This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
35234 | Is it not then the duty of our government to be represented in this new and wide field? |
35952 | The smudge stick is taken up, with the song:"Timber I am looking for? |
6693 | ,:;? |
40167 | Celts of jadeite(?) |
40167 | No harpoon points made of a unio(?) |
20329 | For is not the wild boar the most hardy of all animals? |
20329 | Did the Negritos come from somewhere in Asia, some island like New Guinea, or is their original home now sunk beneath the sea? |
20329 | He can get along without such things, and why waste the time? |
47845 | Could not some plan be devised to enlarge this one? |
47845 | Longhead was about to recover it when Broken Tooth, whose sense of smell may have been more acute, said:"Wait a minute; what is that delicious smell?" |
47845 | One day Broken Tooth said:"What shall we say if some of the people wander this way and find us? |
47845 | What shall we tell them about how we came in possession of this new comfort?" |
58475 | And, further, of what use would mutilations be that had nothing to do with tightness of the foreskin? |
58475 | How could its practically universal occurrence be explained otherwise? |
58475 | How could the time of entry into manhood remain without ceremonious festival? |
35329 | Are these the highest forms of life that the country contains? 35329 May there not have been roving tribes there, and from them the place was designatedWandering Land"? |
35329 | The"image of God"and"living soul"may be the same, but why the change? |
35329 | What being is that sitting on yon fallen tree? |
35329 | Where did Cain get his wife, and why did he build a city? |
35329 | Who were the"sons of God,"and who the"daughters of men"? |
35329 | Why not call him the first great prototype of the human race? |
35329 | Why not the daughters of God? |
58098 | Why do n''t stars come out in the day- time? |
58098 | You poor silly emu,she said,"why do n''t you kill all your chicks except one? |
58098 | He can put a curse in even more easily than he can get it out, and if he puts it in who is there to take it away? |
58098 | If we visited Yarrabah to- day, by means of our magic carpet, what should we see? |
58098 | Is it not strange that we should find this old Hebrew custom still in use in wild Australia? |
58098 | Where do you think I should be if I went about with a family like that? |
58098 | Would any of them volunteer to go? |
21796 | And is there anything in the present physical geography of the Indian Ocean which would suggest its probable position? |
21796 | Further, what was the connexion between this land and Australia which we must equally assume to have existed in Permian times? |
21796 | How then can the facts of such fossil remains be accounted for without the existence of land communication in some remote age? |
21796 | Is Maya? |
21796 | Now turn to the west and what do we find? |
21796 | Was this land continuous between the two regions? |
21796 | Who brought the dialect of Homer to America? |
21796 | or are they coeval?" |
21796 | or who took to Greece that of the Mayas? |
21796 | | Pliocene}|||catastrophe? |
18607 | He must be able to detect future evil, otherwise how can he avoid it? |
18607 | How then is he to communicate with these invisible champions? |
18607 | The priest then accosted the deity in this manner:"Why dids''t thou delay, Magbabáya?" |
18607 | The priest went on:"When dids''t thou get here?" |
18607 | These may be the people whom Pigaffetta, in his First Voyage Around the World( 1519- 1522) calls Benaian( Banuáon?) |
18607 | Who would not be afraid when even the mighty_ Magbabáya_ of Libagánon would at times demand a lance from every settlement and keep careful watch? |
18607 | Why should not he? |
12850 | ''Little sister,''they queried,''how come you here? |
12850 | And why should he be so peremptory in the Negative, when he had so positive an Affirmation of_ Aristotle_ to the contrary? |
12850 | But how came the_ Cranes_ and_ Pygmies_ to fall out? |
12850 | For_ Herodotus_''s[ Greek: andres agrioi], what can they be else, than_ Homines Sylvestres_, or_ wild Men_? |
12850 | On one occasion a man went in there, and met two beautiful fairies whom he addressed thus,"How long will you still linger here, my little sisters?" |
12850 | What may be the Cause of this Mortal Feud, and constant War between them? |
12850 | Why did they not fly their_ Eagles_ against them? |
12850 | kai hai boes kai hoi onoi, schedon hoson krioi? |
12850 | where is your home?'' |
15590 | But can we determine which? |
15590 | But how was the precise direction of this very irregular avenue to be fixed? |
15590 | But is he right in his further assertion that the cult was a cult of the dead? |
15590 | CHAPTER X WHO WERE THE BUILDERS, AND WHENCE DID THEY COME? |
15590 | From what direction did megalithic architecture come, and what was its original home? |
15590 | If to a single race, whence did that race come and in what direction did it move? |
15590 | If to several, did the idea of building megalithic structures arise among the several races independently, or did it spread from one to another? |
15590 | Illustrated|||| Prof. Arnold Meyer( University of Zurich)|| JESUS OR PAUL? |
15590 | The questions we have to discuss are, therefore, as follows: Are all the megalithic monuments due to a single race or to several? |
15590 | Through this is seen a shrine(?) |
15590 | WHO WERE THE BUILDERS, AND WHENCE DID THEY COME? |
15590 | What exactly is a megalithic monument? |
15590 | What is the date of the erection of Stonehenge? |
15590 | What then was the purpose of this wonderful complex of rooms? |
15590 | Who were the foes against whom such elaborate preparations for defence were made? |
15590 | With what purpose were the megalithic monuments erected? |
15590 | With what purpose were these great circles erected? |
43750 | In the year 1691 a question was put,''Why do Scotchmen hate swine''s flesh?'' 43750 May it not, therefore,"it may be asked,"have originated in Italy or France?" |
43750 | The utter absurdity of the misnomer Caucasian, as applied to the blue- eyed and fair- haired Aryan(?) 43750 But is it probable that the first experiments were made with trees? 43750 But why, it will be asked, was the corpse so treated? 43750 Did the Crô- Magnons paint their bodies during life, as do the Australians, the Red Indians, and others, to providea substitute for clothing"? |
43750 | How did early man come to invent the dug- out? |
43750 | How did they reach Britain, and what attracted them from the Continent? |
43750 | M. Reinach struck at the heart of the problem when he asked,"In what western European island is tin found?" |
43750 | The fresh evidence from the site of Asshur is to the effect that he conquered Kaptara(? |
43750 | The head of Hades''cauldron-- what is it like? |
43750 | When the question is asked"What was the religion of the ancient Britons?" |
43750 | When the question is asked,"Whence came the Crô- Magnon people of the Aurignacian phase of culture?" |
43750 | When, then, did man first appear in Europe? |
43750 | Where then were the Cassiterides? |
43750 | Where were boats first invented and the art of navigation developed? |
43750 | Who then were the Picts? |
43750 | Who were the people that first searched for, found, and used metals in Western Europe? |
36979 | Are the A. L. W. patterns distributed in the same way upon the corresponding digits of the two hands? |
36979 | How often would it correspond if the kinship between A and B were as close as it is possible to conceive? |
36979 | How often would it occur between two persons who had no family likeness? |
36979 | In the majority of cases, the mere question would be, Is the man A the same person as B, or is he not? |
36979 | Is his name contained in such and such a register?" |
36979 | Is this criminal an old offender? |
36979 | Is this new recruit a deserter? |
36979 | Is this professed pensioner personating a man who is dead? |
36979 | Is this upstart claimant to property the true heir, who was believed to have died in foreign lands? |
36979 | Let us first consider the question, how far may the minutiæ, or groups of them, be treated as_ independent_ variables? |
36979 | Our problem is this: given two finger prints, which are alike in their minutiæ, what is the chance that they were made by different persons? |
36979 | Still, why does it occur? |
36979 | What is to be done with those prints which can not be certainly classed as Arches, Loops, or Whorls, but which lie between some two of them? |
36979 | but the much more difficult problem of"Who is this unknown person X? |
36979 | the values of 10 × 19, 68 × 61, 27 × 25, all divided by 105? |
12849 | ''Ala, I shall go down to the Ipogau,''He truly went down to them,''What is the matter with you?'' |
12849 | ''Why( are) the mother and the baby in the ground? |
12849 | ? |
12849 | ? |
12849 | After that Kaboniyan above, looking down( said),''What can you do? |
12849 | As he returns, he is sprinkled by a medium, who says,"You are wet from the rain; in what place did you get wet?" |
12849 | Bark head- bands are stained a purplish- red by applying a liquid secured through boiling_ kelyan_(_ Diospyros cunalon_ D.C.?) |
12849 | Big stone, which swallows people, where are you?" |
12849 | He looks again,''Why are my_ igam_ dull? |
12849 | Here, your arm pretty bamboo(?) |
12849 | How can I get them?'' |
12849 | How does it happen that Americans are attending the ceremony?" |
12849 | If the trouble is unusually severe, a hot bath is prepared by boiling the leaves of the lemon,_ atis_(_ Anona squamosa_ L.), and_ toltolang_(?) |
12849 | In the length and breadth of the nose, the Igorot exceeds any of the groups studied, while the Malayan( Mongolian?) |
12849 | The leaves of the bangon arise(?). |
12849 | The people, who go to the well, say,''Why is Ayaonwán dead? |
12849 | Water of Abang(?) |
12849 | We have a bad odor now;''and the eels say,''Whose son is this?'' |
12849 | What is the matter with the woman?" |
12849 | Where is the_ basi_ which should have been in the place where I first came?" |
12849 | Why did you go to steal carabao? |
12849 | You play balgasi(?) |
12849 | You play lagadan( a bird) who flees(?). |
12849 | [ 219] Those used are_ sikag_(_ Lygodium_ near_ scandens_),_ talabibatab_(_ Capparis micracantha_ D.C.) and_ pedped_(?). |
12849 | _ Approximate Translation of the Da- Eng_[ 251] I? |
12849 | and_ dala_(?) |
12849 | beneath the house; likewise, the bark of the_ bani_(?) |
25907 | Ah, but who is your father? 25907 And what shall her name be? |
25907 | And will you not make a feast with that fawn for us who came to your rescue? |
25907 | Are these the things dearest to you? |
25907 | Can I have them for my necklace? |
25907 | Did you see any tracks of moose or bear? |
25907 | Hast thou forgotten the etiquette of thy people, and wouldst compel me to pronounce my own name? 25907 On which side of the trees is the lighter- colored bark? |
25907 | Tell me, uncle, whether you could wear these claws all the time? |
25907 | Uncle, you will tell me, wo n''t you? |
25907 | Well, then, a_ coup_ does not mean the killing of an enemy? |
25907 | What do you think of the little pebbles grouped together under the shallow water? 25907 Where have you been and what have you been doing?" |
25907 | You are not the real mother in maiden''s guise? 25907 And have you forgotten the story of the warrior who sought the will of the Great Mystery? 25907 As soon as the scout got out, with a face more anxious for another than for himself, he exclaimed:Where is Shunka, the bravest of his tribe?" |
25907 | Do you not know my father?" |
25907 | Do you not remember the''Legend of the Feast- Maker,''who gave forty feasts in twelve moons? |
25907 | Have the inlet and the outlet of a lake anything to do with the question?" |
25907 | He would say, for instance:"How do you know that there are fish in yonder lake?" |
25907 | On which side do they have most regular branches?" |
25907 | What is his name?" |
25907 | What is thy name?" |
25907 | What was this one doing at this time of the year and night?" |
25907 | Where do you find the fish- eating birds? |
25907 | and what made the pretty curved marks in the sandy bottom and the little sand- banks? |
3819 | ''What is it that goes along the creek, across the creek, underneath it, and along it again, and yet has left neither side?'' |
3819 | ''What''s that?'' |
3819 | ''Whereabouts?'' |
3819 | ''Which is their Minggah? |
3819 | ''Why you make hole in your ears? |
3819 | A head man says to the corpse,''Did such and such a man harm you?'' |
3819 | After all, when we consider their marriage restrictions, their totems, and the rest, what becomes of the freedom of the savage? |
3819 | He knows; why weary him by repetition, disturbing the rest he enjoys after his earth labours? |
3819 | How do you feel?'' |
3819 | How does the animating principle, or soul, regarded as immaterial, clothe itself in flesh? |
3819 | I suppose the statement must be taken on faith; and as faith can move mountains, why not a dayoorl- stone? |
3819 | Is it a big Coolabah between the Bend and the garden?'' |
3819 | It will be asked,''How far have the Euahlayi been brought under the influence of missionaries, and of European ideas in general?'' |
3819 | My mother that I have been with always, why did you leave me?'' |
3819 | She said one day to the old gin:''Why you have hole made in your nose and put that bone there? |
3819 | What am I?'' |
3819 | What am I?'' |
3819 | What is it that says to the flood- water,''I am too strong for you; you can not push me back''? |
3819 | What is it that says,''You can not help yourself; you will have to go and let me take your place; you can not stay when I come''? |
3819 | When even the spirits gave in, how can ordinary men succeed? |
3819 | Who says that?'' |
3819 | Who says this?'' |
44331 | Rissian| Chellean| of Hoxne]||| of Penck||||||||||_ Interglacial_= 2=| Strépyan|? |
44331 | Rissian|||||| of Penck||||||||||||_ Interglacial_= 2=|? |
44331 | (_ b_) If the apes be thus rejected, the next question is, Would the Mauer jaw be appropriate to such a cranium as that of Pithecanthropus? |
44331 | Asa{ Reindeer{ Bos? |
44331 | At La Chapelle- aux- Saints, the associated fauna includes the Reindeer, Horse, a large bovine form(? |
44331 | Mousterian{? |
44331 | The attempt to overcome this objection by attributing an earlier(? |
44331 | Upper Acheulean{= Levallois{? |
44331 | [ 31] Rutot, 1904,? 1903. |
44331 | what is the general nature of the fauna accompanying Mousterian implements? |
44331 | | Acheulean|| Solutréan||= Mindel- Riss interval|| Chellean++=============||( Penck)||||||||||= Glacial II=|? |
44331 | | Brandon beds||= Günz- Mindel interval||| with implements||( Penck)||||||||||= Glacial I="Günzian"|--|? |
44331 | | Chalky||"Mindelian"of Penck||| Boulder- clay|||||||_ Interglacial_= 1=|--|? |
44331 | | Mousterian||= Günz- Mindel interval||| Chellean||( Penck)||||||||||= Glacial I="Günzian"|? |
44331 | | Neolithic|| Achen and other| period|| period|| oscillations( Penck)||||||||||= Glacial IV= 2nd| Lower|? |
44331 | |--||"Mindelian"of Penck||||||||||_ Interglacial_= 1=|? |
44331 | |? |
44331 | |? |
44331 | |? |
44331 | ||||| Valleys do not||||| correspond to||||| modern river|||||||= Glacial II=|--|? |
44331 | |||||? Flood- gravels. |
23135 | ''What did Moses know about medical science?'' |
23135 | Are there any benefits enjoyed by the Jew that the uncircumcised does not enjoy in equal proportion? |
23135 | As the children of the great Rabbi Moses Mendelssohn asked of their father:"Is it a disgrace to be a Jew? |
23135 | But might not these have been the openings of the ejaculatory ducts? |
23135 | Do you mean that the bile- material is left in the blood, or too much poured in? |
23135 | Do you mean that there is an excess in the alimentary canal, and a deficiency elsewhere? |
23135 | Do you mean, sir, that the liver does not secrete or manufacture a sufficiency of bile, or not enough? |
23135 | Have these poor subjects no right to future bliss, or in what shape will they reach there? |
23135 | How did fecundation take place? |
23135 | IS THE PREPUCE A NATURAL PHYSIOLOGICAL APPENDAGE? |
23135 | IS THE PREPUCE A NATURAL PHYSIOLOGICAL APPENDAGE? |
23135 | If, then, this penile appendage is of any utility, why is it that, unlike the rest of the body, it falls such an easy victim to gangrene? |
23135 | Is circumcision a factor in this difference, or is it not? |
23135 | It may be asked why all this care and trouble, and not circumcise at once? |
23135 | It may well be asked, why? |
23135 | Now, what are the facts in this case? |
23135 | The laity have never been called upon to answer the questioning of the late Prof. Robley Dunglison:"What do you mean, sir, by biliousness? |
23135 | The question may well be asked, which of these two shaped glans is the natural product as nature intended it should be? |
23135 | WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF CIRCUMCISION? |
23135 | WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF CIRCUMCISION? |
23135 | Whence, why, where, and whither? |
23135 | Why do people throw stones at us and call us names?" |
35685 | We are like the birds of the air,said a Kuki to T. C. Hodson,"we make our nests here this year, and who knows where we shall build next year[409]?" |
35685 | # Hottentots#:_ Wa- Sandawi(? |
35685 | # Negrilloes#:_ Akka_;_ Wochua_;_ Dume(? |
35685 | ), the whole representing a money value of about £ 4,000,000(?). |
35685 | )_;_ Doko(? |
35685 | )_;_ Wandorobbo(? |
35685 | ? Kwakiutl( Wakashan stock). |
35685 | Are they to be really taken as objectively one, or are they merely artificial groupings, arbitrarily arranged abstractions? |
35685 | Are we then to conclude that there have been Hindu invasions and settlements in all these regions, the most populous on the globe? |
35685 | But here arises the more important question, by what right are so many and such diverse peoples grouped together and ticketed"Caucasians"? |
35685 | But whence came the hundreds of Aztec names in the lands between Chiapas and Nicaragua? |
35685 | Did they bring their different languages with them, or were these specialised in their new upland homes? |
35685 | Egypt[95] Babylonia[96] Aegean[97] Greece[98] Bronze Age in Europe[99] 3300 Dynasty I 3200 3100 3000 Dynasty of Opis? Early? Pre- Mycenean 2900 Dyn. |
35685 | Egypt[95] Babylonia[96] Aegean[97] Greece[98] Bronze Age in Europe[99] 3300 Dynasty I 3200 3100 3000 Dynasty of Opis? Early? Pre- Mycenean 2900 Dyn. |
35685 | Here it may be asked, What is to be thought of the already- mentioned pebble- markings from the Mas- d''Azil Cave at the close of the Old Stone Age? |
35685 | How is its presence in East Central Asia, including Manchuria and Korea, to be explained? |
35685 | IV.)? |
35685 | IV.,"Whence came the Acheans?" |
35685 | Individuals worship the shades of their immediate ancestors or elder relatives; and the_ k''omas_[ souls?] |
35685 | Is it a wonder that the clothes do not fit? |
35685 | Mpondo||_______|_______ Ama- Tembus Palo( 1780?) |
35685 | Nirvana? |
35685 | The earlier Achaian(?) |
35685 | The question is, Can all these have come from North Africa? |
35685 | The recent finds in Bosnia also[1277], besides the historically proved(?) |
35685 | Thus with the root,_ ahong_, come, and infix_ jám_, slow, is formed the retardative_ náng ahongjámrangmoh_,"will- you- come- slowly?" |
35685 | To what cause is to be attributed this profound modification of this branch of the Nordic type in the direction of the south? |
35685 | W. Ridgeway,_ Who were the Romans?_ 1908. |
35685 | When rallied for burning flash notes at a popular shrine, since no spirit- bank would cash them, a Chinaman retorted:"Why me burn good note? |
35685 | Where did this babel of tongues come from? |
35685 | Where have we to seek the primeval home of this most vigorous and dominant branch of the human family? |
35685 | [ 1058]_ Early Age of Greece_, 1901, p. 237 ff., and"Who were the Romans?" |
35685 | [ 1261] H. Zimmer,"Auf welchen Wege kamen die Goidelen vom Kontinent nach Irland?" |
35685 | [ 145]"Chaque fois que j''ai demandé avec intention à un Mandé,''Es- tu Peul, Mossi, Dafina?'' |
35685 | [ 776]"Whence came the American Indians?" |
35685 | _______________________/\________________________/\ Tembu Xosa( 1530?) |
35685 | unconscious rest or absorption in the eternal essence? |
20902 | Also, why are the painted pebbles only known in a few brochs of Caithness? |
20902 | And is suspicion of forgery to fall, in Portugal, on respectable priests, or on the very uncultured wags of Traz os Montes? |
20902 | Are they to be rejected because they vary in size? |
20902 | Did he forge them on Portuguese models? |
20902 | Did the forger know that? |
20902 | Did the same man wander about forging, or was telepathy at work, or do forging wits jump? |
20902 | Early"wags"may have made them-- but why are they only known in the three Clyde sites? |
20902 | For what conceivable purpose did the forger here resort to the aid of compasses, and elsewhere do nothing of the kind? |
20902 | Had the forger already found the canoe, kept the discovery dark, inserted fraudulent objects, and waited for others to rediscover the canoe? |
20902 | If their reasons were religious or superstitious, how am I to know what were the theological tenets of the Clyde residents? |
20902 | In that case, who, in earlier times, made an useless axe- head of soft micaceous stone, and why? |
20902 | Is it not so? |
20902 | Is not this common impulse rather curious? |
20902 | Now we have to ask( 1) Is there any evidence that men in 1556- 1758 lived on the tops of such modern cairns, dating from the reign of Mary Stuart? |
20902 | Or did the Veronese forger come to Clyde, and carry on the business at Dumbuck? |
20902 | Or was it chance coincidence? |
20902 | Or was it undesigned parallelism? |
20902 | Or where are the lost fragments of countless objects in pottery found in old sites? |
20902 | That point,--a crucial point,--are the various sets of things analogous in character or not? |
20902 | There are no relics, except relics of the fifth(?) |
20902 | There was( 1) a small bone comb with a"Late Celtic"( 200 B.C.-? |
20902 | We stare at it and ask what are these slate spear heads engraved with rude ornament, and certainly never meant to be used as"lethal weapons"? |
20902 | What is the meaning, if meaning there be, of the broken figurines or stone"dolls"? |
20902 | Where are the arms of the Venus of Milo, vainly sought beside and around the rest of the statue? |
20902 | Where are the lost noses, arms, and legs of thousands of statues? |
20902 | Where is the smaller portion of the shattered cup and ring marked sandstone block found in the Lochlee crannog? |
20902 | Why did any one scratch them? |
20902 | Why did he do that? |
20902 | Why did these people live on this structure in the fifth to twelfth centuries? |
20902 | Why should the artist, if an old resident of Dunbuie fort, not have compasses, like the Cairn- wight of Lough Crew? |
20902 | Why should the schist pendant of the Tappock chamber be all right, if the claystone pendant of Dunbuie be all wrong? |
20902 | Why should they forge similar unheard- of things in Russia, Poland, and Italy? |
20902 | Why, then, suspect them at Dumbuck? |
20902 | to twelfth(?) |
20902 | { 127} Is it likely? |
20902 | { 47b} If one stone crannog had a stone causeway, why should this ancient inhabited cairn or round tower not possess a stone causeway? |
20902 | { 4} What man of artistic skill, no conscience, and a knowledge of archaic patterns is associated with the Clyde? |
46379 | And could he have done this without the opposition, and apparently with the approval, of the priests and the people? |
46379 | And what did the birds and creeping things feed upon? |
46379 | And what sort of magicians must they have been who could do the same with their enchantments? |
46379 | But where did they get their tin, without which there is no bronze? |
46379 | Could it have come down the Euphrates or Tigris and been exported from the great sea- ports of Eridhu or Ur by way of the Persian Gulf and Red Sea? |
46379 | Did he perchance jump at one bound from Ararat to the Antipodes? |
46379 | Does pre- glacial mean Pliocene, or is it included in the Quaternary? |
46379 | How can this be reconciled with the theory of evolution and the descent of man from some animal ancestor common to him and the other quadrumana? |
46379 | How could Egypt have got its tin even from the nearest known source? |
46379 | How did he get across the equatorial zone, in which only a tropical fauna, including the tropical Negro, can now live and flourish? |
46379 | How did polar bears, lemmings, and snowy owls live in a temperature suited for monkeys and humming- birds? |
46379 | How did the kangaroo get there, if he is descended from a pair preserved in the Ark? |
46379 | How do we know this? |
46379 | How does this affect the most characteristic of all Quaternary forms, that of man? |
46379 | No man of good faith can honestly say that he believes it to be true; and, if not true, what becomes of inspiration? |
46379 | On what are the distinctions of the human race founded? |
46379 | The next question was, what did these words mean, and could they be recognized in any known language? |
46379 | The question is, how far back can any of these races be identified? |
46379 | What chance would Tertiary caves have of surviving such an extensive denudation? |
46379 | What is the reason of this? |
46379 | When did the Pliocene end and the Quaternary begin? |
46379 | Where did this water come from, and where did it go to? |
46379 | Why did men take to living in dark and damp caves? |
46379 | Why, if all are descended from the same pair of ancestors, and have spread from the same spot by migration? |
46379 | Within which of the two did the first great glacial period fall? |
46379 | and to which do the oldest human remains belong, such as the skeletons of Spy? |
41649 | Are fallow periods necessary to its fertility and apparently dormant times essential to its life and growth? |
41649 | Behind Thor and Odin we see the shadowy form of Dyaus( Ziu? |
41649 | But is this quite as certain as some of us seem to think? |
41649 | Can we define or describe our common people? |
41649 | Can we locate it somewhat more definitely? |
41649 | Did it not devour wood and lap up water on the hearth? |
41649 | Do we really owe anything to them? |
41649 | Does our governmental action to- day represent the will of the people? |
41649 | Even if all migrated, could they have furnished enough descendants to give rise to the Scandinavian population? |
41649 | How about"darkest Africa"? |
41649 | How did man hit upon the plan of castrating the bull and thus changing this intractable, ugly beast into the docile and patient ox? |
41649 | How far did the framers of our Constitution desire or intend that the will of the people should govern? |
41649 | How far was Roman government and law due to Indo- European influence? |
41649 | How far were Achæans and Dorians responsible for the glory of Greek art, especially in"Pelasgic Athens"? |
41649 | How had he come to believe this? |
41649 | How many mammals have attained genuine family life and how many men have realized its possibilities? |
41649 | Is China awakening from just such a dormant period? |
41649 | Is it truly representative? |
41649 | Is not this the history of the frontiersman or homesteader everywhere at all times? |
41649 | Is our whole estimate and valuation of Neolithic life, work, and progress extreme and practically worthless? |
41649 | Is the dormant nation often storing up nutriment, strength, vitality, just as the plant is doing in its ugly underground roots and stem? |
41649 | Is this apparent parallelism mere chance, or is it due to a certain amount of similarity in conditions? |
41649 | Is this the rule in racial, or internal, development? |
41649 | Is this the statement of an accomplished fact or the definition of a dim, far- off event toward which we hope we are moving? |
41649 | London,----? |
41649 | May not this old and wide- spread belief be merely a continuance of views and conceptions already held by our Neolithic folk? |
41649 | May there some day be a family rather than league of nations to which every one will contribute according to its special ability? |
41649 | May we not claim that science and a sort of philosophy may have sprung from the same source? |
41649 | May we not imagine that one of the first steps was the refusal of the mother to allow her dead child to be banished from the house? |
41649 | Our first question is: what inferences can we safely draw from a study and comparison of these different European and Asiatic languages? |
41649 | Pumpelly found a female idol( Astarte?) |
41649 | Reinhardt, L._ Die Erde und die Kultur._ Munich, 1912(?). |
41649 | The Indo- Europeans brought in a new era and started a new world; but just what was their definite and permanent contribution to European culture? |
41649 | The Neolithic period coincides roughly with the latter part of Wundt''s Totem Age: the Bronze period ushered in his Age of Heroes.? |
41649 | The old question:"What is man''s chief end?" |
41649 | They may well be nearly contemporaneous with the( older?) |
41649 | Was the method of choosing and electing the President of the United States, as originally devised, intended to make that election popular or not? |
41649 | Were these people Celts or at least partially celticized? |
41649 | Were they, in spite of all our arguments, a mob of crude, worthless barbarians, undeserving of any gratitude or sympathy, much less of respect? |
41649 | What could he do to please them? |
41649 | What of India, still the home of philosophy? |
41649 | What then was the real source of Neolithic progress? |
41649 | What was their past and whence had they come? |
41649 | Where did this change or revolution and the rise of this new language and culture and remarkable people take place? |
41649 | Why did not they progress, win the future, and insure that all the future meetings of art and learning should be held on the back fence? |
41649 | Why did they migrate in all directions? |
41649 | Why should they change? |
41649 | [ 136]| 10,000 B. C.? |
41649 | || 6,000 B. C.? |
41649 | ||( 7,000) B. C.? |
42380 | [ 28] What were the funeral customs in use among men during the polished- stone epoch? 42380 39) beyond that attained by his ancestors? 42380 56.--Tool made of Reindeer Horn, found in the Cave of Laugerie- Basse( Stiletto?).] 42380 57.--Tool made of Reindeer Horn, found in the Cave of Laugerie- Basse( Needle?).] 42380 62.--A Geode, used as a cooking Vessel(? 42380 A Geode, used as a Cooking Vessel(? 42380 And does it not find some analogy in comparatively modern races? 42380 Are not the viscera of the digestive system the same, and are they not organised on the same plan in man as in the carnivorous animals? 42380 But did the men of the reindeer epoch make no attempts to portray their own personal appearance? 42380 But who shall enumerate the ages which have elapsed whilst these achievements have been realised? 42380 But, it will naturally be asked, on what grounds do you base this assertion? 42380 Could we, for instance, determine what amount of intellect man possessed in this earliest and ancient date of his history? 42380 Did any kind of religious worship exist among the men of the bronze epoch? 42380 Did they possess windows? 42380 Do the skeleton and the viscera make up the entire sum of the human being? 42380 Doubtless the expanding circle of thy peaceful conquests will not stop here, and who can tell how far thy sway may extend? 42380 For how many ages did this miserable state last? 42380 Have not the excavations dug in the settlements of primitive man, found in Périgord, ever brought to light any imitation of the human form? 42380 Have we not here an unmistakable resemblance? 42380 How could it possibly come to pass that fishing- nets of the polished- stone epoch should have been preserved to so late a period as our times? 42380 How did he appear upon the earth, and in what spot can we mark out the earliest traces of him? 42380 How did primitive man dress himself during this epoch? 42380 How were the huts constructed, and what were their shape and dimensions? 42380 How, in the next place, were these clipped flints fitted with handles, so as to make hatchets, poniards and knives? 42380 How, then, was it possible that these bones could have found their way to such an elevated position? 42380 If a fact like this is admitted, does it not render the hypothesis absolutely worthless? 42380 In the first place, what are these_ kjoekken- moeddings_, or kitchen- middens, with their uncouth Scandinavian name? 42380 Is it actually a link between the head of the man and that of the ape? 42380 Is it not the case that in these spots the stone was the special object of work and not the handles? 42380 Is it possible, indeed, to fix this date in the epoch of the tertiary rocks? 42380 Is it, on this account, more demonstrative? 42380 Is not this fact a reason for our regarding the former animal as the ancestor of the Malays, and the latter of the African nations? 42380 Is there nothing in man but bones? 42380 It is asked if this is not a preliminary step towards the bony crests which rise in this region in some of the anthropomorphous apes? 42380 The question may be asked, what are these_ lacustrine dwellings_, and in what way do they serve to elucidate the history of the bronze epoch? 42380 The question naturally arises-- what was the mode of interment, and what was the nature of the burial- places employed by man during the bronze epoch? 42380 The question now arises, what were the characteristics of man during the reindeer epoch, with regard to his physical organisation? 42380 To what do we owe the knowledge of a multitude of curious details as to pre- historic peoples? 42380 Tool made of Reindeer Horn, found in the Cave of Laugerie- Basse( Needle?) 42380 Tool made of Reindeer Horn, found in the Cave of Laugerie- Basse( Stiletto?) 42380 Were all these_ dolmens_ originally covered by earth? 42380 What deduction can be logically drawn from the examination of one single skull? 42380 What do we meet with in these heaps? 42380 What evidence do you bring forward, and what are the elements of your proof? 42380 What might have been the population of one of these settlements? 42380 What more can be necessary to prove that man, at this epoch, was already comparatively far advanced in intellectual culture? 42380 What preparation did the corn undergo in order to render it fit for human food? 42380 What was the character of the type of the human race during the iron epoch? 42380 What was the organic type of man during this epoch? 42380 What was their origin? 42380 What will you say, then, ye blind rhetoricians, about the faculty of intelligence as manifested in the gift of speech? 42380 What, however, was the process which enabled our earliest metallurgists to extract iron from its native ore? 42380 What, in fact, does glass consist of? 42380 What, we may ask, was the wearing apparel of man during the period we are describing? 42380 Why is it, however, that the skeleton is the only point taken into consideration when analogies are sought for between man and any species of animal? 42380 Would it not therefore have been possible for an almost imperceptible modification to have ultimately led to identity? 42380 _ Arts and Manufactures._--What degree of skill in this respect was attained by the men who lived during the polished- stone epoch? 42380 and what were the ceremonies which took place at that period when they buried their dead? 35911 Let the cattle go this time?" |
35911 | And still others were true aboriginals of the soil, or if emigrants, when and whence came they? |
35911 | Any one of them will answer to the character of"Musty- fusty- shang?" |
35911 | But how does he get it there? |
35911 | But how does this gentleman maintain himself? |
35911 | But how is he served? |
35911 | But if the body part is not to be used in this way, how, you will ask, is it to be disposed of? |
35911 | Does he fancy that no one has ever heard it but himself? |
35911 | Does he have recourse to the water which flows in abundance beneath his dwelling? |
35911 | Does he suppose that any one is ignorant of the character of the lion''s roar? |
35911 | From whom does he steal these valuable animals,--and in such numbers as almost to subsist upon them? |
35911 | Have I a reader who has not heard of the"King of the Cannibal Islands?" |
35911 | His costume? |
35911 | How can a single Indian of ordinary strength raise a weight of a thousand pounds out of the water, and lift it over the gunwale of his unsteady craft? |
35911 | How could it be felt, where there is no love? |
35911 | How is he domiciled? |
35911 | How then does the Digger obtain his food? |
35911 | How, then, are the proofs to be preserved? |
35911 | How, then, can water be boiled in it? |
35911 | How, then, does the Turcoman sportsman manage to bag this bristly game? |
35911 | I need hardly add that they are dipped in poison;--for who has not heard of the poisoned arrows of the African Bushmen? |
35911 | Is he a manufacturer,--and perforce a merchant,--who exchanges with some other tribe his manufactured goods for provisions and"raw material?" |
35911 | Is it allowed to hang down outside, like the gown of a slattern woman, who has only half got into it? |
35911 | Is it because he can not afford it, or that it is not procurable in his country? |
35911 | Is it for personal security against human enemies,--for this sometimes drives a people to seek singular situations for their homes? |
35911 | Is there anything peculiar about the style of his house or his village? |
35911 | It can not be the scarcity of the material that prevents him from employing it,--what then? |
35911 | It now becomes necessary to inquire how the Bushman spends his time? |
35911 | Need I say more? |
35911 | Of course, such evidence is sufficient for the present; but how about the future? |
35911 | Other enemies? |
35911 | Otherwise, in this desert land, how should the ravenous puma maintain himself?--how the vultures and vulture- eagles? |
35911 | Perhaps they have lost their way? |
35911 | The name of this wonderful tree? |
35911 | There is no water, and a Bushman can no more go without drinking than a boer: how then does he provide for himself on these long expeditions? |
35911 | There is no winter or cold weather here,--why should the walls be thick? |
35911 | To whom does this vast pasture- ground belong? |
35911 | Upon what do they all prey? |
35911 | What are his sources of supply? |
35911 | What is this food, and from whence derived? |
35911 | What quadruped could detect the cheat? |
35911 | When the spoilers scatter thus, the boer may recover his cattle, but in what condition? |
35911 | Whence comes their subsistence? |
35911 | Where do the Bushmen dwell? |
35911 | Where do they get it? |
35911 | Where does he stretch his body,--on the floor?--on a mat? |
35911 | Where is he now? |
35911 | Where is he to be seen? |
35911 | Who are the dwellers upon the Pampas? |
35911 | Who can say that he was not at one time the owner of the Malayan peninsula? |
35911 | Who has not heard of the_ giants_ of Patagonia? |
35911 | Who then can deny his resemblance to the centaur? |
35911 | Whose flocks and herds are they that browse upon it? |
35911 | Why do others betake themselves to the arid steppes and dreary recesses of the desert? |
35911 | Why do the Esquimaux and Laplanders cling to their inhospitable home upon the icy coasts of the Arctic Sea? |
35911 | Why do tribes of men take to the cold, barren mountains, and dwell there, within sight of lovely and fertile plains? |
35911 | Why does he abjure the paint? |
35911 | With such facts as these before our eyes, who can doubt the decline of the Spanish power? |
35911 | With the_ terra firma_ close at hand, and equally convenient for all purposes of his calling, why does he not build his hut there? |
35911 | Within reach of what then? |
35911 | You can not fail to recognise it as the_ mosquito_? |
35911 | You guess, no doubt, the insect to which I allude? |
35911 | You will be inquiring how the horse could render the prairie Indian more independent of agriculture? |
35911 | You will be inquiring to what point they direct themselves,--east, west, north, or south? |
35911 | You will naturally inquire why he does this? |
35911 | _ Quien sabe_? |
35911 | and what is the nature of his food? |
35911 | his arms? |
35911 | his habits? |
35911 | his occupation? |
35911 | how could they? |
35911 | how he obtains subsistence? |
35911 | the dreaded jaguar, perhaps? |
35911 | the utter enfeeblement of that once noble race? |
35911 | what is their country? |
35911 | what like is his home? |
35911 | what sort of a house does he build? |
35911 | where dwells he? |
35911 | wild beasts? |
47627 | But how call you the sow when she is flayed, drawn and quartered, and hung up by the heels like a traitor? |
47627 | Grassor"Race"--but what Race? |
47627 | How many gentlemen have we in France who by their own talk are of royal extraction? 47627 Is this,"he inquires philosophically,"a cause or an effect of the carnivorous regime?" |
47627 | Was it not a pleasant passage of a friend of mine? 47627 _ Mais où sont les nègres a''antan?_"changed to d''antan. |
47627 | --"Does a Puritan swear?" |
47627 | 114 ethnic differentiation.--Why should the_ Norseman_ differ from the kindred_ Teuton_ in the south? |
47627 | A Kentuckian casually encountering a distinguished New Englander at the buffet of an exclusive Eastern club, exclaimed:"Does a_ Puritan_ drink?" |
47627 | A passion for travel, exploration, adventure, field sports, and fine horses? |
47627 | An allusion to Hood''s poem,"O saw ye not Fair Inez?" |
47627 | And a_ Saxon_ in Mr. Hyde? |
47627 | And does it not inspire a disposition to revive and invigorate those pristine instincts of our common race? |
47627 | And who so fit as Shakespeare to depict the features of a royal race? |
47627 | Are these the peoples that gave substance and strength and splendor to the English race? |
47627 | Are they not_ Alderneys_?" |
47627 | Are they persuasive orators, able lawyers, brilliant fighters, ready and practical thinkers; astute and successful negotiators? |
47627 | But was he pleased? |
47627 | Can evidence be more conclusive that the Norman was neither extinguished nor absorbed by the sluggish Saxon who accepted his yoke? |
47627 | Casto? |
47627 | Caudle? |
47627 | Could there be a better example of cumulative verification? |
47627 | Had nature reproduced in Colonel Campian the antique Norman type? |
47627 | Have they scholarly tastes? |
47627 | Have we not a_ Norman_ in Mr. Jekyll? |
47627 | Have you never heard among the old horsemen of the Bluegrass the odd expression,"The colt will be two years old next''grass''"? |
47627 | IV But what are the characteristic traits of the Norman as we find him in his early habitat in France? |
47627 | If a racial quality, what_ race_? |
47627 | In examining this series, one naturally inquires: How do we know that the thousands of names, taken from an old English Directory, are Norman? |
47627 | Is it an element of race? |
47627 | Is it not possible that this deep intra- racial distinction was recognized by the creator of the"melancholy Dane"? |
47627 | Is it possible that so daring and successful a gamester as the Norman was lost in the shuffle when an auspicious destiny was directing the game? |
47627 | Is it to be supposed for an instant that this puissant racial force was dissipated and lost? |
47627 | Is the Norman still living, still powerful, progressive, and prolific? |
47627 | Is the dominant Scandinavian element_ short_? |
47627 | Is there nothing in this record to appeal to a sentiment of national pride in the Kentuckian''s heart? |
47627 | On the other hand, does not the law of the survival of the fittest operate to correct the tendency to transmit defects of structure and organization? |
47627 | Or, in a word, is it, as Mr. Freeman affirms, a Lost Race? |
47627 | Prospective annexation on the old lines, 85 passion for territorial expansion, 85 Vikings: who were they?, 86 VIRGINIA. |
47627 | Social gifts and accomplishments? |
47627 | The question is sometimes asked,"How were the descendants of Stephen Lee related to the Lees of the Northern Neck?" |
47627 | This liquor they drink out of horns; and that is why, said Du Chaillu, convincingly, that we say in Kentucky,"Will you take a horn?" |
47627 | To what, then, must be ascribed this scholastic renascence? |
47627 | Were not these words and phrases conveyed by racial migration from the North of England to Virginia and from Virginia to Kentucky in days lang syne? |
47627 | What are the original, genetic factors behind this varied manifestation of power in that old, Elizabethan stock? |
47627 | What dost thou think of_ that_, friend Gurth?" |
47627 | What has been the result of this intimate commingling of ethnic elements upon English soil? |
47627 | What has produced or determined this extraordinary differentiation of race? |
47627 | What must it be now? |
47627 | What shall be said of thousands historically traced-- the continuous record of a single race? |
47627 | What theory best explains these facts in their relations? |
47627 | What was it? |
47627 | What was the moral geography of the race? |
47627 | What were his thoughts as he looked with wondering eyes upon that charming Southern matron with her fair, delicate features and high- bred air? |
47627 | Who knows? |
47627 | Who will now say that Anglo- Saxon is a more appropriate name for historic England than the original Albion, or Britannia, or Norman- French, or Celt? |
47627 | Why should the Norseman differ from his kindred Teuton in the South? |
47627 | [ 12] Is it not a fit conclusion to our ethnological tale? |
47627 | _ Batten._ Batin( Flemish? |
47627 | exclaimed an anxious friend,"do n''t you know there is a_ fight_ going on down there?" |
47627 | for what''s the matter? |
47627 | of Anglo- Norman sheriffs? |
47627 | or has some demoniac"Berserker"blood slipped into the cross? |
47627 | or was it a vast popular migration such as America has witnessed in later times? |
47627 | or was it not in point of fact both-- an invasion and a migration, the one following the other? |
55822 | And how shall I catch it? |
55822 | From where did you start on the last day before arriving? |
55822 | What will you give us? |
55822 | What wind? |
55822 | When did you come? |
55822 | When? |
55822 | Who comes ahead with the Kula? 55822 You go with them to Boyowa?" |
55822 | how long were they kept by a man in the Island of Yeguma, and then distributed on the occasion of a so''i( feast)? |
55822 | when they had been the last time in Boyowa? |
55822 | ''What stands in the site of your village?'' |
55822 | 12 When the spirits become angry, they would tell us:--"Why are the Tolabwaga not first and you minor chiefs are ahead? |
55822 | After the protracted litany has been finished, the reciter chants:"Who emerges at the top of Kinana? |
55822 | All these considerations have brought us very near to the essential problem: what does magic really mean to the natives? |
55822 | And one might feel tempted to ask: for whom it is that these customs have no meaning, for the natives or for the writers of the passage quoted? |
55822 | And when asked:"What do the mulukwausi see, then?" |
55822 | And, as a rule, more or less the following conversation will ensue:"who gave this pair of armshells to Pwata''i?" |
55822 | Are not the Tolabwaga cleaners of the sea?" |
55822 | Are these subjective states not too elusive and shapeless? |
55822 | Atu''a''ine turned his eyes, looked over the sea, he spoke:''Why did you deceive me, Aturamo''a? |
55822 | But how does he acquire his wealth? |
55822 | But is this possible? |
55822 | But where are the traces of Yesu Keriso? |
55822 | Did it rain over you?'' |
55822 | Finally, speaking from a sociological point of view, what is the economic function of magic in the process of canoe making? |
55822 | Have they any line of demarcation between the mythical and the actual reality, and if so, how do they draw this line? |
55822 | He spoke:"Who will be first in the Kula? |
55822 | How could I therefore in a few months or a year, hope to overtake and go beyond them? |
55822 | How do they conceive and define it? |
55822 | How do you imagine its invention?" |
55822 | If we would ask even the most intelligent informant some such concretely framed questions as:"Where has your magic been made? |
55822 | Indeed, would this wrinkled old man have obtained the necklace? |
55822 | Instead of the first phrase"where shall I lie? |
55822 | Is it simply an extraneous action, having nothing to do with the real work or its organisation? |
55822 | Is magic, from the economic point of view, a mere waste of time? |
55822 | Is there any reason for striving after wealth, where everyone can have as much as he wants without much effort? |
55822 | Is there plenty of mwali in your villages?" |
55822 | Kasabwaybwayreta asked him:''My friend, which way will you go?'' |
55822 | Kasabwaybwayreta called out,''O, my son, why do you cast me off?'' |
55822 | Magic surely, therefore, must partake of the supernatural character? |
55822 | Perhaps this somewhat anomalous features of the formula may be connected with its obvious linguistic modernity? |
55822 | RAYIKUNA SULUMWOYA( ALSO CALLED SUMGEYYATA) A. U''ULA( INITIAL PART) 1 Avayta''u netata''i sulumwoyala Laba''i? |
55822 | Shall we look towards the sea?'' |
55822 | The people of Vakuta or yourselves? |
55822 | The question arises, has this rite ever been practised in reality? |
55822 | The question which presents itself first, in trying to grasp the native outlook on the subject is: what is myth to the natives? |
55822 | The question:"where is the real strength of magic?" |
55822 | The spell runs on:"I shall act magically on my mountain... Where shall I lie? |
55822 | The words literally mean:''My kuleya( food left over), take it; I brought it to- day; have you perhaps no armshells?'' |
55822 | Then, why attach any value to them? |
55822 | They approached the people of Kudayuri, they spoke:''Which way did you come?'' |
55822 | They arrived there, they saw:''Oh, look at the canoe, are these fishermen from Dobu?'' |
55822 | They said:''Is that the canoe from Dobu?'' |
55822 | They spoke to the Kudayuri men,''How did you come here?'' |
55822 | They spoke:''Shall we go round the point or pierce right through?'' |
55822 | They were astonished:''Which way does he sail?'' |
55822 | They( the villagers) asked:''And where is Kasabwaybwayreta?'' |
55822 | This negative description leaves us with the questions: why, then, are these objects valued, what purpose do they serve? |
55822 | To the question:"where human beings found magic?" |
55822 | Tovasana asked:"Where have you anchored?" |
55822 | Tovasana then asked them,"How long are you going to stay?" |
55822 | We would tell the chiefs:''Why have you first made your canoes? |
55822 | Were the visits returned by the Dobuans and Muruans? |
55822 | What does this latter mean? |
55822 | What is then this ethnographer''s magic, by which he is able to evoke the real spirit of the natives, the true picture of tribal life? |
55822 | What then are the forces at work which keep the partners to the terms of the bargain? |
55822 | What will be the method of procedure? |
55822 | When To''uluwa gives a pair of armshells to Kouta''uya, this latter will ask:''availe yamala''(''whose hand'')? |
55822 | When they arrived at the shore of the main island, Atu''a''ine said:''Aturamo''a, how shall we go? |
55822 | Where is your village?'' |
55822 | Which way did it come? |
55822 | Who ever saw any signs of the tales told by the misinari? |
55822 | Who will carry it to the beach?'' |
55822 | Why give a basketful of fruit or vegetables, if everybody has practically the same quantity and the same means of procuring it? |
55822 | Why make a present of it, if it can not be returned except in the same form? |
55822 | Would the Government put us into jail, in truth?" |
55822 | Yaygu, Kwoyregu, 1 Who cuts the mint plant of Laba''i? |
55822 | [ 60]"Who cuts the sulumwoya of Laba''i? |
55822 | my treading noise made by flying witches(?) |
55822 | the new form runs"Where does the rainbow stand up? |
55822 | the time is short for Ethnology, and will this truth of its real meaning and importance dawn before it is too late? |
17280 | And now where is yours? |
17280 | However else would a reasonable being think of acting? |
17280 | Why should I do this? |
17280 | Why,said Mr. Shaw,"did the mice continue to grow tails? |
17280 | ( the god''s name), so that we can not be sure whether the dancers are indulging in a prayer or in an incantation-- is that religion? |
17280 | ***** We have completed our very rapid regional survey of the world; and what do we find? |
17280 | ***** What, then, you exclaim, is the outcome of this chapter of negatives? |
17280 | Again, how are you going to isolate an instinct? |
17280 | And now what about philosophy? |
17280 | And what are the sources of his information? |
17280 | And what becomes of the miner''s output? |
17280 | And what does this stand for in terms of the antiquity of man? |
17280 | And why did the American redskins never tame the bison, and adopt a pastoral life in their vast prairies? |
17280 | Are the spear- thrower and the bull- roarer inevitably thought of as alive? |
17280 | Are they natural crystallizations that take place when people are thrown together? |
17280 | Are we here on the track of the original dispersal of man? |
17280 | As regards the word, call it science, or history, or anthropology, or anything else-- what does it matter? |
17280 | But are these round- heads all of one race? |
17280 | But can it? |
17280 | But do use and disuse make any difference to the race? |
17280 | But how, it may be objected, does evolution take place, if every one imitates every one else? |
17280 | But is the elimination selective? |
17280 | But what about the instinct or group of instincts answering to sex? |
17280 | But what are these laws? |
17280 | But"Why should I not do something else instead?" |
17280 | CHAPTER VIII RELIGION"How can there be a History of Religions?" |
17280 | Can colour serve for a race- mark in this profound sense? |
17280 | Can we make out their meaning at all? |
17280 | Coming now to the analysis of the forms of society, the beginner must first of all face the problem:"What makes a people one?" |
17280 | Does a savage, for instance, when he is hammering at a piece of flint think of it as other than a"thing,"any more than we should? |
17280 | Does it make any difference? |
17280 | Does some one invent them? |
17280 | Does the very notion of organization imply an organizer? |
17280 | First of all, what is the use of being coloured one way or the other? |
17280 | Firstly, then, what is the ideal scope of anthropology? |
17280 | Given this inheritance, and this environment, how are we, by taking thought and taking risks, to achieve the best- under- the- circumstances? |
17280 | Had the rest of the palaeolithic men already followed the reindeer and other arctic animals towards the north- east? |
17280 | Had they eaten him? |
17280 | How are we to explain these facts, supposing them to be corroborated by more extensive studies? |
17280 | How do the forms of social organization come into being? |
17280 | How do we anthropologists propose to combat this tendency? |
17280 | How far do these different distributions bear each other out? |
17280 | How would you set about the business? |
17280 | How, then, can we say what is the type to breed from, even if we confine our attention to one country? |
17280 | How, then, you may well inquire, does the pre- historian get to work? |
17280 | I am not going far afield into such questions as: Who were the mound- builders of North America? |
17280 | If the hereditarily long- headed can change under suitable conditions, then what about the hereditarily short- witted? |
17280 | If the skull can be so affected, then what about the brain inside it? |
17280 | In what sense, if any, is social organization dependent on numbers? |
17280 | Is history science? |
17280 | Is it because these things can not be done, or because man has not found out how to do them? |
17280 | Is it driving at the universal equality and brotherhood of man? |
17280 | Is it something, like the heart- line of the hand, that may go along with useful qualities, but in itself seems to be a meaningless accident? |
17280 | Is, then, to attribute"virtue"the same thing, necessarily, as to attribute vitality? |
17280 | Now what is a"spiritual being"? |
17280 | Now what, in terms of mind, does crisis mean? |
17280 | Now wherefore all this lack of earnestness? |
17280 | Once man was across, what was the manner of his distribution? |
17280 | Or are they, as a matter of course, endowed with soul or spirit? |
17280 | Or did the neolithic invasion, which came from the south, wipe out the lot? |
17280 | Or may there be also an impersonal kind of"virtue,""medicine,"or whatever the wonder- working power in the wonder- working thing is to be called? |
17280 | Or was there a commingling of stocks, and may some of us have a little dose of palaeolithic blood, as we certainly have a large dose of neolithic? |
17280 | Or why do modern black folk and white folk alike in Africa fail to utilize the elephant? |
17280 | Or, like Topsy, do they simply grow? |
17280 | Or, on the contrary, does it hint at the need of a stern system of eugenics? |
17280 | Race must count for something, or why do not the other animals take a leaf out of our book and build up rival civilizations on suitable sites? |
17280 | Situation, race and culture-- to reduce it to a problem of three terms only-- which of the three, if any, in the long run controls the rest? |
17280 | Taken at its fullest and best, what ought it to comprise? |
17280 | The question then arises, Which, for the Veddas, is the older system, marrying- out or marrying- in? |
17280 | The upshot of these considerations is that if the totem is, on the face of it, a name, the savage answers the question,"What''s in a name?" |
17280 | Thousands of years? |
17280 | Thus if the question be"Who will help?" |
17280 | To what extent, then, must our novice pay attention to the history of language? |
17280 | True, you say, but what about the influence of their various climates, or again of their different ideals of behaviour? |
17280 | Well, now let us hie to Lingheath, not far off, and what do we find? |
17280 | What are the functions of philosophy as contrasted with science? |
17280 | What could be more stupefying than to shut yourself up in a closet and swallow your own gas? |
17280 | What departments must he attend in turn? |
17280 | What does it do, then? |
17280 | What excites these movements? |
17280 | What had happened? |
17280 | What happens now? |
17280 | What happens then in the primitive society? |
17280 | What is his method of linking facts together? |
17280 | What is the cause that has created this variety? |
17280 | What is the geographical and physical theatre of that epoch? |
17280 | What is the significance of this change? |
17280 | What is the truth that Darwinism supposes? |
17280 | What is to be the test of mind? |
17280 | What light, then, does the study of primitive society throw on the first beginnings of family law as administered by the house- father? |
17280 | What, then, are the limits of the geographical control? |
17280 | What, then, are to be the relations between anthropology and philosophy? |
17280 | What, then, is Darwinism? |
17280 | When out with her I would say,''What is out there like men walking?'' |
17280 | Where does its influence begin and end? |
17280 | Which of the two batches of children will tend on the whole to have the stronger legs? |
17280 | Who knows, for instance, the final truth about what happens to the soul at death? |
17280 | Why do men herd cattle, instead of the cattle herding the men? |
17280 | Why does the giraffe have so long a neck? |
17280 | Why? |
17280 | Will it therefore tend to disappear? |
17280 | Will the one invasion prove an incident, he asks, and the other an event, as judged by a history of long perspective? |
17280 | Yes, but what if some of the heaps showed signs of having been upset? |
17280 | Yes, but why did man tame the horse later rather than sooner? |
17280 | Yet who ever observed the slightest signs of beardlessness being produced in this way? |
17280 | Yet, granting this, do we thus reach a criterion whereby the different races of men are to be distinguished? |
41360 | There they lay lamenting their loss, saying, for instance,''Why did you leave us?'' 41360 [ 639] Is this not the same notion of an anonymous and diffused force, the germs of which we recently found in the totemism of Australia? |
41360 | An idea is in reality only a part of ourselves; then how could it confer upon us powers superior to those which we have of our own nature? |
41360 | Are these not the names he gives to the beings of the totemic species? |
41360 | But does not this genesis of the idea of the soul misunderstand its essential characteristic? |
41360 | But how are they to be explained? |
41360 | But how does it happen that, instead of remaining outside of the organized society, they have become regular members of it? |
41360 | But how has this apotheosis been possible, and how did it happen to take place in this fashion? |
41360 | But how have they been able to arrive at this conception? |
41360 | But then, does it ever attain any that are definite, and is it not always necessary to reconsider them? |
41360 | But we know that there are spirits of every sort; how does it happen that the soul of the dead man is necessarily an evil spirit? |
41360 | But what is a ratapa? |
41360 | But whence come these divisions which are so essential? |
41360 | But whence comes the religious character of the totemic beliefs and practices? |
41360 | But whence comes the virtue which they attribute to this? |
41360 | But which are these sensations which give birth to religious thought? |
41360 | But why give them a sort of prerogative? |
41360 | But why should he think it safer in the body of an animal than in his own? |
41360 | But, it is said, what society is it that has thus made the basis of religion? |
41360 | Do they say that the physical forces with which we come in contact exceed our own? |
41360 | Does a man appear inspired, does he speak with energy, is it as though he were lifted outside himself and above the ordinary level of men? |
41360 | Does a mind ostensibly free itself from these forms of thought? |
41360 | Does a misfortune which menaces the group appear imminent? |
41360 | Does an individual come in contact with them without having taken proper precautions? |
41360 | Does he receive good news? |
41360 | Does it not happen to- day that two distinct families have the same name? |
41360 | Does not every consecration by means of anointing or washing consist in transferring into a profane object the sanctifying virtues of a sacred one? |
41360 | Does someone prefer to regard them from the point of view of the understanding? |
41360 | Does something inspire a reverential fear in him? |
41360 | During all this time, what has become of the soul which it sheltered and the individual whose life depended on this soul? |
41360 | Even for the Christian, is not God the Father the guardian of the physical order as well as the legislator and the judge of human conduct? |
41360 | For example, why should the sleeper not imagine that while asleep he is able to see things at a distance? |
41360 | For what could have a greater interest than it in the effects which its own death has on the living? |
41360 | Has he eaten the totemic animal? |
41360 | Has some one committed a fault for which he wishes to atone? |
41360 | How can this immutability give rise to this incessant variability? |
41360 | How could a vain fantasy have been able to fashion the human consciousness so strongly and so durably? |
41360 | How could he imagine that during his sleep he lived a life which he knows has long since gone by? |
41360 | How could he surpass himself merely by his own forces? |
41360 | How could science deny this reality? |
41360 | How could the mere act of representing the movements of an animal bring about the certitude that this animal will be born, and born in abundance? |
41360 | How could they give rise to this confidence if they had had their origin in a sensation of feebleness and impotency? |
41360 | How could this image, repeated everywhere and in all sorts of forms, fail to stand out with exceptional relief in his mind? |
41360 | How is it possible to pick them out? |
41360 | How many instincts have we not lost? |
41360 | III But if the fundamental notions of science are of a religious origin, how has religion been able to bring them forth? |
41360 | IV But if this contagiousness of sacredness helps to explain the system of interdicts, how is it to be explained itself? |
41360 | If particular ideas have nothing logical about them, why should it be different with general ones? |
41360 | In other words, how does it happen that they, too, are of a religious nature? |
41360 | Is he overtaken by an attack or seized by madness? |
41360 | Is it a physical result which they wish to obtain? |
41360 | Is it necessary to repeat that worshippers are generally ignorant of the real reasons for their practices? |
41360 | Is one man more successful than his companions in the hunt or at war? |
41360 | Is one man pursued by another? |
41360 | Is that not as much as to say that the first is a more recent form of the second, which excludes it by replacing it? |
41360 | Is the empirical thesis the one adopted? |
41360 | Is their effect not to mix and confuse beings, in spite of their natural differences? |
41360 | Is this because the woman is profane or because the sexual act is dreaded? |
41360 | Is this not merely a symbolic way of saying that they are parts of the totemic divinity? |
41360 | Must we see a trace of sexual totemism in the following custom of the Warramunga? |
41360 | Now how could he add to the energies which he possesses without going outside himself? |
41360 | Now how could the spectacle of nature give rise to the idea of this duality? |
41360 | Now is it not evident that this double can only be the soul, since the soul is, of itself, already a double of the subject whom it animates? |
41360 | Now is that idea not the one at the basis of the teaching of Christ? |
41360 | Now what does he see about him? |
41360 | Now what is the origin of this differentiation? |
41360 | Now when could they have gotten such a property? |
41360 | Now where does this singular privilege come from? |
41360 | Now, what were these ancestors? |
41360 | So if it is at once the symbol of the god and of the society, is that not because the god and the society are only one? |
41360 | The idea of a divinity in itself, of a transcendental power upon which man depends and upon which he supports himself? |
41360 | Then how is it that they have taken from society the models upon which they have been constructed? |
41360 | Then why have the living considered this uprooted and vagabond double of their former companion as anything more than an equal? |
41360 | Then why should he believe them more infallible at night than during the day? |
41360 | This is a double question and may be subdivided as follows: What has led the clan to choose an emblem? |
41360 | Under these circumstances, is it not surprising that their real function should be to serve moral ends? |
41360 | V But how does it come that men have believed that the soul survives the body and is even able to do so for an indefinite length of time? |
41360 | Vegetation dies every year; will it be reborn? |
41360 | What does the dream amount to in our lives? |
41360 | What reason has the dead man for imposing such torments upon them? |
41360 | What should we be without fire even now? |
41360 | What sort of a science is it whose principal discovery is that the subject of which it treats does not exist? |
41360 | Whence come these successive transfers? |
41360 | Whence comes this differentiation? |
41360 | Where could he have gotten the idea that by imitating an animal, one causes it to reproduce? |
41360 | Which of us knows all the words of the language he speaks and the entire signification of each? |
41360 | Why should they have need of his aid in order to deduct beforehand their just share of the things which he receives from their hands? |
41360 | [ 1264] Whence comes this obligation? |
41360 | [ 1307] But if religion is the product of social causes, how can we explain the individual cult and the universalistic character of certain religions? |
41360 | [ 168] Now if all that which appertains to the notion of gods conceived as cosmic agents is blotted out of the religions of the past, what remains? |
41360 | [ 258] Are these animals not totems? |
41360 | [ 341] Its religious nature comes to it, then, from some other source, and whence could it come, if not from the totemic stamp which it bears? |
41360 | [ 409] Does one man loan another one of his churinga? |
41360 | [ 610] Then where do they come from? |
41360 | [ 677] But of what? |
41360 | [ 70] Does this not prove that between the profane being which he was and the religious being which he becomes, there is a break of continuity? |
41360 | [ 736] Is not the statement that a man is a kangaroo or the sun a bird, equal to identifying the two with each other? |
41360 | and why have these emblems been borrowed from the animal and vegetable worlds, and particularly from the former? |
41360 | for weeks, fail to leave in him the conviction that there really exist two heterogeneous and mutually incomparable worlds? |
40257 | And the second is: How has it been perpetuated? |
40257 | And what has made this difference? |
40257 | Are natural causes competent to play the part of selection in perpetuating varieties? |
40257 | Are these truths ultimate and irresolvable facts, or are their complexities and perplexities the mere expressions of a higher law? |
40257 | But I imagine I hear the question, how is all this to be tested? |
40257 | But can we go no further than that? |
40257 | But has this been done? |
40257 | But how does this classification differ from that of the scientific Zoologist? |
40257 | But how is this remarkable propulsive machine made to perform its functions? |
40257 | But in the next place comes a much more difficult inquiry:--Are the causes indicated competent to give rise to the phenomena of organic nature? |
40257 | But is it not possible to apply a test whereby a true species may be known from a mere variety? |
40257 | But is the like true of the physiological characteristics of animals? |
40257 | But is this really so? |
40257 | But suppose we prefer to admit our ignorance rather than adopt a hypothesis at variance with all the teachings of nature? |
40257 | But the question now is:--Does selection take place in nature? |
40257 | But to how much has man really access? |
40257 | But what does this attempt to construct a universal history of the globe imply? |
40257 | But what more have we to guide us in nine- tenths of the most important affairs of daily life than hypotheses, and often very ill- based ones? |
40257 | But what proportion is there between the structural alteration and the functional result? |
40257 | But where does the grass, or the oat, or any other plant, obtain this nourishing food- producing material? |
40257 | But whither does all this tend? |
40257 | But why does a muscle contract at one time and not at another? |
40257 | Can either be shown to fill up or diminish, to any appreciable extent, the structural interval which exists between Man and the man- like Apes? |
40257 | Can we find any approximation to this in the different races known to be produced by selective breeding from a common stock? |
40257 | Could not a sensible child confute, by obvious arguments, the shallow rhetoricians who would force this conclusion upon us? |
40257 | Did either of these original specimens, on which Von Wurmb''s descriptions are based, ever reach Europe? |
40257 | Do the physiological differences of varieties amount in degree to those observed between forms which naturalists call distinct species? |
40257 | Does Nature acknowledge in any deeper way this unity of plan we seem to trace? |
40257 | Has not his Paley told him that that seemingly useless organ, the spleen, is beautifully adjusted as so much packing between the other organs? |
40257 | How and when are we justified in making our next step-- a_ deduction_ from it? |
40257 | How could that operation of selection, which is his essential function, be carried out by mere natural agencies? |
40257 | How did Harvey determine the nature of the circulation, except by experiment? |
40257 | How did Sir Charles Bell determine the functions of the roots of the spinal nerves, save by experiment? |
40257 | How do we know the use of a nerve at all, except by experiment? |
40257 | How do you know that the laws of Nature are not suspended during the night? |
40257 | How do you know that the man who really made the marks took the spoons? |
40257 | How does the meaning of the scientific class- name of"Mammalia"differ from the unscientific of"Beasts"? |
40257 | How then has this notion of the inexactness of Biological science come about? |
40257 | How, then, is mud formed? |
40257 | If you find any record of changes taking place at_ b_, did they occur before any events which took place while_ a_ was being deposited? |
40257 | In the first place, do these supposed causes of the phenomena exist in nature? |
40257 | In the first place, what is a species? |
40257 | Is he something apart? |
40257 | Is it any more than a grandiloquent way of announcing the fact, that we really know nothing about the matter? |
40257 | Is it not probable that teachers, in pursuing such studies, will be led astray from the acquirement of more important but less attractive knowledge? |
40257 | Is it satisfactorily proved, in fact, that species may be originated by selection? |
40257 | Is it then the_ results_ of Biological science which are"inexact"? |
40257 | Is mother- love vile because a hen shows it, or fidelity base because dogs possess it? |
40257 | Is there among the plants the same primitive form of organization, and is that identical with that of the animal kingdom? |
40257 | Is there any test of a physiological species? |
40257 | Is there no criterion of species? |
40257 | Is this sound reasoning? |
40257 | It is the question why should training masters be encouraged to acquire a knowledge of this, or any other branch, of physical science? |
40257 | No doubt it is a pretty and ingenious way of looking at the structure of any animal, but is it anything more? |
40257 | Now, how many of those are absolutely extinct? |
40257 | Now, the next problem that lies before us-- and it is an extremely important one-- is this: Does this selective breeding occur in nature? |
40257 | Now, what is the effect of this oscillation? |
40257 | Now, what is the result of all this? |
40257 | Or does he differ less from them than they differ from one another, and hence must take his place in the same order with them? |
40257 | Or suppose for a moment we admit the explanation, and then seriously ask ourselves how much the wiser are we? |
40257 | Shall Biology alone remain out of harmony with her sister sciences? |
40257 | So what is the use of what you have done?" |
40257 | That is to say, how many of these orders of animals have lived at a former period of the world''s history, but have at present no representatives? |
40257 | The first is: How has organic or living matter commenced its existence? |
40257 | The first question of course is, Do they thus return to the primitive stock? |
40257 | The great new question would be"How does all this take place?" |
40257 | Was the oldest_ Homo sapiens_ pliocene or miocene, or yet more ancient? |
40257 | What are those inductions and deductions, and how have you got at this hypothesis? |
40257 | What books shall I read? |
40257 | What if the orbit of Darwinism should be a little too circular? |
40257 | What is Mr. Darwin''s hypothesis? |
40257 | What is he doing? |
40257 | What is it originates, directs and controls, the motive power? |
40257 | What is it that constitutes and makes man what he is? |
40257 | What is the cause of this wonderful difference between the dead particle and the living particle of matter appearing in other respects identical? |
40257 | What is the purpose of primary intellectual education? |
40257 | What is the use, it is said, of attempting to make physical science a branch of primary education? |
40257 | What is this very speech that we are talking about? |
40257 | What meaning has this fact upon any other hypothesis or supposition than one of successive modification? |
40257 | What will be the result, then? |
40257 | What will come of a variation when you breed from it, when Atavism comes, if I may say so, to intersect variation? |
40257 | What, then, takes place? |
40257 | When I examine it, what appears to be the most striking character it presents? |
40257 | Where in nature was the analogue of the breeder to be found? |
40257 | Where, then, must we look for primæval Man? |
40257 | Why does one whole group of muscles contract when the lobster wishes to extend his tail, and another group, when he desires to bend it? |
40257 | Why, there is not a function of a single organ in the body which has not been determined wholly and solely by experiment? |
40257 | Your friend says to you,"But how do you know that?" |
40257 | is there anything like the operation of man in exercising selective breeding, taking place in nature? |
40257 | or may I not rather ask is it possible for you to discharge your functions properly, without these aids? |
40257 | or what is really the state of the case? |
40257 | said his opponents,"but what do you know you may be doing when you heat the air over the water in this way? |
40257 | that difference to which we give the name of Life? |
40257 | that none of the phenomena exhibited by species are inconsistent with the origin of species in this way? |
40257 | that there is such a thing as natural selection? |
40257 | what does the explanation explain? |
40257 | what if species should offer residual phenomena here and there, not explicable by natural selection? |
40257 | what is the range and position of Physiological Science as a branch of knowledge, and what is its value as a means of mental discipline? |
4032 | ''What is its name?'' 4032 And what was that poem about, Critias?" |
4032 | He who gives life; He who gives strength; whose command all the bright gods( the stars?) |
4032 | The gods Citlallinicué and Citlalatonac, instantly looking down said:''Divine Lord, what is that fire that is making there? 4032 ''From what wilt thou save me?'' 4032 ''How shall I protect thee?'' 4032 ( Europe, Africa, and America?) 4032 A black cloud assails their country, from which proceeds a terrible hurricane( the water- spout?) 4032 And from these came the thousands of tons of copper and tin that must, during the Bronze Age, have been introduced into Europe? 4032 And how could he have known that the Mediterranean was only a harbor compared with the magnitude of the great ocean surrounding Atlantis? 4032 And if this be not its origin, how comes it that we find it in the most north- western corner of Africa? 4032 And why should the veteran Roman troops have been so terrified and panic- stricken by a lot of cattle with firebrands on their horns? 4032 And why, in both countries, should they stand with their sides square to the four cardinal points of the compass? 4032 And, on the other hand, how can we account for the representations of negroes on the monuments of Central America? 4032 Are not these hundred arms the oars of the galleys, and the frightful crashing of the waves their movements in the water? 4032 Are these another set of coincidences? 4032 Are they in this, too, a reminiscence of the Cross, and of the four rivers of Atlantis that ran to the north, south, east, and west? 4032 Are we to find the original of these legends in the following passage from Plato''s history of Atlantis? 4032 As Maginn well asks, how could Hannibal be in danger of starvation when he had two thousand oxen to spare for such an experiment? 4032 Associated with this event was a divine personage called Niu- va( Noah?). 4032 By what process of development did it reach it? 4032 Can all these precise coincidences be the result of accident? 4032 Can all these things be the result of accident? 4032 Can all this be accident? 4032 Can any one doubt that these two legends must have sprung in some way from one another, or from some common source? 4032 Can any theory of accidental coincidences account for all this? 4032 Can anything be more significant than to find the serpent the sign for n in Central America, and in all these Old World languages? 4032 Can we doubt the reality of events which we thus find confirmed by religious ceremonies at Athens, in Syria, and on the shores of Central America? 4032 Can we not suppose that those three sons represent three great races in the order of their precedence? 4032 Could Plato have guessed all this? 4032 Could anything be more evident than the connection of these ceremonies with the destruction of Atlantis? 4032 Could they have done this without the magnetic compass? 4032 Did it have relation to the mounds and pyramids? 4032 Did these references grow out of vague traditions linking their race withislands in the sea?" |
4032 | Did these three letters include the d and r, which they did not receive from the Atlantean alphabet, as represented to us by the Maya alphabet? |
4032 | Do not these words picture the explosion of a mine with a"force equal to the shock of an earthquake?" |
4032 | Does Plato, in speaking of"the fruits having a hard rind, affording drinks and meats and ointments,"refer to the cocoa nut? |
4032 | Does history or tradition make mention of any such? |
4032 | Does it mean that by means of the magnet he sailed, after the Flood, to the European colonies of Atlantis, already thickly inhabited? |
4032 | Does not all this accord with"that dreadful day and night"described by Plato? |
4032 | Does not this describe the fate of Atlantis? |
4032 | He began to chide, saying,''Who has made this fire here?'' |
4032 | How are we to explain the existence of the Semitic race in Europe without Atlantis? |
4032 | How comes it that all the civilizations of the Old World radiate from the shores of the Mediterranean? |
4032 | How could the beardless American Indians have imagined a bearded race? |
4032 | How did he come to hit upon the hot springs if he was drawing a picture from his imagination? |
4032 | How did the human mind hit upon this singular edifice-- the pyramid? |
4032 | How did the red men of Central America know anything about"black men and white men?" |
4032 | How did the wild horse pass from America to Europe and Asia if there was not continuous land communication between the two continents? |
4032 | How many centuries elapsed ere man thought of cultivating Indian corn? |
4032 | How many more ere it had spread over nearly a hundred degrees of latitude and lost all resemblance to its original form?'' |
4032 | I then asked,''Do the people cross this river in boats?'' |
4032 | In another fragment, at the origin of the human race we see in succession the fraternal couples of Autochthon and Technites( Adam and Quen-- Cain? |
4032 | In what have we added to the civilization of this ancient people? |
4032 | Is Maya? |
4032 | Is it in the barbaric depths of that Asia out of whose uncivilized tribes all civilization is said to have issued? |
4032 | Is it not another remarkable coincidence that the p, in both Maya and Phoenician, should contain this singular sign? |
4032 | Is it not probable that we have here another reference to the great record preserved in the land of the Deluge? |
4032 | Is it possible that a plant of this kind could have been cultivated for this immense period of time in both Asia and America? |
4032 | Is it possible to account for this singular custom, reaching through a belt of nations, and completely around the habitable world, without Atlantis? |
4032 | Is it possible to explain this except by supposing that it originated from some common centre? |
4032 | Is it possible to suppose all these extraordinary coincidences to be the result of accident? |
4032 | Is there any other country to which we can turn which possessed a phonetic alphabet in any respect kindred to this Phoenician alphabet? |
4032 | Is there any proof that civilized man existed at the North Pole when it possessed the climate of Africa? |
4032 | Is this curious design a reminiscence of Atlantis and the three- pronged trident of Poseidon? |
4032 | May not the so- called"Phoenician coins"found on Corvo, one of the Azores, be of Atlantean origin? |
4032 | May not this town of Erythia have given its name to the adjacent sea? |
4032 | May there not be a boiling lake on the unapproachable summit of Roairama? |
4032 | Might not the building of such a gigantic edifice have given rise to the legends existing on both continents in regard to a Tower of Babel? |
4032 | Must not demons and heroes and men come next?... |
4032 | Now what is the peculiarity of this hieroglyph? |
4032 | Now where did the Phoenicians get it? |
4032 | Now, what means, this number? |
4032 | One may well pause, after reading this catalogue, and ask himself, wherein do these peoples differ? |
4032 | Poole says,"How then can we account for this strong conviction? |
4032 | Professor Desor says:"We are asked if the preparation of bronze was not an indigenous invention which had originated on the slopes of the Alps?... |
4032 | Professor Kuntze asks,"In what way was this plant, which can not stand a voyage through the temperate zone, carried to America?" |
4032 | Solon, bearing this, said,''What do you mean?'' |
4032 | The Egyptians regarded Taut( At?) |
4032 | The dictionaries tell us that the ocean is named after the mountains of Atlas; but whence did the Atlas mountains get their name? |
4032 | The first was an age of giants( the great mammalia?) |
4032 | The legends of the Iranian race commence with the reign of ten Peisdadien( Poseidon?) |
4032 | The m here is certainly indicated by the central part of this combination, the figure###; where does that come from? |
4032 | The son of the Creator was called Szeu- kha( Ze- us?). |
4032 | WAS SUCH A CATASTROPHE POSSIBLE? |
4032 | WAS SUCH A CATASTROPHE POSSIBLE? |
4032 | Was not the Nubian"Island of Merou,"with its pyramids built by"red men,"a similar transplantation? |
4032 | Was this done in the past on the island of Atlantis? |
4032 | We come now to another question:"Did the Aryan or Japhetic race come from Atlantis?" |
4032 | Were not the pyramids of Egypt and America imitations of similar structures in Atlantis? |
4032 | What does this prove? |
4032 | What had an inland people, like the Jews, to do with seas and islands? |
4032 | What has become of them? |
4032 | What is the Phoenician form for g as found on the Moab stone? |
4032 | What is the distinctive mark about this figure? |
4032 | What numberless ages does this suggest? |
4032 | What proofs have we that the Egyptians were a colony from Atlantis? |
4032 | Whence comes the word Atlantic? |
4032 | Whence this name Atlas, if it be not from the name of the great king of Atlantis? |
4032 | Where are its Old World affinities? |
4032 | Where are the traces of their civilization? |
4032 | Where are the two nations, agricultural and highly civilized, on those continents by whom it was so cultivated? |
4032 | Where did the Greek, Plato, get these names if the story is a fable? |
4032 | Where did they get the name from? |
4032 | Where on the face of the earth are we to find a Copper Age? |
4032 | Where was Olympus? |
4032 | Who brought the dialect of Homer to America? |
4032 | Who can doubt that it represents the history of a real people? |
4032 | Who is the god to whom we shall offer sacrifice? |
4032 | Why do they thus smoke the sky?'' |
4032 | Why should these extraordinary structures crop out on the banks of the Nile, and amid the forests and plains of America? |
4032 | Why would any people have altogether left such a home? |
4032 | Why, when their civilization had spread to the ends of the earth, did it cease to exist in the peaceful region where it originated? |
4032 | Without Atlantis, how can we explain the fact that the early Egyptians were depicted by themselves as red men on their own monuments? |
4032 | kings,''men of the ancient law, who lived on pure Homa( water of life)''( nectar? |
4032 | or are they coeval?... |
4032 | or who took to Greece that of the Mayas? |
4032 | xi., 4, 5),"Who shall give us flesh to eat? |
17910 | What should I say,How should I begin it?" |
17910 | ( is it not so?) |
17910 | ( or, where do you come from? |
17910 | ? |
17910 | A may then say,"Where are you going to? |
17910 | Aetas? |
17910 | English: Bring Mafulu: yetsia(_ up_); yayeitsie(_ down_) Kambisa:-- Korona: neda Afoa: ainakava Kovio:[ boale?]. |
17910 | Future 2. ememoma? |
17910 | How are questions of doubtful claims to heirship to bush and garden land to be determined? |
17910 | How can a magic man from a distant community hear the wailing? |
17910 | How is the joint ownership of the gardens to be dealt with, and how is the work there to be apportioned, and the products of the gardens divided? |
17910 | I who knows? |
17910 | If A and B meet in the bush, A may say to B,"Where do you come from? |
17910 | Ivi: which one? |
17910 | Mafulu 80_ Nasal Index._ Andamanese? |
17910 | The Interrogatives are:_ te_? |
17910 | The Interrogatives are:_ tsia_? |
17910 | The elaborate carved( turtle?) |
17910 | The exceptions are the interrogative na? |
17910 | The form of the second future as_ umbibia_ is rarely heard, except with the verb_ alili_, see, from which comes_''Aria?_ see? |
17910 | The form of the second future as_ umbibia_ is rarely heard, except with the verb_ alili_, see, from which comes_''Aria?_ see? |
17910 | The future interrogative replies to the question,"Can I..."? |
17910 | The nodding of the head to a negative question, such as"Are you not well?" |
17910 | The question put was,"When Kuni people are dancing, are they in their dance imitating anything, and if so what?" |
17910 | The questions naturally arise:( 1) Is the true Papuan a variable stock including both long- broad- headed elements? |
17910 | The questions"What should I do?" |
17910 | These are:_ Da_(_le_)? |
17910 | What would be the situation if a chief whose death was indicated by the ceremony lived, or if one whose recovery was foretold became worse and died? |
17910 | What would happen if the results of the ceremonies of the various magic men were to differ? |
17910 | [ 164]_ aumen_, his?. |
17910 | _ Ifan''eloma?_ will he become handsome? |
17910 | _ Ifan''eloma?_ will he become handsome? |
17910 | _ Ivi: unau_? |
17910 | _ Nu da_? |
17910 | _ Nuga malele yera?_ have you taken the book? |
17910 | _ Nuga malele yera?_ have you taken the book? |
17910 | _ Songe_ is specially employed when the following phrase indicates a final proposition, or an answer to the questions"Where do you come from?" |
17910 | _ a baibe, amu baibe,_ man tall, woman tall;_ uli baibitsi mau,_ pot big- in put it, put it in the big pot;_ ifana?_ is it good? |
17910 | _ a baibe, amu baibe,_ man tall, woman tall;_ uli baibitsi mau,_ pot big- in put it, put it in the big pot;_ ifana?_ is it good? |
17910 | _ a(le),_ here:_ a mo ma?_ must I put it here? |
17910 | _ a(le),_ here:_ a mo ma?_ must I put it here? |
17910 | _ aida_? |
17910 | _ aiti balava natsi_, to- morrow bread I shall eat;_ aiti nu inditsi na_? |
17910 | _ aked''is''okid''ando_, the men are near the fire;_ ganda_? |
17910 | _ anda l''elete_? |
17910 | _ anda_(_le_)? |
17910 | _ andal''ai(me)_? |
17910 | _ bulomakaoa?_ is it a cow? |
17910 | _ bulomakaoa?_ is it a cow? |
17910 | _ da gatsi? |
17910 | _ da gatsi? |
17910 | _ da(le),_ who? |
17910 | _ dal''aua?_ who is this? |
17910 | _ dal''aua?_ who is this? |
17910 | _ dau ga ne_? |
17910 | _ dau_(_ne_)? |
17910 | _ do yela maiti?_ how shall I call? |
17910 | _ do yela maiti?_ how shall I call? |
17910 | _ do(le)?_ where. |
17910 | _ dol''imaiti?_ what should I do? |
17910 | _ dol''imaiti?_ what should I do? |
17910 | _ domamai_? |
17910 | _ domamai_? |
17910 | _ dotamaiti?_ how should I say? |
17910 | _ dotamaiti?_ how should I say? |
17910 | _ dovavemunge_? |
17910 | _ fang''idede_, to set a trap;_ di yu molots''idoma_? |
17910 | _ ifa mi elatsi?_ he will not be handsome? |
17910 | _ ifa mi elatsi?_ he will not be handsome? |
17910 | _ ime(li)?_ far. |
17910 | _ itara_? |
17910 | _ kukua?_ is it tobacco? |
17910 | _ kukua?_ is it tobacco? |
17910 | _ kupa g''ilama?_ are the potatoes cooked? |
17910 | _ kupa g''ilama?_ are the potatoes cooked? |
17910 | _ kupa ulin''ama_, put the potatoes in the pot;_ na ul''olol''amene_, I passed it through the hole;_ iso nu emana? |
17910 | _ kupa?_ is it a sweet potato? |
17910 | _ kupa?_ is it a sweet potato? |
17910 | _ nu aiti golà ?_ would you start to- morrow? |
17910 | _ nu aiti golà ?_ would you start to- morrow? |
17910 | _ nu da?_ who art thou? |
17910 | _ nu da?_ who art thou? |
17910 | _ nu ga sua? |
17910 | _ nu sise domamai?_ how many dog''s teeth? |
17910 | _ nu sise domamai?_ how many dog''s teeth? |
17910 | _ nug''em''aliluna?_ Have you just come to see the village? |
17910 | _ nug''em''aliluna?_ Have you just come to see the village? |
17910 | _ numuku andola_? |
17910 | _ nuni o''gega_, thou hast passed down there;_ di engo_, let us go up;_ na song''em''aritsi_, I am going to see the village;_ nu do sona_? |
17910 | _ nà _? |
17910 | _ olei_(?). |
17910 | _ ovola?_ is it a pig? |
17910 | _ ovola?_ is it a pig? |
17910 | _ oyand''aua?_ is it a flower? |
17910 | _ oyand''aua?_ is it a flower? |
17910 | _ sona?__ sue_, to walk, go: pres. |
17910 | _ te_? |
17910 | _ te_? |
17910 | _ teile_? |
17910 | _ toma?_ and_ tola? |
17910 | _ toma?_ and_ tola? |
17910 | _ tue_? |
17910 | _ uga nemb''emama?_ has he killed the bird? |
17910 | _ uga nemb''emama?_ has he killed the bird? |
17910 | _ unau_? |
17910 | _ vaina_? |
17910 | _ yari_(? |
17910 | _-a(le)_, with, by( instrumental):_ isong''al''oki ya-andal''a? |
17910 | _-a(le)_, with:_ andal''a?_ with what? |
17910 | _-a(le)_, with:_ andal''a?_ with what? |
17910 | _-noi_, with(? |
17910 | andavete_, does the smoke irritate you? |
17910 | are translated by the expression_ do(le)... maiti_, from_ do(le)?_ where? |
17910 | are translated by the expression_ do(le)... maiti_, from_ do(le)?_ where? |
17910 | art thou quite alone? |
17910 | by what do you swear? |
17910 | dini;_ who will go? |
17910 | elena?_ or_ elama?_ Fut. |
17910 | elena?_ or_ elama?_ Fut. |
17910 | eloma?_ and_ elola?_ 6. |
17910 | eloma?_ and_ elola?_ 6. |
17910 | emama? |
17910 | emena? |
17910 | emolà ? |
17910 | emómà ? |
17910 | he himself;_ nu da? |
17910 | how many? |
17910 | how many? |
17910 | how many? |
17910 | how much? |
17910 | how much? |
17910 | is it not( French, n''est ce pas?). |
17910 | isong''ale_, take the fire with the tongs-- with what? |
17910 | na ga sua_, are you going away? |
17910 | nanienge_; who art thou? |
17910 | or past,_ tena?_ or_ tama? |
17910 | or past,_ tena?_ or_ tama? |
17910 | or"Should I..."? |
17910 | or"Where are you going?" |
17910 | or( 2) Does the broad- headed element belong to an immigrant people? |
17910 | or, again( 3) Is there an hitherto unidentified indigenous broad- headed race? |
17910 | should we make a water- pipe? |
17910 | to- morrow I will give it you, shall I not? |
17910 | umbibia? |
17910 | umbubila? |
17910 | umbubima? |
17910 | umbubima? |
17910 | umbubina? |
17910 | uniende_; who will go? |
17910 | what did he say? |
17910 | what thing? |
17910 | what thing? |
17910 | what? |
17910 | when? |
17910 | where have you been? |
17910 | which? |
17910 | which? |
17910 | who art thou? |
17910 | who has eaten it? |
17910 | who has he been with? |
17910 | who, which? |
17910 | who? |
17910 | who? |
17910 | why? |
26603 | But how can we dwell together,said one,"when there is not food enough for all?" |
26603 | But how can we get close up,said Flaker,"without frightening the bison away?" |
26603 | Do you think they will follow us? |
26603 | How can we prevent the famine? 26603 Where have all the reindeer gone?" |
26603 | _ IV THINGS TO THINK ABOUT How do you feel after you have had a long, hard chase? 26603 _ XLI THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What might happen that would lead the Cave- men to work together? |
26603 | _ XVII THINGS TO THINK ABOUT How do you think the children played in the winter? 26603 Afterwards, however, the following questions may be of service: Did you ever see a reindeer? 26603 Are any here in winter that are not here in the summer? 26603 At length Chew- chew, holding up a skin, turned to Fleetfoot and said,Do you know what animal wore this skin?" |
26603 | At what season of the year are nuts fit to gather? |
26603 | At what season of the year would they be most likely to have a famine? |
26603 | At what times might the clans help one another? |
26603 | Can you see how stories of animals that turned into men could be started? |
26603 | Can you tell what animal it is?__ Think of the two wolves coming up toward the bison. |
26603 | Can you tell what really happened in each of these cases? |
26603 | Can you think how people learned to use poison in hunting? |
26603 | Can you think how the officers of a herd of bison are chosen? |
26603 | Can you think how they became fast runners? |
26603 | Can you think how they learned to fit skins to their bodies? |
26603 | Can you think of any other way in which a cave might be made? |
26603 | Can you think of any way by which they could get food? |
26603 | Can you think of any way of removing little pieces of flint besides striking them off? |
26603 | Can you think of any way that Fleetfoot might prevent them from attacking the Bison clan? |
26603 | Can you think of anything which could be used as food when it was boiled, that would not be a good food eaten raw? |
26603 | Can you think of how they might find a way of saving their spearheads? |
26603 | Can you think what kind of a shelter they might find? |
26603 | Can you think what the first files were like? |
26603 | Can you think why Willow- grouse would take great pains to embroider her baby''s clothing? |
26603 | Can you think why bison live in herds? |
26603 | Can you think why cats do not hunt together? |
26603 | Can you think why they did not preserve and save food in times of plenty? |
26603 | Could they do it in the summer? |
26603 | Did you ever see cattle pawing the ground? |
26603 | Did you ever see horses pawing the ground? |
26603 | Did you ever see them paw the snow? |
26603 | Did you ever walk on snowshoes? |
26603 | Do dogs hunt alone, or with one another? |
26603 | Do you think that Flaker''s first dagger was carved in this way? |
26603 | Do you think that the later Cave- men will hunt in just the same way that the early Cave- men did? |
26603 | Do you think the Cave- men could hunt wherever they chose? |
26603 | Do you think the Cave- men took as good care of the sick, and the lame, and the old people, as we do? |
26603 | Do you think the Cave- men will learn how to boil food? |
26603 | Do you think the Cave- men would gather many nuts? |
26603 | Do you think the reindeer herds would stay near the caves all the year? |
26603 | Do you think there were doctors when the Cave- men lived? |
26603 | Does he always come to the great feasts?" |
26603 | Does the poisoned weapon poison any part of the animal''s flesh? |
26603 | Draw the picture._ VII THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do our horses and cattle eat? |
26603 | Find out where the water comes from._ XXVII THINGS TO THINK ABOUT If Flaker is lame, how will he be able to get food? |
26603 | Find ways of using them._ XXVIII THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do you think Flaker used in cutting the antler? |
26603 | For what do you think it uses its large and heavy antlers?_ XXXIV THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do you think Flaker will do while Fleetfoot is gone? |
26603 | For what do you think it uses its large and heavy antlers?_ XXXIV THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do you think Flaker will do while Fleetfoot is gone? |
26603 | Have you ever heard any one say that cheese or meat had"changed to maggots?" |
26603 | Have you ever heard any one say"It rained angleworms?" |
26603 | Have you ever heard any one talking about the signs of the weather? |
26603 | Have you ever heard that the Indians used to be afraid of having their pictures taken? |
26603 | He asked Scarface,"Where does Nimble- finger live? |
26603 | How are the leaders of the herds chosen? |
26603 | How can they tell when the storm is over?_ XIX THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do you think those who stayed in the cave will do during the storm? |
26603 | How can they tell when the storm is over?_ XIX THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do you think those who stayed in the cave will do during the storm? |
26603 | How can we make the gods understand?" |
26603 | How could she get the color out of plants into the stuff she wished to color? |
26603 | How could the Cave- men help one another in hunting? |
26603 | How could they keep from losing the shafts? |
26603 | How did they hunt them? |
26603 | How do we get animals into traps? |
26603 | How do wolves hunt? |
26603 | How do you think people came to make snowshoes? |
26603 | How do you think people came to use saws? |
26603 | How do you think people learned to dry meat, fish, or fruit? |
26603 | How do you think the Cave- men fished? |
26603 | How do you think the Cave- men learned to take care of themselves? |
26603 | How do you think the Cave- men made straight shafts for their spears? |
26603 | How do you think the Cave- men would hunt when there was only a light fall of snow? |
26603 | How do you think they learned to make mittens and gloves? |
26603 | How do you think they used them? |
26603 | How do you think they would think of carrying the thread through the needle''s eye? |
26603 | How large do you think they were? |
26603 | How many kinds of knots can you tie? |
26603 | How many ways do you know of fastening garments? |
26603 | How might one man hinder the others? |
26603 | How would they hunt when the snow was deep? |
26603 | How would they hunt when there was a hard crust on the snow? |
26603 | How? |
26603 | If a great deal of snow falls each year, what do you think will become of it? |
26603 | If any of his bones were broken, do you think the Cave- men could set them? |
26603 | If game should be scarce on a hunting ground, do you think all of the people could stay at home? |
26603 | If strangers found him, what do you think they would do with him? |
26603 | If such a hole was made in a very soft rock what would happen to it? |
26603 | If the weather kept pleasant how do you think they would travel? |
26603 | If we wanted a house of limestone, what would we do to get it? |
26603 | If you know its nest, model that._ XV THINGS TO THINK ABOUT How do you think Fleetfoot felt the first few days he was with the strange clan? |
26603 | In what kind of a place do we keep dried foods?__ Find the best way of boiling bitter vegetables. |
26603 | In what places does the snow stay all the year round? |
26603 | In what ways can animals help one another in hunting? |
26603 | In what ways can bison notice signs of danger? |
26603 | In what ways can they help one another? |
26603 | Is there any place near by where you have a right to go nutting? |
26603 | Is there anything that we can learn from these stories? |
26603 | Model it in bas- relief._ XXXIII THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do you think the people will do with Fleetfoot? |
26603 | Model the trail which the horses followed.__ What chasing game do you know how to play? |
26603 | Of all the animals you know, which are the fastest runners? |
26603 | One day when the boys were flaking spear points, Fleetfoot turned to Flaker and said,"Do you know who made the first flaker?" |
26603 | See if the children can guess which one it is._ XXVI THINGS TO THINK ABOUT What do you think had happened to Flaker? |
26603 | THINGS TO THINK ABOUT Can you think why the Cave- men used stone for their spear points and knives before they used bone or horn? |
26603 | Tell how you catch flies.__ What animals do you know that sleep during the winter? |
26603 | Those who stood near turned and asked,"Who is Fleetfoot?" |
26603 | Watch one of them and find out what it does._ XXI THINGS TO THINK ABOUT Why would the Cave- men be apt to lose many spears and javelins? |
26603 | What animals did the men hunt most? |
26603 | What animals did the wolves hunt in the time of the Cave- men? |
26603 | What animals did the women hunt most? |
26603 | What animals do wolves hunt to- day? |
26603 | What animals eat nuts? |
26603 | What animals store nuts? |
26603 | What are files used for? |
26603 | What bones do you think the Cave- men would use first in making needles and awls? |
26603 | What change did the Cave- men have to make in their hunting on account of this? |
26603 | What change took place in the animals while the Cave- men were learning to be good hunters? |
26603 | What changes did the Cave- men see take place in the buds? |
26603 | What changes do you think the Cave- men made in their spearheads when they began to throw spears? |
26603 | What changes do you think they made in the shafts? |
26603 | What could hunters do to keep smooth shafts from slipping from their hands? |
26603 | What could they do for them? |
26603 | What did they use instead of a needle? |
26603 | What do the people do? |
26603 | What do we do with wood when we wish to bend it? |
26603 | What do we use hard wood for?_ VI. |
26603 | What do we use limestone for? |
26603 | What do we use soft wood for? |
26603 | What do we use them for? |
26603 | What do wild cattle and horses eat? |
26603 | What do you mean by"parboiling?" |
26603 | What do you play in the winter? |
26603 | What do you think Flaker will do? |
26603 | What do you think he can do that will be useful to the clan? |
26603 | What do you think he can teach them? |
26603 | What do you think he will learn of them? |
26603 | What do you think people mean when they say that some one is living a"hand- to- mouth"life? |
26603 | What do you think some mothers mean when they tell their children that the"Bogie- man"will get them? |
26603 | What do you think the Bison clan will do when Fleetfoot returns? |
26603 | What do you think the Cave- men wore? |
26603 | What do you think the Cave- men would do when the herds went away? |
26603 | What do you think the Cave- men would use instead of wax? |
26603 | What do you think the first saws were? |
26603 | What do you think the first thimbles were like? |
26603 | What do you think they were used for? |
26603 | What do you think they would say when they noticed that the animals had gone? |
26603 | What do you think would happen at such a time? |
26603 | What does your mother do, when she wants to find out whether the flatiron is hot enough to iron? |
26603 | What does your mother tell you to do when you come in dripping with sweat? |
26603 | What dried foods do we eat? |
26603 | What happens to the water in which a bitter vegetable is boiled? |
26603 | What happens to the water in which a sweet vegetable is boiled? |
26603 | What has become of them? |
26603 | What is it that makes the clicking sound when reindeer walk or run? |
26603 | What is the harpoon used for to- day? |
26603 | What kind of a voice does it have when it is angry? |
26603 | What kind of a voice does the reindeer have when it is good- natured? |
26603 | What kind of boiling- pots did people first use? |
26603 | What kind of boundaries did the hunting grounds have? |
26603 | What kind of dishes did the Cave- men have? |
26603 | What kind of men did the Cave- men have to be? |
26603 | What kind of rules and laws do you think the Cave- men made? |
26603 | What kind of thread did they have? |
26603 | What laws do you think they would make about hunting animals? |
26603 | What laws would they make about the use of plants? |
26603 | What might make them think of boiling food? |
26603 | What must any one do to be honored? |
26603 | What officers does a herd of bison have? |
26603 | What part could they use for leggings? |
26603 | What part of an animal''s skin could they use for sleeves? |
26603 | What people did the Cave- men honor most? |
26603 | What signs do you know? |
26603 | What tests do you think they would give the boys? |
26603 | What things do you think Fleetfoot will do? |
26603 | What tools did the Cave- men need in making flint spear points? |
26603 | What tools will he need to use in making weapons of bone or horn? |
26603 | What weapons do you think the Cave- men would take when they went to hunt the bison? |
26603 | What were some of the signs that a man was honored? |
26603 | What were the first holes which they made in their needles used for? |
26603 | What would happen to a hole made in a hard rock? |
26603 | What would happen to them if they were put over the fire? |
26603 | What would they do if it looked like a storm? |
26603 | When dangerous work needs to be done, what kind of men and women are needed? |
26603 | When do you think people began to use thimbles? |
26603 | When the Cave- men first learned to boil water, do you think they would think of boiling food? |
26603 | When the Cave- men wanted a limestone house, what did they do? |
26603 | When the snow is very deep, what do the wild animals do? |
26603 | When they found shells in the hard rocks instead of in the water, what do you suppose they would think? |
26603 | When they went away would they go in large or small herds? |
26603 | When they were lame and stiff, do you think they would know what made them so? |
26603 | Where do reindeer live now? |
26603 | Where do we get their food? |
26603 | Where do you think Flaker will live? |
26603 | Where were the reindeer at the time of the Tree- dwellers? |
26603 | Where were they at the time of the early Cave- men? |
26603 | Which are hard? |
26603 | Which do you think will be the greater man-- Fleetfoot or Flaker? |
26603 | Which for the heavy winter coats? |
26603 | Which of these do we use? |
26603 | Which of these do you think the Cave- men used? |
26603 | Which of these knots slip? |
26603 | Which of these knots would be the best to use in a trap? |
26603 | Which of these live in herds? |
26603 | Which skins do you think would be used for curtains and beds? |
26603 | Which skins would be used for clothing? |
26603 | Who would do the work which doctors do to- day? |
26603 | Why can the reindeer walk easily in the snow or on slippery places? |
26603 | Why did each clan have its own hunting ground? |
26603 | Why did mothers teach their children the boundary lines? |
26603 | Why did n''t they hang their boiling- pots over the fire? |
26603 | Why did people begin to make barbs? |
26603 | Why did the Cave men make holes in their awls? |
26603 | Why did the Cave- men have to learn to strike gentle blows in making their weapons? |
26603 | Why did the bison go away from the Cave- men''s hunting grounds each winter? |
26603 | Why did the men use weapons more than tools? |
26603 | Why did the reindeer come to the wooded hills by the caves at the time of the Cave- men? |
26603 | Why did the women use tools more than weapons? |
26603 | Why did they have to do these things? |
26603 | Why did they make more mistakes than people do to- day? |
26603 | Why do a child''s bones break less easily than an old person''s?__ If there is a spring in your neighborhood, go and see it. |
26603 | Why do animals become more cunning after they are hunted? |
26603 | Why do people build fences around their land? |
26603 | Why do people try to be careful not to leave poison around? |
26603 | Why do reindeer live in herds? |
26603 | Why do we have fences? |
26603 | Why do we have them? |
26603 | Why do we like to hear such stories? |
26603 | Why do we sometimes wax thread? |
26603 | Why do we use thimbles when we sew? |
26603 | Why do you think it was made to bulge near the bottom? |
26603 | Why do you think people first began to make fences and walls? |
26603 | Why do you think people invented new stitches? |
26603 | Why does a shelving rock sometimes break and fall to the ground?__ Model the cliffs which you find. |
26603 | Why was it easier to make pretty dyes after people knew how to boil? |
26603 | Why was it not safe to go on the land of a stranger? |
26603 | Why was the bottom made flat? |
26603 | Why was the neck made narrow? |
26603 | Why were handles put on this basket? |
26603 | Why were the Cave- men careful to make no mistake in the dance? |
26603 | Why were they afraid of it? |
26603 | Why would Willow- grouse want pretty colors? |
26603 | Why would it be harder for people to learn to boil than to roast? |
26603 | Why would people want the hardest bones for needles? |
26603 | Why would the people honor the one who taught them to preserve food by drying it? |
26603 | [ Illustration:"_ The reindeer swam through the deep water and waded out to the opposite bank._"]"Why did the reindeer jump into the river?" |
26603 | [ Illustration:_ Two views of a curved bone tool used by the Cave- men in polishing skins._] How did the Cave- men learn what they knew? |
26603 | in eggs? |
26603 | in seeds? |
12545 | ''How does it happen?'' 12545 ''What are you coming for you say?'' |
12545 | ''What did you come here for?'' 12545 ''What, are you here?'' |
12545 | ''Where did you come from?'' 12545 ''Where did you get her?'' |
12545 | Ala, my grandmother Alokotán, what shall we do? 12545 Ala, my_ abalayan_, is there any other debt?" |
12545 | Ala, now grandmother old woman Alokotán, how much must I pay, because you saved my wife Wanwanyen? |
12545 | Ala, now, sister- in- law, how much will we pay? |
12545 | And what can you all do if I am not, who am grass? 12545 And where are you going?" |
12545 | Are you a brave man? |
12545 | Are you here Aponitolau? 12545 Are you here now,_ tikgi_?" |
12545 | Are you sure those boys are your sons? 12545 Are you_ tabalang_ from Kaodanan?" |
12545 | Are you_ tabalang_ of Kadalayapan? |
12545 | Ay, Agta, did you not see the lady for whom we are waiting? |
12545 | Did the baby eat well? |
12545 | Did they accept our golden cup which looks like the moon, mother? |
12545 | Did they wish me to marry their daughter Dawinisan? |
12545 | Did you catch it, Sayen? |
12545 | Did you catch it, Sayen? |
12545 | Did you catch it, Sayen? |
12545 | Did you not give her any betel- nut? |
12545 | Did you sharpen the ends? 12545 Do you want to give him up to Aponitolau? |
12545 | Does the old enemy bring greetings? |
12545 | Good morning, what are you here for? |
12545 | How are you Gináwan? 12545 How are you, my Aunt?" |
12545 | How are you? 12545 How are you?" |
12545 | How are you? |
12545 | How can I go? 12545 How can you buy?" |
12545 | How did the firefly get in here? 12545 How did you get in here?" |
12545 | How did you get up there? |
12545 | How did you pass in here? |
12545 | How do you do now? |
12545 | How does it happen that you went to war, for you are only just from your mother''s womb? |
12545 | I know now what you want; why did you not tell the truth at first? 12545 I wonder how those_ tikgi_ sent all the rice? |
12545 | Is Aponibolinayen here? |
12545 | Is this the well of Aponibolinayen? |
12545 | Mother Alokotán, will you let us go to walk? 12545 Mother_ alan_ I ask you if I have a sister? |
12545 | My aunt, will you find out how I may become a man again? |
12545 | Niece Sinogyaman, where is the ford? |
12545 | No, do not rub it off; what is that? |
12545 | No, father, the spring will be lost and then what can we do? 12545 Oh, why are you here Ibago wa Agimlang who just came from your mother''s womb?" |
12545 | She is not, because she went to celebrate_ Sayang._[ 199] Did you not get the invitation of Gawigawen of Adasin? |
12545 | Tikgi, tikgi, Ligi, can we cut your rice which is_ amasi_ mixed with_ alomáski_ in the place of Domayási? |
12545 | What am I coming for you say? 12545 What are the dogs fighting about, Aponibolinayen? |
12545 | What are we going to do? 12545 What are we noisy about, you ask? |
12545 | What are you bending your head for? 12545 What are you coming here for, Aunt?" |
12545 | What are you coming here for? 12545 What are you laughing for?" |
12545 | What are you so downcast for? 12545 What are you so noisy about, you women who are like me?" |
12545 | What are you so noisy for, women like Aponibolinayen? |
12545 | What are you so sorry for if you gave her betel- nut? 12545 What can I do for this baby? |
12545 | What can I do, if I become a man now? 12545 What can I do?" |
12545 | What can you do if I am not-- who am_ legpet_? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do if I am not? |
12545 | What can you do? 12545 What did you come for?" |
12545 | What did you do, you_ tikgi_? 12545 What did you do?" |
12545 | What do you come here for, boys? |
12545 | What do you want here, Aunt? |
12545 | What do you want here? |
12545 | What has happened to the boy? 12545 What is it?" |
12545 | What is that? |
12545 | What is that? |
12545 | What is that? |
12545 | What is that? |
12545 | What is the matter of this boy who is the son of_ alan_? 12545 What is the matter that you can not go and get it yourself?" |
12545 | What is the matter with Dapilísan? 12545 What is the matter with my weapons that they weep oil? |
12545 | What is the matter with this woman that she does not leave any fish for her husband? |
12545 | What is the matter with this_ bunkaka_ that it talks bad? 12545 What is the matter with you, Ipogau?" |
12545 | What is the matter with you, father, that you swim in the blood? 12545 What is the matter with you, father? |
12545 | What is the matter with you? |
12545 | What is the matter, Aponibolinayen? 12545 What is the matter? |
12545 | What is your name then? |
12545 | What makes you feel so badly, Aponitolau? |
12545 | What man hung those little pigs in the basket in the tree? 12545 What name shall we give to this boy?" |
12545 | What shall we call our girl? |
12545 | What shall we call our son? |
12545 | What shall we call our son? |
12545 | What shall we call the baby? |
12545 | When you went to sail, did you not find the switch which belongs to Aponibolinayen? 12545 Where are our children-- the little pigs--?" |
12545 | Where are we going? |
12545 | Where are you going Aponibolinayen? |
12545 | Where are you going, Dogidog? |
12545 | Where are you going, Dogidog? |
12545 | Where are you going, Dogidog? |
12545 | Where are you going, lone man who is carrying the babies? |
12545 | Where are you going, rich young men? |
12545 | Where are you going? |
12545 | Where are you going? |
12545 | Where are you going? |
12545 | Where did the girl go? 12545 Where did you come from little baby?" |
12545 | Where did you come from, Aponibolinayen, for whom we have been seeking? 12545 Where did you come from, my dear sons?" |
12545 | Where did you come from? 12545 Where did you get her?" |
12545 | Where did you go, then? |
12545 | Where have you been, my sons? |
12545 | Where is Dona? |
12545 | Where is my bird? |
12545 | Where is your mother then? |
12545 | Who are the boys with Dagoláyan who go with us to fight? |
12545 | Who is that boy? |
12545 | Why are we going there? |
12545 | Why are you alone? |
12545 | Why are you here you ask? 12545 Why are you here, brother- in- law?" |
12545 | Why are you so thin, Aponibolinayen? |
12545 | Why are you walking in the middle of the jungle? |
12545 | Why did the son of_ alan_ kill someone before us? |
12545 | Why did we grow up in Nagbotobotán with our mother Alokotán, if you are truly our mother? |
12545 | Why did you become a little bird, Kanag? 12545 Why did you go to kill Aponibolinayen?" |
12545 | Why did you not tell the truth, Aponibolinayen? |
12545 | Why did you search for me? 12545 Why do n''t you wish to marry Gawigawen?" |
12545 | Why do we have a bad sign? 12545 Why do you agree, Awig, do you not like our only daughter?" |
12545 | Why do you blame us, Ligi? |
12545 | Why do you come here, Aunt? |
12545 | Why do you come here, rich young men? |
12545 | Why do you dislike our daughter Linongan? 12545 Why do you not like it? |
12545 | Why does Aponibolinayen want the mango fruit of Algaba of Dagála; does she not know that anyone who goes there can not return? |
12545 | Why have I another ring? |
12545 | Why is Aponibolinayen dead? 12545 Why is the fastening on the door different from before?" |
12545 | Why is there no one here? |
12545 | Why not? 12545 Why were you searching for them? |
12545 | Why( are) the mother and the baby in the ground? 12545 Why, Aponibalagen, do you detest me? |
12545 | Why, Ayo, does the milk from your breasts drop on my legs? |
12545 | Why, Cousin Dumalágan and Cousin Agyokan, do you destroy the town? |
12545 | Why, Dumanau, it is not the jungle where we are now; where are we? |
12545 | Why? |
12545 | Will one of you guide us to the house of our cousin Algaba? |
12545 | Will you comb my hair, Indiápan, because Aponibolinayen is impatient and does not want to comb my hair? |
12545 | Will you come with me to the place where my mother is while I ask for my tobacco? |
12545 | Will you go and tell her to come here and see what I have to sell? |
12545 | You ask why we are noisy? 12545 You look for the place where the people go across?" |
12545 | You people who are dipping water from the spring, where is a shallow place where we can cross? |
12545 | You people who are dipping water, where is the shallow place for us to cross? |
12545 | You people who are dipping water, where is the trail which leads to the house of Algaba of Dagála? |
12545 | You, grandmother, did you see a man who came here? 12545 You_ tabalang_, where did you come from? |
12545 | ("What town did they not yet invite?" |
12545 | A bird went to him and said,"Why do you stand here for a long time, Aponitolau?" |
12545 | A fish came and said,"What are you doing?" |
12545 | After that Ini- init said,"Why do you order to throw away, that which serves the purpose to which we put it, even though you cook many sticks?" |
12545 | After that Kaboniyan above, looking down( said),"What can you do? |
12545 | After that he asked them,"Is this the spring of Gawigawen of Adasen?" |
12545 | After that he whipped his perfume_ dagimonau_ and his father woke up and he was surprised to see the little boy by him and he said,"Who are you? |
12545 | Again she asked,"How shall I spin it?" |
12545 | And Kaboniyan answered,"How can you become cured of your sickness when you have a bad sign for that which you made-- your house? |
12545 | And Kadayadawan of Pintagayan said,"What is it?" |
12545 | And he looked out of the window and said,"What do you want?" |
12545 | Aponibalagen said,"How can we attend the_ balaua_ when we are searching for my sister?" |
12545 | Aponibolinayen answered,"Why did you come from the well? |
12545 | Aponibolinayen said,"What is the matter with you?" |
12545 | Aponibolinayen said,"Why do you still ask if you know?" |
12545 | Aponitolau jumped and he secured all their spears and headaxes, and he said to them,"Am I the next now?" |
12545 | Aponitolau said,"What shall I do, because of those companions of the beautiful woman? |
12545 | Appears as( a) Ayo,( b) Dolimáman(?). |
12545 | Are you the_ tabalang_ of Kapaolan? |
12545 | As soon as he arrived at the home of the lightning,"Where are you going?" |
12545 | As soon as he arrived at the place of_ Silit_[ 218] it said to him,"Where are you going, Aponitolau?" |
12545 | As soon as he arrived at the place where the young girls spun and had joined his companion, his cousin asked,"What did she say?" |
12545 | As soon as he arrived in the yard of Dawinisan, he said,"Good morning, Dawinisan, will you look out of the window at me?" |
12545 | As soon as he got down he sat and he bent his head,"What can I do? |
12545 | As soon as he returned to the place where Kanag was waiting he said,"Can you see my headaxe, little boy? |
12545 | As soon as the tattooed Igorot heard what he said, they said,"Why, do you brave baby come to fight with us for, you are very young? |
12545 | As soon as they arrived in Kadalayapan Aponibolinayen said to Ginalingan,"What is best for us to do for Aponitolau''s finger?" |
12545 | As soon as they arrived where Daldalipáto lived, he said,"How are you, Kabkabaga- an? |
12545 | As soon as they arrived where Ligi was waiting for them,"Where did you get the other boy who is with you?" |
12545 | As soon as they finished eating,"What do you want to pay?" |
12545 | As soon as they reached home Aponitolau said to Aponibolinayen,"Will you comb my hair? |
12545 | Asibowan said,"How can we chew betel- nut, for I do not chew for I am related to Kaboniyan?" |
12545 | Ca n''t you use your power so you do n''t have to swim?" |
12545 | Dagoláyan said to him,"What did you say when you killed that pretty girl? |
12545 | Did someone else hang them in the tree?" |
12545 | Did they not tell you?" |
12545 | Did you see the_ tabalang_ pass here?" |
12545 | Do n''t you know that a girl has many dangers? |
12545 | Gináwan said,"You women who are dipping water from the spring, to whom does it belong?" |
12545 | He asked,"Why do you not like to eat?" |
12545 | He looks again,"Why are my_ igam_ dull? |
12545 | He said to his sons,"Why do you not take the dead man?" |
12545 | He said,"What is the matter of the guards that they did not see those people enter the town? |
12545 | He says to himself,"To whom shall I give these goods which I am carrying? |
12545 | He truly went down to them,"What is the matter with you?" |
12545 | He walked very quietly, but the_ alan_ woke up and said,"What do you want?" |
12545 | How are you? |
12545 | How can I get them?" |
12545 | How can we make_ balaua_ again?" |
12545 | If you are not from Kapaolan, are you from Kanyogan?" |
12545 | Ini- init asked her,"What are you doing with that stick which you are breaking, which you put in the jar?" |
12545 | Kaboniyan asked,"Did you catch it?" |
12545 | Kaboniyan called to him,"Are you there, Sayen?" |
12545 | Kaboniyan[ 369] went to Sayen in Benben and said,"Are you a brave man, Sayen? |
12545 | Ligi said to them,"What are you going to do? |
12545 | Not long after Dolimáman went to ask Agtanang and Gamayawan, and she said to them,"Did you see our son Kanag?" |
12545 | Not long after Langa- an put on her skirt, and when she finished she said,"Are you not finished dipping water, Sinogyaman? |
12545 | Not long after he arrived at the place where the thunder was and it said,"Where are you going, little boy?" |
12545 | Not long after he revived him,"Why did you do that, Gawigawen? |
12545 | Not long after she walked on and she reached the place of many big trees and the big monkey met her and said,"Where are you going, Aponibolinayen?" |
12545 | Not long after they had killed Linongan,"Why does my breast flutter so, Awig?" |
12545 | Not long after they went and when they were in the middle of the way Algaba said,"Is it far yet?" |
12545 | Said the floor supports to the poles who were quarreling,"What can you do if I am not?" |
12545 | So he stopped playing and he said,"What is the matter with this flute? |
12545 | So he went up to the town and said,"Good morning, Aponibolinayen, will you give me some water to drink? |
12545 | So they went home and Dangdangáyan went to meet them at the gate of the town, and he asked at once,"Father and mother did they accept me?" |
12545 | Soon after,"How much do I pay?" |
12545 | Soon he appeared to them and they said to him,"Do you not wish to come back up with us?" |
12545 | Soon the chief of the spiders went to him:"What are you feeling sorry about, Aponitolau?" |
12545 | The spirit said,"Where am I now?" |
12545 | The women who had been at the spring said,"Why did you not invite Aponitolau? |
12545 | Then she asked,"What shall I do with it then?" |
12545 | What ails me, for I am so anxious to chew? |
12545 | What can you do now? |
12545 | What did you come here for, worthless woman?" |
12545 | What do you want here?" |
12545 | What do you want?" |
12545 | What is the matter with me?" |
12545 | What will Dagdagalisit use for his_ balaua?_ He ties a banana bark clout on his body. |
12545 | When Kanag and his wife returned to Kalaskigan they said,"Why did you stay so long? |
12545 | When he arrived at their house,"Why are you bending your head Aponitolau?" |
12545 | When he arrived, Aponibolinayen had finished cooking, and he asked where she got the fish which she had cooked, and she said,"Why do you ask again? |
12545 | When he got there, he saw the thumb, and said,"What are you doing?" |
12545 | When he had almost reached the place where the_ alzados_ were dancing he said,"What can I do to get the head of my daughter?" |
12545 | When he reached there, he said to his wife,"Wife, where am I now?" |
12545 | When it became time to eat, Aponibolinayen said,"What do we eat?" |
12545 | When she cooked it, the spirit ate it, and he asked,"Where is your mother- in- law?" |
12545 | When she reached the place where the spring was she said,"You people who are dipping water from the spring, whose place is this where the spring is?" |
12545 | When they all sat down beside the river, Dalonágan said,"What shall we use for the_ alawig_,[ 249] for your father and mother?" |
12545 | When they arrived up Gaygayóma said,"Why, Aponitolau, did you lie to me and not return? |
12545 | When they arrived where the king was,"Why Kadayadawan have you a pretty girl in your house? |
12545 | When they put their clouts on they asked the women,"Where is the road to the house of Algaba of Dagála?" |
12545 | When they reached the middle of the jungle they met a big frog, and it said,"Where are you going, young men?" |
12545 | When they reached the well, he asked again,"Is it still far?" |
12545 | Where am I going to go to find my daughter?" |
12545 | Where are you going?" |
12545 | Where are you going?" |
12545 | Where did you come from?" |
12545 | Where have you been so long? |
12545 | Where is Nagbotobotán? |
12545 | Where would I find a pretty woman?" |
12545 | While they were sitting there, the_ komau_ came to them and said,"How many have you?" |
12545 | Why are the dogs barking?" |
12545 | Why are you coming here?" |
12545 | Why can I not see him here?" |
12545 | Why did you come here?" |
12545 | Why did you not drink while you were there?" |
12545 | Why do n''t you tell us the news before you sleep?" |
12545 | Why do the dogs bark? |
12545 | Why do you bend your head?" |
12545 | Why do you come here?" |
12545 | Why do you have a daughter who is a young girl?" |
12545 | Why do you lie on your stomach?" |
12545 | Will you give us some of it to eat?" |
12545 | Will you go and arrange the_ pakálon? |
12545 | Will you please put him in your magic well which changes everything which goes in it and make him a young boy again?" |
12545 | [ 127]"Why does my hat cluck when I take it down? |
12545 | [ 161] And Kadayadawan asked,"How do we make_ Sayang_ by ourselves? |
12545 | [ 162]"Why do you do that Gawigawen?" |
12545 | [ 163]"Why do you say that you are not my mother?" |
12545 | [ 188]"What shall we name the baby?" |
12545 | [ 211]"What shall we call him?" |
12545 | [ 273]"What are we going to name it?" |
12545 | [ 302] 31 There were two girls who went to take a walk and a rich man met them, and he asked,"Where are you going, you two girls?" |
12545 | [ 305]"Why do not those Ipogau who are making_ Sayang_ start the_ balaua_[ 306] correctly?" |
12545 | [ 337] The sick man said to her,"How do we make_ bawi_, for we have never heard about that?" |
12545 | [ 392]"Where are you going?" |
12545 | [ 98] Her mother asked,"Where did you get this baby, Aponibolinayen?" |
12545 | said Gamayawán to them? |
12545 | said the rich man,"when you have no money?" |
5109 | ''But still, suppose I am deserving of destruction, why have the waves deserved this? 5109 36. Who hath put wisdom in the inward part? |
5109 | 5. Who can open the doors of his face? 5109 9. Who knoweth not in all these that the hand of the Lord hath wrought this?" |
5109 | At_ Wu_--the Sixth Stem-- the Darkness and the Light unite_ with injurious effects_--all things become_ solid_,( frozen? |
5109 | But, just as they had made a beginning, a prairie- wolf rushed in, and, crying out,''Why all this trouble and embroidery?'' 5109 But,"says one,"how long did all this take? |
5109 | I will not stir him up, like one that is cruel; for who can resist my( his?) |
5109 | Is it, indeed, possible that thy wrath and punishment and vexed indignation are altogether implacable, and will go on to the end to our destruction? 5109 Then answered Ganglere,''Does fire burn over Bifrost?'' |
5109 | What can he do? 5109 Where am I? |
5109 | Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? 5109 Who hath laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest? |
5109 | Who,says Origen,"that has sense, can think that the first, second, and third days were without sun, moon, or stars?" |
5109 | [ 1] But do these comets come anywhere near the orbit of the earth? 5109 [ 1] Is not all this a striking confirmation of my theory? |
5109 | [ 1] Now, what is the genesis of a comet? 5109 [ 1] They counseled together, and created four men of white and yellow maize( the white and yellow races?). |
5109 | [ 1] Was this burned log, thus found at a depth of twenty- two feet, a relic of the great conflagration? 5109 [ 1] What other results would follow at once from contact with the comet? |
5109 | [ 2] How could such a universal terror have fixed itself in the blood of the race, if it had not originated from some great primeval fact? 5109 [ 3] Dr. Dawson continues:"Was the Miocene period on the whole a better age of the world than that in which we live? |
5109 | and live? |
5109 | countenance,or,"who shall stand against me"( him?) |
5109 | using a_ large stone_ as an auger,( the fall of stones and pebbles?) |
5109 | ''Did the writer of Genesis invent an absurdity, or did he record an undoubted tradition? |
5109 | ( The cave?) |
5109 | 13 V. WAS IT CAUSED By GLACIERS? |
5109 | A voice spake:"Shall mortal man be more just than God? |
5109 | After the creation of the herbs and plants, what came next? |
5109 | Again the myth reappears; this time among the Norsemen: Balder, the bright sun,( Baal?) |
5109 | Again: where did the clay, which is deposited in such gigantic masses, hundreds of feet thick, over the continents, come from? |
5109 | Among the Esquimaux the soul crosses an awful gulf over a stretched rope, until it reaches the abode of"the great female evil spirit below"( beyond?) |
5109 | And by what means was_ the uniform thickness of the copper produced_? |
5109 | And did the Miztec barbarians, in their vanity, claim descent from these monstrous creatures of the sky? |
5109 | And dost thou give this as my recompense? |
5109 | And dost thou give this as my recompense? |
5109 | And how could the washings of rivers have made this uniform sheet, reaching over the whole length and half the breadth of this continent? |
5109 | And how did mankind come to be reduced to a handful? |
5109 | And if God has not done this terrible deed, who has done it? |
5109 | And if it occurred in that age, why do we hear nothing more about so extraordinary an event in the history of the Jews or of any other people? |
5109 | And if man was not or had not yet been on earth, whence could the name Heaven have been derived? |
5109 | And men have said:"Call ye this real history, or inspired narrative? |
5109 | And on the walls were tablets, and on one of them were inscribed these solemn words:"''Where are the kings and the peoples of the earth? |
5109 | And then the question arises, How did they hit upon a lie that accords so completely with the revelations of science? |
5109 | And thou sayest, How doth God know? |
5109 | And what do they affirm? |
5109 | And what greater guarantee of the future can we have than evolution? |
5109 | And what has all this to do with a darkness that cometh in the day- time in which the wicked grope helplessly? |
5109 | And what is I end that I should keep patience?" |
5109 | And when did God in{ p. 304} the natural order of things overturn mountains by the roots? |
5109 | And where is that which they collected and boarded? |
5109 | And who shall say that the material of all comets assumes the same form? |
5109 | And why does the record, in each case, tell us that the evening and the morning"constituted the day, instead of the morning and the evening? |
5109 | And why this recurrence of the word flint, so common in the Central American legends and religions? |
5109 | And why, if warm rains occurred in all ages, were not all the earlier rocks similarly changed while they were at the surface? |
5109 | And, on this last hypothesis, is this brightness owing to a kind of phosphorescence, or to the state of incandescence of the nucleus? |
5109 | Are not his days also like the days of an hireling?" |
5109 | Are not these statements incompatible?" |
5109 | Are they not there? |
5109 | Are they something, or the next thing to nothing? |
5109 | At last the Rabbit brings a round object,( the Sun? |
5109 | At last the dormouse undertook it, for at this time the dormouse was the largest animal in the world"( the mastodon? |
5109 | Blindness( darkness?) |
5109 | But again I ask, when in the natural order of events was dust poured on the earth and hardened into clods, like molten metal? |
5109 | But another says:"Why do you think the finer parts of the material of the comet are carried farthest back from the head?" |
5109 | But can you escape the facts by shrinking back? |
5109 | But did the earth escape with a mere shower of fireworks? |
5109 | But how about the markings, the_ striæ_, on the face of the surface- rocks below the Drift? |
5109 | But how can Bifrost mean the rainbow? |
5109 | But how can one curse a past period of time and ask the darkness to cover it? |
5109 | But how could the word"replenish"be applied to a new world, never before inhabited? |
5109 | But how did the human race fare in this miserable time? |
5109 | But how did the water change instantly from salt to fresh? |
5109 | But is not the attempt worth making? |
5109 | But it may be asked:"Are you right in supposing that man first rose to civilization in a great Atlantic island? |
5109 | But may they not also possess a light of their own? |
5109 | But one day the evil- one came, as in the Bible legend the Prince of the_ Rakchasos_( Raknaros-- Ragnarok?) |
5109 | But one other question remains: Did the Drift material come from the comet? |
5109 | But the south part of Ginungagap was lighted up by the_ glowing sparks_ that flew out of Muspelheim''( Africa?). |
5109 | But was it sudden? |
5109 | But what became of that elevation afterward? |
5109 | But what would make it move southward? |
5109 | But when the lemon and the banana grew in Spitzbergen, as geology assures us they did in pre- glacial days, where was the cold to come from? |
5109 | But where did the nitric acid come from? |
5109 | But where is the human race? |
5109 | But where were the rest of the assets of these bankrupt comets? |
5109 | But where were they? |
5109 | But why should there be warm rains at this particular period? |
5109 | But_ did_ the land rise up in this extraordinary fashion? |
5109 | By touching the corpse of his mother( the sun?) |
5109 | COULD A COMET STRIKE THE EARTH? |
5109 | COULD A COMET STRIKE THE EARTH? |
5109 | Can I live in a world where such things are to continue? |
5109 | Can all this be accident? |
5109 | Can all this mean nothing? |
5109 | Can any one suppose that this primitive people invented all this? |
5109 | Can he judge_ through the dark cloud?_"14. |
5109 | Can not the greed for information do one tenth as much as the greed for profit? |
5109 | Can these words then be of general application, and mean that those who lie down and rise not shall not awake for ever? |
5109 | Can we conceive of a force that was powerful enough to grind up the solid rocks, and yet was not able to remove its own_ débris_? |
5109 | Can we imagine a person, who never saw or heard of an elephant, drawing a picture of such a two- tailed creature? |
5109 | Canst thou put a ring in his nose, or bore through his jaw with a buckle? |
5109 | Could all this have been invented? |
5109 | Could all this orderly nature have grown up out of chance, out of the accidental concatenation of atoms? |
5109 | Could it be possible? |
5109 | Could such language properly be applied, even by the wildest stretch of poetic fancy, to a whale or a crocodile, or any other monster of the deep? |
5109 | DID MAN EXIST BEFORE THE DRIFT? |
5109 | DID MAN EXIST BEFORE THE DRIFT? |
5109 | Did God know no more about the nature of the heavens than this?" |
5109 | Did anything out of the usual order occur on the face of the earth about this time? |
5109 | Did ice grind this out of the granite? |
5109 | Did it originate out of it? |
5109 | Did not God do this very thing when he permitted the comet to strike the earth? |
5109 | Did the ice intelligently pick out a particular kind of rock, and that the hardest of them all? |
5109 | Do these descend upon the flat country? |
5109 | Do these lie in the track of the great collision? |
5109 | Do we not find his typical picture, with those great mule- tufts,( referred to by Professor Winchell,) the hare- like ears, on this coin of Illinois? |
5109 | Does this typify the fate of the world when the great catastrophe occurred? |
5109 | Doubtless, the inscribed tablets, by which the art of writing survived to the race; for what would tablets be without inscriptions? |
5109 | Escaped from what? |
5109 | FIRST, let us ask ourselves this question, Did man exist before the Drift? |
5109 | For he knoweth vain men: he seeth wickedness also; will he not then consider it? |
5109 | For whom should God have named it, if there were no human ears to catch the sound? |
5109 | From his physical disease? |
5109 | Has it been formed in space? |
5109 | Has the book of Job anything to do with that great event which we have been discussing? |
5109 | Hast thou entered into_ the storehouses of the snow_, or hast thou beheld the treasures of the_ hail?_". |
5109 | Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden? |
5109 | Hast thou marked_ the old way_ which wicked men have trodden? |
5109 | Hath he not seen the vanity and wickedness of man? |
5109 | Have you not been told that the gods made a bridge from earth to heaven, which is called Bifrost? |
5109 | He beholdeth under all the heavens,"( he is seen under all the heavens?) |
5109 | He says:"8. Who shut up the sea with doors, when it broke forth as issuing out of the womb? |
5109 | He, seeing all things destroyed, spoke thus to Monau:''Wilt thou also destroy the heavens and their garniture? |
5109 | Hermod, mounted on Odin''s horse, Sleifner, the slippery- one,( the ice?) |
5109 | His children are far from safety,"( far from any place of refuge?) |
5109 | How can I ever survive this great tempest? |
5109 | How can I, that am so mean and worthless, dare to appear before thy majesty? |
5109 | How can my strength stand the crushing of these stones? |
5109 | How can the stones of the field be in league with man? |
5109 | How closely does all this agree with Hesiod''s description of the shaking earth and the universal conflict of nature? |
5109 | How could his work have been so imperfect? |
5109 | How did it come to be? |
5109 | How did the ice pick out its materials so as to grind_ nothing but granite_? |
5109 | How did they get to Africa, Asia, and America?" |
5109 | How does the ordinary summer rain falling on the earth set up the low and destroy the wealthy? |
5109 | How else can these words be interpreted? |
5109 | How is the water in the clouds transferred to the clouds from the seas? |
5109 | How long ago, then, must it have been that the race lived there whose pavements and cisterns of Roman brick now lie_ seventy feet underground_?" |
5109 | How was it born? |
5109 | How? |
5109 | How? |
5109 | I quote from the"_ Younger Edda, The Creation_":"Then asked Ganglere,''What is the path from earth to heaven?''" |
5109 | IN the first place, are comets composed of solid, liquid, or gaseous substances? |
5109 | If a man speak, surely_ he shall be swallowed up?_"And then God talks to Job,( chap. |
5109 | If he_ cut off_ and_ shut up_ and_ gather together_, who can hinder him? |
5109 | If it was not caused by contact with a comet,_ what was it_? |
5109 | If neither waves, nor icebergs, nor glaciers, nor ice- sheets, nor comets, produced this world- cloak of_ débris_, where did it come from? |
5109 | If the Arctic ice- sheet does not create such a clay now, why did it create it centuries ago on the plains of England or Illinois? |
5109 | If the Drift of North America was due to the ice- sheet, why is there no drift- deposit in"the driftless region"of the Northwestern States of America? |
5109 | If the cold formed the ice and the ice formed the Drift, why is there no Drift in the coldest regions of the earth, where there must have been ice? |
5109 | If these clays were made from land- washings, how comes it that in some places they are red, in others blue, in others yellow? |
5109 | If this be not the true interpretation of Job, who, let me ask, can explain all these allusions to harmonize with the established order of nature? |
5109 | If this has been the case for two thousand years, why would they not remain unchanged for ten thousand, for a hundred thousand years? |
5109 | If this is not the interpretation, for what would Job dig about him? |
5109 | In that I supply green leaves to the_ cattle_, and_ corn_, a wholesome food for mankind, and_ frankincense_ for yourselves?" |
5109 | In the dense masses of clouds? |
5109 | In the first place, was it sudden? |
5109 | Is it an outcome of that pure carbon which the spectroscope has revealed to us as burning in some of the comets? |
5109 | Is it not time to discharge the race from its labors? |
5109 | Is it the great sword of Surt? |
5109 | Is my flesh brass, that it will not burn up? |
5109 | Is my strength the_ strength of stones?_ Or is my flesh of brass?" |
5109 | Is my strength the_ strength of stones?_ Or is my flesh of brass?" |
5109 | Is not all this wonderful? |
5109 | Is not this written in the book of Jasher? |
5109 | Is there any other allusion besides this to the fire which accompanied the comet in Genesis? |
5109 | Is there anything else in this dislocated text that refers to this first creation? |
5109 | Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth? |
5109 | Is there to be no mercy nor pity for us until the_ arrows of thy fury are spent?_. |
5109 | Is this the meaning of the"_ turbid_ chaos"? |
5109 | It is drawn and cometh out of the body; yea, the glittering sword"( the comet?) |
5109 | It may be asked,"How does your theory account for the removal of great blocks, weighing many tons, for hundreds of miles from their original site? |
5109 | It may be asked:"What relation, in order of time, do you suppose the Drift Age to hold to the Deluge of Noah and Deucalion?" |
5109 | Job''s disease? |
5109 | Let us turn to the next question: Was it an extraordinary event, a world- shaking cataclysm? |
5109 | Now it may be said that all this is a strained construction; but what construction can be substituted that will make sense of these allusions? |
5109 | On what sea- shore, in what river- beds, was this incalculable mass of clay, gravel, and stones found? |
5109 | One commentator makes this read:"Under him the whales below heaven bend,"( the crooked leviathan?) |
5109 | Or who has stretched the line upon it? |
5109 | Or who hath given understanding to the heart?" |
5109 | Or who laid the corner- stone thereof? |
5109 | Or why, if it did form on it, did it refuse to tear up the rock- surfaces and form Drift? |
5109 | Otherwise, how can we understand how God, as stated in the preceding verse, has just made the heavens{ p. 330} and the earth? |
5109 | Out of whose womb came the_ ice_? |
5109 | Peradventure, hast thou altogether forsaken thy nation and thy people? |
5109 | READER,--Let us reason together:-- What do we dwell on? |
5109 | Shall a man be more pure than his Maker? |
5109 | Shall friends"( Septuagint,"the nations") cut him in pieces, shall merchants"( Septuagint,"the generation of the Phœnicians")"divide him?" |
5109 | Shall it be told him that I speak? |
5109 | Shall not his excellency make you afraid? |
5109 | Shalt thou play with him as with a bird, or tie him up for thy handmaids? |
5109 | Solon, hearing this, said,''What do you mean?'' |
5109 | Still the heat is intense-- how long it lasts, who shall tell? |
5109 | That is to say, how can I ever bold out? |
5109 | That is to say, why did I not die before this great calamity fell on the earth, and before I saw it? |
5109 | The Rabbit said he came because his grandmother had altogether_ beaten the life out of him_"( the fallen_ débris_?). |
5109 | The earth_ is given into the hands of the wicked:_ he covereth the faces of the judges thereof; if it be not him, who is it then?" |
5109 | The original birthplace of the human race who shall tell? |
5109 | The scratched stones we may occasionally find,_ but where is the clay?_. |
5109 | The_ grinders of thy teeth_"( the dragon''s teeth of Ovid?) |
5109 | Then the gods"( the chiefs?) |
5109 | Then was Libya"( Sahara?) |
5109 | These latter attacked him with murderous intent( the comet assailed the sun? |
5109 | They say the Great Spirit made Mount Shasta first:"_ Boring a hole in the sky_,"( the heavens cleft in twain of the Edda?) |
5109 | This as the reward of my fertility and of my duty, in that_ I endure wounds from the crooked plow and harrows_, and am harassed all the year through? |
5109 | This last line shows how greatly the original text has been garbled; what have the cattle to do with it? |
5109 | To what whale or crocodile can these words be applied? |
5109 | WAS IT CAUSED BY A CONTINENTAL ICE- SHEET? |
5109 | WAS IT CAUSED BY CONTINENTAL ICE- SHEETS? |
5109 | WAS IT CAUSED BY ICEBERGS? |
5109 | WAS IT CAUSED BY ICEBERGS? |
5109 | WAS PRE- GLACIAL MAN CIVILIZED? |
5109 | WAS PRE- GLACIAL MAN CIVILIZED? |
5109 | WE come now to another and very interesting question: In what stage of development was mankind when the Drift fell upon the earth? |
5109 | WHAT IS A COMET? |
5109 | WHAT IS A COMET? |
5109 | WHAT is a glacier? |
5109 | Was it a catastrophe? |
5109 | Was this"thick air"the air thick with comet- dust, which afterward became the mud? |
5109 | Was this, too, the result of a comet visitation? |
5109 | We, indeed,_ have seen the sun_, but they-- now that his golden light begins to appear, where are they?" |
5109 | Were these"hideous beings"the comets? |
5109 | What are the proofs of my proposition that man survived on an Atlantic island? |
5109 | What are these solid materials? |
5109 | What became of it? |
5109 | What became of them? |
5109 | What caused the ice? |
5109 | What conclusion is forced upon us? |
5109 | What condition of ice can be imagined that would_ smash_ rocks, that would beat them like a maul, that would_ indent_ them? |
5109 | What could obscure them but dense clouds? |
5109 | What did these gases consist of? |
5109 | What do they get out of all this abundant and beautiful world? |
5109 | What do we infer? |
5109 | What does all this indicate? |
5109 | What does all this mean? |
5109 | What does existence give to them? |
5109 | What does this mean? |
5109 | What dramatist or novelist has ever yet made a plot which did not consist of events that had already transpired somewhere on earth? |
5109 | What earthly creature could terrify the angels in heaven? |
5109 | What earthly creature has ever breathed fire? |
5109 | What effect would these gases have upon our atmosphere? |
5109 | What has this Arabian poem to do with so many allusions to clouds, rain, ice, snow, hail, frost, and_ frozen oceans_? |
5109 | What is it? |
5109 | What is my strength that I can hold out? |
5109 | What is necessary to evaporation? |
5109 | What is rain in the first instance? |
5109 | What is the crooked serpent? |
5109 | What is the meaning Of FLINT here? |
5109 | What is the meaning of all this? |
5109 | What is the meaning of the whole poem? |
5109 | What is the proof of this? |
5109 | What next? |
5109 | What next? |
5109 | What next? |
5109 | What obscured them? |
5109 | What part of the earth? |
5109 | What relation can digging have with the disease which afflicted Job? |
5109 | What rivers intersect a rainbow? |
5109 | What rod-- what fear? |
5109 | What separated these various deposits? |
5109 | What was Python doing? |
5109 | What was it? |
5109 | What would be the result? |
5109 | What, now, are the elements of the problem to be solved? |
5109 | What,--he said to him,--can Solomon do to thee,"when thou art in the midst of this great sea?" |
5109 | When I lie down, I say, When shall I arise,_ and the night be gone?_ and I am full of tossings to and fro unto_ the dawning of the day_." |
5109 | When did they ever shed gold or stones? |
5109 | When has the sun refused to rise? |
5109 | When in history have the waters failed from the sea? |
5109 | When was_ the dust poured on the earth_, and the_ clods hardened together_?" |
5109 | Whence are the clouds derived? |
5109 | When{ p. 302} otherwise did the day and night come to an end? |
5109 | Where are Canaan and Pharaoh? |
5109 | Where are Korah and Haman? |
5109 | Where are the continents to be found which are composed of granite and nothing but granite? |
5109 | Where are the kings of the foreigners and the Arabs? |
5109 | Where are the kings of the regions of the earth"Where are the Amalekites? |
5109 | Where are the lords of high degree? |
5109 | Where are the mighty monarchs? |
5109 | Where are the troops? |
5109 | Where are those exposures of granite on the face of the earth from which ice or water could have ground them? |
5109 | Where did he live? |
5109 | Where did it come from? |
5109 | Where did it get the granite? |
5109 | Where did the clouds come from? |
5109 | Where did the heat come from? |
5109 | Where did the material of the Drift come from? |
5109 | Where is Sheddad, the son of Add? |
5109 | Where shall he save him? |
5109 | Where was"the island of the innocent"? |
5109 | Where were the continents, of any kind, from which these washings came? |
5109 | Where would the air cool first? |
5109 | Wherefore do I take my flesh in my teeth, and put my life in mine hand? |
5109 | Which were cut down out of time,_ whose foundation was overflown with a flood?_""20. |
5109 | Which were( was?) |
5109 | Who can tell what extraordinary revelations wait below the vast mass of American glacial clay? |
5109 | Who hath given understanding to the comet to do this work? |
5109 | Who shall count the ebbs and flows of eternity? |
5109 | Who shall say how far great revolutions and wars and other perturbations of humanity have been due to similar modifications? |
5109 | Who shall say how often this planet has been developed up to the highest forms of life, and how often all this has been obliterated in universal fire? |
5109 | Who shall say what circumstances accompanied an event great enough to crack the globe itself into immense fissures? |
5109 | Who shall say? |
5109 | Who shall tell the age of this old earth? |
5109 | Why did not the advancing ice- sheet drive these deposits southward over the plains of the United States? |
5109 | Why did they not appear? |
5109 | Why has thy brother''( Neptune)''deserved it? |
5109 | Why should I live, since there is none other of my kind? |
5109 | Why should a general cause produce only local results? |
5109 | Why should the ice have left this oasis, and refused to form on it? |
5109 | Why should the ice- sheet move southward? |
5109 | Why should the religious world shrink from the theory of evolution? |
5109 | Why should we refuse to accept this statement? |
5109 | Why was there no interval of brackish water, during which the blue and yellow clays would have gradually shaded into each other? |
5109 | Why were_ they_ not ground up with the granite? |
5109 | Why? |
5109 | Will he make a covenant with thee, and wilt thou take him to be a servant for ever? |
5109 | Will he make many supplications to thee, or speak soft words to thee? |
5109 | Will these trees, That have outlived the eagle, page thy steps And skip, when thou point''st out?" |
5109 | Would a comet meet all these prerequisites? |
5109 | Would the comet furnish us with such heat? |
5109 | Wrought what? |
5109 | Yet he shall perish for ever like his own dung: they which have seen him shall say, Where is be?" |
5109 | _ But by what means were they etched_? |
5109 | _ For the great day of his wrath is come_, and who shall be able to stand?" |
5109 | _ The flames went up to the very heavens, and melted many stars_, SO THAT THEY RAINED DOWN IN MOLTEN METAL UPON THE EARTH, forming the ore"[ gold?] |
5109 | _ and his dread fall upon you?_"12. |
5109 | and the_ frost_ from heaven, who hath gendered it? |
5109 | henceforth where will be our home? |
5109 | is hell any worse than this? |
5109 | or who can go into the midst of his mouth? |
5109 | that the peopled place become a wooded hill and_ a wilderness of stones?_. |
5109 | vii):"12: Am I sea or a whale,_ that thou hast inclosed me in a prison?_""7. |
5109 | was one moment in the northeast, and the next moment had whirled away into the northwest? |
5109 | xl, v. 20):"Canst thou draw out the leviathan with a book, or canst thou tie his tongue with a cord?" |
5109 | { p. 137} Was this jagged, white, sickle- shaped object a comet? |
5109 | { p. 155} this chariot; and yet, what have we greater than Jupiter? |
5109 | { p. 17} CHAPTER V. WAS IT CAUSED BY GLACIERS? |
5109 | { p. 191} Who would dare, among ourselves, to alter a syllable of the"Lord''s Prayer"? |
5109 | { p. 290} Who can doubt that these widely separated legends refer to the same event and the same patriarch? |
5109 | { p. 300} What is the meaning of all this? |
5109 | { p. 311}"4. Who can discover the face of his garment? |
5109 | { p. 318}"How,"it is asked,"could there be night and day and vegetation without a sun?" |
5109 | { p. 354} axe- kerf made by some civilized man who wielded a bronze or iron weapon? |
5109 | { p. 35} Can any one suppose that ice could so discriminate? |
5109 | { p. 389} again in vegetation? |
5109 | { p. 392} Set aside my theory as absurd, and how much nearer are you to solving the problem? |
5109 | { p. 410} Did the Fenris- Wolf, the Midgard- Serpent, and the Dog- Garm look like this? |
5109 | { p. 436} Who shall say? |