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 |
---|---|
20925 | When her ransom had arrived he met her with a smile, saying:"I have pleasant words for you this morning; would you like to hear them? |
15162 | Orrach( Orrock?) |
15924 | And who does not remember the sweet carol of Christmas Bells? |
15924 | Groton, Nov. 22,1763[ 8?]. |
15924 | How will the authorities at Plymouth treat this first division in the ruling church of the colony? |
15924 | Will they punish by severe fines, by imprisonment, by scourgings, or by banishment? |
15015 | But was not primitive man very lazy, and did he not do fewer things than he reasonably could have done? |
15015 | He created the world, and shall we liken ourselves unto him in seeking to penetrate into the mysteries of his creation? |
15015 | Portions of a paper printed in the_ Forum_, XXXVI, 305ff., with the title,"Is the Human Brain Stationary?" |
15015 | Shall we say, Behold this star spinneth round that star, and this other star with a tail goeth and cometh in so many years? |
15015 | What, indeed, would be the fate of a man on the streets of a city if he did otherwise? |
15015 | Will much knowledge create thee a double belly, or wilt thou seek paradise with thine eyes?... |
14825 | But can they withstand saturation? |
14825 | CHAPTER VIII THE CITY BUILDERS"What will happen to immigration when the public domain has vanished?" |
14825 | How else could it be when peoples of two such diverse epochs in racial evolution meet? |
14825 | Moreover, in the light of the law, who was a"merchant"and who a"visitor"? |
14825 | The labor unions are led by them; and what would municipal politics be without them? |
14825 | What race of people? |
14825 | What sort of nation? |
14825 | Whence come these millions? |
14825 | Where can they go? |
16088 | I do not ask about your feelings; I want to know if you are going to clean that gun? |
16088 | Does not the government both demand and accept it as in lieu of other service? |
16088 | For more than a week have we lain here, refusing to engage in hospital service; shall we retrace the steps of the past week? |
16088 | Hard beds are healthy, but I query can not the result be defeated by the_ degree_? |
16088 | How can we evade a fact? |
16088 | How can we reason with such men? |
16088 | Or shall we go South as overseers of the blacks on the confiscated estates of the rebels, to act under military commanders and to report to such? |
16088 | So as we go down to our trial we have no arm to lean upon among all men; but why dost thou complain, oh, my Soul? |
16088 | Then we are to be sent into the field, and there who will deliver us but God? |
16088 | What shall we receive at their hands? |
16088 | What would become of our testimony and our determination to preserve ourselves clear of the guilt of this war? |
18174 | ***** Why did Bryant dwell so often on the theme of death in Nature? |
18174 | But why, oh why, did n''t he name the trees? |
18174 | Is there any white on him, and if so, where? |
18174 | Is this the only planet with a plan of salvation? |
18174 | The square, the flag, the cross, the swelling bud of spring, what are they all but symbols of the realities? |
18174 | What difference can it make whether it take the shape of exhortation, or of passionate exclamation, or of scientific statement? |
13376 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
13376 | And the said John Solas is bound to the said Thomas Profyt in 100 pounds by a bond to make defense of the said lands and tenements by the bribery(?) |
13376 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
13376 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
13376 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
13376 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
13376 | What am I? |
13376 | What am I? |
13376 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
16038 | What are you doing here? |
16038 | & company? |
16038 | Besids, what could they see but a hidious& desolate wildernes, full of wild beasts& willd men? |
16038 | Is there not something extremely romantic in the characters of the men of that epoch? |
16038 | Las Casas was asked what number of negroes would suffice? |
16038 | Louisiana had been named from a king: was it not in keeping that those lakes should be called after ministers? |
16038 | Mr. Parris preached upon the text,"Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil?" |
16038 | Our general inquired of the French galley, which was the vessel nearest his,"Whence does this fleet come?" |
16038 | What could now sustaine them but y^e spirite of God& his grace?... |
16038 | What did it mean? |
16419 | ----- Who among the opulent is willing to restore a_ Father_ to his Family and Christmas Fire Side? |
16419 | But is it likely that the old methods of punishment would be considered by criminals themselves as severer than the present? |
16419 | But who ever heard that our_ pious_ ancestors_ ducked_ women for scolding?" |
16419 | Do you think it fit for any person to lie on? |
16419 | Is this state of things brought about by the infliction of light sentences, or is it caused by the increase among us of a bad foreign element? |
16419 | Still, in spite of this, do not most of us feel that it has of late years been rather safer to reside in a city than in the country? |
16419 | W. as a suitable compliment for this piece of service done his country? |
16419 | What had he done to merit such a punishment as this? |
16419 | What say you?" |
12767 | How was Massachusetts to treat such an appeal? |
12767 | How was it possible to deal with such a slippery creature? |
12767 | Is it objected--''But so I may expose myself to be spoiled or troubled''? |
12767 | Should she modify her constitution to please a tyrant or see it trampled under foot? |
12767 | The question is here suggested what could it have been in Gorton''s teaching that enabled him thus to"bewitch"these little communities? |
12767 | Vane had said in Parliament,"Why should the labours of any be suppressed, if sober, though never so different? |
12767 | What was the common purpose which brought these men together in their resolve to create for themselves new homes in the wilderness? |
12767 | When did the Roman Empire come to an end? |
12767 | [ Sidenote: When did the Roman Empire come to an end?] |
21645 | ''Indeed,''I answered;''and what appeared to be the emotions of the king? 21645 Indeed; and, pray, what was that?" |
21645 | What does he say to you? |
21645 | And to this letter Whittier added as a postscript:"Can you give me the address of Evelina Bray?" |
21645 | Are these the rocks whose mosses knew The trail of thy light gown, Where boy and girl sat down? |
21645 | As a postscript to this letter he asked:"Did you ever know Evelina Bray?" |
21645 | Doctor Warren replied,''Are you serious, Doctor Church? |
21645 | Eleazer( Dauphin? |
21645 | Morse?'' |
21645 | What did he say?'' |
11812 | Are petting parties dangerous? |
11812 | Are petting parties dangerous? |
11812 | Are you happy? |
11812 | KELLOGG, IRWIN, JR. Why breathe? |
11812 | KELLOGG, PHILIP M. Why breathe? |
11812 | Laddie, whither away? |
11812 | Laddie, whither away? |
11812 | MEARS, NEAL F. What is up in your family tree? |
11812 | ROBINSON, GEORGE L. Where did we get our Bible? |
11812 | SEE Meredith, I. H. Laddie, whither away? |
11812 | Where was Bobby? |
11812 | Where was Bobby? |
11812 | Where was Bobby? |
11812 | Where, grave, thy victory? |
11812 | Where, grave, thy victory? |
11812 | Why breathe? |
11812 | Why breathe? |
19564 | Judge:''Answer me, Sirrah.... How will you be try''d?'' 19564 Judge:''D''ye hear how the Scoundrel prates?... |
19564 | Are you guilty, or not guilty?'' |
19564 | Can it be that these two professions flourished most vigorously side by side, and that when one began to languish, the other also began to fade? |
19564 | Had you not better make one of us than sneak after these villains for employment?" |
19564 | Have not the medical men their Directory, the lawyers their List, the peers their Peerage? |
19564 | How dare you talk of considering?... |
19564 | I''d have you to know, Raskal, we do n''t sit here to hear Reason... we go according to Law.... Is our Dinner ready?'' |
19564 | What do they find to exercise their undoubted, if unsocial, talents and energies to- day? |
19564 | What have we to do with the Reason?... |
19564 | are these devils or what are they?" |
11809 | Can you solve it? |
11809 | How could I be forgetting? |
11809 | How could I be forgetting? |
11809 | How could I be forgetting? |
11809 | LENNES, HARRIET G. Whither democracy? |
11809 | What can a free man worship? |
11809 | What can a free man worship? |
11809 | What can a free man worship? |
11809 | What do you know? |
11809 | What do you know? |
11809 | What''s the use? |
11809 | What''s the use? |
11809 | Wherefore art thou, Romeo? |
11809 | Wherefore art thou, Romeo? |
11809 | Whither democracy? |
11809 | Who, when, where and what? |
11809 | Who, when, where and what? |
11809 | Worry? |
11809 | or pray? |
26040 | But why did so many of the early settlers, quickly leave the Atlantic coast for the Connecticut valley? |
26040 | There is still preserved a letter from England, written in a fine hand, with red ink, dated Obeydon? |
21501 | Can you agree on the proportions each colony should raise? |
21501 | Shall we Proteus- like perpetually change our ground, assume every moment some new strange shape, to defend, to evade? |
21501 | What are the reasons that have provoked the Lord to bring his judgments upon New England? |
21501 | And what was this Art of Virtue but a socialized religion divested of doctrine and ritual? |
21501 | And who could doubt that men who bought their clothes in London would readily crook the knee to kings? |
21501 | And who could say what lay beyond the Gulf of Guinea? |
21501 | But was this man provincial? |
21501 | Do you think you have some powerful kings here?--they have always the air of asking-- some great rivers, populous and thriving cities? |
21501 | III And who was not in search of gold? |
21501 | In how many unrecorded instances did a similar experience produce a similar effect? |
21501 | Or was it the influence of new inventions, railways, and the tightening bonds of commerce that did the work? |
21501 | Or was that, indeed, a province which produced such men? |
21501 | The flood tide of religious emotionalism ebbed but to flow in other channels? |
21501 | Was that country rightly dependent and inferior where law and custom were most in accord with the philosopher''s ideal society? |
22675 | And is it not pretty sport to pull up twopence, sixpence, or twelvepence, as fast as you can hale and veare a line? |
22675 | And may I not enter here a plea for the preservation of the box- edgings of our old garden borders? |
22675 | Another garden dial thus gives,"in long, lean letters,"its warning word:--"You''ll mend your Ways To- morrow When blooms that budded Flour? |
22675 | In what far Country does To- morrow lie? |
22675 | Now, how kin ye tell how fur it is acrost a tree afore ye cut it off? |
22675 | Sitting astride the ridge- pole, one poet sang:--"Here''s a mighty fine frame Which desarves a good name, Say what shall we call it? |
22675 | must I be shut in a closet and sit on a shelf?" |
22675 | what shall we name it?" |
20105 | Can any of the wounded pull a rope? |
20105 | *** Afraid of them!--what, sir-- shall we who have laid the proud British lion at our feet, now be afraid of his whelps?" |
20105 | But why should these tremendous efforts be necessary? |
20105 | Grave questions are presenting themselves for solution, but who can doubt that the American people have the brain and the vigor to solve them? |
20105 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
20105 | Menendez asked:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?" |
20105 | Said, in a tremulous voice:''Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?''" |
20105 | That they learned to love their adopted land who can question? |
20105 | The question is then put,''Does any one object?''" |
20105 | Was it to be Badajos over again? |
20105 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
20105 | What would they have? |
20105 | When all of the Frenchmen, about two hundred in number, had been thus secured, Menendez again asked them:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?" |
20105 | When some one objected that she was a pagan--"Is it not my duty,"he replied,"to lead the blind to the light?" |
20105 | Why stand we here idle? |
12772 | And why not in my own? |
12772 | Besides, was he not already the mortuary poet of All Saints, Northampton? |
12772 | Did not our hearts feel all he deign''d to say, Did they not burn within us by the way? |
12772 | Hover''d thy spirit o''er thy sorrowing son, Wretch even then, life''s journey just begun? |
12772 | How shall I speak thee, or thy power address, Thou God of our idolatry, the press? |
12772 | On the morning of her death he asked the servant"whether there was life above stairs?" |
12772 | Otherwise why so much art? |
12772 | Shall I once more give you a peep into my vile and deceitful heart? |
12772 | What motive do you think lay at the bottom of my conduct when I desired him to call upon you? |
12772 | What was the attraction to this"well,"this"abyss,"as Cowper himself called it, and as, physically and socially, it was? |
12772 | What was the source of his madness? |
12772 | Why did not Cowper go on writing these charming pieces which he evidently produced with the greatest facility? |
12772 | Why hire a lodging in a house unknown For one whose tenderest thoughts all hover round your own? |
12772 | and if to deceive, wherefore and with what purpose? |
12772 | shall the old African blasphemer stop while he can speak?" |
12772 | when I learn''d that thou wast dead, Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed? |
18992 | Do ye give in to fairies then, ma''am? |
18992 | Earnest, now? |
18992 | Honestly? |
18992 | You wo n''t tell? |
18992 | A child to whom is told any story which he considers remarkable will usually reply by an expression of skepticism, such as:"Really and truly?" |
18992 | And whom shall I marry? |
18992 | Cut your nails Monday morning, without speaking(? |
18992 | First boy:"Cut your throat?" |
18992 | First boy:"Honor bright?" |
18992 | For whom make the bed? |
18992 | If the"cradle cap"of a baby be combed with a( fine?) |
18992 | In the ring games of our school children they always move sunwise, though whether because of convenience or from some forgotten reason who can say?" |
18992 | Is this because death is thereby suggested, since it is so customary to have enlarged copies of a photograph made after the decease of the original? |
18992 | It is bad luck or death to dream of naked clinging( climbing?) |
18992 | Let the( blindfolded?) |
18992 | The first time you see the moon in the New Year, look at it and say,-- Whose table shall I spread? |
18992 | The woman to the parson said:"Shall I be so when I am dead?" |
18992 | Throw a ball of yarn into an unoccupied house, and holding the end of the yarn, wind, saying,"I wind and who holds?" |
18992 | To dream of white things is lucky( or sign of death?). |
18992 | To dream on land of a vessel( with sails set?) |
18992 | Whose name shall I carry? |
18992 | or,"How did you break my vase?" |
17857 | Is that the way you employ your precious time? 17857 What is this I see, Harriet?" |
17857 | ''George,''said his father,''do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry tree yonder in the garden?'' |
17857 | Could anything be more lucid? |
17857 | Fleet, 1789?] |
17857 | Fleet, 1789?] |
17857 | How else could elders and guardians have placed without scruple such books in the hands of children? |
17857 | In the Bible Adam( or is it Eve?) |
17857 | Is there no possibility of arresting this force of evil? |
17857 | Margery, upon her rounds to teach the farmers''children to spell such words as"plumb- pudding""( and who can suppose a better? |
17857 | Mr. Hildeburn has given Rivington a rather unenviable reputation; still, as he occasionally printed(?) |
17857 | Was the price marked upon its page as a reminder that two shillings was a large price to pay for a boy''s book? |
17857 | What say you to a little good prose? |
17857 | Who can forget? |
17857 | Who can spurn the ministers of joy That waited on the lisping girl and petticoated boy? |
17857 | Who except Goldsmith was capable of this vein of humor? |
17857 | Who to- day could wade through with children the good- goody books of that generation? |
20203 | For,says he,"I am often ask''d by those to whom I propose subscribing, Have you consulted Franklin upon this business? |
20203 | How so? |
20203 | I have ask''d her,says my landlady,"how she, as she liv''d, could possibly find so much employment for a confessor?" |
20203 | Is it possible, when he is so great a writer? 20203 My dear friend,"says he, pleasantly,"how can you advise my avoiding disputes? |
20203 | So, you are soon return''d, Innis? |
20203 | 1774? |
20203 | And what does he think of it? |
20203 | Had not you better sell them? |
20203 | If you ask, Why less properly? |
20203 | If you were a Servant, would you not be ashamed that a good Master should catch you idle? |
20203 | Methinks I hear some of you say,_ Must a Man afford himself no Leisure_? |
20203 | Music have I done to- day? |
20203 | Now, is not_ want of sense_( where a man is so unfortunate as to want it) some apology for his_ want of modesty_? |
20203 | One of his friends, who sat next to me, says,"Franklin, why do you continue to side with these damn''d Quakers? |
20203 | Published)_ The Morals of Chess._ 1780? |
20203 | The following are the most famous of these essays and the dates when they were written: 1774? |
20203 | The others said,"Let us row; what signifies it?" |
20203 | This reproof, being before all the company, piqu''d the secretary, who answer''d,_"I being thy servant, why did thee not order me to come down? |
20203 | Who can charge_ Ebrio_ with Thirst of Wealth? |
20203 | Yet, unsolicited as he was by me, how could I think his generous offers insincere? |
20203 | You ask what I mean? |
20203 | _ The Levee._ 1779? |
20203 | _ The Story of the Whistle._ 1779? |
20203 | and would not the lines stand more justly thus? |
20203 | how should it be otherwise, when the Distemper hath hardly any Objects left to work upon? |
20203 | says one of them,"you surely do n''t suppose that the fort will not be taken?" |
20203 | {} Contrive day''s_ Question._ What good{} business, and take the shall I do this day? |
21895 | What''s the best road to Jericho Beach? |
21895 | Which way to Egypt? |
21895 | And why? |
21895 | But is the message cheering? |
21895 | Can we imagine the emptiness, the illimitable loneliness of that bay? |
21895 | Even the number of historic forts seems a proper part of those righteous days, for when did religion and warfare not go hand in hand? |
21895 | How did they compare with the modern home and household? |
21895 | How is this for the minister''s salary? |
21895 | How many of us of this softer age can contemplate without a shiver the vision of people sitting hour after hour in an absolutely unheated building? |
21895 | Is it that vivid natures unconsciously seek an environment characteristic of them? |
21895 | Is this an echo from that time when the Bible was the corner- stone of Church and State, of home and school? |
21895 | Or are they, perhaps, inevitably forced to create such an environment wherever they find themselves? |
21895 | Or will you look out first, on all sides and see the harbor, the city and country as it is to- day? |
21895 | The homes which these pioneers so laboriously and so lovingly wrought-- what were they? |
21895 | What of the services conducted there? |
21895 | What then of the services? |
21895 | Why not, when the Lincoln family, ancestors of Abraham, has been identified with the town since its settlement? |
21895 | Will you read the inscriptions first and recall the events which have raised this special hill to an historic eminence equal to its topographical one? |
11490 | Is there anything particular in the cases of Ruth, Hannah and Pegg,he enquired,"that they have been returned as sick for several weeks together?... |
11490 | ''I know that,''says the first,''but what is it?'' |
11490 | ''What have you been doing, my boys,''said our coachman in passing,''to entitle you to these ruffles?'' |
11490 | ''What is this I hear about you and Sam, eh?'' |
11490 | ''Why,''say they,''should all our cotton make so long a journey to the North, to be manufactured there, and come back to us at so high a price? |
11490 | Do n''t you see, Mr. Miller, that we had better let you keep and plant your seed? |
11490 | How could they justly continue to hold men in bondage when in vindication of their own cause they were asserting the right of all men to be free? |
11490 | Some of these, embarrassed by the question''What further is to be done with them?'' |
11490 | That they are not to be violated but with his wrath? |
11490 | The men were making feeble attempts to light a fire....''Colonel,''said one of them as I rode past,''this is the gate of hell, ai n''t it?'' |
11490 | The question then arises, Why was there so large a recourse to negro slave labor? |
11490 | The traveler reported a tilt between two wagoners:"''What''s cotton in Augusta?'' |
11490 | There were injustice, oppression, brutality and heartburning in the régime,--but where in the struggling world are these absent? |
11490 | Were there any remedies available? |
11490 | What do the bulk of the people get here that they can not have there for one fifth the labor in the western country?" |
11490 | What then was the consequence? |
11490 | What will my children say if I deprive them of so much estate? |
11490 | Wo n''t you alight, come in, take a seat and sit awhile? |
11490 | how d''ye massa? |
12288 | When shall we three meet again, In thunder, lightning or in rain? 12288 Who then was the''witch''with whose execution Connecticut stepped into the dark shadow of persecution? |
12288 | Did Longfellow, after a critical study of the original evidence and records, truly interpret Mather''s views, in his dialogue with Hathorne? |
12288 | Did he deserve it? |
12288 | He may have been the husband or father of''Achsah''[?] |
12288 | How may this story best be told? |
12288 | Mary asked, Who gave you the commission? |
12288 | One time she sd she saw her and describd her whole attire, her[ master]? |
12288 | To ye 1st Quest whether a plurality of witnesses be necessary, legally to evidence one and ye same individual fact? |
12288 | What law embalmed in ancientry and honored as of divine origin has been more fruitful of sacrifice and suffering? |
12288 | What of this literature? |
12288 | What was done at Salem, when the tempest of unreason broke loose? |
12288 | What were those rules of evidence and of procedure attributed to Mather? |
12288 | Whether the preternatural apparitions of a person legally proved, be a demonstration of familiarity with ye devill? |
12288 | Who were the chief actors in it? |
12288 | Whose is that pathetic figure shrinking in the twilight of that early record? |
12575 | And would you, now, venture to_ book_ a place for me? |
12575 | And, perhaps, you will go so far as to receive half my fare? |
12575 | Do''ee want to get up, zur? |
12575 | So you_ will_ venture then to_ book_ a place for me? |
12575 | So, sir,said I to the book- keeper,"you start a coach, to London, at five in the morning?" |
12575 | The End,with"Who danced at the Wedding?" |
12575 | Well, zur, I''ll_ carl_''ee; but will''ee get up when I_ do_ carl? |
12575 | Who''s there? |
12575 | You are certain of that? |
12575 | You understand me? 12575 And must I turn away? 12575 At_ five_?--in the MORNING? |
12575 | Can any thing be more full of pathos? |
12575 | Can guilt or misery ever enter here? |
12575 | Do not such things sound more like the ravings of madmen, than the sober conclusions of people in their waking senses? |
12575 | Even had all the materials for the operation been tolerably thawed, it was impossible to use a razor by such a light.--"Who''s there?" |
12575 | Hark, hark!--it is my mother''s voice I hear, Sadder than once it seem''d-- yet soft and clear-- Doth she not seem to pray? |
12575 | Is it indeed the night That makes my home so awful? |
12575 | Is it the brooding night? |
12575 | Is it the shivery creeping on the air, That makes the home, so tranquil and so fair, O''erwhelming to my sight? |
12575 | Is there a chance of my overtaking it?" |
12575 | Let the house be kept perfectly quiet, and desire the chambermaid to call me--""At what o''clock, zur?" |
12575 | Passing one day by a portico, wherein several women were seated, one of them whispered, with a look of awe;"Do you see that man? |
12575 | Perhaps, now-- pray be attentive-- perhaps, now, you will carry on the thing so far as to receive the whole?" |
12575 | What are garlands and crowns to the brow that is wrinkled? |
12575 | What care I for the wreaths that can_ only_ give glory? |
12575 | What mortal can be made to believe, without demonstration, that the sun is almost a million times larger than the earth? |
12575 | When for, sir?" |
12575 | Where were my boots? |
12575 | Who does not remember the Butterfly''s Ball and the Grasshopper''s Feast in the halcyon days of their childhood? |
12575 | for admitting that the proprietors might prevail on some poor idiot to act as coachman, where were they to entrap a dozen mad people for passengers? |
12575 | or that there exist animated and regularly organised beings, many thousands of whose bodies laid close together would not extend an inch? |
12575 | who imagines they should?" |
20160 | _ Q._ How do you prove that there is but one true God? 20160 All were put into the utmost consternation-- men, women, and children crying,''What shall we do?'' 20160 Almost of course the good people began with the question, What good men shall we keep out? 20160 And who can look at our past history and feel proud of our present status? |
20160 | But when they handed Dr. Dwight a list of subjects for class disputation, to their surprise, he selected this:''Is the Bible the word of God?'' |
20160 | Could this be due to the Quaker faith in the sufficiency of"the Light that lighteneth every man that cometh into the world"? |
20160 | Did not these things betoken a superficial piety, springing up like seed in the thin soil of rocky places? |
20160 | How could the two parties walk together when one prayed_ Vater unser_, and the other_ unser Vater_? |
20160 | It is a prevailing trait of this theology, born of the great revival, that it has constantly held before itself not only the question, What is truth? |
20160 | Nay, verily, said Murray( in this following one of his colleagues, James Relly); what saith the Scripture? |
20160 | Shall we be unworthy of the trust? |
20160 | Should this consent be given? |
20160 | The foundations were destroyed, and what should the righteous do? |
20160 | The governor was incompetent and corrupt, and the minister was faithful and plain- spoken; what could result but conflict? |
20160 | This, with Doddridge''s hymn,"My God, and is thy table spread?" |
20160 | Were all the population of Salem to be reckoned as of the church of Salem? |
20160 | What form will the structure take? |
20160 | Would it tend to mitigate the intensity of sectarian competition, or would it tend rather to aggravate it? |
20160 | and if not, who should"discern between the righteous and the wicked"? |
20160 | but also the question, How shall it be preached? |
10019 | ''She puerwell, shir? |
10019 | Almost new!--_what_ was? |
10019 | Did n''t I tell you he''d do it? |
10019 | Has either''f you gen''l''men ever been''n Uncle? |
10019 | How dare you treat a Southerner in this way? |
10019 | I say, TOM,said the leader,"what''s her little game?" |
10019 | Is the Prussian whom we have helped to humble to be our only ally? 10019 PERHAPS; BUT WHAT''S A SMILE? |
10019 | Shall it be thus? 10019 The Cave of the Winds? |
10019 | WILL YOU HAVE''EM ON ONE PLATE OR ON TWO PLATESES?] |
10019 | Well, then, where''s that umbrella? |
10019 | What is the matter, gentlemen? |
10019 | What was the result of that experiment? 10019 Where are those nephews-- where''s that umbrella?" |
10019 | Why? |
10019 | But who cares about this grade of bliss? |
10019 | Could he supply a couple of poached eggs and a cup of milk? |
10019 | Did you Ne''er read of the Nereids, Mr. PUNCHINELLO? |
10019 | Is war the only alternative? |
10019 | Judge SWEENEY wished to know if Mr. PENDRAGON had any political relations, or could influence any votes? |
10019 | Then, with a momentary brightening--"''scuse me, shir: whah''ll y''take?" |
10019 | Was there no nobler game worth the killing by Tammany? |
10019 | Was there not a"stag of Ten"to be found, to be struck, if party necessities required it? |
10019 | Where is he?" |
10019 | Who won? |
10019 | Would that I were a poet, that I-- But I ai n''t, so what''s the use? |
10019 | [ Illustration] Does not this look cool? |
10019 | cried Mr. P;"Why, what do you mean?" |
10019 | he asked, in great agitation:"must I take the oath of Loyalty; or am I required by Yankee philanthropy to marry a negress?" |
10019 | who can do justice to them and their lovely wearers? |
27867 | Of course,replied the fellow,"for we_ feed_ ourselves, but for teaching we depend on_ you._"*****[ Illustration: The Reg(ulator?)] |
27867 | Well, how are you this morning? |
27867 | _ Utica_ asks, Need we keep dark any longer? |
27867 | Are you fond of coughs, colds, dyspepsia and rheums? |
27867 | But would you avoid the dark gloom of disease? |
27867 | Did you ever know such weather? |
27867 | Do our readers wish to hear any thing more about them? |
27867 | How many square inches aperture will be required to discharge the same quantity in the same time? |
27867 | Of bitters, hot- drops, and medicine fumes, And bleeding, and blisters and pills? |
27867 | Of headaches, and fevers and chills? |
27867 | The scholar so dull in his class? |
27867 | Then who pays those old accounts of yourself that was?" |
27867 | Well, what if he does? |
27867 | What astronomer had calculated this eclipse for Arabia? |
27867 | What makes the grave deacon so drowsy at church? |
22822 | Can I not hit you? |
22822 | ''Somnia, terrores magicos, miracula, sagas, Nocturnos lemures, portentaque Thessala rides?'' |
22822 | ***** Can not my body, nor blood- sacrifice, Entreat you to your wonted furtherance? |
22822 | Appear in divers shapes to Kelly, And speak i''th''nun of Loudun''s belly? |
22822 | Did he not help the Dutch to purge At Antwerp their cathedral church? |
22822 | First Scholar--"Why did not Faustus tell us of this before, that divines might have prayed for thee?" |
22822 | From whence come you now, Catch, limping? |
22822 | Good sir, is it not one manifest kind of idolatry for them that labour and are laden to come unto witches to be refreshed? |
22822 | Indignant, the accused addressed the lady,''Madam, why do you use me thus? |
22822 | Matthew?'' |
22822 | Meet with the Parliament''s committee At Woodstock on a pers''nal treaty? |
22822 | Oh, why is this immortal that thou hast?'' |
22822 | Sing catches to the saints at Mascon, And tell them all they came to ask him? |
22822 | The girl no sooner noticed her than she began to cry out, pointing to the old woman,''Did you ever see one more like a witch than she is? |
22822 | To the sceptics( or to the_ atheists_, as they were termed) the orthodox could allege,''Will you not believe in witches? |
22822 | Why wert thou not a creature wanting soul? |
22822 | was publicly accused of sorcery: it was affirmed that''he had a familiar demon[ the Socratic Genius? |
11837 | ALLEN, HARLAND H. Whither interest rates? |
11837 | Am I blue? |
11837 | America''s dilemma: alone or allied? |
11837 | CAMPBELL, KATHERINE R. Why smash atoms? |
11837 | Did Shakespeare translate The Decameron? |
11837 | Did you ever? |
11837 | Do n''t you want to greet the rosy fingered dawn? |
11837 | Do these bones live? |
11837 | Do you remember? |
11837 | GOODSPEED, STEPHEN S. How came the Bible? |
11837 | Have you met these women? |
11837 | Help or handicap? |
11837 | How came the Bible? |
11837 | How came the Bible? |
11837 | I give up, where are you from? |
11837 | Interior with figures; or, Why is this goddam thing hurting me so? |
11837 | Is the kingdom of God realism? |
11837 | Marxism, is it science? |
11837 | May I borrow a cup of cyanide? |
11837 | Nemesis? |
11837 | Nemesis? |
11837 | Say, is this the U.S.A? |
11837 | Schenley swallows sing: Schenley whiskey''s unexcelled, reason? |
11837 | Schenley swallows sing: Why Journey to some polar spot? |
11837 | TOPPING, DONALD G. Who is this girl? |
11837 | Tell me, where is fancy bred? |
11837 | The first American novelist? |
11837 | The first American novelist? |
11837 | Well, who made the magic go out of our marriage, you or me? |
11837 | What Is It? |
11837 | What do you want to be inscrutable for, Marcia? |
11837 | What is Christianity? |
11837 | What makes Sammy run? |
11837 | What will become of Europe? |
11837 | What will become of Europe? |
11837 | What''s he up to? |
11837 | What''s their game? |
11837 | Who are Catholics? |
11837 | Who is this girl? |
11837 | Who is this girl? |
11837 | Whose surprise? |
11837 | Whose surprise? |
11837 | Why ca n''t I fly? |
11837 | Why smash atoms? |
11837 | You ever fought an Injun? |
11837 | abroad as Nemesis? |
11089 | Aye,said I,"and what things were they?" |
11089 | Do you understand, friend, as well as read this book? 11089 I am glad,"replied I,"to hear you say so; and pray what is the good book you read?" |
11089 | Again, who is it that teaches your slaves to read? |
11089 | And do they give those that are young such an education as becomes Christians; and are the others encouraged in a religious and virtuous life? |
11089 | And who taught you to read it? |
11089 | Are all set at liberty that are of age, capacity, and ability suitable for freedom?" |
11089 | CHAPTER IV ACTUAL EDUCATION Would these professions of interest in the mental development of the blacks be translated into action? |
11089 | Doomed then to be half- fed, poorly clad, and driven to death in this cotton kingdom, what need had the slaves for education? |
11089 | Has one susceptibilities of improvement, mentally, socially, and morally? |
11089 | Here is something_ practical_; where are the whites and where are the blacks that will respond to it? |
11089 | I asked him likewise, how he got comfort under all his trials? |
11089 | I know him; he is a very good man; but what does he say to your leaving his work to read your book in the field? |
11089 | Is one bound by the laws of God to improve the talents he has received from the Creator''s hands? |
11089 | Is one embraced in the command''Search the Scriptures''? |
11089 | Now the question which naturally arises here is, to what extent were such efforts general? |
11089 | Now, colored men, what do you mean to do, for you must do something? |
11089 | So I see you have been reading, my lad? |
11089 | Supposing however the funds raised for such an institution, where are the professors to come from? |
11089 | The Bible!--Pray when did you get this book? |
11089 | They_ must_ be educated in this country; and how can that be done without establishing an institution specially for young colored men? |
11089 | Was interest in the education of this class so widely manifested thereafter as to cause the movement to endure? |
11089 | Well did you do so? |
11089 | Well, I have a great curiosity to see what you were reading so earnestly; will you show me the book? |
11089 | Well, what does that book teach you? |
11089 | Were these beginnings sufficiently extensive to secure adequate enlightenment to a large number of colored people? |
11089 | What Boss anti- slavery mechanic will take a black boy into his wheelwright''s shop, his blacksmith''s shop, his joiner''s shop, his cabinet shop? |
11089 | What can be done in order to instruct poor children, white and black to read? |
11089 | What directions shall we give for the promotion of the spiritual welfare of the colored people? |
11089 | Where are the antislavery milliners and seamstresses that will take colored girls and teach them trades, by which they can obtain an honorable living? |
11089 | Who is your master? |
11089 | Who would tolerate an indictment against his son or daughter for teaching a slave to read? |
11089 | Would the whites permit the blacks to continue as their competitors after labor had been elevated above drudgery? |
11089 | Would they secure to Negroes the educational privileges guaranteed other elements of society? |
11089 | [ 3] Answering these inconsistent persons, John Wesley inquired:"Allowing them to be as stupid as you say, to whom is that stupidity owing? |
11089 | _ How_ shall this be done? |
29853 | Did Endecott remember, we wonder, a certain incident connected with the royal ensign at Salem? |
21090 | And I said,''Why is this thus? 21090 Mais ou sont les neiges d''antan?" |
21090 | They said,''Doth not like us?'' 21090 They then said,''Wilt not marry us?'' |
21090 | What are the trees saying? |
21090 | What though the field be lost? 21090 Where are the snows of yester year? |
21090 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? 21090 At Genoa he drives the cicerone to despair by pretending never to have heard of Christopher Columbus, and inquiring innocently,Is he dead?" |
21090 | Do put your accents in the proper spot; Do n''t, let me beg you, do n''t say''How?'' |
21090 | How Sleep the Brave? |
21090 | In such verses as Carew''s_ Encouragements to a Lover_, and George Wither''s_ The Manly Heart_--"If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?" |
21090 | In the_ Europeans_, 1879, and an{ 588}_ International Episode_, 1878, he has reversed the process, bringing Old Word[ Transcriber''s note: World?] |
21090 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
21090 | It was the precise point at which Sidney Smith had uttered that bitter taunt in the_ Edinburgh Review_,''Who reads an American book?'' |
21090 | Or are ye very Nature, the goddéss, That have depainted with your heavenly hand This garden full of flowrës as they stand?" |
21090 | So young and so untender? |
21090 | Thou bender of the thistle of Lora; why, thou breeze of the valley, hast thou left mine ear? |
21090 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men That rived the rebel line asunder?" |
21090 | What Was it? |
21090 | What frail man Dares lift his hand against it? |
21090 | What is patriotism? |
21090 | What is the reason of this thusness?'' |
21090 | What''s that you say?-- Why, dern it!--sho!-- No? |
21090 | Who, even after a single reading or representation, ever forgets Falstaff, or Shylock, or King Lear? |
21090 | Whom do you love best in the world? |
21090 | Why Come Ye Not to Courte? |
21090 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us and not the history of theirs?" |
21090 | and''Wherefore did I come?''" |
21090 | for''What?'' |
19418 | Do you think I am a very old woman? |
19418 | What for? |
19418 | And who can expound a shadow? |
19418 | And why? |
19418 | Ash served every purpose this side of iron; it was as good as a rope, for was not the Gordion knot tied with it? |
19418 | But how does one know when he is learning? |
19418 | Can not a Dorian speak Doric? |
19418 | Could she be ignorant of the pleasure I was anticipating? |
19418 | Had I helped her at all in her own composition? |
19418 | Had he not been to Boston, and more than once? |
19418 | Had they changed? |
19418 | He winks out of the corner of his eye at me and says,''Your old daddy is tough is n''t he?'' |
19418 | Here my youngest sister, Harriet, who was fifteen years old, said,"Mother, why do n''t you tell him the other part of the cloak story?" |
19418 | How could I fill the void with such trivial pastimes with a Fourth of July cannon ringing in my ears and the learned pig''s red eyes following me? |
19418 | How could it be otherwise? |
19418 | How could it have been otherwise at the rate of one dollar per week? |
19418 | How is one to write without a definite subject, or one selected for him? |
19418 | How should I not become wise? |
19418 | I had had a taste of better things, or so they seemed, or was it their novelty? |
19418 | I was in no hurry, dreading my reception; what should I say, what should I answer? |
19418 | Is there nothing but bad grammar, mispronunciation and provincialisms in the heart of the rustic? |
19418 | Must he be forever misrepresented by his speech that he may be saved by his virtues? |
19418 | My mother was silent again and I exclaimed"is that all, mother? |
19418 | On the whole, who is he, that would not rather be loved for himself than for his book, his horses or his honors? |
19418 | Or was it I? |
19418 | Shall the squirrel hunt for nuts and the little sons of men be forbidden, just to save a new pair of breeches, or an old jacket? |
19418 | Should I ever find my way back? |
19418 | Should I ever see my home again? |
19418 | That was my first thought when I happened to observe any kind of tree, could I climb it? |
19418 | There was only one short question to be asked and answered,"what color"? |
19418 | Was it possible these pistols were not what they seemed and would not kill a man? |
19418 | Was not this better than the explanations which never explain to children? |
19418 | What better training was there than this? |
19418 | What do I care? |
19418 | What does the modern child find in a modern sermon to give him any sort of quickening? |
19418 | What impression did this talk and excitement make on children? |
19418 | What is the good of however large a circle, if it have no center? |
19418 | What would be revealed? |
19418 | Who can predict what will be the permanent deposit? |
19418 | Who can recover for me the relish that went with them? |
19418 | William Miller do for us? |
19418 | Would you see him do it with a boy''s eyes? |
19418 | Yet how can a healthy boy awake in the morning dejected? |
19418 | You never knew a grasshopper was provisioned with a molasses jug? |
12864 | A Senior Optime? |
12864 | A what? |
12864 | Are you aware who the learned author is? |
12864 | Have the_ passmen_ done their paper work yet? |
12864 | Have you_ wet_ that new coat yet? |
12864 | How much Euclid did you do? 12864 How the_ goney_ swallowed it all, did n''t he?" |
12864 | Lord bless you, master,says she,"who I reading? |
12864 | Mr.----, what is logic? |
12864 | What is the meaning of this noise? |
12864 | What will you drink? |
12864 | When you go into Cheshire, and upon your ramble, may I trouble you with a commission? 12864 Who would not place this precious boon Above the Greek Oration? |
12864 | Why, what was he then? |
12864 | _ Gonus_,echoed I,"what''s that mean?" |
12864 | _ Ques._ What is the name of this University? 12864 _ Ques._ Who was your father? |
12864 | And has the Bursch his cash expended? |
12864 | And what shall I say of Morse? |
12864 | And who asks for a richer heritage, or a more enduring epitaph, than that he too is a Brother in Unity?" |
12864 | But if they, capricious through long indulgence, did not choose to get up, what then? |
12864 | But who are those three by- standers, that have such an air of submission and awe in their countenances? |
12864 | But yearneth not thy laboring heart, O Tom, For those dear hours of simple_ Freshmanhood_? |
12864 | Did not the_ Præses_ himself most kindly and oft reprimand me? |
12864 | Did not thy starting eyeballs think to see Some goblin_ pariètal_ grin at thee? |
12864 | Fifteen?" |
12864 | Hast spent the livelong night In smoking Esculapios,--in getting jolly_ tight_? |
12864 | Have I been screwed, yea,_ deaded_ morn and eve, Some dozen moons of this collegiate life, And not yet taught me to philosophize? |
12864 | Have I been_ screwed_, yea, deaded morn and eve, Some dozen moons of this collegiate life? |
12864 | How now, ye secret, dark, and tuneless chanters, What is''t ye do? |
12864 | I asked her what she was reading? |
12864 | Of what_ standing_ are you? |
12864 | Or men"_ get high_"by drinking abstract toddies? |
12864 | She says,"What makes you look so very pale?" |
12864 | The following is a translated specimen:--"_ Ques._ What is your, name? |
12864 | Then an anthem,''The voice of my beloved sounds,''& c. Then a forensic dispute,_ Whether Christ died for all men_? |
12864 | Then,"How do you know them?" |
12864 | Univ._ Of this word, De Quincey says:"But what is the meaning of a lecture in Oxford and elsewhere? |
12864 | Were there any_ Goodies_ when you were in college, father? |
12864 | What are parietals, parts,_ privates_ now, To the still calmness of that placid brow? |
12864 | Who can tell what eagerness fills its ranks on an exhibition- day? |
12864 | Who would not brave the heat, the dust, the rain, To march the leader of that valiant train?" |
12864 | Who would not choose the wooden spoon Before a dissertation? |
12864 | are they? |
12864 | can ye surpass these enormous piles? |
12864 | the stern_ pariètal_ monitions? |
12864 | wert ever beset by a dun? |
12864 | with what exultation they mark their banner, as it comes floating on the breeze from Holworthy? |
12864 | with what spirit and bounding step the glorious phalanx wheels into the College yard? |
29494 | Can I get there to- night? |
29494 | There were men of hoary hair Amid that Pilgrim band; Why had they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? 29494 What sought they thus afar? |
29494 | What will you do for a place to pray in,said he,"now that we have burned your meeting- house? |
29494 | Where,exclaimed Madockawando, earnestly and impatiently,"shall we buy powder and shot for our winter''s hunting when we have eaten up all our corn? |
29494 | Why, then,Captain Church continued,"are your warriors here with arms in their hands?" |
29494 | Are you not afraid?" |
29494 | Awashonks appeared embarrassed, and replied,"What weapons do you wish them to lay aside?" |
29494 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
29494 | Captain Church said to him,"Will you take a gun and fight for us?" |
29494 | Shall we leave Englishmen and apply to the French, or shall we let our Indians die? |
29494 | Should you let them have the powder we sell you, what do we better than to cut our own throats? |
29494 | The wealth of seas-- the spoils of war? |
29494 | Then he said twice, though very inwardly,_ Keen__ Winsnow?_ which is to say, Art thou Winslow? |
29494 | Then he said twice, though very inwardly,_ Keen__ Winsnow?_ which is to say, Art thou Winslow? |
29494 | Where has history recorded a deed of nobler heroism? |
29494 | Why did they not succeed in this plan? |
13911 | And would you advise, then, that married couples live apart one- third of the time, in the interests of domestic peace? |
13911 | And, Zeke, what did you do with your dollar? |
13911 | Do you know why their love was so very steadfast, and why they stimulated the mental and spiritual natures of each other so? |
13911 | For God''s sake, Walter,whispered Payn,"you are not going to explain to''em how you do it, are you?" |
13911 | How long have you studied law? |
13911 | It''s not Bill Spear who keeps a secondhand- shop, you want, mebbe? |
13911 | No, why was it? |
13911 | The which? |
13911 | Well, Dan,said the father,"did you spend your money?" |
13911 | What can all this fuss be about? |
13911 | What''s it about? |
13911 | You know those suits against you in the Admiralty Court? |
13911 | *****"Are n''t we staying in this room a good while?" |
13911 | After a little pause my inquiring mind caused me to ask,"Who made Judge Davis?" |
13911 | And how did Richard Henry Lee like it, and George Wythe, and the Randolphs? |
13911 | And is all this worry the penalty that Nature exacts for dreaming dreams that can not in their very nature come true? |
13911 | And is your sleep disturbed by dreams of British redcoats or hissing flintlocks? |
13911 | And what have you heard or observed of his character or merits? |
13911 | And whether, think you, it lies in the power of the Junto to oblige him, or encourage him as he deserves? |
13911 | As Pendleton handed his pistol to Hamilton he asked,"Shall I set the hair- trigger?" |
13911 | Did Patrick Henry wax eloquent that afternoon in a barroom, and did Jefferson do more than smile grimly, biding his time? |
13911 | Did Washington forget his usual poise and break out into one of those swearing fits where everybody wisely made way? |
13911 | Do you know of any deserving young beginner, lately set up, whom it lies in the power of the Junto in any way to encourage? |
13911 | For sin is only perverted power, and the man without capacity to sin neither has ability to do good-- isn''t that so? |
13911 | Hath any deserving stranger arrived in town since last meeting that you have heard of? |
13911 | Have you any weighty affair on hand in which you think the advice of the Junto may be of service? |
13911 | Have you lately observed any defect in the laws of your country, of which it would be proper to move the legislature for an amendment? |
13911 | Have you lately observed any encroachment on the just liberties of the people? |
13911 | Have you read over these queries this morning, in order to consider what you might have to offer the Junto, touching any one of them? |
13911 | He reminded us boys several times when we kicked, that he had a good claim on it-- for did n''t he furnish the door and the window- frames? |
13911 | I was feeling quite useless and asked,"Ca n''t I do something to help?" |
13911 | In what manner can the Junto, or any of its members, assist you in any of your honorable designs? |
13911 | Is there any difficulty in matters of opinion, of justice and injustice, which you would gladly have discussed at this time? |
13911 | Jefferson''s experience seems to settle that mooted question,"Can a man love two women at the same time?" |
13911 | Merchant- prince and agitator, horse and rider-- where are you now? |
13911 | One fine day, one of his schoolmates put the question to him flatly:"In case of war, on which side will you fight?" |
13911 | Or do you know of any beneficial law that is wanting? |
13911 | Spear, the antiquarian?" |
13911 | The non- slaveholding North was rubbing its sleepy eyes, and asking, Who is this man Seward, anyway? |
13911 | The question at issue was,"Is a bequest for founding a college a charitable bequest?" |
13911 | Then did the boy ask the question, What moral right has England to govern us, anyway? |
13911 | They look at me out of wistful eyes, and sometimes one calls to me as she goes by and asks,"Why have you done so little since I saw you last?" |
13911 | Were we talking of the seasons? |
13911 | Wha-- what''s that you said?" |
13911 | What benefits have you lately received from any man not present? |
13911 | What happy effects of temperance, of prudence, of moderation, or of any other virtue? |
13911 | What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed or heard; of imprudence, of passion, or of any other vice or folly? |
13911 | What was it? |
13911 | Where is the man who in a strange land has not suffered rather than reveal his ignorance before a shopkeeper? |
13911 | Who is there who can not sympathize with that groan? |
13911 | do you understand the situation? |
13911 | how has Samuel managed to get himself so enormously in debt?" |
28067 | Are our social adjustments such as to facilitate, or at least not interfere with it? |
28067 | Are we sure that the political experience of England proves the wisdom of an independent judiciary? |
28067 | Are you sure that your Federal judiciary will act thus? |
28067 | But how were those imposed by the Constitution on the general government itself to be enforced? |
28067 | Do they make the question of success or failure, survival or elimination, depend upon individual fitness or unfitness? |
28067 | Does a majority vote for a party indicate that the majority approve of the entire platform of that party? |
28067 | Does a popular majority for a party mean that the majority approve of the policies for which that party professes to stand? |
28067 | Does it seek to crystallize and secure a definite expression of public opinion at the polls, or is it so constructed as to prevent it? |
28067 | Does the platform of the American political party serve this purpose? |
28067 | How, then, was this change in the attitude of the public brought about? |
28067 | Is free government, then, being tried here under the conditions most favorable to its success? |
28067 | Is progress achieved only through the preservation of the fit and the elimination of the unfit? |
28067 | Is that judiciary as well constructed, and as independent of the other branches, as our state judiciary? |
28067 | Is the evolution of a higher human type the same kind of a process as that of a higher animal or vegetable type? |
28067 | Is the use made of this argument from analogy warranted by the facts in the case? |
28067 | What, then, can be done to make that body an organ of democracy? |
28067 | Where are your landmarks in this government? |
28067 | Why did not the framers of that document clearly define the relation of the Federal to the state courts? |
22994 | And where,he asked,"would all this power and money center? |
22994 | But these issues are not with the same imperious"Which?" |
22994 | But what constitutional historian has made any adequate attempt to interpret political facts by the light of these social areas and changes? |
22994 | But where is the proof of this? |
22994 | Can these ideals of individualism and democracy be reconciled and applied to the twentieth century type of civilization? |
22994 | Can you hem in such a territory as that? |
22994 | Did"Populistic"tendencies appear in this frontier, and were there grievances which explained these tendencies? |
22994 | Have we not here an illustration of what is possible and necessary for the historian? |
22994 | How adjust the old conceptions to the changed conditions of modern life? |
22994 | How did the frontiersman differ from the man of the coast? |
22994 | How far was this first frontier a field for the investment of eastern capital and for political control by it? |
22994 | How shall we conserve what was best in pioneer ideals? |
22994 | In other words, has the United States itself an original contribution to make to the history of society? |
22994 | Said Duquesne to the Iroquois,"Are you ignorant of the difference between the king of England and the king of France? |
22994 | Sir, can it be pretended that the patriots of that day would for one moment have listened to it? |
22994 | The Mississippi Valley is asking,"What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" |
22994 | The Northwest extends eastward to the base of the Alleghany Mountains, and does not all of western New York lie westward of the Alleghany Mountains? |
22994 | The people before me,--who are you but New York men, while you are men of the Northwest?" |
22994 | The result is stated by a writer in_ De Bow''s Review_ in 1852 in these words:--"What is New Orleans now? |
22994 | Think, here_ Should this be done any more?_ We read of Balaam, in Num. |
22994 | This called out Burke''s splendid protest: If you stopped your grants, what would be the consequence? |
22994 | Were there evidences of antagonism between the frontier and the settled, property- holding classes of the coast? |
22994 | What effects followed from the trader''s frontier? |
22994 | What has it been in American life? |
22994 | What is the West? |
22994 | What more effective agency is there for the cultivation of the seed wheat of ideals than the university? |
22994 | What were America''s"morning wishes"? |
22994 | Whence comes all the inspiration of free soil which spreads itself with such cheerful voices over all these plains? |
22994 | Where are her dreams of greatness and glory? |
22994 | Where can we find a more promising body of sowers of the grain? |
22994 | Why was it that the Indian trader passed so rapidly across the continent? |
17722 | And do we have to pass Doubting castle, as they did? |
17722 | And is it not the theme the_ ultima thule_ of grandeur in an artist''s pilgrimage? |
17722 | And so you''re taking notes to see what sort of a set we are? 17722 And whose portrait is it?" |
17722 | As the saying goes, what axe have you to grind, Master Edmonson? 17722 But the_ man_, O, where is he?" |
17722 | Certainly he wo n''t do everything for you, or certainly you will not ask him-- which? |
17722 | Cheever and Lovell and Gardner, the Puritan, the Tory, and shall not we say, in some fuller sense, the man-- are they not characteristic figures? 17722 Did I do that?" |
17722 | Do n''t you propose to ask him? |
17722 | Do you know it was just one hundred years ago this very year, 1784, Mount Washington received its name? |
17722 | Do you know,he said,"that you have an exaggerated conscience? |
17722 | Do you object to my seeing it? |
17722 | Do you remember the other time we were here, Molly? |
17722 | Do you see? |
17722 | Friends, is it not? |
17722 | Has Madam Archdale gone into the garden yet? 17722 I was going to beg you to remain until we can look into things a little; you, and my father, and I, you understand? |
17722 | Insuperable? |
17722 | Is n''t the thought inspiring,I remarked to my companions,"that we are on the highest land for which our fathers fought a century ago?" |
17722 | Shall I tell you why I call him so? |
17722 | Suppose we call him Banquo''s ghost? 17722 Then it is settled that you stay a few days longer with us?" |
17722 | Then, if I can not, why do n''t you ask some one who can, Colonel Archdale, for instance? 17722 Very kind of you, I am sure,"said Molly,"but who will vouch for its authenticity?" |
17722 | Well, what is it? |
17722 | What? |
17722 | When and how did you bring that picture here? |
17722 | Why are you like this? 17722 Why do n''t some of our authors use more of the historical material of this region in story writing than they do?" |
17722 | Why should I, if it were open? 17722 Will you come with me into the hall? |
17722 | Will you follow, Temple? |
17722 | You are speaking only of military matters? |
17722 | You know,continued Katie,"that these are the people whose romantic story Master Harwin related to us one memorable evening?" |
17722 | You see it? 17722 ''Going to America, I understand?'' 17722 And when in some depth of need he sends a message, then, because no other ear than his may catch the answer given, is there for that reason none? 17722 But why wo n''t you talk to me naturally, just as other people do? |
17722 | Can I do anything for you? |
17722 | Did you ever see him on the stage? |
17722 | Do n''t you think so?" |
17722 | Do you believe in the Trojan war? |
17722 | Do you believe that Marshal Ney said at Waterloo,''Up guards and at them?''" |
17722 | Everybody will see it; is n''t it so? |
17722 | Had she any hand in this unveiling of an ancestral face? |
17722 | How came it there? |
17722 | How came_ he_ here? |
17722 | If he go, I have no doubt I shall catch the fever, too, being in the same house with him; Lord Bulchester may also, who knows? |
17722 | If she were to be separated from Stephen Archdale forever, what wonder that she was grieved with the woman who had done it? |
17722 | If this triumphant fellow had any such thing to tell, did she already know it? |
17722 | In doing so you glad my soul The aged king replied: But what sayst thou my youngest girl How is thy love ally''d? |
17722 | Now, has it failed in these recent years? |
17722 | Shall we believe nothing?" |
17722 | Shall we go into the garden again until somebody comes?" |
17722 | That will be more as you wish it? |
17722 | There is nothing sentimental about a railroad, but after all who would care to return to the old methods of locomotion? |
17722 | Was it going to be that she could no longer believe in him? |
17722 | Was she upon such terms of intimacy with him as this? |
17722 | Was the other only a vision? |
17722 | Was this the way that men spoke of women, with sneers, with scoffing? |
17722 | Washington? |
17722 | What does it mean?" |
17722 | What makes you so sure, though, that he has secured your--?" |
17722 | What would the world be without mountains? |
17722 | Wo n''t you ask the Colonel to show us his private portrait gallery? |
17722 | asked Fritz,"and the beautiful moonlight evenings we enjoyed?" |
15488 | [ 10] And again, what mother could be certain that punishment for her own petty errors might not be wreaked upon her innocent child? 15488 [ 113] And what of old Judge Sewall of the previous century-- he of a number of wives and innumerable children? |
15488 | [ 233] And then, if the young gallant( may we dare call a Puritan beau that?) 15488 [ 310] Who can estimate the quiet aid such women gave the patriots in those years of sore trial? |
15488 | [ 46] And what did girls of Puritan days learn in thedame schools"? |
15488 | ''What do you expect to find there?'' |
15488 | ''Who are you, whence come you, where going, what is your business, and what your religion?'' |
15488 | *****"But why should I complain That have so good a God, That doth mine heart with comfort fill Ev''n whilst I feel his rod? |
15488 | And alone, mention''d to me the hainous faults of my wife, who the very first word ask''d my daughter why she married my Son except she lov''d him? |
15488 | And staying at home, she read out of Mr. Cotton Mather-- Why hath Satan filled thy Heart? |
15488 | And what became of this first woman leader in America? |
15488 | And what of women''s originality and daring in other fields of activity? |
15488 | And who performed the marriage ceremony in those old days? |
15488 | Are we at our boards? |
15488 | Are we in our shops? |
15488 | Between 7 and 8 Lechus( Lynchs? |
15488 | But was not this characteristic of so many of those better class colonial women? |
15488 | Causes of Display and Frivolity_ What else could be expected, for the time being at least? |
15488 | Did she not possess essentially the same strengths and weaknesses as she does to- day? |
15488 | Did they indeed? |
15488 | Do you feel no pity in your gentle bosom for the man who would die to make you happy?... |
15488 | Do you think you come here for your pleasure?''" |
15488 | Dress Regulation by Law_ Who would think of writing a book on woman without including some description of dress? |
15488 | If the condition was so bad among those prosperous enough to own property, what must it have been among the poor and so- called lower classes? |
15488 | If you are not well& happy, how can I be so? |
15488 | In conclusion, what may we say as to the general status of the colonial woman in the church? |
15488 | Is it not evident that woman was charmingly feminine, even in colonial days? |
15488 | One puffs and sweats, the other mutters why Ca n''t you promove your work so fast as I? |
15488 | Pointing out that it was Adam who ate of the tree and that they were innocent, they ask:"O great Creator, why was our nature depraved and forlorn? |
15488 | Raillery and Scolding_ Of course, the colonial man found woman''s dress a subject for jest; what man has not? |
15488 | Shall I expect no return to the most sincere, ardent, and disinterested passion? |
15488 | The Chief Judge asked the prisoner who he thought hindered these witnesses from giving their testimonies? |
15488 | What else could the women do? |
15488 | What man, soldier or statesman, could have written more courageous words than these by Abigail Adams? |
15488 | What more pleasing romance could one want? |
15488 | What woman could tell whether she or her daughter might not be the next victim of the bloody harvest? |
15488 | When shall I hear from you? |
15488 | When will''New Woman''do more for her country? |
15488 | Who bewitches you? |
15488 | Whoever heard her call an ill name? |
15488 | Why so defil''d, and made so vil''d, whilst we were yet unborn? |
15488 | Will any one dare to deny this fact? |
15488 | Would not this cause anguish to the heart of any mother? |
15488 | Yet, who can say what rebellion unconsciously arose sometimes in the hearts of the women? |
15488 | beds? |
15488 | or detract from anybody? |
22100 | And he said, Hagar, Sarai''s maid, whence comest thou? 22100 One was afraid and the other dare not"--but which? |
22100 | Our political problem now is,''Can we as a nation continue together_ permanently_--forever-- half slave, and half free''? 22100 ( What law? 22100 And when they had called him unto David, the King said unto him, Art thou Ziba? 22100 Are you for it? 22100 Art thou called being a servant? 22100 But how can we attain it? 22100 But was it not in the divine plan that slavery in the Republic should come to a violent end? 22100 But where were his staff officers, who should furnish eyes and ears for their General? 22100 Could the Sixth Corps, could the cavalry, or could Sheridan have been spared from the battle? 22100 Could you not break him?_"A. 22100 Dissolution? 22100 Do men dream of Lot and Abraham parting, one to the east and the other to the west, peacefully, because their servants strive? 22100 Grant was not perfection as a soldier at Shiloh, but who else would or could have done so well? 22100 Had Kansas even become slave, what then? 22100 He seemed surprised to see me, and asked sharply,What are_ you_ doing here?" |
22100 | How shall it be? |
22100 | How was the news of the failure to reinforce Sumter, and of its being fired on and taken possession of by a rebellious people, received in the North? |
22100 | I am against this, Are you for it? |
22100 | I awaited his approach, and on his arrival accosted him with the inquiry,"What is the matter, General?" |
22100 | If they could hold out a few days, could you help them? |
22100 | In other respects, how dissimilar? |
22100 | In the antithesis of this speech he asked and answered:"How can the Union be saved? |
22100 | Is there, has there ever been, any question that by the laws of war, property, both of enemies and friends, may be taken when needed?" |
22100 | Mr. President, do you remember the last chapter in that history? |
22100 | Now that California and New Mexico were United States territory, how was it to be devoted to slavery to reward the friends of its acquisition? |
22100 | One of the runaway slaves,"Joe,"a handsome mulatto,_ borrowed_(?) |
22100 | That States will divide from States and boundary lines will be marked by compass and chain? |
22100 | The law of the place whence it came, or the law of the place to which it was taken? |
22100 | Then turning to me, he said,''General Mahone, I have no other troops, will you take your division to Sailor''s Creek?'' |
22100 | They were evidently taken by surprise, and retired in the utmost confusion[?]. |
22100 | We are''shivering in the wind,''are we, sir, over your Cuba question? |
22100 | What can I do with you?" |
22100 | What great soldier ever before took an army and moved it into battle against a formidable adversary in so short a time? |
22100 | What"partisan ruling"of mine was not heartily approved by my party, or did not command at least the respect of the Democrats? |
22100 | Where can I get it? |
22100 | Where is Ewell? |
22100 | Who shall make it? |
22100 | Who would not, with their homes as open graveyards strewn with the dead of their families, etc.? |
22100 | Why should the justices of the Supreme Court be free from its influence? |
22100 | Will you please keep those people back?'' |
22100 | You will say, Why do not the people grow them? |
22100 | _ Ought American Slavery to be Perpetuated?_( Brownlow and Pryne debate), p. 78, etc. |
22100 | _ This is dissolution!_ If such, Sir, is_ dissolution_ seen in a glass darkly, how terrible will it be face to face? |
22100 | has the army dissolved?'' |
22100 | why, in the name of God, should anybody prevent it?" |
21623 | Are you in earnest? |
21623 | But where is the money for me? |
21623 | Is it such a fast that I have chosen? 21623 Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? |
21623 | Shall the ax boast itself against him that heweth therewith? 21623 What agreement hath the temple of God with idols?" |
21623 | Wherefore then gavest not thou my money into the bank, that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury or interest? |
21623 | Who is my neighbor? |
21623 | Whose shall these things be? |
21623 | Why should the laws presume to level the rates for a whole state? 21623 ''What will you take?'' 21623 A day for a man to afflict his soul?... 21623 Also I said, The thing ye do is not good: ought ye not to walk in the fear of our God, because of the reproach of the nations, our enemies? 21623 And when one buys a farm for money does not that farm produce other money yearly? 21623 And whence is derived the profit of the merchant? 21623 Antonio--And what of him? |
21623 | But were not the people of Israel discharged to take any usury or profit for lent money from their brethren? |
21623 | Could there be a more absurd application of a Scripture passage? |
21623 | Did he take interest?" |
21623 | Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgment seats? |
21623 | Do not they blaspheme that worthy name by which ye are called?" |
21623 | Do they on this account deny themselves any of the good things of this life? |
21623 | Have we not the rights of the cattle? |
21623 | His ear is deaf to the voice,"Is not this the fast that I have chosen? |
21623 | How do you prove from scripture, that moderate usury, or common interest, is not oppression in itself? |
21623 | How do you prove that moderate usury is lawful? |
21623 | How great a benefit can he gain by it? |
21623 | Is it lawful to take any interest or gain for money lent? |
21623 | Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house?" |
21623 | Is it warrantable to take interest from the poor? |
21623 | Is money born from roofs and walls? |
21623 | Is not this the fast that I have chosen?... |
21623 | Is the gaining of money by usury unlawful? |
21623 | Or is your gold and silver, ewes and rams?" |
21623 | Psalm 15:"Jehovah, Who shall sojourn in thy tabernacles? |
21623 | The question is frequently discussed in church circles,"How can the laboring man be attracted to the churches?" |
21623 | The question is, how rapidly can he earn, and how soon can his earnings be collected? |
21623 | Thus we have in Isaiah 43:13:"I will work and who will let( hinder) it?" |
21623 | To undo the heavy burdens and to let the oppressed go free?... |
21623 | Was this inserted to make interest good? |
21623 | We clip the following story:"Why do you borrow money for so short a time?" |
21623 | Were not the Israelites forbidden to take usury from their brethren, whether poor or rich? |
21623 | What can the borrower do or make with this capital? |
21623 | What does a house from the letting of which I receive a rent? |
21623 | What does the sea beget? |
21623 | What is it to take usury, according to the proper signification of the word? |
21623 | What is the unlawful profit for money, which may be called usury? |
21623 | What is the usury condemned in scripture and by what reason? |
21623 | What is this loan worth to you? |
21623 | What is usury? |
21623 | What kind of usury or interest is lawful? |
21623 | What shall we believe was the question? |
21623 | Who doubts that idle money is wholly useless? |
21623 | Who shall dwell in thy holy hill? |
21623 | Who shall dwell in thy holy hill? |
21623 | Will you do it?" |
21623 | or shall the saw magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
26317 | All correct? |
26317 | And do n''t you suffer with your limbs? |
26317 | Are they not our brethren, the neighbors to whom the command applies,"Love thy neighbor as thyself"? |
26317 | But do our statesmen or our clergy suggest this view? |
26317 | Do they not all maintain the Christian religion( at least nominally) by all the power of their governments and public opinion? |
26317 | Do they recoil from war or inspire the people with thoughts of peace? |
26317 | Has the old spirit died out? |
26317 | Have the syndicates too much influence? |
26317 | Is Christendom the only dangerous portion of the world, where an honorable and peaceful nation can not exist in safety? |
26317 | Is Col. Ingersoll too much of a pessimist to believe that American moral power will be sufficient in time to calm the world''s agitation? |
26317 | Is all the civilization, statesmanship, and Christianity of the leading nations of the earth incapable of withholding them from such gigantic crimes? |
26317 | Is all the genius and energy of the American people bound in fidelity to the Moloch of war? |
26317 | Is it possible now? |
26317 | Is it true?" |
26317 | Is that all so?" |
26317 | Is that so?" |
26317 | Is there not among our politicians who sustained the Blair Education bill some one whose voice may be heard in behalf of peace? |
26317 | Is this our Christian love, to spend a hundred and twenty millions for the assassination of our beloved brethren-- avowedly for that purpose? |
26317 | Look even two centuries ahead, and what do we see? |
26317 | May I not therefore ask his aid in relieving me of this burden by increasing the circulation of the Journal among his friends? |
26317 | Shall we move onward toward humane civilization, or cling to a surviving barbarism? |
26317 | W. H. Thomas of Chicago? |
26317 | WHAT IS INTELLECTUAL GREATNESS? |
26317 | What is the popular judgment, or even the judgment of popular leaders worth upon any great question? |
26317 | Why is the metropolitan press silent? |
26317 | Will editors who read these lines speak out? |
26317 | Will the time ever come when nations shall be guided by wisdom sufficient to avoid convulsions and calamities? |
26317 | Yet who among all the leaders of the people knew anything of these warnings, or was sufficiently enlightened to have paid them any respect? |
26317 | when shall the demand for the supremacy of the moral law be anything more than"the voice of one crying in the wilderness"? |
13042 | Ay, is it so? |
13042 | I doubt me much,said Peter Stuyvesant,"that thou art some scurvy costard- monger knave: how didst thou acquire this paramount honor and dignity?" |
13042 | Of what consequence is it,said Pliny,"that individuals appear, or make their exit? |
13042 | And what is immortal fame? |
13042 | Besides, why should I have been sociable to the crowd of how- d''ye- do acquaintances that flocked around me at my first appearance? |
13042 | But hold, whither am I wandering? |
13042 | Did I not enter with sad forebodings on this ill- starred expedition? |
13042 | For what is history, in fact, but a kind of Newgate Calendar-- a register of the crimes and miseries that man has inflicted on his fellow- men? |
13042 | For what says the ballad? |
13042 | Had they not been devoured alive by the cannibals of Marblehead and Cape Cod? |
13042 | Had they not been put to the question by the great council of Amphictyons? |
13042 | Had they not been smothered in onions by the terrible men of Pyquag? |
13042 | Is it not enough that I have followed thee undaunted, like a guardian spirit, into the midst of the horrid battle of Fort Christina? |
13042 | Now if it could have happened in that manner, why might it not have been at the same time, and by the same means, with the other parts of the globe?" |
13042 | Take away his pipe? |
13042 | Taking the pipe slowly out of his mouth,"To whom should I lower my flag?" |
13042 | This resolution being carried unanimously, another was immediately proposed-- whether it were not possible and politic to exterminate Great Britain? |
13042 | Upon this my wife ventured to ask him, what he did with so many books and papers? |
13042 | Was not this too much for human patience? |
13042 | What are the great events that constitute a glorious era? |
13042 | What stronger right need the European settlers advance to the country than this? |
13042 | What was it to him if he should set the house on fire, so that he might boil his pot by the blaze? |
13042 | What was the consequence of these exploring expeditions? |
13042 | Where is the reader who can contemplate without emotion the disastrous events by which the great dynasties of the world have been extinguished? |
13042 | Where, then, is the difference in principle between our measures and those you are so ready to condemn among the people I am treating of? |
13042 | Why are kings desolating empires, and depopulating whole countries? |
13042 | and are we not at this very moment striving our best to tyrannize over the opinions, tie up the tongues, and ruin the fortunes of one another? |
13042 | and have you the baseness to murmur, when we claim a pitiful return for all these benefits?" |
13042 | does not our moon give you light every night? |
13042 | have we not come thousands of miles to improve your worthless planet? |
13042 | have we not intoxicated you with nitrous oxide? |
13042 | would he roar,"have I caught ye at last?" |
13042 | would you have had me take such sunshine, faint- hearted recreants to my bosom at our first acquaintance? |
14461 | And in what part of the chamber do you now conceive the apparition to appear? |
14461 | And who got the mastery, I pray you? |
14461 | And why should that be unlucky? |
14461 | Is that the thanks I am to have for my labour? |
14461 | Ladies,he said,"this is very well, but somewhat monotonous-- will you be so kind as to change the tune?" |
14461 | Look you for thanks at my hand? |
14461 | Now,said the queen,"how long think you that you have been here?" |
14461 | Then I understand,continued the physician,"it is now present to your imagination?" |
14461 | This skeleton, then,said the doctor,"seems to you to be always present to your eyes?" |
14461 | What do you think of this? |
14461 | You say you are sensible of the delusion,said his friend;"have you firmness to convince yourself of the truth of this? |
14461 | & c. Canst thou dance no better? |
14461 | & c. Ransack the old records of all past times and places in thy memory; canst thou not there find out some better way of trampling? |
14461 | ''What will you have of me?'' |
14461 | ( 4) Durst you have used her in this manner if she had been rich? |
14461 | A young gentleman, brother to the lady, seeing him, switcht him about the ears, saying--''You warlock carle, what have you to do here?'' |
14461 | And can not a palsy shake such a loose leg as that? |
14461 | And has he not within a year Hang''d threescore of them in one shire? |
14461 | And what could any of us have done better, excepting in that case where she complied with you too much, and offered to let you swim her? |
14461 | And wherein differ thy leapings from the hoppings of a frog, or the bouncings of a goat, or friskings of a dog, or gesticulations of a monkey? |
14461 | Another, of a woman, who asked seriously, when she was accused, if a woman might be a witch and not know it? |
14461 | But see you yet a fourth road, sweeping along the plain to yonder splendid castle? |
14461 | But who has heard or seen an authentic account from Earl St. Vincent, or from his"companion of the watch,"or from his lordship''s sister? |
14461 | Can you take courage enough to rise and place yourself in the spot so seeming to be occupied, and convince yourself of the illusion?" |
14461 | Did the true Deity refuse Saul the response of his prophets, and could a witch compel the actual spirit of Samuel to make answer notwithstanding? |
14461 | Dost thou not twirl like a calf that hath the turn, and twitch up thy houghs just like a springhault tit? |
14461 | Have I not cause to have a sore heart?" |
14461 | He did not speak for the space of an hour, till his brother broke silence and asked,"How he did?" |
14461 | He thus expostulates with some of the better class who were eager for the prosecution:--"(1) What single fact of sorcery did this Jane Wenham do? |
14461 | I ask( 2) Did she so much as speak an imprudent word, or do an immoral action, that you could put into the narrative of her case? |
14461 | Is this the top of skill and pride, to shuffle feet and brandish knees thus, and to trip like a doe and skip like a squirrel? |
14461 | It was followed up by the counsel for the prisoners asking, in the cross- examination of MacPherson,"What language did the ghost speak in?" |
14461 | Pump thine invention dry; can not the universal seed- plot of subtile wiles and stratagems spring up one new method of cutting capers? |
14461 | Smack?" |
14461 | The strangers saluted her, and said,"Welcome, Bessie; wilt thou go with us?" |
14461 | They might say to the theologist, Will you not believe in witches? |
14461 | Thome answered,"Seest thou not me both meat- worth, clothes- worth, and well enough in person?" |
14461 | What charm did she use, or what act of witchcraft could you prove upon her? |
14461 | What single fact that was against the statute could you fix upon her? |
14461 | When he had come to her,''Sandie,''says she,''what is this you have done to my brother William?'' |
14461 | Who was your father? |
14461 | You remember, doubtless, the disease of which the Duke d''Olivarez is there stated to have died?" |
14461 | and doth not her poverty increase rather than lessen your guilt in what you did? |
14461 | and into whose hands did you put yourselves? |
14461 | and( if the true sense of the statute had been turned upon you) which way would you have defended yourselves? |
14461 | is this the dancing that Richard gave himself to thee for? |
14461 | said the apparition,"why must thou make such dole and weeping for any earthly thing?" |
14461 | says the afflicted young lady;"and what news do you bring?" |
32172 | Was there no way in which the memory of these feathered friends might be kept fresh and beautiful? |
21348 | (_ Hastily._) Whose agent is he? 21348 I will leave the paper then with Mr. Pownall to be--"(_ Hastily._) To what end would you leave it with him? |
21348 | Sir,exclaimed Franklin,"is Philadelphia taken?" |
21348 | Why, my lord? 21348 of"? |
21348 | And was his accuser a man to have turned his back on such viands, had he also been bidden to the feast of flattery? |
21348 | And what signifies the dearness of labor when an English shilling passes for five and twenty?" |
21348 | Could they by no possibility be persuaded to withdraw it? |
21348 | Did their shrewd and well- informed writer believe what he said? |
21348 | Gout had disabled him, but who could tell when he might get sufficient respite to return and deal havoc? |
21348 | Have you consulted Franklin upon this business? |
21348 | He asked:"Is there no way of treating_ back_ of this step of independency?" |
21348 | He said to Vaughan:"Is the new commission necessary?" |
21348 | He was then asked what was the difference"between a duty on the importation of goods and an excise on their consumption?" |
21348 | If Franklin relished the repast, who among mortals would not? |
21348 | In an American tax what do we do? |
21348 | Into what companies will he hereafter go with an unembarrassed face or the honest intrepidity of virtue? |
21348 | Is that affair dropt? |
21348 | Is your lordship quite sure that you have such a letter? |
21348 | Mr. Hale in his recent volumes upon Franklin truly says that"it is unnecessary to place vituperative adjectives to the credit[ discredit?] |
21348 | Or was he only uttering a prophecy which he desired, if possible, and for his own purposes to induce others to believe? |
21348 | Other queries, like pendants, have also come: Why have you not included A, or B, or C? |
21348 | Otherwise, if they carried the English laws and power of Parliament with them, what advantage could the Puritans propose to themselves by going?" |
21348 | Our own property? |
21348 | Should they have equal weight in voting, or not? |
21348 | To whom else would the Frenchmen have unlocked their coffers as they did to him, whom they so warmly liked and admired? |
21348 | Was he casting this political horoscope in good faith? |
21348 | Was it a nation, or only a parcel of rebels? |
21348 | We, your Majesty''s Commons of Great Britain, give and grant to your Majesty-- what? |
21348 | What are they then to do? |
21348 | When Jefferson was asked:"C''est vous, Monsieur, qui remplace le Docteur Franklin?" |
21348 | Who are we to hear in provincial affairs? |
21348 | Who shall say that Franklin''s personal prestige in Europe had not practical value for America? |
21348 | Why should they exert their power in the most disgusting manner, and throw pain, terror, and displeasure into the breasts of their fellow citizens?" |
21348 | With what face can we ask aids and subsidies from our friends, while we are wasting our own wealth in such prodigality?" |
21348 | With what face could the ministry meet Parliament with a treaty deserting all those who had been faithful to their king? |
21348 | Would they caulk their ships, would they even litter their horses, with wool, if it were not both plenty and cheap? |
21348 | Yet what could have been reasonably expected? |
21348 | [ 27] Which of these is agent for the province? |
21348 | _ Q._ How can the commerce be affected? |
21348 | _ Q._ If the act is not repealed, what do you think will be the consequences? |
21348 | _ Q._ Is it in their power to do without them? |
21348 | _ Q._ Why may it not? |
21348 | _ Q._"Can anything less than a military force carry the Stamp Act into execution? |
21348 | and what does he think of it? |
18936 | Do you yet want to go on? |
18936 | Fool, do you not know that the law says these doors shall admit no one except at sunrise? |
18936 | Have you had any breakfast? 18936 The Ideal School a school for Negroes, instituted by a Negro, where only Negroes teach, and only Negroes are allowed to enter as students?" |
18936 | What difference does it make, anyway? |
18936 | Who ever heard anything like that before? |
18936 | A voice, seemingly coming from afar, demanded,"Do you still wish to go on?" |
18936 | About that time the Bishops in assembly asked,"Is Simeon sincere?" |
18936 | As to his chastity, there was little doubt, and his poverty was beyond question; but how about obedience to his superiors? |
18936 | At a point where he seemed about to perish a voice called loudly,"Do you yet desire to go on?" |
18936 | Besides, what greater or juster aim and ambition have they than to please their husbands? |
18936 | Can a sane person reply to such lack of logic? |
18936 | Can we now conceive of a system where the duty of certain scholars was to whip other scholars? |
18936 | Can you foretell where this will end-- this formation of habits of industry, sobriety and continued, persistent effort towards the right? |
18936 | Did Simeon hear the bells and say,"Soon it will be my turn"? |
18936 | Did he suffer? |
18936 | Do you mean to say that the child should not be disciplined? |
18936 | Do you not know I am doing the best I can?''" |
18936 | Does the Bible say that the child is good by nature?" |
18936 | Every phase of life is solved by answering the question,"What would Mrs. Eddy do?" |
18936 | Fifteen hundred people of one mind, doing anything in unison-- do you know what it means? |
18936 | Has any man a mind to raise himself a good estate? |
18936 | He looked up at me and said with a touch of spirit:''Sir, why do you get angry with me? |
18936 | He needed them: he wanted to make Rugby a model school, a school that would influence all England-- would they help him? |
18936 | He was so little-- the place was so big-- by what right could he ask to be admitted? |
18936 | Here a questioner asked,"If we are to protect our persons, must we not learn to fight?" |
18936 | How did Simeon get to the top of the column? |
18936 | How do we explain these inconsistencies? |
18936 | If God, being all- wise, all- powerful and all- loving, turns author, why does He produce work so muddy that it requires a"Key"? |
18936 | In reading a book, the question that interests us is not,"Is it inspired?" |
18936 | Is it necessary? |
18936 | Is n''t it better to relax and rest and allow Divinity to flow through us, than to sit on a sharp rail and call the passer- by names in falsetto? |
18936 | Not only to whip them, but to beat them into insensibility if they fought back? |
18936 | Now, is it not possible that the prevalency of the Monastic Impulse is proof that it is in itself a movement in the direction of Nature? |
18936 | Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into nought? |
18936 | Others asked as to the nature of his wares, and one dignitary called and asked,"Is Herr Pestalozzi in?" |
18936 | Others, still, inquired,"Is she sincere?" |
18936 | The horses of a drunkard, blanketless, hungry, shivering, outside of the village tavern, do they not proclaim the poor, despised owner within? |
18936 | The only question ever asked was,"Can you do the work?" |
18936 | The question is, then, what teaching concern in America supplies the best quality of actinic ray? |
18936 | The question then arises,"Was Mrs. Eddy sincere in putting forth such writings?" |
18936 | The test was simple and severe: would they and could they do one useful piece of work well? |
18936 | The well- upholstered conservatives twiddled their thumbs, coughed, and asked:"How about the doctrine of total depravity? |
18936 | They always ask when you take away their superstition,"What are you going to give us in return?" |
18936 | What does Solomon say about the use of the rod? |
18936 | What does Solomon say? |
18936 | What end does it serve and how is humanity to be served or benefited by it? |
18936 | What''s in a name? |
18936 | Where did she get it? |
18936 | Where do you suppose oppressed colored people get chickens? |
18936 | While floundering there the voice again called,"Do you yet desire to go on?" |
18936 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
18936 | Would he arise at sundown and pray, and with outstretched hands bless the assembled pilgrims? |
18936 | Yes, you liver- colored boy-- you, I say, have you had your breakfast?" |
18936 | but,"Is it true?" |
3099 | If, therefore, on leaving our harbors we are certainly to lose them, is it not better as to vessels, cargoes, and seamen, to keep them at home?" |
3099 | Were we able to prevent their going in and out, or stop them from taking our trade and our storeships even in sight of our garrisons? |
27683 | What does the straight line mean to you? |
27683 | And who knows the hand, if not the lover? |
27683 | But who shall put into words limitless, visionless, silent void? |
27683 | But will you please tell us what idea you had of goodness and beauty when you were six years old?" |
27683 | By what half- development of human power has the left hand been neglected? |
27683 | From contrasts so irreconcilable can we fail to form an idea of beauty and know surely when we meet with loveliness? |
27683 | Has any chamber of the blind man''s brain been opened and found empty? |
27683 | Has any psychologist explored the mind of the sightless and been able to say,"There is no sensation here"? |
27683 | Has anything arisen to disprove the adequacy of correspondence? |
27683 | Hast thou entered into the treasures of the night? |
27683 | Hast thou seen Thought bloom in the blind child''s face? |
27683 | Hast thou seen his mind grow, Like the running dawn, to grasp The vision of the Master? |
27683 | Hath not my naked body felt the water sing When the sea hath enveloped it With rippling music? |
27683 | Have I not felt The lilt of waves beneath my boat, The flap of sail, The strain of mast, The wild rush Of the lightning- charged winds? |
27683 | Have I not smelt the swift, keen flight Of winged odours before the tempest? |
27683 | Have I not the same right to use these words in describing what I feel as you have in describing what you see? |
27683 | Have not my fingers split the sand On the sun- flooded beach? |
27683 | He made darkness his secret place; his pavilion round about him were dark waters and thick clouds of the skies"? |
27683 | How are we to know that they have ceased to exist for us? |
27683 | How can the world be shrivelled when this most profound, emotional sense, touch, is faithful to its service? |
27683 | If I had said"visit,"he would have asked no questions, yet what does"visit"mean but"see"(_ visitare_)? |
27683 | Is it not used in the great moments of swearing, blessing, cursing, smiting, agreeing, marrying, building, destroying? |
27683 | May I not understand the poet''s figure:"The green of spring overflows the earth like a tide"? |
27683 | May I not, then, be excused if this account of my sensations lacks precision? |
27683 | May I not, then, say:"Myriads of fireflies flit hither and thither in the dew- wet grass like little fluttering tapers"? |
27683 | The blind man of spirit faces the unknown and grapples with it, and what else does the world of seeing men do? |
27683 | The imp Curiosity pulled Memory by the sleeve and said,"Why do they run away? |
27683 | Then came Love, bearing in her hand The torch that is the light unto my feet, And softly spoke Love:"Hast thou Entered into the treasures of darkness? |
27683 | To escape this moralizing you should ask,"How does the straight line feel?" |
27683 | What ear hath heard the music of the spheres, the steps of time, the strokes of chance, the blows of death? |
27683 | What eye hath seen the glories of the New Jerusalem? |
27683 | What great invention has not existed in the inventor''s mind long before he gave it tangible shape? |
27683 | What ground have we for discarding light, sound, and colour as an integral part of our world? |
27683 | What is life to him? |
27683 | What would odours signify if they were not associated with the time of the year, the place I live in, and the people I know? |
27683 | When the Psalmist considers the heavens and the earth, he exclaims:"What is man, O Lord, that thou art mindful of him? |
27683 | Would they command Darwin from the grave and bid him blot out his geological time, give us back a paltry few thousand years? |
27683 | when will this city be finished? |
20064 | And what will you do afterwards? |
20064 | And what will you do with it? |
20064 | As good a one as I know how? |
20064 | But if I should refuse you admission? |
20064 | Do you know anything about the business? |
20064 | Do you want a hand? |
20064 | Do you want the whole of it at once? |
20064 | Have you been brought up to work? |
20064 | Have you room for an apprentice? |
20064 | How can that be? |
20064 | How much do you charge for board? |
20064 | How much do you need? |
20064 | How much is it, sir? |
20064 | How often do you get drunk in the week? |
20064 | How shall I get something to eat? |
20064 | How? |
20064 | If I take you, will you stay with me and work out your time? |
20064 | Is it not good French, then? |
20064 | Is your father willing that you should learn this trade? |
20064 | Well how much do you charge? |
20064 | What is going on? |
20064 | What salary do you ask? |
20064 | What shall I do,asked the governor,"if the stamped paper should be sent to me by the king''s authority?" |
20064 | What''s the excitement about? |
20064 | Why, what age are you? |
20064 | But how did people measure time during the countless ages that rolled away before the invention of the clock? |
20064 | But the terrible question was, how near right is the chronometer? |
20064 | But who and what was this man, and why was he performing these laborious journeys? |
20064 | But who could pick them out? |
20064 | But, in the mean time, are you right in abandoning this property, and your country with it? |
20064 | But, then, what is carbon? |
20064 | Do you mark that sentence, reader? |
20064 | Does he live economically? |
20064 | Does he manage it well? |
20064 | Does the reader know how the industrial classes were treated in former times? |
20064 | Has he capital enough for his business? |
20064 | He was greatly taken with them, and he said to himself:"Why not try a few letters on a similar plan from Washington, to be published in New York?" |
20064 | He would enter an office and ask in his whining note:--"Do you want a hand?" |
20064 | How is this? |
20064 | I''d cry, And lightly fly Into my saddle seat; My rein I''d slack, My whip I''d crack-- What music is so sweet? |
20064 | In the course of a few years, eight bouncing girls and boys filled his little house; and the question recurs with force: How did he support them all? |
20064 | Is his business reasonably safe? |
20064 | Is the supposed borrower an honest man? |
20064 | Maydole?" |
20064 | Need I say that from that moment the influential classes, almost to a man, dropped him? |
20064 | Was this pure philanthropy? |
20064 | Well, what do you complain of?" |
20064 | What can a city of yesterday, they ask, find to place in its archives, beyond the names of the first settlers, and the erection of the first elevator? |
20064 | What mortal eye can discern in a man the_ genuine_ celestial fire before he has proved its existence by the devotion of a lifetime to his object? |
20064 | When? |
20064 | Where is now the negro car? |
20064 | Where?" |
20064 | Who can it be?" |
20064 | Who can wonder at it? |
20064 | Who has supplied all these millions of miles of wire? |
20064 | Who is it? |
20064 | Why are the operatives at Lowell less discontented than elsewhere? |
20064 | Why not? |
12193 | Are you aware,said he, savagely,"that the rules direct that all fruit shall be gathered by the head gardener, and by him alone?" |
12193 | Brothers,said the Governor,"shall we order the troops and police in every city to fire? |
12193 | But how about the stuffing? |
12193 | But, how happens it,said he, in astonishment,"that you speak my language?" |
12193 | Dearest,cried Henry,"when can we meet again?" |
12193 | Did you expect any? |
12193 | Do yer''spect dere may be soon, sah? |
12193 | Do you think,shrieked the irate virago,"that I will allow my daughter who is studying French, Latin, Greek, and German to wash your dirty dishes?" |
12193 | Father,cried the Governor,"will the 9th Regiment kill their own brothers if ordered to shoot?" |
12193 | How did you do it? |
12193 | Just as you please, gentlemen, peace or war? |
12193 | May I know your name? |
12193 | Passing out of the shadow Into eternal day-- Why do we call it dying, This sweet going away? |
12193 | Sherman,said I, to my stroke oarsman, as we landed on our island,"why did n''t you throw me overboard?" |
12193 | Well,said the little imp,"how do ye know but what that feller lied?" |
12193 | What for you dune dar? |
12193 | What for you here? |
12193 | What you laughing at? |
12193 | What, you be a minister? |
12193 | Who you be? |
12193 | Yes,said the dunce,"are we not commanded in the holy book to preach the gospel to every critter?" |
12193 | You''ll hold your employers out in the cold, will you? 12193 ''The shoo- fly-- the shoo- fly,''said he;''why did n''t we think of that? 12193 ''What on airth, father, you doin''?'' 12193 ''What you laughing at?'' 12193 ''Where? 12193 --Boys,"I said, turning to the darkies,"what''s the matter?" |
12193 | Are we craven crows to be scared by such windy effigies?" |
12193 | At last, the Judge, in despair, said:"Foss, will you go?" |
12193 | But what is that? |
12193 | Do you want any more such times?" |
12193 | Do you want that kind of provender again? |
12193 | Had our spirits been wandering through the universe millions of years seeking each the other, nor finding rest until we met? |
12193 | Had we lived and loved on some fairer shore? |
12193 | His pastoral calls were appalling; arm extended like a pump handle to shake hands, one up and down motion, a"how do you do?" |
12193 | Is it strange that I and many others lost all faith in a religion that brought forth such bitter fruit? |
12193 | Little Blue Bell, one of the medium''s cabinet spirits, them came, pointing to the door, saying:"See that little fat snoozer?" |
12193 | My life seemed a failure; I reflected long upon the question of the Psalmist,"What is man?" |
12193 | One would step to the window and in an exasperatingly in- no- hurry way, say:"Anything for Andrew Jackson, sah?" |
12193 | Shall they be satisfied, the spirit''s yearning, For sweet communion with kindred minds? |
12193 | Shall we ever forget the feeding of the pigs? |
12193 | Sunbeam, at this my first glance, I love you; can you sometime love me?" |
12193 | The millions of dollars, now worse than wasted by our selfish millionaires? |
12193 | The owners who have plenty of money, or you who are dependent upon the work they give you for every cent you get? |
12193 | The silent love that here meets no returning, The inspiration, which no language finds? |
12193 | Well, who''ll freeze to death first if you stop the factories? |
12193 | What de hell you do on de doo''?" |
12193 | What is death but a journey home? |
12193 | What wonder that our country now has in Washington over five hundred millions of gold dollars; the richest treasury ever known on earth? |
12193 | Whence came that vital spark blending our souls in one? |
12193 | Where are the Injuns?" |
12193 | Who can tell? |
12193 | no corn juice pison nor nuthin''? |
12193 | where?'' |
32294 | COTGRAVE, RANDLE(?-1634), English lexicographer, came of a Cheshire family, and was educated at Cambridge, entering St John''s College in 1587. |
32294 | How could the small industry, with a high cost of production because it was small, compete with Lancashire? |
32294 | May we infer deductively that they have been attained because of the increase of speculative transactions? |
32294 | What, then, we may profitably inquire next, has actually happened to price movements generally as the market has developed? |
33248 | Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale? |
33248 | Is it too wild a dream that_ Paradise Lost_ might have been written in Boston or in New Haven? |
33248 | Was Milton''s Puritanism hurtful to his art? |
33248 | Which side would you have been on, if you had lived during the English civil war of the seventeenth century? |
314 | A_ Lady''s Experiences in the Wild West in 1883_, London( 1883? |
314 | At a pause the bishop shook his long, wise head and remarked,"My son, when DO you get time to think?" |
314 | But knowledge of what? |
314 | Do I contradict myself? |
314 | Figureless and with more human interest is_ Prairie Experiences in Handling Cattle and Sheep_, by Major W. Shepherd( of England), London? |
314 | In an article entitled"What Ideas Are Safe?" |
314 | In_ Our Southwest_, Erna Fergusson has a whole chapter on"What is the Southwest?" |
314 | With Boyce House''s earlier_ Were You in Ranger?_, this book gives a contemporary picture of the gushing days of oil, money, and humanity. |
314 | _ Cow- Boys and Colonels: Narrative of a Journey across the Prairie and over the Black Hills of Dakota_, London, 1887; New York( 1888?). |
22783 | Do n''t you see the officer with the white flag going up to the General? |
22783 | Do you know where Mr. Royal is? |
22783 | From home? 22783 Has Elizabeth returned?" |
22783 | Have you no hope? |
22783 | How is she? |
22783 | Is it possible,she said to herself at last,"that it annoys me because he does not treat me as the rest do, as if I had done something wonderful? |
22783 | Is that too far? |
22783 | Is there any cider in the house? |
22783 | News? |
22783 | Then, I suppose that you are busy, too, and everybody else? |
22783 | Truce? 22783 Well?" |
22783 | What are you saying? |
22783 | What does it mean? |
22783 | What''s that about truce? |
22783 | Where should you like to go, Lady Dacre? |
22783 | Where we left it? |
22783 | Who is that? |
22783 | You mean when I said I should like to be invited to walk through Louisburg? |
22783 | You regret what you said? 22783 ), was not better as_ Sagamore Hill_, the Indian name for it? 22783 16, 207.--Who was John Harvard? 22783 About any one there? 22783 Ai nt we going to have a chance at the''_ parley- vous_?'' |
22783 | And now the summer of 1885 was approaching, and where should they go? |
22783 | And now? |
22783 | But what should he say to her? |
22783 | Can the wind have veered? |
22783 | Commonplaces? |
22783 | Faith?" |
22783 | Have we the glorious privilege of striking it down? |
22783 | How could it be? |
22783 | I inquired,"What evidence have you of this?" |
22783 | NATURAL HISTORY.--Will the Land become a Desert? |
22783 | Not bad?" |
22783 | Oriole, sitting asway High on an emerald spray, Why that melodious zest, Bird of the beautiful breast, Bright as the dawn of the day? |
22783 | Shall I come for you at sunset?" |
22783 | Shall I tell you?" |
22783 | Shall she find us grown to brawny manhood?" |
22783 | Should he go in and ask for her? |
22783 | The doctor replied:"Do you refer to his alleged drinking habits?" |
22783 | Uncle Walter? |
22783 | Upon what else can I rest?" |
22783 | Was Elizabeth suffering only because she was connected, though so innocently, with this dreadful thing? |
22783 | Was this all? |
22783 | Was this the effect? |
22783 | What are the words that you say?--"Sing and be merry with May, Since to be merry is best,"Oriole? |
22783 | What did he want? |
22783 | When did you come?" |
22783 | Where are you, somebody? |
22783 | Who can say that_ Chelsea_ is an improvement on sweet_ Win''nisim''met_? |
22783 | Why had he not been to see her? |
22783 | Why should he go? |
22783 | Yes, now, is it still not I? |
22783 | You did not mean it, Elizabeth?" |
22783 | _ Elizabeth Taylor._ 17, 68.--How Shall we Teach Writing in Primary Grades? |
22783 | and pray what may the subject be?'' |
22783 | any of life with you, Elizabeth? |
22783 | is there any chance? |
22783 | you at home? |
33776 | But you say you know we will pretend weaknes; and doe you think we had not cause? |
33776 | In what, let us ask, did his greatness consist? |
33776 | What clearer evidence could be furnished us, as to the sentiment of the people, both in their small original company and as numbers increased? |
33776 | When has a combination of so many most critical problems confronted a magistrate? |
26978 | I know this is a_ Noli Me tangere_, but what shall we do? 26978 ''_ The God of Peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly._''Shortly, didst thou say, dearest Lord? 26978 --_Massachusetts Historical Collections, I., v., 75._ The questions arise; When and why did he leave the Court? 26978 And here, what shall I say? 26978 But how with Cotton Mather''s Book, the_ Wonders of the Invisible World_? 26978 Her answer was,How do I know? |
26978 | I ask every person of candor and fairness, to consider whether it is just to treat authors in this way? |
26978 | If Mr. Mather is not alluded to in the following passage from Brattle''s letter, who is? |
26978 | If he was not present at his Examination before the Magistrates, how could he have spoken, as he did, of the righteousness of his sentence? |
26978 | It may be asked, what did he mean by"not laying more stress upon spectre testimony than it will bear,"and the general strain of the paragraph? |
26978 | Looking towards"the afflicted children,"who had sworn that her spectre tortured them, the Magistrate asked,"How comes your appearance to hurt these?" |
26978 | Lord what wilt thou do with me?" |
26978 | Mr. Hale limits the definition of a witch to the following:"Who is to be esteemed a capital witch among Christians? |
26978 | Now what are the facts? |
26978 | The Reviewer asks:"Were those five persons executed that day without any spiritual adviser?" |
26978 | The question is, Which of them is meant? |
26978 | The question is: Does it forbid, denounce, or dissuade, its introduction? |
26978 | The question now arises, what was Cotton Mather''s attitude towards them? |
26978 | To the question,"Who hurts you?" |
26978 | Was he present at any of the Examinations? |
26978 | What are the facts? |
26978 | What if the Courts do admit the testimony of the Devil in the appearance of a spectre, and, on its strength, consign to death the innocent? |
26978 | What right had Mather to insert this paragraph, at all, in his report of the_ trial_ of George Burroughs? |
26978 | What was the difficulty? |
26978 | Whence had they this supernatural sight? |
26978 | Where did he, our Reviewer, find authority for the positive statement that Winthrop"signed the Death- warrant?" |
26978 | Who can tell how far the good Angels of Heaven cooperate in those proceeding?" |
26978 | Why did he not, as the Reviewer says ought always have been done, protest utterly against its admission at all? |
26978 | Why did they have to"entreat"him, if he had come all the way from Boston for that purpose? |
26978 | Why did they not join their voices in this prayer, going up elsewhere, from all concerned, for the divine forgiveness? |
15854 | And I said,''Why is this thus? 15854 Is any thing to be seen of the Delaware chief?" |
15854 | Is any thing to be seen? |
15854 | Is it fast to the warlock, or does he carry it above the left ear? |
15854 | Is the rock empty, Judith? |
15854 | Not hear it? 15854 They said,''Doth not like us?'' |
15854 | They then said,''Wilt not marry us?'' 15854 What are the trees saying?" |
15854 | What is''t?--what is''t, Judith? |
15854 | What now, Judith?--what next? 15854 Where does he wear his hawk''s feather?" |
15854 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? 15854 Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference because they are greener? 15854 At Genoa he drives the_ cicerone_ to despair by pretending never to have heard of Christopher Columbus, and inquiring innocently,Is he dead?" |
15854 | Do I not distinguish that heavy and horrible beating of her heart? |
15854 | Do put your accents in the proper spot: Do n''t, let me beg you, do n''t say''How?'' |
15854 | Do the Mingoes still follow, or are we quit of''em for the present?" |
15854 | Do you remember any act of enormous folly, at which you would blush, even in the remotest cavern of the earth? |
15854 | From the tops of mountains they appear like smooth- shaven lawns; yet whither shall we walk but in this taller grass? |
15854 | Have I not heard her footstep on the stair? |
15854 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
15854 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When, through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell? |
15854 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
15854 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
15854 | Is she not hurrying to upbraid me for my haste? |
15854 | It was the precise point at which Sidney Smith had uttered that bitter taunt in the_ Edinburgh Review_,''Who reads an American book?'' |
15854 | O, whither shall I fly? |
15854 | One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp he was-- come acrost him with his box and says:"''What might it be that you''ve got in the box?'' |
15854 | Said I not that my senses were acute? |
15854 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
15854 | Then they said,"Wilt not marry us?" |
15854 | They said,"Doth not like us?" |
15854 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men That rived the rebel line asunder?" |
15854 | Was there no meaning in the live repose of the valley behind the mill, and which Homer or Shakespeare could not re- form for me in words? |
15854 | Well, what''s_ he_ good for?'' |
15854 | What could I do? |
15854 | What could a poor old orphan do? |
15854 | What if Remorse should assume the features of an injured friend? |
15854 | What if he should stand at your bed''s foot, in the likeness of a corpse, with a bloody stain upon the shroud? |
15854 | What if the fiend should come in woman''s garments, with a pale beauty amid sin and desolation, and lie down by your side? |
15854 | What is patriotism? |
15854 | What is the reason of this thusness?" |
15854 | What is the reason of this thusness?'' |
15854 | What links of human affection brings she over the sea? |
15854 | What was It?, 186. |
15854 | What was it that Nature would say? |
15854 | What worlds in the yet unformed Occident May come refined with accents that are ours?" |
15854 | What would human life be without forests, those natural cities? |
15854 | What''s that you say?-- Why, dern it!--sho!-- No? |
15854 | Whence comes this?" |
15854 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, That lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, A beauteous sisterhood? |
15854 | Whither,''midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day, Far through their rosy depths dost thou pursue Thy solitary way? |
15854 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us and not the history of theirs?" |
15854 | Will she not be here anon? |
15854 | Would you not think the bases of the earth rising beneath it? |
15854 | Would you not think the foundation of the deep had given way? |
15854 | You ask what I mean? |
15854 | [ 1] On being asked, Whence is the flower? |
15854 | and''Wherefore did I come?''" |
15854 | for''What?'' |
15854 | said my grandsire, as he shook Some powder in his pan,"What could this lovely creature do Against a desperate man?" |
15854 | what is this? |
19308 | ''A witness of what?'' 19308 And who is JESUS?" |
19308 | Are there any in Rangoon? |
19308 | Are they foreigners? |
19308 | Are you willing to part with me? 19308 Art Thou not from everlasting, O Lord my God, mine Holy One? |
19308 | But how,he asked,"came the wish for this knowledge?" |
19308 | Can a mother forget? |
19308 | Has God commanded kings and indunas to learn His word? |
19308 | He is neither born nor begets,cried the Moollahs; and one said,"What will you say when your tongue is burnt out for blasphemy?" |
19308 | How do you hope to obtain forgiveness? |
19308 | How is your heart to be changed? |
19308 | How many were present? |
19308 | O vagabond,cried one man,"why didst thou not come to my house? |
19308 | Said I,writes Mr. Judson,"knowing his deistical weakness, do you believe all that is contained in the book of St. Matthew which I gave you? |
19308 | What was that sacrifice? |
19308 | What? 19308 What?" |
19308 | Who is GOD? |
19308 | Why do things go so well with them and so hardly with me? |
19308 | Will this be better than what I have found? |
19308 | Will you forgive injuries? |
19308 | Will you renounce all idolatry, feasts, poojahs, and caste? |
19308 | Will you renounce the world, the flesh, and the devil? |
19308 | Will you suffer for Christ''s sake? |
19308 | And where shall we ever expect but from that country the true Comforter to come to the nations of the East?" |
19308 | And who can paint our mutual joy When, all our wanderings o''er, We both shall clasp our infants three At home on Burmah''s shore? |
19308 | Are you like the Portuguese priests? |
19308 | Are you married?" |
19308 | Are you sure there is such a thing in existence, or are you merely subject to a delusion of the senses?" |
19308 | But as you burn with the intenseness and rapid blaze of phosphorus, why should we not make the most of you? |
19308 | But even if only one is gained, is not that an exceeding gain? |
19308 | But what was the word I spoke last? |
19308 | He writes:"What should a young minister do? |
19308 | How do you suppose we can waste any more time in praying for you?" |
19308 | If a British cruiser descended on a slave- ship, and released her freight, should he not also deliver the captive wherever he met him? |
19308 | If any of them did wrong, the alternative was--"Will you go to the Rajah''s court, or be punished by me?" |
19308 | If she answered,"It is matter,"he would reply,"And what is matter? |
19308 | In particular, do you believe that the Son of God died on a cross?" |
19308 | In the sun the bright waves glisten; Rising slow with solemn swell, Hark, hark, what sound unwonted? |
19308 | Is it an idea or a nonentity?" |
19308 | Is it matter or spirit? |
19308 | Is there no magic in the touch Of fingers thou dost love so much? |
19308 | Mr. Brown, on hearing of his plan, consented in these remarkable terms:"Can I then bring myself to cut the string and let you go? |
19308 | Presently he inquired,"How long a time will it take me to learn the religion of JESUS?" |
19308 | She wept much, and the Bishop said,"Bring them both to me; who knows whether they may live to wish for it again?" |
19308 | Such bitter disappointments occur in missionary life; and how should we wonder, since the like befel even St. Paul and St. John? |
19308 | The examination was thus, the Bishop standing in the midst:--"Are you sinners?" |
19308 | They demanded of him:"In the Gospel of Christ, is anything said of our Prophet?" |
19308 | Was Corpus very much changed, when, only eleven years after, John Keble entered it at the same age? |
19308 | Was it his fault, or was it any shortcoming in the teaching that was laid before him, and was that human honour a want of faith? |
19308 | What fruit has his mission zeal left? |
19308 | What words can befit this piteous history better than"This is the patience of the saints"? |
19308 | When did you arrive? |
19308 | When shall appear that new heaven and earth wherein dwelleth righteousness? |
19308 | Where should the phoenix build her odoriferous nest but in the land prophetically called the''blessed''? |
19308 | Why should we"faint, and say''tis vain,"after one hundred in India? |
19308 | Will he ever come again? |
19308 | Will he ever come again?" |
19308 | You speak Burmese-- the priests that I heard of last night? |
19308 | and be guilty of a breach of faith?" |
19308 | this little girl not converted yet? |
19308 | what can it avail?" |
19308 | what is rice? |
19308 | when shall time give place to eternity? |
19308 | when to meet again? |
30406 | Can any one particular form of government suit all mankind? 30406 Has any citizen in your knowledge failed, and have you heard the cause? |
30406 | Has any deserving stranger arrived in town since your last meeting? 30406 Has anybody attacked your reputation lately? |
30406 | Have you met with anything in the author you last read? 30406 How so?" |
30406 | Is perfection attainable in this life? 30406 Is there any difficulty which you would gladly have discussed at this time?" |
30406 | Should it be the aim of philosophy to eradicate the passions? 30406 What general conduct of life is most suitable for men in such circumstances as most of the members of the Junto are?" |
30406 | What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed? 30406 And have we now forgotten that powerful friend? 30406 And if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an Empire can rise without his aid? 30406 And what was the cause of all this commotion, which converted America, for seven years, into an Aceldama of blood and woe? 30406 But if she wishes to recover our commerce, are these the probable means? 30406 Can even our ministers sustain a more humiliating disgrace? 30406 Can there be a more mortifying insult? 30406 Can you, who are Protestants, consent to unite with a nation of Roman Catholics? 30406 Do they dare to resent it? |
30406 | He could only say that"I am_ inclined to believe_ that my child has not passed away into utter annihilation; but who knows? |
30406 | If these are deemed affronts, and the messengers punished as offenders, who will henceforth send petitions? |
30406 | What provision shall be made for the Tories in America, whose estates have been confiscated? |
30406 | What then is the use of that word?" |
30406 | Why, then, should he worry? |
30406 | Will not England at the judgment be held responsible for this war and its woes? |
30406 | and who will deliver them?" |
30406 | or do we imagine that we no longer need his assistance? |
15691 | And why should one desire to undertake this arduous responsibility? |
15691 | Are foreign entanglements necessary or desirable? |
15691 | Are not married women better fitted than celibates to deal with boys and girls in the period of adolescence? |
15691 | Are our interests nearly identical with those of England? |
15691 | Are our republican neighbors to the south to be increasingly recognized as under our protection and direction? |
15691 | Are they able to form political judgments? |
15691 | Are they able to make a wise selection of people to represent them in political action? |
15691 | Are we fitted by the genius of our institutions and by our experience to handle a foreign empire? |
15691 | But how can celibate young women, longing toward the towns, give this? |
15691 | But why should a woman be forced to leave teaching because she marries? |
15691 | Had not St. Paul declared:"It is a shame for women to speak in the church"? |
15691 | Has he serious defects that may cause his failure? |
15691 | Has he the honesty to resist the temptation to exploit me? |
15691 | Has he the leadership to command the best efforts of the subordinates in his department? |
15691 | Have they knowledge of the working of political machinery; or, lacking it, are they prepared to obtain it? |
15691 | Have they need of the protection which government gives? |
15691 | Have they need of the training which participation in political life gives? |
15691 | How can these women train safe citizens for the future if they do not understand the processes involved well enough to use them themselves? |
15691 | How could they combine an independent professional or industrial career with the life of a home and the responsibilities of a mother? |
15691 | How does it work in England, where it has been fairly tried? |
15691 | How does its use affect him? |
15691 | How far must older social restraints be modified in the interest of intellectual and industrial freedom? |
15691 | How would such an alliance affect our relation with England''s present ally, Japan? |
15691 | How, then, is good government achieved? |
15691 | If not, what should we do with the Philippines? |
15691 | If so, how are we to maintain the peace and secure payment of their foreign debts? |
15691 | If so, how can it be reached? |
15691 | If so, with what European or Asiatic nations should we seek to strengthen our friendship? |
15691 | In the past, the partnership of marriage has been incomplete on the property side; why not complete it? |
15691 | Is he an opportune man for the time and place? |
15691 | Is the work of the family more petty or monotonous than the work of the factory, shop or office? |
15691 | On what terms or under what guarantees should they be turned over to individuals or companies, if this is to be done? |
15691 | Shall woman in her time of need turn to a state made up of other women, or to a state made up of men? |
15691 | Should a great corporation pay taxes in proportion to its wealth, and in places where the wealth is protected by the law? |
15691 | Should a man with a cash income of$ 50,000 a year pay more to support government than one with a cash income of$ 500? |
15691 | Should churches, museums, libraries and schools be taxed; if not, why not? |
15691 | Should she be required to stand through hours of continuous work? |
15691 | Should she handle substances that endanger health? |
15691 | Should she have a decent retiring- room? |
15691 | Should she work at night and overtime? |
15691 | Should she work in bad air, due to dust, moisture, or excessive heat or cold? |
15691 | Should she work with dangerous machinery? |
15691 | Should taxes be devised, or continued, to protect such infant industries as now handle our kerosene oil, meat, sugar and steel? |
15691 | Should taxes be laid on flour, meat and eggs, on woolen cloth, on silks, velvets, ostrich plumes and diamonds? |
15691 | Should taxes be laid on whiskey, wines, tobacco, cigars and race- tracks? |
15691 | Should they be thrown away, gambled away, given away as favors, rented, sold, or handled directly by the people? |
15691 | To be a safe citizen one must be able to go beyond this kindly feeling and ask, Does the candidate know enough to do what I want done? |
15691 | What are some of the questions, then, on which he must form judgments? |
15691 | What are the effects of direct and indirect taxation? |
15691 | What are the objections to an income tax? |
15691 | What do the national, State and municipal governments own? |
15691 | What does it enable him to accomplish? |
15691 | What line of education should women pursue? |
15691 | What lines of work could they best undertake? |
15691 | What now is the relation of women to the range of political activity described in the last chapter? |
15691 | What qualities does political life presuppose in a participant? |
15691 | What should she do? |
15691 | What then does daily association of a man and woman who belong together do for them? |
15691 | When the work is reasonable, how long should a woman work daily? |
15691 | Who can estimate the value of training in coöperative work and organization which the Civil War gave to the American women? |
15691 | Why do women prefer social to domestic service? |
15691 | Why is it so much nobler to care for other people''s children in a social settlement, or in a school, than to care for one''s own in a home? |
15691 | Why is it that women count it an honor to work and starve for an art, but dishonor to undergo privations for their children? |
15691 | Why should women mass themselves together in vast groups as industrial workers, as teachers, as suffragettes? |
15691 | Why then did not the American Revolution pass on to full freedom and opportunity for women? |
15691 | Would a heavy tax on land force unused lands, including mines and waterways, into use? |
15691 | Would an alliance with England probably draw us into her troubles, if she has any, in Egypt or India? |
15691 | Would not married women do much to strengthen and broaden the calling? |
15691 | [ 27] What then should they do? |
22136 | Pray, Mr Surtees,said the great man,"do you think that any other undergraduate in the college would have taken that liberty?" |
22136 | Was not that then an awful wasting of his substance on vanities? |
22136 | What had the brother paid for that bauble[ a picture by Wouvermans], for instance? |
22136 | You fool,was the reply,"is that any reason why you should go to hell?" |
22136 | ''No, thank you, sir; I have ordered a bit of supper; perhaps you will walk up with me?'' |
22136 | A nervous inquiry in later years, if he heard of any guest being expected, was,"He, or she, will not meddle with me, will he?" |
22136 | Being endowed with power and wealth, and putting to himself the question,"What can I render to the Lord for all that he hath conferred on me?" |
22136 | But how many instances far more flagrant could be found in picture- buying? |
22136 | Every tribute from such_ dona ferentes_ cost him much uneasiness and some want of sleep-- for what could he do with it? |
22136 | He is known to quote Scripture for his purposes, but who ever before heard of his writing a sermon-- and, as it seems, a sound and orthodox one? |
22136 | How are you all? |
22136 | How many drops? |
22136 | If a novel was recommended to him he used to inquire,"Is there plenty of murder in it?" |
22136 | In what mood and shape shall he be brought forward? |
22136 | Is it not something in itself to possess genius? |
22136 | May the writer here be permitted to state that she considers this small and little- noticed work the best of all her husband''s productions? |
22136 | Might it not be as well to remain until that period, when I might attend the Circuit and bring you back? |
22136 | Quo innumerabiles libros et bibliothecas, quarum dominus vix tota vita indices perlegit? |
22136 | Surely you will not let this cruel king rob us of the fruits of our industry? |
22136 | The reason for sorrow, then, what is it? |
22136 | The stranger replied--"Sir, I am a minister; let me hear the text?" |
22136 | These he set to cater for him, and he triumphantly asks,"Among so many of the keenest hunters, what leveret could lie hid? |
22136 | True, the world at large has gained a brilliant essay on Euripides or Plato-- but what is that to the rightful owner of the lost sheep? |
22136 | What can be the theory of such a costume? |
22136 | What can it be? |
22136 | What fry could evade the hook, the net, or the trawl of these men? |
22136 | What use of putting notions into the greedy barbarian''s head, as if one were to find treasures for him? |
22136 | What would you think of such an association? |
22136 | When he had come so close that I could hardly escape him, he roared out:''Is''t you''at''s the laad Colonel H.''at''s been runnan''awa''?'' |
22136 | Where next are we to be disenchanted? |
22136 | Who can deny it? |
22136 | Who could gainsay those believed to hold in their hands the issues of life and death? |
22136 | Who knows what he may be reduced to? |
22136 | Who shall say what the belated traveller may make of this? |
22136 | Why was he taken away from his attendance at Mr Winchester''s office? |
22136 | [ 79] What would the learned world give for the restoration of these things? |
22136 | a street- boy of some sort? |
22136 | and whose fault is that?" |
22136 | cries the carle;''Gie me an answer, short and plain-- Is the sow flitted, yammerin''wean?''" |
33920 | After all, are we so far removed from the blue- law regime of early New England? |
33920 | Now, can you account for that? |
33920 | The foregoing, at least, shows some of the Christian features(?) |
33920 | Were the Prohibitionists on hand at that time with any sort of a program, solution or panacea for the difficulty? |
33920 | Where will it all end? |
17721 | And do you think,he went on in a passionate undertone,"that I am fit for nothing but Edmonson''s fag? |
17721 | Archdale? 17721 Bulchester,"Edmonson hissed out when they were alone,"what''s the reason you always retail my opinions?" |
17721 | But what? |
17721 | But, if you will pardon a word of warning at the outset from an unprejudiced observer-- what makes you expect to win, over Stephen Archdale''s head? 17721 Did I say any harm?" |
17721 | Do n''t you know she is the same as married to her cousin? |
17721 | Do you imagine that I shall forget my station? |
17721 | Do you know him? |
17721 | Do you know, I like it? |
17721 | Does n''t it occur to you that they may find them perfectly natural? |
17721 | Done anything? 17721 For how long are you engaged for this role of dictator? |
17721 | How do you do? |
17721 | How much too much do I take for granted? |
17721 | Is General Grant in? |
17721 | Is he poor, Archdale, because you think he has made the best bargain? |
17721 | Is she pretty, or plain? |
17721 | May we come? |
17721 | Not any of the Archdale family? |
17721 | Or my''position as guest?'' 17721 Or your position as guest?" |
17721 | Tell you what? |
17721 | That you have found--? |
17721 | Then you think she_ is_ married? |
17721 | To drink? |
17721 | What about him? |
17721 | What concerns your lordship? |
17721 | What has come over you, Bulchester? |
17721 | What has fate to do with this invitation? |
17721 | When is he going to get out? 17721 Why not?" |
17721 | Will you introduce me to Mistress Katie Archdale? |
17721 | You do n''t like Katie? |
17721 | You do n''t like her? |
17721 | You do n''t mean that you admire her so much as that? |
17721 | You know,she began eagerly,"that I am the----?" |
17721 | You mean that you have a clue? 17721 You take too much for granted, do nt you?" |
17721 | You will introduce me? |
17721 | But why? |
17721 | Did Great Britain withdraw her protectorate? |
17721 | Did she give up her new geography of Central America, and restore Balize to its original territory? |
17721 | Did she know intuitively that the eyes of the latter held more true worship for her than the other''s tones? |
17721 | Did she withdraw her colonies from the Bay Islands? |
17721 | Did she yield a single point in the controversy, except to give up and repudiate as unauthorized the seizure of San Juan? |
17721 | Do you forget that all is fair in love and war?" |
17721 | Edmonson?" |
17721 | Has the light of your honeymoon faded so quickly? |
17721 | Have you any idea?" |
17721 | Have you done anything about it?" |
17721 | How could she? |
17721 | How is it, Major, does he keep peace with you?" |
17721 | In answer I said, without throwing the blanket from over my head,''Who in thunder are you?'' |
17721 | Is she like a certain lady I know who chose to be married in a dowdy dress and a poke bonnet for fear of losing her husband altogether?" |
17721 | Is the young man to be dog in the manger? |
17721 | Nothing,--nothing-- uncomfortable, you know, I hope?" |
17721 | Say, Bul,"he added in a quick undertone as he was about moving forward to meet the new- comer,"how good does one have to be among this set? |
17721 | Shall we abrogate the patriotic principles contained in the declarations of the Monroe doctrine, and confess that we have no definite American policy? |
17721 | Stephen Archdale?" |
17721 | Stephen thought that this evening you might like a sail,--unless you have had too much of the water?" |
17721 | That the name amounts to anything?" |
17721 | The diplomatic correspondence which followed this high- handed outrage, like all the diplomatic(?) |
17721 | The moon fulls to- night Am I right, Temple?" |
17721 | The question at once arises, what are the net profits from which dividends may be declared, and do they include the surplus fund? |
17721 | Then he added,"Do n''t you see, Bulchester, that I dare not throw away an opportunity? |
17721 | This admission, from the lips of the very man who so diplomatically(?) |
17721 | Was it coquetry? |
17721 | What has got into the girl? |
17721 | What kind of person is this Elizabeth Royal?" |
17721 | What, then, is the duty of this republic in regard to the Central American problem? |
17721 | When are we to pay back the Canso affairs, and how? |
17721 | Where shall we strike? |
17721 | Who is to tell us? |
17721 | Who knows? |
17721 | Who shall say, then, that Central America shall never become part of this Republic, which now increases its population over a million each year? |
17721 | Why did Katie turn so readily from Edmonson to welcome the new- comer? |
17721 | Will not American principles and American institutions be firmly planted there? |
12486 | Why should Congregational worship be excluded to make room for others? |
12486 | And how do they fulfil the solemn trust? |
12486 | Are the Indians at Marshpee, protected in the same manner the whites are, in their religious freedom? |
12486 | Are the interests of a whole people to be sacrificed to one man? |
12486 | Brothers, our fathers of this State meet soon to make laws; will you help us to enable them to hear the voice of the red man? |
12486 | But what says the amended article on this subject of religious freedom? |
12486 | But who is the"_ Marshpee Deputation_,"that is showing off to such advantage in the city? |
12486 | Can I think that Apes will press it? |
12486 | Can he ever have read the third Article of the Bill of Rights, as amended? |
12486 | Can it be wondered, that the Indians become more and more degraded? |
12486 | Can you, gentlemen, can the Legislature, resist the simple appeal of their memorial? |
12486 | Do they not look exclusively to his own benefit, without regard to the wishes of the Indians? |
12486 | Do you think the white men would like it? |
12486 | Does he mean to insinuate he does not walk worthily now? |
12486 | Does it not appear from, this, and from his message, that the Ex- Governor is a man of pure republican principles? |
12486 | Does not he better deserve the name who took from us two dollars for sleeping in his stable? |
12486 | Fish beyond the period of their own existence? |
12486 | Fish continue to hold the parsonage against their will? |
12486 | Fish in possession of this property, which he claims to hold by the Laws? |
12486 | Fish the improvement of the parsonage and Meeting- house? |
12486 | From the days of Elliott, to the year 1834, have they made one citizen? |
12486 | Have not the Indians a right to their own property? |
12486 | How has it ever been conveyed out of their hands? |
12486 | How will the white man of Massachusetts ask favor for the red men of the South, while the poor Marshpee red men, his near neighbors, sigh in bondage? |
12486 | If the white man desired the welfare of his red brethren, why did he not give them schools? |
12486 | In the name of Heaven,( with due reverence,) I ask, what people could improve under laws which gave such temptation and facility to plunder? |
12486 | Is it creditable to let the_ white_ spiders break through the laws, while we catch and crush the poor Indian flies? |
12486 | Is not depriving them of all means of mental culture the worst of all robberies? |
12486 | Is not the conclusion then, from all the facts in the case, that the system of laws persisted in since 1763, have failed as acts of paternal care? |
12486 | Is not this a gross perversion of the design of the donors, even if they had any power to have made this grant? |
12486 | Is not this more expensive in proportion to the good done, than any heathen mission on record? |
12486 | Is there any thing unreasonable in their requests? |
12486 | Is there, then, any danger in giving the Indians an opportunity to try a liberal experiment for self- government? |
12486 | Is this language for a Christian minister to address to the Legislature of Massachusetts? |
12486 | Is this possible? |
12486 | Is this religious liberty for the Indians? |
12486 | Is this right, and ought the Indians to be sacrificed to the advantage a single man derives from holding an office of very trifling profit? |
12486 | Is this sword designed to protect or oppress the Indians? |
12486 | Mr. Dwight, one of the Committee, asked, if so many whites being there, did not tend to discourage the Indians from being interested in the meeting? |
12486 | Now what power had these men in 1783, to sequester four hundred acres of the common land of the Indians, for any purpose? |
12486 | O, ye who despise Indians, merely because they are poor, ignorant, and copper- colored; do you not think that God will have respect unto them? |
12486 | Or, can it be that there is no disgrace in persisting in wrong toward Indians? |
12486 | Should he turn them loose to shift for themselves, at the risk of losing them?) |
12486 | Should the worst come to the worst, does the proud white think that a dark skin is less honorable in the sight of God than his own beautiful hide? |
12486 | The Speaker put the question, shall the petition be read? |
12486 | The question is, how can a man do good among a people who do not respect him or desire his presence, and who refuse to hear him preach? |
12486 | Their object was to promote the gospel in Marshpee, but how has it turned out? |
12486 | This being the case, ought he not to pay as much regard to them? |
12486 | To petition for an established Church in Marshpee? |
12486 | Was it by virtue of his settlement, so that he now claims the land as a sole corporation? |
12486 | Was it then a public use? |
12486 | What has been the result of those"rival factions,"in Marshpee? |
12486 | What kind of law is this? |
12486 | What says the Bill of rights? |
12486 | What would the pious Williams say to Harvard College, could he visit Marshpee on a Sabbath? |
12486 | Where and how was their consent given to this act of 1809? |
12486 | Where are all our Cherokee philanthropists, at this time? |
12486 | Where did the General- Court get any power to give away the property of the Indians, any more than the lands of white men, held in common? |
12486 | Who shall dare to call that in question? |
12486 | Who were the Congregational church, and who the society in Marshpee, in 1811? |
12486 | Who, then, dared to teach them? |
12486 | Why has not the State done something to supply us with teachers and places of instruction? |
12486 | Why is it more iniquitous to plunder a stranded ship than to rob, and perhaps murder, an Indian tribe? |
12486 | Why should not this odious, and brutifying system be put an end to? |
12486 | Why should they not_ vote_, maintain schools,( they have volunteered to do this in some instances,) and use as they please that which is their own? |
12486 | Will not your white brothers of Georgia tell you to look at home, and clear your own borders of oppression, before you trouble them? |
12486 | Will other papers publish this simple appeal to the justice of the white men? |
12486 | Will the good people of Massachusetts revert back to the days of their fathers, when they were under the galling yoke of the mother country? |
12486 | Will you think of this? |
12486 | Would they ever have thus yielded to an Indian, if they had not been compelled? |
12486 | You plead for the Cherokees, will you not raise your voice for the red man of Marshpee? |
12486 | when they petitioned the government for a redress of grievances, but in vain? |
32892 | ''And I?'' 32892 Oh,_ ça!_"replied the charming South American, with a shrug:"Is that all? |
32892 | But what can I do? |
32892 | Can the stern patriot Clara''s suit deny? |
32892 | Did you not bid me tempt God and die? |
32892 | For instance, what could be more suggestive of utter simplicity than the diary of Abigail Foote, to which reference has just been made? |
32892 | How oft have you eaten and drunk your own damnation?" |
32892 | If in the history of these people a Queen Esther stands forth as a cruel monster, did not proud Rome produce a Messalina? |
32892 | If the cold Puritans were not guiltless in this wise, what could be expected from the Cavaliers or the warm- blooded sons of France? |
32892 | Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone? |
32892 | Or need we go beyond the records of a later date of the people of one of the most cultured nations of Europe? |
32892 | They were imperative in their instant demands; they must be satisfied; but how? |
32892 | What symptoms of the workings of the devil could seem surer to a man of Mather''s prejudices and sympathies? |
32892 | Where shall we place the blame? |
32892 | Who could refuse a fairy, and above all the Blue Fairy? |
32892 | Will they lay out their hair, and wear their false locks, their borders, and towers like comets about their heads?" |
32892 | or have they none? |
31413 | Are there any Spaniards,says he, after some pause,"in that region of bliss which you describe?" |
31413 | Who is he? |
31413 | Who is there,replied the local prince,"that is not tributary to that Emperor?" |
31413 | 2 175 The Quipu 180 Gold Ornament(? |
31413 | Although you are a woman, and are the image of your father, what more can I say to you than has already been said?... |
31413 | As several soldiers were one day disputing about the division of some gold- dust, an Indian cazique called out:"Why quarrel about such a trifle? |
31413 | Besides all that, of what use could ships be to us in the present expedition? |
31413 | But what were these Or what the thin gold hauberk, when opposed To arms like ours in battle? |
31413 | It was then, according to Voltaire''s story, that when Charles asked the courtiers,"Who is that man?" |
31413 | Meantime what had Montezuma been doing, the sad- faced[19] and haughty Emperor of Mexico, land of the Aztecs and the Tezcucans? |
31413 | The Aztec chief replied with an air of dignity:"How is it that you have been here only two days, and demand to see the Emperor? |
31413 | The Pythagoreans, it is true, argued that our earth must be spherical, but why? |
31413 | There was now a temporary suspension of hostilities; should they not avail themselves of it to retrace their steps to Vera Cruz?" |
31413 | What lands were imagined by the ancients in the far West under the setting sun? |
31413 | What would the Tlascalans say? |
31413 | What, then, was the work done by Balboa, and what prevented him from taking Peru? |
31413 | When can I be admitted to your sovereign''s presence?" |
31413 | Who is the red man? |
31413 | Who were the people of this stout- hearted republic? |
31413 | Why not sail westward from Europe over the ocean, and thus come to the eastern parts of Asia by traveling toward the setting sun? |
31413 | Why should it not at one time have been fully deserving of the name by which we still know it? |
31413 | Why was Europe so long in discovering the vast Continent which all the time lay beyond the Western Ocean? |
31413 | With such obstacles, without the draft assistance of horses or cattle, how was it possible to effect such a transport? |
31413 | [ Illustration: Gold Ornament(? |
31413 | _ Basque Discovery of America._--Who are the Basque people? |
31413 | _ Raro antecedentem scelestum__ Deseruit pede Poena claudo._ When Did Doom, though lame, not bide its time, To clutch the nape of skulking Crime? |
31413 | when was it ever known that a Castilian turned his back on a foe?" |
23200 | Meruit quo crimine servus Supplicium? 23200 What is the charge? |
23200 | Where did you come from? |
23200 | --> is it not? |
23200 | 63. p. 456, de- departed--> departed 64. p. 459, lieutenant- governnorship--> lieutenant- governorship 65. p. 464, it it not? |
23200 | A. Sykes? |
23200 | A. Sykes? |
23200 | Are the teachers or conductors of your voluntary organizations professionally trained( viz, as in question 7)? |
23200 | Audi Nulla umquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa est""O demens, ita servus homo est? |
23200 | Davidson 1879- 81 S.A. McElwee? |
23200 | Davidson S.A. McElwee? |
23200 | Do they feel that these organizations are vital to them or do they feel as one student in an eastern university? |
23200 | Do they function in the lives of the students? |
23200 | Does intellectual knowledge of this particular type function religiously in the lives of the students? |
23200 | Does it not move, and feel and think? |
23200 | Does your school have a special appropriation for religious work, viz: for the Y.M.C.A., for a chaplain, college pastor, etc.? |
23200 | For example, Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, etc.? |
23200 | Have you any courses in the Seminary or Divinity School for which you give college credit? |
23200 | Have you any definite data upon which to base your estimate? |
23200 | He said to the teacher,"What is your name?" |
23200 | How does religion function in student life? |
23200 | How has the movement demanding efficiency in religious education affected Negro institutions? |
23200 | How many students are enrolled in your voluntary organizations? |
23200 | How many students are in your curriculum courses of religious education? |
23200 | How much credit is given for each? |
23200 | How much credit is given for them, and how many students are affected by them? |
23200 | In a historical periodical, accuracy is important, is it not? |
23200 | In your opinion, are the Negro colleges meeting the needs of definite religious training? |
23200 | Is attendance required and what number attend? |
23200 | Is it not a matter of vital significance to our American history which of these statements is to be accepted? |
23200 | It might be wise to let it sleep in its torpor;"but has not,"he asked,"its dark chaos been illumined? |
23200 | League, College Church, Sunday School, etc.? |
23200 | Phipps not knowing him, demanded:"Who are you?" |
23200 | Quis detulit? |
23200 | Quis testis adest? |
23200 | That will not be admitted by everyone, for what share did the Negro have in America in which he lived more than in Britain which offered him freedom? |
23200 | They called out,''Is this Southampton County?'' |
23200 | To the Editor of_ The Planet_: Will you for the sake of history allow this communication in your columns? |
23200 | To the question"Does crime grow less as education increases?" |
23200 | To what extent do religious services figure in this work? |
23200 | Was it the fear of Nat Turner and his deluded drunken handful of followers, which produced such effects? |
23200 | Was it this that induced distant counties where the very name of Southampton was strange to arm and equip for a struggle? |
23200 | Well, what does that matter so far as the estimate of the value of sermons delivered to them? |
23200 | What are the items of importance in these respective services, the sermon, prayer, ritual, congregational singing, special music, etc.? |
23200 | What are they? |
23200 | What do the supervisors of Negro institutions conceive religious education to be? |
23200 | What institution attended and what degrees received? |
23200 | What is general education? |
23200 | What is religion? |
23200 | What is the evidence? |
23200 | What is the number enrolled in these curriculum courses? |
23200 | What is the type of teachers in Negro institutions, for the progressive socialization of the individuals whom they instruct? |
23200 | What is your church affiliation? |
23200 | What is your own estimate of the religious value of your courses and organizations? |
23200 | What opportunity have the students for the expression of ideals received through these organizations? |
23200 | What opportunity have they for the expression of their religious thought and devotional attitude in actual service? |
23200 | What other criticism have you to offer on these services? |
23200 | What religious services are held by the school? |
23200 | What suggestion have you to offer for the improvement of these services? |
23200 | What then are the courses included in the curricula of these institutions? |
23200 | What then is the attitude of these teachers toward their task? |
23200 | What value is the chapel service to the religious development? |
23200 | Where should that stop? |
23200 | Which of the courses are elective and which are required? |
23200 | Who laid the information? |
23200 | Why did you make the preceding ranking as you did? |
23200 | [ 4] How can one account then for the unfavorable attitude of Great Britain toward the return of the Negro fugitives? |
23200 | or any other religious service? |
20752 | And I dare say, you must have only a little money left now? |
20752 | And if, coming down from those higher functions in society, we descend to our domestic relations, where do we find that those relations are changed? 20752 And who did more than they to save the city?" |
20752 | And you have come all that distance to help us with these things? |
20752 | But how is that? |
20752 | But who is it that says so? 20752 Does he not know that, for generations past, the institution of slavery had been forced upon us by the avarice, the love of power of the North? |
20752 | Does not the intelligent freedman know that neither he nor we are accountable to God for the condition in which we were respectively born? 20752 How long does it take to come here from Mecca?" |
20752 | In what particular have our relations changed? 20752 Is not our soil calling for the energetic efforts of his sinewy arms? |
20752 | The Negroes prefer a glass necklace to that gold, which polite nations so highly value: can there be greater proof of their wanting common sense? 20752 Then you must have paid quite a lot of money for your passage?" |
20752 | Where can that happiness spring from? 20752 Why, then, should there be any strife between us? |
20752 | [ 507] Cardinal Gibbons, some years ago, wrote a letter in which occur the following sentiments:What then is the first need of the colored people? |
20752 | --"But are they mine,"said the old woman,"do they not work for you, and are you not my son yourself? |
20752 | --"Have you not,"rejoined the master,"two grandsons who can mend it for you?" |
20752 | 13, 23,''can the Ethiopian change his skin?'' |
20752 | Again, has one ever asked himself why it is that so much of the poetry of the Negro fails to reach the ultimate standards of art? |
20752 | Am I to dine alone?'' |
20752 | And what are these rights? |
20752 | And what repairs did the poor creature''s roof require? |
20752 | And why? |
20752 | But how have these records been made available? |
20752 | But where? |
20752 | Can we, in fact, live without him? |
20752 | Can you expect any more? |
20752 | Cur timeas, quamvis, dubitesve, nigerrima celsam_ Cæsaris occidui_, candere(_ x_)_ Musa_ domum? |
20752 | Deprived of all created bliss, Through hardship, toil, and pain? |
20752 | Does he not know that to- day we have in him the same implicit faith and reliance we had before? |
20752 | Does the apprehension of being combated by the Indians damp their enterprize? |
20752 | First of all, last of all, is it not the matter of technique? |
20752 | How are we to explain this contradiction in dealing with the Negro? |
20752 | How could either escape error? |
20752 | How then are we to explain the profound change of sentiment indicated by the leading papers of the South just before the war? |
20752 | How then can you expect from what we have seen of the bad life of you Christians that we should wish to be like you?" |
20752 | In case of a serious alarm, this would prove but of little service; and what security is there against such an alarm? |
20752 | In what case have our interests in the general welfare been divided? |
20752 | Is it even the political leader whose eloquence stirred up the North and West to the rescue of that race? |
20752 | Is it from the midst of a community divided against itself, or from one blessed with peace and harmony? |
20752 | Is it the Federal soldier who fought for the freedom of that race? |
20752 | Is it the fear of being pursued and overtaken that is an obstacle to the project? |
20752 | Is it the uncertainty of a subsistence in this new mode of life, that deters them from undertaking it? |
20752 | Is it true that Reconstruction was a failure? |
20752 | Is not today the colored man as essential to our prosperity as he was before? |
20752 | Le jour du repos n''appartient- il pas à tous les hommes, et plus particulièrement à ceux qui sont employés aux penibles travaux de la campagne? |
20752 | Ought not Congress to be petitioned to grant them a district in a good climate, say on the shores of the Pacific Ocean? |
20752 | Parviennent- ils à se procurer des esclaves? |
20752 | Que résulte- t- il cependant de cette avarice mal entendue? |
20752 | She perceived him, and accosting him, said,"My master, when will you send one of your carpenters to repair the roof of my hut? |
20752 | The contest then must be who can arm fastest, and where are our arms? |
20752 | To what civilization does he refer? |
20752 | Two thirds of the camels bought by Daumas in the Sudan died before he reached"Isalab"( Ain Salah? |
20752 | Un esclave fuit- il son maître? |
20752 | Un maître ne doit- il pas a son esclave le vêtement et une nourriture substantielle, à proportion du travail qu''il en exige? |
20752 | Un vol a- t- il été commis? |
20752 | Was that true? |
20752 | Was this a mistake? |
20752 | What more natural in their revolt from the old country than to make this doctrine the political and moral sanction of their course? |
20752 | What then is to be done? |
20752 | What was wanting to shelter her from the wind and rain of heaven? |
20752 | What, then, are some of those discoveries which have so completely destroyed the ethnic fetish of the Caucasian race? |
20752 | When I had read the report, the Governor- General said:"What is now to be done?" |
20752 | When one tribe defeats another the question arises, What is to be done with the prisoners? |
20752 | Who was Minos? |
20752 | Why dost thou fear or doubt that the blackest Muse may scale the lofty house of the western Caesar? |
20752 | Why should not our gods be their gods-- our happiness be their happiness? |
20752 | Would any one believe that I am a master of slaves of my own purchase? |
20752 | [ 50] Were the terrors of San Domingo to be reenacted on the banks of Mississippi? |
20752 | _ Redemption_ from what? |
20752 | and am I born for this, To wear this slavish chain? |
20752 | and must I still complain, Deprived of liberty? |
20752 | can he quail or cower? |
20752 | shall an_ Æthiop_ touch the martial string, Of battles, leaders, great achievements sing? |
20752 | who suckled and raised your two brothers? |
20752 | who was it but Irrouba? |
36299 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
36299 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
36299 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
36299 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
36299 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
36299 | What am I? |
36299 | What am I? |
36299 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
33000 | Colonel,said he,"can you capture that battery?" |
33000 | He was all alone, was he? 33000 I wonder if that''s possible,"said Marshall, beginning to think his companion was right;"how can we find out?" |
33000 | So it is in these times, but we''ll give it to you in gold, if you''ll show us where we can get a chance at the rebel; did you see him? |
33000 | The Indians, men and women, were in high good humor, and why should they not be? 33000 What stronger evidence can be given,"he asked,"of the want of energy in our government than these disorders? |
33000 | Who is Franklin Pierce? |
33000 | Above all, had not"Old Hickory"won the battle of New Orleans, the most brilliant victory of the War of 1812? |
33000 | And he was mounted on a black horse with a white star in his forehead, and he was going like a streak of lightning, was n''t he?" |
33000 | And what did November tell? |
33000 | But what American can not be convinced that he is pre- eminently fitted for the office? |
33000 | Can it be the breeze of morning which sounds''click, click?'' |
33000 | Happening to look around, he asked:"What is that shining near your boot?" |
33000 | If there is not a power in it to check them, what security has a man for his life, liberty, or property? |
33000 | In the midst of the terrific fighting, when the_ Richard_ seemed doomed, Captain Pearson of the_ Serapis_ shouted:"Have you struck?" |
33000 | It consisted of the words,"What hath God wrought?" |
33000 | The salutation, when one member met another, was,"Have you seen Sam?" |
33000 | We recall that one of the most popular songs began:"Oh, where, tell me where, was the log- cabin made? |
33000 | What fate awaited it on the morrow? |
33000 | What is that noise? |
33000 | What shall we do with them? |
33000 | What steps did she take to do so? |
33000 | When that officer was brought into Hancock''s tent the latter extended his hand to his old acquaintance, exclaiming heartily,"How are you, Ned?" |
33000 | While Washington lived and was willing thus to serve his country, what other name could be considered? |
18948 | For who hath known the mind of the Lord? |
18948 | A race of lawgivers? |
18948 | A race of seers? |
18948 | A race of traders and sharpers? |
18948 | Again, what is the ground for arguing that the lips are"full, ripe and red?" |
18948 | And Rutherford B. Hayes? |
18948 | And Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart? |
18948 | And the poor in spirit? |
18948 | And to what end? |
18948 | And why? |
18948 | And why? |
18948 | But did she make it Hen or Rik, or neither? |
18948 | But how many Lincolns would you get out of it, and how many Jacksons, and how many Grants? |
18948 | But how? |
18948 | But what of old Ludwig? |
18948 | But why are actors, in general, such blatant and obnoxious asses, such arrant posturers and wind- bags? |
18948 | But why praise and flatter Him for His unspeakable cruelties? |
18948 | But, why, then, that widespread error? |
18948 | Does it break the pride of strutting, snorting man, and turn his heart to the things of the spirit? |
18948 | For example, Mark Twain''s"What Is Man? |
18948 | Has humanity found by experience that the man who sees the fun of life is unfitted to deal sanely with its problems? |
18948 | How many gentlemen of God, having to choose between Christ and Patrie, have actually chosen Christ? |
18948 | IV THE BURDEN OF HUMOR What is the origin of the prejudice against humor? |
18948 | If God can hear a petition, what ground is there for holding that He would not hear a complaint? |
18948 | In his"What Is Man?" |
18948 | Is he the diligent reader, the hard student, the eager inquirer? |
18948 | Is he the young fellow with ideas in him, and a yearning for hard and difficult work? |
18948 | Is he, taking averages, the intelligent, alert, ingenious, ambitious young fellow? |
18948 | Is it because humor and sound sense are essentially antagonistic? |
18948 | Is it disconcerting to think of Him thus? |
18948 | Is its use, then, to prepare him for happiness to come-- for the vast ease and comfort of convalescence? |
18948 | Is one to tell her that one loves her? |
18948 | Is one to thank her? |
18948 | Is the torture, then, an end in itself? |
18948 | Just what sort of instruction do they radiate, and what is its value? |
18948 | Of what use is it? |
18948 | Or Columbus? |
18948 | Or Darwin?... |
18948 | Or Jenner? |
18948 | Or Lincoln? |
18948 | Or is one to descend to chatty commonplaces-- about the weather, literature, politics, the war? |
18948 | Ottchen? |
18948 | Should the taxpayers be forced to sweat millions for such a purpose? |
18948 | The meek shall inherit-- what? |
18948 | There is one place where the harps, taking a running start from the scrolls of the violins, leap slambang through( or is it into?) |
18948 | To which did Henrik Ibsen answer at the domestic hearth? |
18948 | Was Emmanuel Swendenborg ever Manny? |
18948 | Was John Wesley ever Jack? |
18948 | Was Robert Browning ever Bob? |
18948 | Was Tadeusz Kosciusko ever Teddy? |
18948 | Well, is it any the less disconcerting to think of Him as able to ease and answer, and yet failing?... |
18948 | What actual fact of life lies behind it, giving it a specious appearance of reasonableness? |
18948 | What clown ever brought down the house like Galileo? |
18948 | What conceivable cunning could do such execution as her stupendous appeal to masculine vanity, sentimentality, egoism? |
18948 | What could be more idiotic? |
18948 | What is one to say to the woman then? |
18948 | What reason have we for believing, as he says, that the lungs are"strongly expanded"during the act? |
18948 | What was Bismarck to the Fürstin, and to the mother he so vastly feared? |
18948 | What was Grant to his wife? |
18948 | Where are all the faiths of the middle ages, so complex and yet so precise? |
18948 | Which did Ann Boleyn use when she cooed into the suspicious ear of Henry VIII.? |
18948 | Which has prevailed? |
18948 | Who will do a full- length psychological study of him? |
18948 | Why assume that those notions would be any the less worth hearing and heeding if they were cast in the form of criticism, and even of denunciation? |
18948 | Why forget so supinely His failures to remedy the easily remediable? |
18948 | Why hold that the God who can understand and forgive even treason could not understand and forgive remonstrance? |
18948 | Why is it as surprising to find an unassuming and likable fellow among them as to find a Greek without fleas? |
18948 | Why is it so dangerous, if you would keep the public confidence, to make the public laugh? |
18948 | Why not call an ecumenical council, appoint a commission to see to such things, and then forget the sacrilege? |
18948 | Why not give them over, now and then, to justifiable indignation meetings? |
18948 | Why was it invented? |
18948 | Why, after all, be intelligent? |
18948 | Why, indeed, devote the churches exclusively to worship? |
18948 | Why, then, go on parroting_ gaucheries_ that Schumann himself, were he alive today, would have long since corrected? |
18948 | XIX ACTORS"In France they call an actor a_ m''as- tu- vu_, which, anglicised, means a have- you- seen- me?... |
18948 | XLII QUID EST VERITAS? |
18948 | XLIX EXEMPLI GRATIA Do I let the poor suffer, and consign them, as old Friedrich used to say, to statistics and the devil? |
18948 | XVI THE JOCOSE GODS What humor could be wilder than that of life itself? |
18948 | XXX THOUGHTS ON THE VOLUPTUOUS Why has no publisher ever thought of perfuming his novels? |
10723 | ''Lord, Thou hast here Thy ninety and nine; Are they not enough for Thee?'' 10723 And what was in those ships all three On Christmas day, on Christmas day, And what was in those ships all three On Christmas day in the morning? |
10723 | And where better could you leave all? |
10723 | Are those John''s children? |
10723 | Betty, do you know any poor people I ought to get things for, this Christmas? |
10723 | But what if we never should? 10723 But what will they all say?" |
10723 | Dear husband,said Rose Standish,"wilt thou go ashore in this company?" |
10723 | Diana, will you take a walk with me to- night? |
10723 | Did n''t I go a whole year and never touch a drop? 10723 Do n''t you think the ocean is like death-- wide, dark, stormy, unknown? |
10723 | Do n''t you want to come in and see the church? |
10723 | Dost hear, mother? 10723 Father, may I go ashore? |
10723 | For why? 10723 I say, boys,"said James,"who''ll help bring in my sea chest?" |
10723 | Know ye, brethren, what in this land smelleth sweetest to me? |
10723 | May we play with them, please, sir? |
10723 | Mother, do n''t you know me? |
10723 | Now, is n''t that a brave ballad? |
10723 | Now, sweet son, since thou art a king, Why art thou laid in stall? 10723 Of course; well, what is it?" |
10723 | Oh, what''s that? |
10723 | Pray, whither sailed those ships all three, On Christmas day, on Christmas day? 10723 This lovely laydie sat and sung, And to her child she said, My son, my brother, and my father dear, Why lyest thou thus in hayd? |
10723 | Wal, look here-- don''t ye want a sort o''nest- egg? 10723 Well, Deb,"said Master Coppin, pinching the ear of a great mastiff bitch who sat by him,"what sayest thou? |
10723 | Well, have n''t we done a good day''s work, cousin? |
10723 | What in the world ails James? |
10723 | What is it, Pussy-- half of my kingdom? |
10723 | What made Jim go to college? |
10723 | What was the matter o''the deacon? |
10723 | What, the gardener father turned off for drinking? |
10723 | Who cares what they say? 10723 Who''s that looking in at the window?" |
10723 | Why do you cry, mother? |
10723 | Why, aye, sweetheart, what else am I come for-- and who should go if not I? |
10723 | Why, yis; do n''t ye know that are? 10723 Why,"said Abner Jenks, a stolid plow boy to whom this stream of remark was addressed;"this''ere place ai n''t mortgaged, is it? |
10723 | _ Is_ this true? 10723 A sturdy little fellow of four presses up to the mother''s knee and repeats the question,Sha''n''t we have a Christmas, mother?" |
10723 | And was this mighty Saviour given to him? |
10723 | Ca n''t we do_ any_ thing? |
10723 | Ca n''t we get him back? |
10723 | Carver? |
10723 | Come, now, it''s a splendid evening;_ wo n''t_ you come?" |
10723 | Did n''t everybody hit wrong sometimes? |
10723 | Did n''t rich fellows have their wine, and drink a little too much now and then? |
10723 | Do I read it right?" |
10723 | Encircled on all sides with lovers, would she keep faith with an adventurer gone for an indefinite quest? |
10723 | For if Miss Diana wished to ride or row or dance with any of the Pitkin boys, why should n''t she? |
10723 | Give us thy mind on it, old girl; say, wilt thou go deer- hunting with us yonder?" |
10723 | How shall we keep it in these woods?" |
10723 | I say, Betty, do you know where John''s wife lives?" |
10723 | I, for example, how much do I_ deserve_ to have all these nice things? |
10723 | Is James_ gone_? |
10723 | Now do n''t you?" |
10723 | Oh, the choppings, the poundings, the stoning of raisins, the projections of pies and puddings, the killing of turkeys-- who can utter it? |
10723 | Oh, why did n''t I know?" |
10723 | Sarvant, ma''am,"to Diana--"how ye all gettin''on?" |
10723 | She adds, demonstratively clasping the little woman round the neck and leaning her bright cheek against her whitening hair,"Have n''t we been smart?" |
10723 | Thou rememberest, Master Coppin?" |
10723 | Though Sanballat the Horonite, and Tobias the Ammonite, and Geshem the Arabian make scorn of us, and say,''What do these weak Jews? |
10723 | Wal, yis, naow-- goin''to walk to the cross- road tavern? |
10723 | We wo n''t be down- hearted, will we? |
10723 | Were they not her cousins? |
10723 | What if He_ would_ help him? |
10723 | What love- gift giveth our Lord Jesus on this day? |
10723 | What order shall we take?" |
10723 | What that Christmas Eve was, when the husband and father came home with the new and softened heart that had been given him, who can say? |
10723 | What''s come over the old crittur? |
10723 | Who believes it? |
10723 | Why do n''t you go with us? |
10723 | Why else am I come on this quest? |
10723 | Why not ordain thy bedding In some great king his hall? |
10723 | Why should she?" |
10723 | Why should we wear our lives out fretting? |
10723 | Would she wait for him? |
10723 | _ Is_ this so? |
10723 | he said, looking over to the eager group of girls and boys,"ye would go ashore, would ye? |
10723 | he said;"no welcome from you?" |
10723 | says a little voice,"what are we going to have for our Christmas?" |
10723 | what noise is that?" |
15866 | And did you get left? |
15866 | But of course the thought at once occurs to us, How can we_ be_ considering the high cost of the necessaries of life? 15866 Do you begin to feel rested?" |
15866 | Give me leave, mister? |
15866 | How am I to get things in their right perspective? 15866 How do you make that out?" |
15866 | Who shall rule? |
15866 | And what would it be for? |
15866 | Are we tending to a Plutocracy, or can a real Democracy hold its own? |
15866 | At last he asked, hesitatingly,"What do you think of it? |
15866 | But I stumbled over the question, in regard to certain Commandments,"What are the reasons annexed?" |
15866 | But how does the British Empire hold together? |
15866 | But how is it to be distributed? |
15866 | But in so much as we were bound to find him out sometime, shall we quarrel with Dickens because we were enabled to do so in the first chapter? |
15866 | But is the remedy to be found in the restriction of immigration? |
15866 | But it must have occurred to some one to ask,"What will happen when the Oregons and Californias are filled up?" |
15866 | But we may ask, When these diverse peoples come together on common ground, what sort of man do they choose as their symbol? |
15866 | But what of yesterday? |
15866 | But when one is asked to warm his enthusiasm by means of the Roman monuments, he naturally asks,''Enthusiasm over what?'' |
15866 | Can it get itself obeyed? |
15866 | Could any better description be given of the kind of man whom Americans delight to honor? |
15866 | Did not all Lilliput laugh over the discovery of Gulliver? |
15866 | Do you remember that story of Jules Verne about a voyage to the moon? |
15866 | Does it seem to you to be cogent?" |
15866 | Does the charm remain? |
15866 | Druids or pre- Druids? |
15866 | Even when it is admitted that when considered in a large way the change is for the better, the question arises, Who is to pay for it? |
15866 | Having traversed the period from King William to the dwellers in the Halls of Tara, what more natural than to take a further plunge into the past? |
15866 | His ready- made world does not please him-- why should it? |
15866 | Honest Touchstone, in trying to reconcile the different points of view, blurted out the test question,"Hast any philosophy in thee, Shepherd?" |
15866 | How can Worship be personified? |
15866 | How can they? |
15866 | How can this machinery be controlled and used for truly human ends? |
15866 | How do the old scenes affect us? |
15866 | How shall we answer the prophets of ill? |
15866 | I ask you to remember two letters-- E and N._ What_ does the country expect this Federation to do? |
15866 | If Seattle should cease to grow while we are looking at it, what should we do then? |
15866 | If Tiberius must exhibit his colossal inhumanity, could he have anywhere in all the world chosen a better spot? |
15866 | If a person possessed a cheerful disposition, you should ask,"How did he get it?" |
15866 | If that was not happiness, what was it? |
15866 | If the Home Rule Bill be enacted into law, will Ulster submit to be ruled by a Catholic majority? |
15866 | If you do n''t feel that you can afford to make such a heavy investment as I have suggested, why do n''t you put your material into a short story? |
15866 | In the light of such facts as these, who can be a pessimist? |
15866 | In your judgment is it organic or functional?" |
15866 | Is n''t there a little of a cheaper quality that they could show you? |
15866 | Is not the motto of the true knight,_ Ich dien_? |
15866 | Is there any symptom of decadence more sure than when the moral temperature suddenly rises above normal? |
15866 | Is this an evidence of a cynic humor in the blood, or is it a manifestation of childish optimism? |
15866 | Is this still to be a land of opportunity? |
15866 | North Ovid is real, and so would be the apartment- house; but what of it? |
15866 | Said he:"Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? |
15866 | Shall Ireland any longer submit to be ruled by the English? |
15866 | Should the abutters be assessed for betterments or should they sue for damages? |
15866 | Should we push on to it? |
15866 | Suppose the pagan Maxentius had triumphed over Constantine, what difference would it have made in the picture? |
15866 | THE CONTEMPORANEOUSNESS OF ROME I"You here, Bagster?" |
15866 | That the Common has been saved many times before is true; but is that any reason why we should falter now? |
15866 | The Man on Horseback will appear, and what shall we do then? |
15866 | The question is--"Can rules or tutors educate The semigod whom we await?" |
15866 | The question which disturbs us is, Ought we to have done so? |
15866 | There they are, and here you are, and what are you going to do about them?" |
15866 | Under those circumstances what did Ulphilas do? |
15866 | Was it fear or love? |
15866 | Was there ever a greater contrast between an earthly paradise and abounding sinfulness? |
15866 | Well, what do you say to Cavour? |
15866 | Were they still under the influence of the glacial period and attempting to imitate the wild doings of Nature? |
15866 | What are the"reasons annexed"to all this uproar? |
15866 | What can a mere Act of Parliament do when confronted by such a combination as that? |
15866 | What is Gradgrind to us or we to Gradgrind? |
15866 | What is it about a stamp act that arouses such fierceness of resistance? |
15866 | What right has Sir Lionel to lay down the law for Hodge? |
15866 | What shall be done with the next ninety millions? |
15866 | What should we see when we got there? |
15866 | What spurred them on to their feats of prodigious industry? |
15866 | What then?" |
15866 | What''s the use of being here unless you are here in the spirit? |
15866 | Where was the stern little city which Calvin taught and ruled? |
15866 | Where will it find the troops to coerce the province? |
15866 | Which Boniface? |
15866 | Who is to get the benefit of these economies? |
15866 | Who were the worshipers? |
15866 | Why ca n''t I feel that way about the great events that happened down there?" |
15866 | Why should he do so when there was no Scripture for it? |
15866 | Why should not Hodge have a right to have his point of view considered? |
15866 | Why should not the sinners have the same means of identification? |
15866 | Why should they do this? |
15866 | Will she pay that three- pence? |
15866 | Will the Labor party be a little less noisy and insistent in its demands? |
15866 | Will the masses of the people submit any longer to the existing inequalities in political representation? |
15866 | Will the women of England kindly wait a little till their demands can be considered in a dignified way? |
15866 | Will you allow me, as one in the same line, to indulge in a little criticism? |
15866 | _ When_ does the country expect you to do it? |
12101 | An annual report of what? |
12101 | Are they admitted as citizens? |
12101 | Are we men? |
12101 | But,continued Nott,"the solemn question here arises-- in what condition will this momentous change place us? |
12101 | How forswear? |
12101 | I have plowed, and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me-- and a''n''t I a woman? 12101 Just what is the light in which we are to regard the slaves?" |
12101 | What can a man do to help such a suffering mass of humanity? |
12101 | What of the darker world that watches? 12101 What, Peggy,"asked Price,"were you going to set the town on fire?" |
12101 | What, is it about Mr. Hogg''s goods? |
12101 | ( Boston?) |
12101 | After a while the slave raised the important question: Had not his residence outside of a slave state made him a free man? |
12101 | And what was the Negro Problem? |
12101 | And which is the world to choose, Christ or Mammon? |
12101 | Approaching the cabin of a free Negro they asked,"Is this Southampton County?" |
12101 | Are they admitted as property? |
12101 | Asked in court by Gray if he still believed in the providential nature of his mission, he asked,"Was not Christ crucified?" |
12101 | But whar did Christ come from?" |
12101 | But, sir, where did the Greeks and the Romans and the Jews get it? |
12101 | Could a bishop hold a slave? |
12101 | Could any one use a young woman who wanted to work for her board? |
12101 | Could our worst enemies or the worst enemies of republics, wish us a severer judgment?" |
12101 | Could the Church really countenance slavery? |
12101 | Dey talks''bout dis ting in de head-- what dis dey call it?" |
12101 | Do we not owe it to civilized man to stand in the breach and stay the uplifted arm?... |
12101 | Have we any other master but Jesus Christ alone? |
12101 | How could one know that wakeful and sagacious enemies without would not discover the vulnerable point and use it for the country''s overthrow? |
12101 | How many families of your town would take in a Negro man or woman, teach them, bear with them, and seek to make them Christians? |
12101 | How many merchants would take Adolph, if I wanted to make him a clerk; or mechanics, if I wanted to teach him a trade? |
12101 | How shall we measure such a life? |
12101 | I am aware that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity? |
12101 | I could work as much and eat as much as a man, when I could get it, and bear de lash as well-- and a''n''t I a woman? |
12101 | If I wanted to put Jane and Rosa to school, how many schools are there in the Northern states that would take them in?... |
12101 | If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint and yourn holds a quart, would n''t ye be mean not to let me have my little half- measure full?" |
12101 | In any case the answer to the first question at once suggested another, What shall we do with the Negro? |
12101 | In the first place, what is he worth, and especially what is he worth in honest Southern opinion? |
12101 | In the same month George W. Cable answered affirmatively and with emphasis the question,"Does the Negro pay for his education?" |
12101 | In this life was it also possible for the children of Africa to have a permanent and an honorable place? |
12101 | Is He not their master as well as ours? |
12101 | Is it finally to be an agency for the upbuilding of the nation, or simply one of the forces that retard? |
12101 | Is she to abide by the principles that guided her in 1776, or simply seize her share of the booty? |
12101 | Is there not land enough in America, or''corn enough in Egypt''? |
12101 | It was said after the Civil War that he would not work except under compulsion; just how had he come to be regarded in the industry of the New South? |
12101 | Maughan''s The Republic of Liberia, London( 1920? |
12101 | Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? |
12101 | Query: Was it genuine statesmanship that permitted these people to feel that they must leave the South? |
12101 | Raising her voice she repeated,"Whar did Christ come from? |
12101 | Said St. Clair to Ophelia:"If we emancipate, are you willing to educate? |
12101 | Shall we permit that blow to fall? |
12101 | So did the king of Egypt doubt the very existence of God, saying,''Who is the Lord, that I should let Israel go?'' |
12101 | Somerset objected to this and in so doing raised the important legal question, Did a slave by being brought to England become free? |
12101 | The question then arises: Just what is the relation that he is finally to sustain to other workingmen? |
12101 | This is a duty: the whites do not trade with you; why should you give them your patronage? |
12101 | Was he not made by the Creator to sit in the shade, and make the blacks work without remuneration for their services, to support him and his family? |
12101 | What is its real promise in American life? |
12101 | What right, then, have we to obey and call any man master but Himself? |
12101 | What the Negro in the last analysis wonders is: Who was right, Livingstone or Rhodes? |
12101 | What though before us lies the open grave? |
12101 | What will my children say if I deprive them of so much estate? |
12101 | What''s dat got to do with women''s rights or niggers''rights? |
12101 | What, then, is this dark world thinking? |
12101 | When despairing African fugitives do the same thing-- it is-- what_ is_ it?" |
12101 | When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? |
12101 | Who can weigh love and hope and service, and the joy of answered prayer? |
12101 | Who could believe that such a tremendous physical force would remain forever spell- bound and quiescent? |
12101 | Why should they send us into a far country to die? |
12101 | Will you despair, seeing Truth, and Justice, and Mercy, and God, and Christ, and the Holy Ghost, are on your side? |
12101 | Would King accordingly enter into conference with the English officials with reference to disposing of any Negroes who might be sent? |
12101 | _ But is there no civil law to protect me_? |
12101 | he asked;"then why are they not admitted on an equality with white citizens? |
12101 | my brothers, are we men?... |
12101 | or naked, and clothed thee? |
12101 | or thirsty, and gave thee drink? |
12101 | then why is not other property admitted into the computation?" |
29952 | Hans Breitman gife a barty-- Vhere ish dot barty now? |
29952 | Shall gravitation cease when you go by? |
29952 | To which of these religions do you specially adhere? |
29952 | What''s your business, stranger, in these parts? |
29952 | But does romance disappear from the farm with machinery and scientific agriculture? |
29952 | But how much of this humor, after all, is either essentially universal in its scope or else a matter of mere stage- setting and machinery? |
29952 | But just what subtle racial differentiation had been at work, since William Hawthorne migrated to Massachusetts with Winthrop in 1630? |
29952 | But precisely what national traits are to be discovered in this eminent fellow- countryman of ours? |
29952 | Did the colonist need a tool? |
29952 | Does not the_ Autocrat of the Breakfast Table_ itself presuppose the existence of a truly cultivated society? |
29952 | Does this make Nathaniel Hawthorne merely an"Englishman with a difference,"as Mr. Kipling, born in India, is an"Englishman with a difference"? |
29952 | Enjoying the thing liberty, have we been therefore less concerned with the idea? |
29952 | Has our literature kept equal pace with our thinking and feeling? |
29952 | He betrays it in this striking passage from his_ Journal_, about the sculptor Greenough:--"What interest has Greenough to make a good statue? |
29952 | Is there, then, a distinctly American type of humor and satire? |
29952 | National smugness and conceit, the impatience crystallized in the phrase,"What have we got to do with abroad?" |
29952 | Next, what is right, just, lawful for my crowd? |
29952 | Or is it simply another illustration of the defective passion of American literature? |
29952 | Shall we enter the preoccupation plea once more? |
29952 | The farm expands over the wolf''s den, the Indian becomes a blacksmith, but do the gross and material instincts ultimately triumph? |
29952 | The first instinct, perhaps, is to ask what is right, just, lawful, for me? |
29952 | The sole question is,"Are you on the Lord''s side?" |
29952 | This vast series of kaleidoscopic changes which we call America; has it produced a humor of its own? |
29952 | Toward what tangible symbols of the invisible did their eyes instinctively turn? |
29952 | Was Hawthorne, then, simply an Englishman living in America? |
29952 | Were not such heroes, impossible as they would have been in any other civilized country, perfectly illuminative of your national state of mind?" |
29952 | What are the causes of American romance, the circumstances and qualities that have produced the romantic element in American life and character? |
29952 | What is it which contradicts, inhibits, or negatives the romantic tendency? |
29952 | What is the evidence? |
29952 | What is the use of battling for one''s own opinions when one can already see that the multitude is on the other side? |
29952 | When you meet a bore or a hypocrite or a plain rascal, is it better to chastise him with laughter or to flay him with shining fury? |
29952 | Who cares whether it is good? |
29952 | Why should New Jersey, for example, be more ridiculous than Delaware? |
29952 | Why should the suburban dweller of every city be regarded with humorous condescension by the man who is compelled to sleep within the city limits? |
29952 | Why? |
29952 | Will an author choose to address the selected guests or the casual crowd? |
29952 | Yet when one asks the great Russian,"What am I to do as a member of this fellowship?" |
29952 | Yet who does not know that the inherent instinct for political order may be accompanied by mental disorderliness? |
11618 | If Gaunt dies, your husband may come to his honors; your little boys may inherit them, and who knows what besides? 11618 It''s hardly to be borne,"said the prim man, looking round;"hardly to be borne, is it?" |
11618 | My Lady Steyne,he said,"once more, will you have the goodness to go to the desk and write that card for your dinner on Friday?" |
11618 | Now, Mr. Sawyer,screamed the shrill voice of Mrs. Raddle,"are them brutes going?" |
11618 | Shall I step up- stairs and pitch into the landlord? |
11618 | Tell me, thou bonny bird, When shall I marry me? |
11618 | Where are the snows of yester year? |
11618 | Who is the master of it, and what is it? 11618 Who makes the bridal bed, Birdie, say truly?" |
11618 | Why do n''t you go down and knock''em every one down- stairs? 11618 Again, could any thing be more miraculous than an actual authentic Ghost? 11618 Are we not Spirits, that are shaped into a body, into an Appearance; and that fade away again into air, and Invisibility? 11618 Bardolph, am I not fallen away vilely since this last action? 11618 But whence?--O Heaven, whither? 11618 Come there not tones of Love and Faith, as from celestial harp- strings, like the Song of beatified souls? 11618 Comfort thyself: what comfort is in me? 11618 Did ye not hear it? 11618 Hovered thy spirit o''er thy sorrowing son, Wretch even then, life''s journey just begun? 11618 Martinmas''wind, when wilt thou blaw And shake the green leaves off the tree? 11618 O gentle death, when wilt thou come? 11618 O thou dull god, why liest thou with the vile, In loathsome beds; and leav''st the kingly couch, A watch- case, or a common''larum bell? 11618 O wherefore should I busk[78] my head? 11618 O who can hold a fire in his hand, By thinking on the frosty Caucasus? 11618 O young lord- lover, what sighs are those For one that will never be thine? 11618 On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I had stood before, When will return the glory of your prime? 11618 Once more I say, sweep away the illusion of Time; compress the threescore years into three minutes: what else was he, what else are we? 11618 One day in much good company, I was asked by a person of quality whether I had seen any of their_ Struldbrugs_, or immortals? 11618 Or are ye very Nature, the goddéss, That have depainted with your heavenly hand This garden full of flowrës as they stand? 11618 Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast? 11618 Or wallow naked in December snow, By thinking on fantastic summer''s heat? 11618 Or wherefore should I kame[79] my hair? 11618 PEACE OR WAR? 11618 Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow For old, unhappy, far- off things, And battles long ago: Or is it some more humble lay, Familiar matter of to- day? 11618 Pray, madam, shall I tell you some little anecdotes about my Lady Bareacres, your mamma? |
11618 | Sawyer?" |
11618 | Sawyer?" |
11618 | So young and so untender? |
11618 | Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, and may be again? |
11618 | That never heard thy name sung but in banquets And loose lascivious pleasures? |
11618 | The captive linnet which enthral? |
11618 | The life and light of Rome to a blind stranger That honorable war ne''er taught a nobleness, Nor worthy circumstance showed what a man was? |
11618 | The night of time far surpasseth the day, and who knows when was the equinox? |
11618 | This house?" |
11618 | This is my own, my native land? |
11618 | Thou bender of the thistle of Lora; why, thou breeze of the valley, hast thou left mine ear? |
11618 | To a boy That had no faith to comprehend thy greatness, No study of thy life to know thy goodness?... |
11618 | To what green altar, O mysterious priest, Lead''st thou that heifer lowing at the skies, And all her silken flanks with garlands drest? |
11618 | Were it not better done, as others use, To sport with Amaryllis in the shade, Or with the tangles of Neæra''s hair? |
11618 | What frail man Dares lift his hand against it? |
11618 | What idle progeny succeed To chase the rolling circle''s speed, Or urge the flying ball? |
11618 | What is this world? |
11618 | What little town by river or sea- shore, Or mountain built with peaceful citadel, Is emptied of its folk this pious morn? |
11618 | What mad pursuit? |
11618 | What maidens loath? |
11618 | What men or gods are these? |
11618 | What might this be? |
11618 | What pipes and timbrels? |
11618 | What poor fate followed thee and plucked thee on To trust thy sacred life to an Egyptian? |
11618 | What struggle to escape? |
11618 | What though the field be lost? |
11618 | What wild ecstasy? |
11618 | When I learnt that thou wast dead, Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed? |
11618 | When a Mammonite mother kills her babe for a burial fee, And Timour- Mammon grins on a pile of children''s bones, Is it peace or war? |
11618 | When will the dancers leave her alone? |
11618 | Who are these coming to the sacrifice? |
11618 | Who are you, to give orders here? |
11618 | Who can but pity the founder of the pyramids? |
11618 | Who would not weep if Atticus were he? |
11618 | Who, even after a single reading or representation, ever forgets Falstaff, or Shylock, or King Lear? |
11618 | Whom do you love best in the world?" |
11618 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned, From wandering on a foreign strand? |
11618 | Will no one tell me what she sings? |
11618 | [ 82] As I was walking all alane I heard twa corbies making a mane; The tane unto the t''other say,"Where sail we gang and dine to- day?" |
11618 | [ From_ The False One._] O thou conqueror, Thou glory of the world once, now the pity: Thou awe of nations, wherefore didst thou fall thus? |
11618 | do I not bate? |
11618 | do I not dwindle? |
11618 | inquired Hopkins,"or keep on ringing the bell, or go and groan on the staircase? |
11618 | what axen[37] men to have? |
11618 | what boots it with incessant care To tend the homely, slighted, shepherd''s trade, And strictly meditate the thankless Muse? |
11618 | what mortal hand Can e''er untie the filial band That knits me to thy rugged strand? |
11618 | why should they know their fate? |
35222 | Are the prisoners in the boat? |
35222 | Every one of them? |
35222 | Is it possible that a stimulus can be wanting? 35222 Is the treaty signed?" |
35222 | And must these Moors, then, carry me away?_ MOTHER. |
35222 | And what these horrid scenes that round me rise? |
35222 | And who can tell that this despised portion of the globe is not destined to yet another restoration? |
35222 | Can there be but one feeling? |
35222 | HORACE And thinkest thou this, O man, that judgest them which do such things, and doest the same, that thou shalt escape the judgment of God? |
35222 | Heard ye the clanking of the captive''s chain? |
35222 | Heard ye the groans, those messengers of pain? |
35222 | Heard ye your free- born sons their fate deplore, Pale in their chains and laboring at the oar? |
35222 | Or must it forever be the fate of_ FREE STATES,_ that the soft voice of union should be drowned in the hoarse clamors of discord?_ No! |
35222 | Saw ye the fresh blood where it bubbling broke From purple scars, beneath the grinding stroke? |
35222 | What can be worse? |
35222 | What else can I expect from thee, abandoned At such a tender age, amongst a people Full of deceit and all iniquity? |
35222 | Where are the gallant remains of the race who fought for freedom? |
35222 | Where is desire for his service? |
35222 | Where is human pity and the compassion of man for man? |
35222 | Where is the love of God? |
35222 | Where is the zeal for his glory? |
35222 | Where the glorious heirs of their patriotism? |
35222 | Who can tell how many hearts have been wrung by the pangs of separation, how many crushed by the comfortless despair of interminable bondage? |
35222 | Will you go with me, brother? |
35222 | _ O mother, mother, may I not remain? |
35222 | _ Saw ye the shrinking slave, th''uplifted lash, The frowning butcher, and the reddening gash? |
35222 | _ Will there never be a truce between political parties? |
35222 | then, have you, mother, Forsaken me?_ MOTHER. |
35222 | what mean these dolorous cries? |
35222 | whither will they bear me Away from you? |
12674 | ''"We can not find your book,"I said;"where have you concealed it?" |
12674 | ''Am_ I_ going to die, grandmamma?'' |
12674 | ''If your spirits are spirits, why do they let the world wag on in its old way, why do they confine themselves to trivial effects?'' |
12674 | ''Is she going to die?'' |
12674 | ''Is there no one present,''the learned judge asked in general,''who can give better testimony?'' |
12674 | ''Soon?'' |
12674 | ''What friend?'' |
12674 | ''Where are the soules that swarmed in time past? |
12674 | ''Who knows?'' |
12674 | ''Why do you weep, grandmamma, are you not happy where you are?'' |
12674 | And whither has it led us? |
12674 | And why not toleration for''immoral''actions? |
12674 | Are the sounds in Haunted Houses real or hallucinatory? |
12674 | Being asked why she had always withdrawn before, she said she had seen''like a boyn( halo?) |
12674 | But this evidence is in itself a fact to be considered--''Why do these gentlemen tell this tale?'' |
12674 | But we still ask:''_ Do_ objects move untouched? |
12674 | But who ever swore that he_ saw_ witches so transported? |
12674 | But why is it always the same old story? |
12674 | But why not, as we know nothing about our relations with the invisible world? |
12674 | But, when they expect nothing, and are disappointed by having to witness prodigies, the same old prodigies, what is the explanation? |
12674 | By what sign can we be sure that the manifesting agency present is that of a god, an angel, an archon, or a soul? |
12674 | Can''high scientific attainments''leave their possessor with such humble powers of observation? |
12674 | Do impostors and credulous persons deliberately''get up''the subject in rare old books? |
12674 | Do the expenses of exorcism fall on landlord or tenant? |
12674 | Does Mr. Sully believe that the portrait was an original portrait of a real person? |
12674 | Finally, the author has often been asked:''But what do you believe yourself?'' |
12674 | First, why abuse the judge at Tours? |
12674 | From the hour of my marriage till this day, what have I wrought against thee that I need conceal?'' |
12674 | Have all other Mediums secret wires? |
12674 | Have you ever had any hallucination? |
12674 | He asks, among other things: How can gods, as in the evocations of gods, be made subject to necessity, and_ compelled_ to manifest themselves? |
12674 | He would ask:''Does M. Littre accept the alleged facts; if so, how does he explain them?'' |
12674 | How did his Zulu learn the method of Home, of the Egyptian diviners, of St. Joseph of Cupertino? |
12674 | How do''expectancy''and the''dominant idea''explain this experience, which Mr. Aide has published in the Nineteenth Century? |
12674 | How does a demon differ from a hero, or from a mere soul of a dead man? |
12674 | How is the identity of the spirit to be established? |
12674 | How is the inquirer, how was Porphyry to know that the assertion is correct, that it is not the mere''boasting''of some vulgar spirit? |
12674 | I have been at a loss ever since what to make of this last,''says Patrick Walker, and who is not at a loss? |
12674 | In either case, what causes the hallucination, or are there various possible sorts of causes? |
12674 | In what sorts of periods, in what conditions of general thought and belief, are the alleged abnormal phenomena most current? |
12674 | Is it a disease of observation? |
12674 | Is it not the business of the owner of the house to''whustle on his ain parten,''to have his own bogie exorcised? |
12674 | Is there a method of imposture handed down by one generation of bad little girls to another? |
12674 | Is there such a thing as persistent identity of hallucination among the sane? |
12674 | It is suggested that Graime himself was the murderer, else, how did he know so much about it? |
12674 | Now, could a hallucination lift a mosquito- curtain, or even produce the impression that it did so, while the curtain was really unmoved? |
12674 | Now, had the peay tradition reached Cock Lane, or was the peay- man counterfeiting, very cleverly, some real phenomenon? |
12674 | Now, if the committee do not provide themselves with a good''sensitive''comrade, what can they expect, but what they get, that is, nothing? |
12674 | On the night of Lindsay''s death, Pitcairn dreamed that he was in Edinburgh, where Lindsay met him and said,''Archie, perhaps ye heard I''m dead?'' |
12674 | On the other hand, if Reginald Scot asked today,''Who heareth the noises, who seeth the visions?'' |
12674 | On this turned the fate of Joan of Arc: Were her voices and visions of God or of Satan? |
12674 | Or are demons in some way evolved out of something abstracted from living bodies? |
12674 | Or are there certain mystic correspondences in the nature of things, which may be detected? |
12674 | Or, if we disbelieve this cloud of witnesses, if they voluntarily fabled, we ask, why do they all fable in exactly the same fashion? |
12674 | Saint or sorcerer? |
12674 | So far, everybody is agreed: the differences begin when we ask what causes hallucinations, and what different classes of hallucinations exist? |
12674 | That is simple, but why are sane, scientific, modern observers, and even disgusted modern sceptics, in a tale, and that just the old savage tale? |
12674 | The neighbours make the noises, and again the narrator asks''how?'' |
12674 | The question was, did an indicator move, or not, under a certain amount of pressure? |
12674 | The spiritus percutiens,''rapping spirit''(?) |
12674 | Then were the spectators of the agile crockery collectively hallucinated? |
12674 | They asked:''What is the difference between a living body and a dead one?'' |
12674 | Thyraeus now raises the difficult question:''Are the sounds heard in haunted houses real, or hallucinatory?'' |
12674 | To the friends of a force or faculty in our nature, M. Littre remarks, in effect,''Why do n''t you_ use_ your force? |
12674 | Vincent?'' |
12674 | Was he well? |
12674 | Was there any coincidence between the hallucination and facts at the time unknown to you? |
12674 | We do not so much ask:''Are these stories true?'' |
12674 | Well, be it so; what does anthropology study with so much zest as survivals? |
12674 | What have she- goats to do in the matter? |
12674 | What is his motive? |
12674 | What makes them repeat the stories they do repeat? |
12674 | What then is the type, the typical haunted house, from which, if narratives vary much, they are apt to break down under cross- examination? |
12674 | When they met, she said:''Did you take your friend with you?'' |
12674 | Whence, then, comes the uniformity of evidence? |
12674 | Why should the behaviour of ghosts be an exception? |
12674 | Why was there no trial of the case till''about 1798 or 1799''? |
12674 | Will can move my limbs, if it also moves my table, what is there superstitious in that? |
12674 | X X? |
12674 | Yes: but how does that explain volatile pots and pans? |
12674 | and how many portraits of mediaeval people does he suppose to exist in English country houses? |
12674 | and''why?'' |
12674 | as,''_ Why are these stories told_?'' |
12674 | what have I done that thou should''st help to assail me? |
12674 | where are the spirits? |
12674 | who heareth their noises? |
12674 | who seeth their visions?'' |
12674 | why do n''t you supply a new motor for locomotives? |
12674 | { 207b} Consequently, they, at least, were hallucinations; so what was Lieutenant B.? |
12674 | { 319b} Perhaps the unscientific reader supposes that Dr. Carpenter replied to the arguments of M. de Gasparin? |
12674 | { 65b} How do you discriminate between demons, and gods, that are manifest, or not manifest? |
12674 | { 70b} Or is there a blending of the soul''s operations with the divine inspiration? |
22608 | Does not the burning of a metropolitan theatre,says a great writer,"take above a million times as much telling as the creation of a world?" |
22608 | Well-- Savage''s? |
22608 | What one? |
22608 | Why could n''t he write English instead of indulging in that_ thee_ and_ thou_ business? |
22608 | *****"Have you a poem on the Victor of Manengo, by Anon?" |
22608 | 1459, which brought £ 4,950 at the Syston Park sale in 1884? |
22608 | A? |
22608 | An eminent librarian of one of the largest libraries was asked whether he did not find a great deal of time to read? |
22608 | And of the books which go a second time to the binder, although at first uncut, how many retain their fair proportions of margin when they come back? |
22608 | And what of the newspaper? |
22608 | But here comes in the problem-- can the requisite authority to lay the tax be secured? |
22608 | But how many books do we see always bulging open at the sides, or stiffly resisting being opened by too great tightness in the back? |
22608 | But the question returns upon us-- what is wholesome food? |
22608 | But, when your insurance office is bankrupt, what becomes of the insured? |
22608 | By which method of notation will the library messenger boys or girls soonest find the book? |
22608 | Can one guess be said to be any nearer the fact than the other? |
22608 | Do readers want an exciting novel? |
22608 | Do you, in your search, take up every book in that mass, to scrutinize its title, and see if it is the one you seek? |
22608 | Does not this bespeak laxity of public morals in Boston in regard to such abuses of library property? |
22608 | Dost ask what book creates such heavenly thought? |
22608 | His daily business being learning, why should he not in time, become learned? |
22608 | How can a dyspeptic who dwells in the darkness of a disease, be a guiding light to the multitudes who beset him every hour? |
22608 | How often do you leave out a word in your writing experience, which may change the meaning of a whole sentence? |
22608 | How then, you may ask, is a weak memory to be strengthened, or a fairly good memory to be cultivated into a better one? |
22608 | I may instance the Mazarin Bible of Gutenberg and Schoeffer( 1455?) |
22608 | If there is a city charter, does it empower the municipal authorities( city council or aldermen) to levy such a tax? |
22608 | If these books were sentient beings, and could speak, would they not say--"our sufferings are intolerable?" |
22608 | If we have international patent right, why not international copyright? |
22608 | In view of the valuable monopoly conceded by the public, does not the government in effect give far more than a_ quid pro quo_ for the copy- tax? |
22608 | Is not the name of the author commonly uppermost in the mind of the searcher? |
22608 | It was but"A Modern Instance"Of true"Love''s Random Shot,"And I,"The Heir of Redclyffe"Was"Kidnapped": and"Why Not"? |
22608 | May we not be pardoned for treating all estimates as utterly fallacious that are not based upon known facts and figures? |
22608 | Now can any one give a valid reason for the awkward and tedious method of notation exhibited in the Roman numerals? |
22608 | Of what consequence is the size of a book to any one, except to the searcher who has to find it on the shelves? |
22608 | One of the most common and most inconsiderate questions propounded to a librarian is this:"Do you ever expect to read all these books through?" |
22608 | Query-- What did she want? |
22608 | Shall we let him? |
22608 | Shall you refer then to the English Catalogue for its title? |
22608 | Suppose( as often happens) that you bind your pamphlet, does it then cease to be a pamphlet, and become a book? |
22608 | The first question that arises is, what are those means? |
22608 | The pride of dead and dawning years, How can a poet best repay The debt he owes your House to- day? |
22608 | The word is in Shakespeare:"Comest thou with deep premeditated lines, With written pamphlets studiously devised?" |
22608 | This is what is known as a"Dictionary catalogue"; but why is it preferable to any other? |
22608 | To print or not to print? |
22608 | We ask-- who is sufficient for these things? |
22608 | What are the business houses which are most thronged with customers? |
22608 | What can be more exciting than"Les Miserables"of Victor Hugo, a book of exceptional literary excellence and power? |
22608 | What could you not do in three months, if you had all the time to yourself? |
22608 | What does he learn by his assiduous pursuit of these ephemeral will o''the wisps, that only"lead to bewilder, and dazzle to blind?" |
22608 | What has been the result? |
22608 | What is a pamphlet? |
22608 | What is the best style of binding for a select or a public library? |
22608 | What life is long enough-- what intellect strong enough, to master even a tithe of the learning which all these books contain? |
22608 | What merit is there in having a good memory, when one can not help remembering? |
22608 | What time has he, wearied by the day''s multifarious and exacting labors, for any thorough study of books? |
22608 | Which of these two forms of expression is more quickly written, or stamped, or read? |
22608 | Who ever felt Miss Austen tame, or called Sir Walter slow? |
22608 | Who wants this bright young man? |
22608 | Who will say that the last form of title does not convey substantially all that is significant of the book, stripped of superfluous verbiage? |
22608 | Why do you do this? |
22608 | Why should they not be so? |
22608 | Why was this? |
22608 | Why? |
22608 | With one or two hundred thousand volumes as a basis, what but utter neglect can prevent a library from becoming a great and useful institution? |
22608 | Works without date, when the exact date is not found, are to be described conjecturally, thus:[ 1690?] |
22608 | and it is well answered by propounding another question, namely--"Did_ you_ ever read your dictionary through?" |
12700 | But when we come to inquire Whence is matter? 12700 Can he answer these questions? |
12700 | Canst thou by searching find out God? 12700 How can the man who has learned but one art procure all the conveniences of life honestly? |
12700 | Oh, what is Heaven but the fellowship Of minds that each can stand against the world By its own meek and incorruptible will? |
12700 | Physician art thou, one all eyes; Philosopher, a fingering slave, One that would peep and botanize Upon his mother''s grave? |
12700 | Scorn triflescomes from Aunt Mary Moody Emerson, and reappears in her nephew, Ralph Waldo.--"What right have you, Sir, to your virtue? |
12700 | Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar? 12700 Shall we judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? |
12700 | What is the remedy? 12700 What?" |
12700 | Who has a part with**** at this next exhibition? |
12700 | Why call him_ the Post_? |
12700 | Why then goest thou as some Boswell or literary worshipper to this saint or to that? 12700 ''How long?'' 12700 ''What is this truth you seek? 12700 ''What will you do, then?'' 12700 ***** What was the errand on which he visited our earth,--the message with which he came commissioned from the Infinite source of all life? 12700 *****Let us then ponder his words:--''Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach and sunsets show? |
12700 | --Of these three questions, What is matter? |
12700 | A hundred and forty?" |
12700 | A little while afterwards he asked of his fellow- traveller, Professor Thayer,"How much did I weigh? |
12700 | After reading what Emerson says about"the masses,"one is tempted to ask whether a philosopher can ever have"a constituency"and be elected to Congress? |
12700 | And how could prose go on all- fours more unmetrically than this? |
12700 | And what shall we do with Pope''s"Essay on Man,"which has furnished more familiar lines than"Paradise Lost"and"Paradise Regained"both together? |
12700 | And will you stop in England, and bring home the author of"Counterparts"with you? |
12700 | Are my friends bent on killing me with kindness? |
12700 | But what is the gift of a mourning ring to the bequest of a perpetual annuity? |
12700 | But what shall we say to the"Ars Poetica"of Horace? |
12700 | But what would youth be without its extravagances,--its preterpluperfect in the shape of adjectives, its unmeasured and unstinted admiration? |
12700 | Can any ear reconcile itself to the last of these three lines of Emerson''s? |
12700 | Can he dispose of them? |
12700 | Can we find any trace of this idea elsewhere? |
12700 | Can you help any soul_? |
12700 | Can you obtain what you wish? |
12700 | Can you see tendency in your life? |
12700 | Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" |
12700 | Do all the women have bad noses and bad mouths? |
12700 | Does this sound wild and extravagant? |
12700 | Genius has given you the freedom of the universe, why then come within any walls? |
12700 | Have you eyes to find the five Which five hundred did survive?" |
12700 | Have you read Sampson Reed''s"Growth of the Mind"? |
12700 | How could the man in whose thought such a meteoric expression suddenly announced itself fail to recognize it as divine? |
12700 | How could they have got on together? |
12700 | How d''ye do? |
12700 | How d''ye do? |
12700 | Is it too late now? |
12700 | Is not the inaudible, inward laughter of Emerson more refreshing than the explosions of our noisiest humorists? |
12700 | Is not this to make vain the gift of God? |
12700 | Is not this to turn back the hand on the dial?" |
12700 | Is there method in your consciousness? |
12700 | Is virtue piecemeal? |
12700 | Is''t not like That devil- spider that devours her mate Scarce freed from her embraces?" |
12700 | One was tempted to ask:"What forlorn hope have you led? |
12700 | Or did----write the novels and send them to London, as I fancied when I read them? |
12700 | Shall we not bid him come, and be Poet and Teacher of a most scattered flock wanting a shepherd? |
12700 | Shall we rank Emerson among the great poets or not? |
12700 | The breeze says to us in its own language, How d''ye do? |
12700 | The clouds are rich and dark, the air serene,_ So like the soul of me, what if''t were me_?" |
12700 | The eye does not bring landscapes into the world on its retina,--why should the brain bring thoughts? |
12700 | The translations excited me much, and who can estimate the value of a good thought? |
12700 | The"Rhodora,"another brief poem, finds itself foreshadowed in the inquiry,"What is Beauty?" |
12700 | They seemed to me to betray the richest invention, so rich as almost to say, why draw any line since you can draw all? |
12700 | Transcendentalism has its occasional vagaries( what school has not? |
12700 | Was he thinking of his relations with Carlyle? |
12700 | We do not want his fragments to be made wholes,--if we did, what hand could be found equal to the task? |
12700 | What am I? |
12700 | What are Olympiads and Consulates to these neighboring systems of being? |
12700 | What can promise more than an Essay by Emerson on"Immortality"? |
12700 | What do you? |
12700 | What does Rome know of rat and lizard? |
12700 | What great discovery have you made? |
12700 | What harm doth it?" |
12700 | What has Emerson to tell us of"Inspiration?" |
12700 | What heroic task of any kind have you performed?" |
12700 | What immortal book have you written? |
12700 | What is Beauty? |
12700 | What is a farm but a mute gospel?" |
12700 | What is the definite belief of Emerson as expressed in this discourse,--what does it mean? |
12700 | What is the use of going about and setting up a flag of negation?''" |
12700 | What is this beauty?'' |
12700 | What is this"genial atmosphere"but the very spirit of Christianity? |
12700 | What man could speak more fitly, with more authority of"Character,"than Emerson? |
12700 | What man was he who would lay his hand familiarly upon his shoulder and call him Waldo? |
12700 | What would it avail to tell you anecdotes of a sweet and wonderful boy, such as we solace and sadden ourselves with at home every morning and evening? |
12700 | When we come to the application, in the same Essay, almost on the same page, what can we make of such discourse as this? |
12700 | Whence is it? |
12700 | Where then did Goethe find his lovers? |
12700 | Where to? |
12700 | Who can give better counsels on"Culture"than Emerson? |
12700 | Who is the owner? |
12700 | Why have you not told me that we thought alike? |
12700 | Why should I cumber myself with regrets that the receiver is not capacious? |
12700 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? |
12700 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of theirs?" |
12700 | Why should you renounce your right to traverse the starlit deserts of truth, for the premature comforts of an acre, house, and barn? |
12700 | Will no_ Angel_ body himself out of that; no stalwart Yankee_ man_, with color in the cheeks of him and a coat on his back?" |
12700 | Wordsworth''s"Ode"is a noble and beautiful dream; is it anything more? |
12700 | You are quite welcome to the lines"To the Rhodora;"but I think they need the superscription["Lines on being asked''Whence is the Flower?''"]. |
12700 | _ New England Reformers_.--Would any one venture to guess how Emerson would treat this subject? |
12700 | and Whereto? |
12700 | and we have already taken our hats off and are answering it with our own How d''ye do? |
12700 | has my stove and pepper- pot a false bottom? |
12700 | or"Out of what great picture have these pieces been cut?" |
12700 | the old mystery remains, If I am I; thou, thou, or thou art I?" |
37806 | Have we not the Kammergericht at Berlin? |
37806 | Not at any price? |
37806 | English generally has_ au_( now often reduced to_ a_) for Old French_ ã_--_vaunt_(_ vanter_,_ vanitare_),_ tawny_(_ tanné_(?) |
37806 | In 1529 he produced a free version(_ Klagbrief der armen Dürftigen in England_) of the famous_ Supplycacyon of the Beggers_, written abroad( 1528?) |
37806 | said the king''s agent;"could not the king take it from you for nothing, if he chose?" |
35744 | [ 8] But if the heavens were solid, how could the brief presence of a comet be explained? 35744 ( FEBRUARY, 1619)(_ Thomæ Fieni Epistolica Quæstio_: An verum sit, coelum moveri et terram quiescere? 35744 ), as Diogenes Laërtius claims,[5] a long line of Greek thinkers including Plato( 428?-347? 35744 19( Dedication 1604, Louvain),( IV, 947);Vides deliria, quomodo aliter appellent?"] |
35744 | : What are these absurdities? |
35744 | : What arguments do they rely on who hold that the earth is revolved and that the sun forsooth is still? |
35744 | And who knoweth whether a hundred yeares hence a third opinion will arise which happily shall overthrow these two præcedent?" |
35744 | Beginning with the followers of Thales or perhaps Parmenides(?-500 B.C. |
35744 | But why such diversity? |
35744 | By what arguments then can it be proved there are ten spheres? |
35744 | Can not wicked angels be defined without privation since they are corporeal essences? |
35744 | Does it not also concern Physics to discuss those things that lie outside the universe? |
35744 | Ejusdem Thomæ Fieni Epistolica quæstio, An Verum sit Coelum moveri, et Terram quiescere?_ London, 1655. |
35744 | Everything loose on the earth seeks its rest on the earth, why should not the whole earth itself be at rest? |
35744 | FINIS APPENDIX D. A TRANSLATION OF A LETTER BY THOMAS FEYENS ON THE QUESTION: IS IT TRUE THAT THE HEAVENS ARE MOVED AND THE EARTH IS AT REST? |
35744 | For what should move the earth? |
35744 | He and at least one of the members of his school, Eudoxus( 409?-356? |
35744 | How could that be explained if the sun were stationary? |
35744 | How many spheres are there? |
35744 | How widespread among the people generally did this theory become in the years immediately following the publication of the_ De Revolutionibus_? |
35744 | Is it possible that after a lapse of time as considerable as this, we have nothing more than a rumor of such an event? |
35744 | Is there some medium between God and the angels which shares in the nature of both? |
35744 | Montaigne[198] was characteristically indifferent:"What shall we reape by it, but only that we neede not care which of the two it be? |
35744 | Nor is it moved by another body; for by what is it moved? |
35744 | That they have been condemned a year or two ago by our Holy Father, Pope Paul V? |
35744 | What do you call fixed stars? |
35744 | What should one do with such a variety of opinions? |
35744 | What then in corporeal nature is closest to God? |
35744 | What then? |
35744 | What was the state of astronomy in the century of Copernicus''s birth? |
35744 | Why is the one less noble than the other? |
35744 | Why so? |
35744 | Why then are not eleven spheres counted? |
35744 | Why then was the heliocentric theory not definitely accepted? |
35744 | [ 4] According to Plutarch, though Thales( 640?-546? |
35744 | and later the Stoics believed the earth to be spherical in form, Anaximander( 610- 546? |
35744 | of Interpretation_: Preface, xviii:"Who,"asks Calvin,"will venture to place the authority of Copernicus above that of the Holy Spirit?"] |
28687 | ***** Harry cum Parry, when will you marry? |
28687 | ***** Heigh ding a ding, what shall I sing? |
28687 | ***** How many days has my baby to play? |
28687 | ***** How many miles to Babylon? |
28687 | ***** I would, if I could; if I could n''t, how could I? |
28687 | ***** Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
28687 | ***** Nose, Nose, jolly red Nose, And what gave you that jolly red Nose? |
28687 | ***** Shake a leg, wag a leg, when will you gang? |
28687 | ***** What care I how black I be? |
28687 | *****[ Illustration] Little lad, little lad, Where were you born? |
28687 | ---- What shall I sing? |
28687 | Ah, old man, do you serve me so? |
28687 | And how do you do again? |
28687 | And vex his own baby will he? |
28687 | And why may not I love Johnny As well as another body? |
28687 | And why may not I love Johnny, And why may not Johnny love me? |
28687 | And why may not I love Johnny? |
28687 | And why,& c.& c.[ Illustration] Who comes here? |
28687 | Can I get there by candle- light? |
28687 | Can he set a shoe? |
28687 | Can you spell that with four letters? |
28687 | Could you without you could, could ye? |
28687 | Dance over my Lady Lee, How shall we build it up again? |
28687 | Did his papa torment it? |
28687 | He began to compliment, and I began to grin, How do you do, and how do you do? |
28687 | How get her home? |
28687 | How many holes in a skimmer? |
28687 | How shall I cut it Without any knife? |
28687 | How shall I marry Without any wife? |
28687 | How shall we build it up again? |
28687 | How shall we dress her? |
28687 | I could n''t without I could, could I? |
28687 | Is not that enough tocher For a shoemaker''s daughter, A bonny sweet lass With a coal- black ee? |
28687 | Kits, cats, sacks and wives, How many were going to St. Ives? |
28687 | Little Robin chirped and sung, and what did pussy say? |
28687 | Old woman, old woman, old woman, said I, O whither, O whither, O whither so high? |
28687 | Pussy cat, pussy cat, what did you there? |
28687 | Says I,"So you have lost mamma?" |
28687 | So, so, dear mistress Pussy, Pray tell me how you do? |
28687 | The air is cold, the worms are hid, For Robin here what can be done? |
28687 | Then comes in the little dog, Pussy, are you there? |
28687 | Wan''t Jemmy Jed a staring fool, Born in the woods to be scar''d by an owl? |
28687 | Was not she a dirty slut, To sell her bed and lay in the dirt? |
28687 | We have mice too in plenty, That feast in the pantry, But let them stay and nibble away, What harm in a little brown mouse? |
28687 | What do you want? |
28687 | What to do there? |
28687 | When will that be? |
28687 | When will you pay me? |
28687 | Where was a jewel and pretty, Where was a sugar and spicey? |
28687 | Where''s your money? |
28687 | Who pulled her out? |
28687 | Will you be mine? |
28687 | Yet did n''t you see, yet did n''t you see, What naughty tricks they put upon me? |
28687 | You could n''t without you could, could ye? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Bow, wow, wow, whose dog are thou? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Ding----dong----bell, the cat''s in the well, Who put her in? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Goosey, goosey, gander, where dost thou wander? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Hey rub- a- dub, ho rub- a- dub, three maids in a tub, And who do you think was there? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Is master Smith within? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Little Tommy Tucker, Sing for your supper: What shall I sing? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Once in my life I married a wife, And where do you think I found her? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Pretty John Watts, We are troubled with rats, Will you drive them out of the house? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Pussy sits behind the log, How can she be fair? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Robert Barns, fellow fine, Can you shoe this horse of mine, So that I may cut a shine? |
28687 | [ Illustration] See saw, sacradown, sacradown, Which is the way to Boston town? |
28687 | [ Illustration] The man in the wilderness, Asked me, How many strawberries Grew in the sea? |
28687 | [ Illustration] The north wind doth blow, And we shall have snow, And what will poor robin do then? |
28687 | [ Illustration] There was an old woman, and what do you think? |
28687 | [ Illustration] What''s the news of the day, Good neighbour, I pray? |
28687 | [ Illustration] Willie boy, Willie boy, Where are you going? |
28687 | [ Illustration]_ Hen._ Cock, cock, cock, cock, I''ve laid an egg, Am I to gang ba- are- foot? |
28687 | _ Who was Mother Goose?_ and_ when_ were her melodies first given to the world? |
28687 | _ Who was Mother Goose?_ and_ when_ were her melodies first given to the world? |
28687 | could ye? |
28687 | could ye? |
28687 | is this the way you mind your sheep, Under the haycock fast asleep? |
28687 | said the gridiron, Ca n''t you agree? |
28687 | says John all alone, How get her home? |
28687 | says John all alone, How shall we dress her? |
28687 | says John all alone, What to do there? |
28687 | says Richard to Robin, How get her home? |
28687 | says Richard to Robin, How shall we dress her? |
28687 | says Richard to Robin, What to do there? |
28687 | says Robin to Bobin, How get her home? |
28687 | says Robin to Bobin, How shall we dress her? |
28687 | says Robin to Bobin, What to do there? |
38417 | Can_ Boston_ boast of many such? |
38417 | The question naturally arises, Why was it called Corn Hill? |
38417 | Were they private property or public property? |
38417 | When once a man is Bewitched with the Ordinary, what usually becomes of him? |
38417 | Will the_ Haunters_ of those_ Houses_ hear the Counsels of Heaven? |
38417 | _ Were_ any of these ever starved yet? |
38371 | Is it lawful to give tribute unto Caesar, or not? |
38371 | By what species of casuistry does any person think it possible to put this forward as sane public policy? |
38371 | Is it possible for impudence to go further?... |
38371 | Is this the form of doctrine calculated to raise the moral tone of the community? |
38371 | Its privileges may be free; but what does that mean to those who count them as worthless? |
38371 | Why should it be the only one to demand a favoritism incompatible with self- respect or with justice to its fellows? |
38013 | _ And Sultan after Sultan with his Pomp Abode his destined Hour and went his way._It is often asked"why do animals become extinct?" |
38013 | And if a blow from an irate ostrich is sufficient to fell a man, what must have been the kicking power of an able- bodied Moa? |
38013 | Did they devour everything large enough to be eaten throughout their habitat, and then fall to eating one another? |
38013 | How much of what we term intelligence could such a creature possess-- what was the extent of its reasoning powers? |
38013 | If, it was said, these animals have been spared, why not others? |
38013 | Other footprints there are in this prison- yard; the great round"spoor"of the mammoth, the hoofs of a deer, and the paws of a wolf(? |
38013 | The question is often asked-- How long ago did this or that animal live? |
38013 | This may take the form of a wish to know how a millionaire made his first ten cents, or it may lead to the questions-- What is the oldest animal? |
38013 | WHY DO ANIMALS BECOME EXTINCT? |
38013 | What do we find among Dinosaurs? |
38013 | Why not a legendary bison that has increased with years of story- telling? |
38013 | Why? |
38013 | XII WHY DO ANIMALS BECOME EXTINCT? |
38013 | and, What did this, our primeval and many- times- removed ancestor, look like? |
38013 | or, What is the first known member of the great group of backboned animals at whose head man has placed himself? |
38022 | Juliet, wilt thou have this false pretence, this profligate in broadcloth, this unpaid tailor''s bill, for thy wedded husband? |
38022 | You believe a woman should have all the rights of a man? |
38022 | According to the old but truthful saying, it is impossible for a man to outwit a shrewd woman; and instead of asking, What can a woman do? |
38022 | And what is the result? |
38022 | But where did it come from? |
38022 | Did it come from the sun, the moon, the earth, or from some exploded planet? |
38022 | It does not matter what a man professes to know, but the question is, what does he know, compared with what he might know? |
38022 | Where can it be commenced, except in our common schools? |
38022 | Where, then, is this all- important work to be commenced? |
38022 | Why is this? |
38022 | or was it generated in the atmosphere? |
38022 | we should ask, What is there a woman can not do? |
37341 | Shall our Father,he exclaims,"spit in our face, and we not be ashamed? |
37341 | What can one do with such men? |
37341 | But can we? |
37341 | But would he come? |
37341 | Could the power of official narrowness and banality go further? |
37341 | Did not the Christian Indians in the missions near Montreal drink brandy? |
37341 | How had the country developed, and what were the elements of the situation which confronted Frontenac on his arrival? |
37341 | If he was not president of the council, why was he ever so addressed in official despatches? |
37341 | It was known that the English of Albany and New York were moving: what the next news would be, who could tell? |
37341 | Moreover who can say what motive was predominant? |
37341 | Then could there be any expedition? |
37341 | Was it for this that he had come to Canada, to be flouted and set at nought by a subordinate officer? |
37341 | Was it the extreme mediævalism of the Denonville régime aided by an excessive use of intoxicating liquors? |
37341 | Was this interval, then, one of peace? |
37341 | What at this time were the resources of the colony in population? |
37341 | What good do we get by lending ear to the Gospel, if conversion and death walk hand in hand?" |
37341 | What had been accomplished during those sixty odd years? |
37341 | What progress was being made in the meantime with the land expedition against Montreal in which New York was to take the lead? |
37341 | or that, for one piece of bark that has been stripped from my cabin, I can not put double the number in its place? |
12933 | And did Mr. Gladstone go? |
12933 | And did Oliver Goldsmith really play his harp in this very room? |
12933 | And do you never admit visitors, even to the grounds? |
12933 | And so you are an alien? |
12933 | And what did you tell him? |
12933 | Ay, mon, but ai n''t ut a big un? |
12933 | Aye, you are a gentleman-- and about burying folks in churches? |
12933 | But did Shakespeare run away? |
12933 | But visitors do come? |
12933 | Can you tell me how far it is to Brantwood? |
12933 | Can you tell me where Mr. Whitman lives? |
12933 | Did George Eliot live here? |
12933 | Did you visit Carlyle''s''ouse? |
12933 | Do we use them? 12933 Do you believe in cremation, sir?" |
12933 | Have ye a penny, I do n''t know? |
12933 | He might know all about one woman, and if he should regard her as a sample of all womankind, would he not make a great mistake? |
12933 | Heart of my heart, is this well done? |
12933 | How can any adversity come to him who hath a wife? |
12933 | Never mind wot I am, sir--''oo are you? |
12933 | Question, What is justice in Pigdom? 12933 Rheumatism? |
12933 | The Anxworks package-- I will not deceive you, Sweet; why should I? |
12933 | Together, I s''pose? |
12933 | Was what sarcasm? |
12933 | Well,said Hawkins,"what did he say to you?" |
12933 | What are you reading? |
12933 | What did I say-- really I have forgotten? |
12933 | What is your favorite book? |
12933 | Which boat do you want? |
12933 | Who? |
12933 | Would you like to become a telegraph- operator? |
12933 | You are twenty- five now? 12933 You mean Walt Whitman?" |
12933 | You speak of death as a matter of course-- you are not afraid to die? |
12933 | A policeman passed us running and called back,"I say, Hawkins, is that you? |
12933 | Alone? |
12933 | And did I want to buy a bull calf? |
12933 | And is n''t that so? |
12933 | And to whom do we owe it that he did leave-- Justice Shallow or Ann Hathaway, or both? |
12933 | Are these remains of stately forests symbols of a race of men that, too, have passed away? |
12933 | Assertive? |
12933 | Besides, who was there to take up his pen? |
12933 | Brown?" |
12933 | But it is all good-- I accept it all and give thanks-- you have not forgotten my chant to death?" |
12933 | But still, should not England have a fitting monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | But who inspired Dorothy? |
12933 | But why should I tell about it here? |
12933 | Ca n''t you go with me?" |
12933 | Cawn''t ye hadmire''i m on that side of the wall as well as this?" |
12933 | Could it be possible that these rustics were poets? |
12933 | Dark Mother, always gliding near with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
12933 | Did Mademoiselle Mars use it? |
12933 | Did you ever hear of him?" |
12933 | Do you know the scene?" |
12933 | Do you not know what books are to a child hungry for truth, that has no books? |
12933 | Does she protest, and find fault? |
12933 | Edison?" |
12933 | Edison?" |
12933 | Genius has its times of straying off into the infinite-- and then what is the good wife to do for companionship? |
12933 | Had Gavroche ever seen them? |
12933 | Have n''t you noticed that men of sixty have no clearer vision than men of forty? |
12933 | He answered back,"What t''ell is the matter with you fellows?" |
12933 | He brings to bear an energy on every subject he touches( and what subject has he not touched?) |
12933 | He evidently was acquainted with five different languages, and the range of his intellect was worldwide; but where did he get this vast erudition? |
12933 | Honeydew: Ay, Jarvis; but what will fill their mouths in the meantime? |
12933 | How can I get in?" |
12933 | How did she acquire this knowledge? |
12933 | How is any education acquired if not through effort prompted by desire? |
12933 | How? |
12933 | I did likewise, and was greeted with a resounding smack which surprised me a bit, but I managed to ask,"Did you run away?" |
12933 | I heard Old Walt chuckle behind me, talking incoherently to himself, and then he said,"You are wondering why I live in such a place as this?" |
12933 | I touched my hat and said,"Ah, excuse me, Mr. Falstaff, you are the bouncer?" |
12933 | In a voice full of defense the County Down watchman said:"Ah, now, and how did I know but that it was a forgery? |
12933 | Is it not too bad? |
12933 | Is not the child nearer to God than the man? |
12933 | Is not this enough? |
12933 | Is this much or little? |
12933 | Is this to his credit? |
12933 | Just below was the Stone pier and there stood Mrs. Gamp, and I heard her ask:"And which of all them smoking monsters is the Anxworks boat, I wonder? |
12933 | More than a thousand years before Christ, an Arab chief asked,"If a man die shall he live again?" |
12933 | Need I say that the girl who made the remark just quoted had drunk of life''s cup to the very lees? |
12933 | Next the public wanted to know about this thing--"What are you folks doing out there in that buckwheat town?" |
12933 | Of course, these girls are aware that we admire them-- how could they help it? |
12933 | Once they urged him to go with them to an exhibition at Kensington, but he smiled feebly as he lit his pipe and said,"An Art Exhibition? |
12933 | Philip asked the eunuch a needless question when he inquired,"Understandest thou what thou readest?" |
12933 | Proud? |
12933 | Say, did you know him?" |
12933 | So I put the question to him direct:"Did you see Buffalo Bill?" |
12933 | Stubborn? |
12933 | Then the preacher spoke and his voice was sorrowful:"Oh, but I made a botch of it-- was it sarcasm or was it not?" |
12933 | Then what have I done concerning which the public wishes to know? |
12933 | Then what? |
12933 | Then why a monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | These things being true, and all the sentiments quoted coming from"good"but blindly zealous men, is it a wonder that the Artist is not understood? |
12933 | Tomorrow we go-- where? |
12933 | Victor Hugo has said something on this subject which runs about like this: Why a monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | WILLIAM M. THACKERAY TO MR. BROOKFIELD September 16, 1849 Have you read Dickens? |
12933 | Was ever a Jones so honored before? |
12933 | Was ever woman more honestly and better praised than Dorothy? |
12933 | Were the waters troubled in order that they might heal the people? |
12933 | What architect has the skill to build a tower so high as the name of Shakespeare? |
12933 | What bronze can equal the bronze of"Hamlet"? |
12933 | What can bronze or marble do for him? |
12933 | What capital, were it even in London, could rumble around it as tumultuously as Macbeth''s perturbed soul? |
12933 | What do you mean by equity? |
12933 | What edifice can equal thought? |
12933 | What framework of cedar or oak will last as long as"Othello"? |
12933 | What is Pig Poetry? |
12933 | What is as indestructible as these:"The Tempest,""The Winter''s Tale,""Julius CÃ ¦ sar,""Coriolanus"? |
12933 | What is meant by''your share''?" |
12933 | What is the Whole Duty of Pigs? |
12933 | What monument sublimer than"Lear,"sterner than"The Merchant of Venice,"more dazzling than"Romeo and Juliet,"more amazing than"Richard III"? |
12933 | What moon could shed about the pile a light more mystic than that of"A Midsummer Night''s Dream"? |
12933 | When trouble, adversity or bewilderment comes to the homesick traveler in an American hotel, to whom can he turn for consolation? |
12933 | Where, one asks in amazement, did this remarkable man find the inspiration for carrying forward his great work? |
12933 | Who can recount the innumerable biographies that begin thus:"In his youth, our subject had for his constant reading, Plutarch''s Lives, etc."? |
12933 | Who can tell? |
12933 | Who could harm the kind vagrant harper? |
12933 | Who made the Pig? |
12933 | Who wrote it? |
12933 | Whom did he ever hurt? |
12933 | Why did he not learn at the feet of Sir Thomas Lucy and write his own epitaph? |
12933 | Why, do n''t you know? |
12933 | Will this convey the thought? |
12933 | Would the author be so kind as to change it? |
12933 | Would they have been so great had they not suffered? |
12933 | Yet love is life and hate is death, so how can spite benefit? |
12933 | now, wot you want?" |
12933 | where the mob surges, cursed with idle curiosity to see the graves of kings and nobodies? |
33318 | ''A woman''s? 33318 ''Do you still believe in the existence of the treasure?'' |
33318 | ''What''s in they, Captain?'' 33318 Can you tell the names of any persons that you would make use of in your defense?" |
33318 | Do you think I was a pirate? |
33318 | Do you think William Moore was one of those that was for taking her? |
33318 | Had you any discourse with Captain Kidd after this, about the man''s death? |
33318 | Have you any more to say, Captain Kidd? |
33318 | Have you those passes? |
33318 | How does he know what he is charged with? 33318 How long was this ago?" |
33318 | Might we venture to advance the theory that the Divine Rod was known and used nearly two thousand years ago? 33318 Mr. Kidd, do you know what you mean by matters of law?" |
33318 | Was that the reason that he struck Moore, because this ship was not taken? |
33318 | Was there a mutiny among the men? |
33318 | What can he have counsel for before he has pleaded? |
33318 | What matter of law can you have? |
33318 | What ship was that which had the French passes? |
33318 | What was the provocation for throwing the bucket? |
33318 | What was the reason the blow was given to the gunner? |
33318 | What were their names? 33318 What would you have counsel for?" |
33318 | What''s that for? |
33318 | When was this mutiny you speak of? |
33318 | Where were they then? |
33318 | Who hides it? |
33318 | Why, is it hid all around? |
33318 | Will you plead to the indictment? |
33318 | Would you have me plead and not have my vindication by me? |
33318 | You heard that one, Captain Elms, say they were French passes? |
33318 | ''And what then?'' |
33318 | ''And,''says he,( the captain)''have I brought you to ruin? |
33318 | ''Damn you for villains, who are you, and from whence come you?'' |
33318 | ''Heaven, you fool,''says Sutton,''Did you ever hear of any pirate going thither? |
33318 | ''What is to become of the country, plundered by land, plundered by sea? |
33318 | ''Why not, the brutes? |
33318 | ''Why,''says I,''may we take the ship because we are poor?'' |
33318 | At last he saw it and cried out with some agony:"''_ What is this? |
33318 | Did Kidd have reason to suppose that she would take his gifts and try to befriend him? |
33318 | Did you see their basnets glitter?'' |
33318 | Do they drive women in their gangs?'' |
33318 | Do you hear, Bradingham, what he says?" |
33318 | He says,( Kidd),''Would you have had me take this ship? |
33318 | How long have you had notice of your trial?" |
33318 | Is not the cold- blooded murder inconceivable barbarity, and the burying the body over the treasure too dramatic and buccaneer- like? |
33318 | Or might not the Spaniard have lied from love of lying and mystifying his simple shipmate, or might he not have been raving? |
33318 | Says I,''How will you do that?'' |
33318 | Seaman Hugh Parrott was then called and asked by Kidd:"Do you know the reason why I struck Moore?" |
33318 | Thereupon Kidd called Abel Owens, one of his sailors, and asked him:"Can you tell which way this bucket was thrown?" |
33318 | These explorers finished when[ Transcriber''s note: what?] |
33318 | Upon him saying this, says Captain Kidd,''Have I ruined you, ye dog?'' |
33318 | Was he discouraged? |
33318 | What have you to say for yourself?" |
33318 | What shall plead for them? |
33318 | Whence comes this?_''And then with changed countenance they told him how and where they got it. |
33318 | Where is the dazzling treasure of Samarcand? |
33318 | Where is the wealth of Antioch, and where the jewels which Solomon gave the Queen of Sheba? |
33318 | Who''d you reckon, Sunday- school superintendents?" |
33318 | Why did he not tell it before? |
33318 | _ My dear reader, do you wish me to speak candidly? |
33318 | cries out Salem Dick;"What for, my jumpin''beau? |
33318 | is there not yet a Room for Sovereign Grace to be display''d, in their Conversion and Salvation? |
11431 | And he swore? |
11431 | And how long,said Alexander,"have I to live?" |
11431 | And you expect me, a stranger on your lake, to find this place without chart, course, distance, latitude, longitude, or soundings? 11431 And you,"replied the pirate,"by what right do you ravage the world? |
11431 | Better than teaching school and writing learned articles? |
11431 | Do n''t you? |
11431 | From far? |
11431 | Have you learned that fame is an icy shadow? |
11431 | Have you? |
11431 | His name? |
11431 | How, friend,replied the archbishop,"has it[_ the homily_] met with any Aristarchus[_ severe critic_]?" |
11431 | I''m a sort of a kind of a nonentity; arn''t I, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | If you once saw me in battle, you''d never forget it; would he, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | In your opinion, who is the greatest genius that France has ever produced? |
11431 | Is the sinful servant more Than his gracious Lord who bore Bonds and stripes in Jewry? |
11431 | My character for valor is pretty well known; is n''t it, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | That gratified ambition can not make you happy? 11431 That was pretty well, egad, eh?" |
11431 | The ladies will be happy to-- eh? |
11431 | Then prithee, sweetheart, do you know the bailiff''s daughter there? |
11431 | Was he a-- ah-- peaceable man? |
11431 | What''s here? 11431 Where were you born?" |
11431 | ( Query,"Seint Eloy"for Seinte Loy?) |
11431 | ... The same Astarte? |
11431 | 1): Have you forgot the elder Dionysius, Surnamed the Tyrant?... |
11431 | Allow me to ask if you think a mariner runs by his nose, like one of Pathfinder''s hounds?" |
11431 | Ask you for whom my tears do flow so? |
11431 | BETTY DOXY, Captain Macheath says to her,"Do you drink as hard as ever? |
11431 | BORS(_ King_) of Gaul, brother of king Ban of Benwicke[ Brittany?]. |
11431 | Bishop Bruno, whither art thou travelling? |
11431 | But Ogier gazed upon it[_ the sea_] doubtfully One Moment, and then, sheathing, Courtain, said,"What tales are these?" |
11431 | But what are these to great Atossa''s mind? |
11431 | Byron refers to it in the lines: Like friar Bacon''s brazen head, I''ve spoken,"Time is, time was, time''s past[?]" |
11431 | C. Dibdin says none who ever saw W. Parsons( 1736- 1795) in"Corbaccio"could forget his effective mode of exclaiming"Has he made his will? |
11431 | Can this last long? |
11431 | Can we the Drapier then forget? |
11431 | Care I for the limb, the thews, the stature?... |
11431 | Clytus? |
11431 | Cowley,_ Who''s the Dupe_? |
11431 | Cui a Deo æternum meritum nisi vero Catholico Recaredo regi? |
11431 | D''ye give it up? |
11431 | D''ye think my niece will ever endure such a borachio? |
11431 | Did he mean all that by shaking his head? |
11431 | Did you think I should live for ever? |
11431 | Do n''t you hear how lord Strutt[_ the king of Spain_] has bespoke his liveries at Lewis Baboon''s shop[_ France_]?... |
11431 | Do you love me?" |
11431 | Doll Tearsheet for a lady of quality in Temple Garden; if he were wiser than he is... of what worth were he to us? |
11431 | ELEAZAR the Moor, insolent, bloodthirsty, lustful, and vindictive, like"Aaron,"in[ Shakespeare''s?] |
11431 | EST- IL- POSSSIBLE? |
11431 | Fond of saying"good things,"and pointing them out with such expressions as"There I had you, eh?" |
11431 | From Corin came it first? |
11431 | Have you not heard the poets tell How came the dainty Baby Bell Into this World of ours? |
11431 | He is stabbed by Deme''trius and Chiron, sons of Tam''ora queen of the Goths.--(?) |
11431 | He rarely finishes a sentence, but runs on in this style:"Dover is an odd sort of a-- eh?" |
11431 | He turned at random to the"Prayer of the Jews,"in Baruch, and was so struck with it that he said aloud to Racine,"Dites, donc, who was this Baruch? |
11431 | His one and only inquiry is"How many quarterings has a person got?" |
11431 | His wife says to him: Here''s a goodly jewel.. Did you not win this at Goletta, captain?.. |
11431 | How dare you infest the seas with your misdeeds?" |
11431 | Iago, speaking of the lieutenant, says: And what was he? |
11431 | If then, Castara, I in heaven nor move, Nor earth, nor hell, where am I but in love? |
11431 | If this had been the case it would, indeed, have been startling; but what are the facts? |
11431 | Is not our nation in his debt? |
11431 | Is not this dying with courage and true greatness? |
11431 | Justice Shallow remonstrated, but Falstaff exclaimed,"Will you tell me, master Shallow, how to choose a man? |
11431 | Now, if the food was in the great- coat, and the great- coat was stolen, how is it that the victuals remained in Sancho''s possession untouched? |
11431 | Or to the dreadful summit of the cliff That beetles o''er its base into the sea? |
11431 | Pilate''s question, QUID EST VERITAS? |
11431 | Shakespeare would have furnished them with a good motto,"Use every man after his desert, and who shall''scape whipping?" |
11431 | Shall sapient managers new scenes produce From Cherry, Skeffington, and_ Mother Goose?_ Byron,_ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_( 1809). |
11431 | Sinopê,"He who made a tub his home?" |
11431 | Sir Fine- face, sir Fair- hands? |
11431 | The captain was taken up by a coaster from Eye, loaded with cheese--"[ Now, pray, what did parson Prunello say? |
11431 | The lady Astarte his? |
11431 | The measure was agreed to in full council, but one of the sager mice inquired,"Who would undertake to bell the cat?" |
11431 | The sailors trembled at sight of him, and the fiend demanded how they dared to trespass"where never hero braved his rage before?" |
11431 | This Curio, hated now and scorned by all, Who fell himself to work his country''s fall? |
11431 | Thus,"Does your master stay in town, as the saying is?" |
11431 | Was I for this nigh wrecked upon the sea, And twice by awkward wind from England''s bank Drove back again unto my native clime?... |
11431 | Was it not for this that no cortejo ere I yet have chosen from the youth of Sev''ille? |
11431 | Were you at Sedan? |
11431 | What is this jargon? |
11431 | What say you does this wizard style himself-- Hakeem Biamrallah, the Third Fatimite? |
11431 | What says my Æsculapius? |
11431 | What would Sir Roger de Coverley be without his follies and his charming little brain- cracks? |
11431 | What''s the matter with me?" |
11431 | What, however, says history proper? |
11431 | Whatty, what is this? |
11431 | When Crillon heard the story of the Crucifixion read at Church, he grew so excited that he cried out in an audible voice,_ Où étais tu, Crillon_? |
11431 | When like a wretche led in an iron chayne, He was presented by his chiefest friende Unto the foes of him whom he had slayne? |
11431 | Where is the great Alcidês of the field, Valiant lord Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury? |
11431 | Where were they when I, unaided, Rescued thee from thirteen foes? |
11431 | Who can Amiel''s praise refuse? |
11431 | Who in their useless pyramids would live? |
11431 | Who is it thou hast slain? |
11431 | Who knows not Circe, The daughter of the sun, whose charmed cup Whoever tasted lost his upright shape, And downward fell into a grovelling swine? |
11431 | Who would not weep if Atticus were he? |
11431 | Why does he wish to swear away the life of that young man who never did him any harm? |
11431 | Why is Chelmsford Theatre like a half- moon? |
11431 | Why is a pump like viscount Castlereigh? |
11431 | Why should I not, had I the heart to do it, Like to th''Egyptian thief at point of death, Kill what I love? |
11431 | _ Bacchus_ or_ Saturn_? |
11431 | _ Beonê_ or_ Oenonê_? |
11431 | _ Ce''lia_, a poetical name for any lady- love: as"Would you know my Celia''s charms...?" |
11431 | _ Critias_ or_ Crito_? |
11431 | _ Dites, donc, avez- vous lu Baruch?_ Said when a person puts an unexpected question, or makes a startling proposal. |
11431 | can you prefer a man to the interests of Rome?" |
11431 | de quoi servait- il sur la terre? |
11431 | do they run already? |
11431 | in thy anguish What is there left to thee? |
11431 | is he dead? |
11431 | my Galen?... |
11431 | said the prince of darkness;"so you think by these churches and convents to put me and mine to your ban, do you? |
11431 | the hapless husband cried;"young as I am and unprepared?" |
11431 | who comes here? |
34974 | Are you so exasperated against wise_ Scotland_, that you will make_ England_ your foole or foot- stoole? |
34974 | Are you so weary of Peace, that you will never be weary of Warre? |
34974 | Are you so weary of being a good King, that you will leave your selfe never a good Subject? |
34974 | Are you so willing to warre at home, who were so unwilling to warre abroad, where and when you should? |
34974 | But how should an erring King trust a provoked Parliament? |
34974 | But if they should; if God will make both King and Kingdome the better by it, what should either lose? |
34974 | Can you put any difference? |
34974 | Fuller, in his"Worthies of England,"speaking of him, says, that he,"following the counsel of the poet, Ridentem dicere verum, Quis vetat? |
34974 | Have you not driven good Subjects enough abroad, but you will also slaughter them that stay at home? |
34974 | Have you peace of Conscience, in inforcing many of your Subjects to fight for you against their Conscience? |
34974 | Have your three Lamb- like flocks so molested you, that you must deliver them up to the ravening teeth of evening Wolves? |
34974 | Hilary= hath among our Lives no statue erected for him?_ let that enquiry go for part of one." |
34974 | How can the sword of the Lord put it selfe up into its scabbard and be quiet, when himself hath given it a charge to the contrary? |
34974 | Is it your prudence to be inraged with your best friends, for adventuring their lives to rescue you from your worst enemies? |
34974 | Is no Bishop no King, such an oraculous Truth, that you will pawne your Crowne and life upon it? |
34974 | Is there not some worse root than all these growing in your Spirit, bringing forth all this bitter fruit? |
34974 | Is your_ Advisera_ such a_ Suavamen_ to you, that hath been such a_ Gravamen_ to Religion and Peace? |
34974 | Is_ Majestas Imperii_ growne so kickish, that it can not stand quiet with_ Salus Populi_, unlesse it be fettered? |
34974 | May not you as well challenge the absolute disposall of all the wealth of the Kingdome as of all the strength of your Kingdome? |
34974 | We say,_ Nullum tempus occurrit Regi_ in taking wrong; why may wee not say,_ Nullum tempus succurrit Regi_ in doing wrong? |
34974 | What Man do''st meane to lay thy Trumpet downe? |
34974 | What doth forbid but one may smile, And also tell the truth the while? |
34974 | What good will the_ Militia_ doe you when you have wasted the Realme of all the best_ Milites_ it hath? |
34974 | What if I be? |
34974 | What if he committed his morall will to Divines, that were no Bishops? |
34974 | What incenses your heart to make so many widdowes and Orphans, and among the rest your owne? |
34974 | What moves you to take up Armes against your faithfull Subjects, when your Armes should bee embracing your mournfull Queen? |
34974 | Will you be so covetous, as to get more then you ought, by losing more then you need? |
34974 | Will you follow your very worst Councell so far, as to provoke your very best, to take better counsell than ever they did? |
34974 | Will you take such an ill course, that no prayers can fasten that good upon you we desier? |
34974 | Ye say, why come not we over to help the Lord against the Mighty, in these Sacred battailes? |
34974 | _ Ridentem dicere verum, quid prohibet?__ Gray Gravity it selfe can well beteam, That Language be adapted to the Theme. |
34974 | against which you should take up Arms, rather then against your harmlesse Subjects? |
34974 | and your Barons Cloakes, for so many Rockets, whereof usually twenty have had scarce good manners enough to keepe the other six sweet? |
34974 | breaking your simple Subjects braines to understand such mysticall Parleenment? |
34974 | doe you not know that_ malum est, posse malum_? |
34974 | his Politicall, to his Parliament, and a Councell chosen by Parliament? |
34974 | what can I say more? |
27920 | And the Rangers-- what about them? |
27920 | And what was Webb doing all this time? |
27920 | And why should n''t we have traps? 27920 Are they going to hang them, Edmund?" |
27920 | B- Been? 27920 Both dead? |
27920 | D- don''t you know? 27920 Did n''t the other boys have anything to do with it?" |
27920 | Did n''t you see a dog run across the lake, some distance down? |
27920 | Heavens and earth, man,said Hector,"what''s that? |
27920 | How are we going to get over that breastwork, Edmund? 27920 How did you get through it, Ben?" |
27920 | How soon can we begin, Davy? |
27920 | How''s that, Captain John? |
27920 | How''s that? 27920 How''s that?" |
27920 | I suppose you know the duties of elders? |
27920 | Injuns ask,''What that man''s name?'' 27920 Is n''t Amos rather young to go fox- hunting, Davy?" |
27920 | Major, where is Amos Locke? |
27920 | McKinstry, what do these animals eat? |
27920 | One hundred out of one hundred and forty- five? 27920 Rum, tobacco, and chocolate?" |
27920 | Ruth? 27920 So, you''re Jonas Parker, the best man in Middlesex? |
27920 | Well, ai n''t we going over to Dog Lane, to pick up little Amos Locke? 27920 Well, what of it? |
27920 | Well, you miserable thief, how do you like it now? 27920 What are you doing that for?" |
27920 | What do you think about that fire on the island, Ben? |
27920 | What in the w- world are we up to? 27920 What is it, Amos? |
27920 | What''s he doing that for? |
27920 | What''s the matter, Benny? 27920 What''s the matter, Martin? |
27920 | Where have you fellows b- been? 27920 Where''s Amos?" |
27920 | Who''s that over on the island in the meadow? |
27920 | Why did n''t you catch him, Ben? 27920 Why do we turn them out? |
27920 | Why does n''t Rogers order us to attack? |
27920 | Why is it, Donald,I asked,"that the regulars think so well of us, and laugh at the rest of the provincials?" |
27920 | Will they? 27920 Will you please tell me your name?" |
27920 | You''ve been among the Indians, have n''t you? 27920 An- An- And ai n''t I glad to see you? |
27920 | And now, neighbours, is there anything I can do for you?" |
27920 | And that their life would be gloomy without me? |
27920 | And that? |
27920 | And that?" |
27920 | And what is Amherst doing?" |
27920 | And what news is there of General Wolfe and his army? |
27920 | Are we going to attack the French army with one hundred and fifty men? |
27920 | But where am I, and what good fortune brought me here?" |
27920 | But where can we find men ready to fulfil the duties of the office?" |
27920 | But you''ve had lots of fun, have n''t you?" |
27920 | Did n''t every mother''s son in the Black Watch know that our major, Duncan Campbell, would meet his death there? |
27920 | Do n''t you think they would miss their little girl? |
27920 | Do you own all these dogs?" |
27920 | Do you suppose I did n''t notice you chuckling to yourself when you thought no one saw you?" |
27920 | Do you suppose I''ve got to go to hell?" |
27920 | Have I been in the river?'' |
27920 | Have you forgotten what they did then? |
27920 | Have you heard anything from Davy Fiske?" |
27920 | He would promise them-- well, what would n''t he promise them? |
27920 | How did he get it?" |
27920 | How did it happen?" |
27920 | How did you lose your scalp or scalps? |
27920 | How do you feel?" |
27920 | How do you get so strong?" |
27920 | How do you like it?" |
27920 | How in the world can that be?" |
27920 | How many Rangers have been tormented by them and scalped? |
27920 | How many of the Rangers got back?" |
27920 | How old are you?" |
27920 | How was it,''Bijah?" |
27920 | How''ll we do it?'' |
27920 | I followed him out and heard him say to Amos Muzzy:"Have you been in to see Benoni? |
27920 | I turned to Edmund and said,"Ca n''t we get that man out of there?" |
27920 | Is that fair to them, Boaz? |
27920 | Is that it, Edmund?" |
27920 | Mr. Harrington, who was leaning on his hammer by the forge, asked:--"But why do you turn them out? |
27920 | Old McKinstry said:"Do n''t you see, boys, why we do n''t advance? |
27920 | One day a stranger came to the house and asked:''Is Mr. McNeil at home?'' |
27920 | Say, have you got anything to eat? |
27920 | She would point out the letters with her knitting- needle and ask,"What is that letter? |
27920 | We broke away, and he looked at me, panting, and said:"What be ye, anyhow? |
27920 | We cut across the upper part of the lake, and as we approached the further side, Edmund said:"What''s that over on the shore, Ben? |
27920 | We were eager for the Rangers to join in this assault, and asked:"Why do n''t we advance?" |
27920 | What am I a blacksmith for? |
27920 | What are you looking at?" |
27920 | What better chance do you want?" |
27920 | What did I tell you about dogs?" |
27920 | What do you do, Ben, to make you so strong? |
27920 | What do you think of succedaneum, Donald?" |
27920 | What in time are we up to?" |
27920 | What makes you call them whales?" |
27920 | What would a dog be doing out here alone?" |
27920 | What''s the matter with that open place over there, with the big clump of bushes behind it?" |
27920 | When Amos told how Morin rushed in and freed Major Putnam, Rogers said:--"Morin? |
27920 | When we got through, Davy asked,"What was it that you were saying to us when we got here? |
27920 | Where are you bound for?" |
27920 | Where have you been? |
27920 | Where have you been? |
27920 | Where have you been?" |
27920 | Who''s she?" |
27920 | Why could n''t poor Lord Howe have been spared two days longer, to win everlasting renown? |
27920 | Why do n''t you let them alone?" |
27920 | Why do we halt?" |
27920 | You like hens? |
27920 | You never suspected that I was a full- fledged Indian warrior, did you, Ben?" |
27920 | [ Sidenote: A LIKELY LAD] Father stepped up, and said:"Jonas, what are you up to? |
27920 | [ Sidenote: CATCHING QUAIL]"Perhaps you think it was one of these whales that swallowed Jonah?" |
27920 | [ Sidenote: EXPEDITION TO ACADIA]"Well, which of you young men is going to serve the King? |
27920 | [ Sidenote: MARTIN''S MOTHER PLAYED BEAR]"''What''s the matter? |
27920 | [ Sidenote: ROGERS ASSUMES ENGLAND''S DEBT]"So you belong to the Rangers? |
38666 | If not-- what is better? |
38666 | If so-- is this an effectual plan? |
38666 | They will ask him there, why did you run away? |
38666 | Whether the present management requires any improvement? |
20248 | I wonder,mused the Martian,"did the grim spectre of death finally instill a grain of scepticism into his mind?" |
20248 | Again Jerome Davis asks,"Is it possible that our Church leaders are to some extent blinded by current conventional standards? |
20248 | Again, if witchcraft is given up, why not the chief witch of the Bible, the Devil? |
20248 | Aloud he muses,"Is there no place on Earth which is free from this contradiction?" |
20248 | And how well he must have rewarded his faithful servants, for was this not done in His name? |
20248 | And then all Gods laughed and shook on their chairs and cried:"Is Godliness not just that there are Gods, but no God?" |
20248 | And, behold, they cried out, saying,''What have we to do with thee, Jesus, Son of God? |
20248 | Are not the wants of his family, the hunger, and ostracism torture? |
20248 | Are they so busy sharing the wealth of the prosperous with others in spiritual quests that they fail to see some areas of desperate social need? |
20248 | Art thou come hither to torment us before the time?'' |
20248 | Brahmanism, Jainism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Confucianism, Taoism, Zoroastrianism, Hebrewism, Mohammedanism, Christianity-- which is the true religion? |
20248 | But actually who created this creator? |
20248 | But does the Mohammedan or the Christian analyze as critically each his own belief? |
20248 | But if the wife is displeased, is there any justice? |
20248 | But what effectual check has Christianity contributed? |
20248 | But, is the modern worshipper who is contemptuous of the ancients very different from them? |
20248 | By what process of thought had Mohammed come to exalt Allah not merely above all Arabian gods, but above the gods of all times? |
20248 | Can anything stronger be said to discourage research, investigation, experiment, and retard progress? |
20248 | Did the clergymen stand firm when men with dollars talked? |
20248 | Divine Justice? |
20248 | Do certain diseases as yet remain to plague man? |
20248 | Do certain diseases still baffle the physician? |
20248 | Do they to some degree unconsciously exchange the gift of prophecy for yearly budgets and business boards?" |
20248 | Does any one believe that Jew, Mohammedan, Catholic, and Protestant can long live in peace together? |
20248 | Does not this apologist confuse his god with his devil? |
20248 | For how much longer will man be a slave to his inferiority complex with regard to his own rational capacities? |
20248 | Furthermore, why was he so certain of his own intimate association with Allah? |
20248 | Good God-- surely in the face of all this sense of aliveness and motion, and this and that, there should be some intimation of WHY? |
20248 | Has man profited by having remained in his mental infancy so long? |
20248 | Has not his mind so co-*ordinated his movements that he has enslaved those forces of nature to be his aid? |
20248 | How can we attribute these qualities to a being who is described to us as devoid of any nerve structure? |
20248 | How can we know the actual number of earthlings that are sceptics? |
20248 | How much longer before humanity can begin to build on a sound foundation? |
20248 | How, then, could an omnipotent being permit wholesale and private murder? |
20248 | However, the Martian argues,"Is it not a fact that in your earthly experience, you have created your gods in your own image? |
20248 | If everything must have a cause, then the First Cause must be caused and therefore: Who made God? |
20248 | If faith is vital to man, why not relate it to that which at least holds a promise of solution? |
20248 | If men were possessed of devils in Jesus''time, what has happened to these devils now? |
20248 | If the God of these earthlings bothers not about them, why should they trouble about God? |
20248 | If the grocer, the butcher, the doctor, the lawyer, the scholar, the business man, were to boldly announce his scepticism, what would happen to him? |
20248 | If this be God''s word, did God err when He said it? |
20248 | In how many of the advanced ideas of our time has the Church taken the lead? |
20248 | In this series of complications where may we discern a first cause? |
20248 | Is He not rather a demon than a God? |
20248 | Is anything so pitiful to behold as the firm grasp that the Church places on the mind of the youngest of children? |
20248 | Is it necessary that you should salt your truth that it will no longer quench thirst_? |
20248 | Is it not a fact that if the Christian nations of the world would only live at peace together, war would be impossible? |
20248 | Is it not renowned for being a long way in the rear rather than in the vanguard of progressive thought and action? |
20248 | Is religion, is church membership a help to virtue? |
20248 | Is religion, is church membership, a help to virtue? |
20248 | Is this all that is left to the theologian: that he must use the pitiful"Theology of Gaps"? |
20248 | It is an absurd answer to reply that the creator created himself, yet, even if this is granted, may not the universe have created itself? |
20248 | It is an excellent and comprehensive statement, but one is left wondering why the name"religious humanism"? |
20248 | It was Lactantius who asked,"Is there any one so senseless as to believe that there are men whose footsteps are higher than their heads? |
20248 | Must it take five hundred years for all mankind to come to a similar conclusion? |
20248 | Now is it strange that Sinai should have excited reverence and dread? |
20248 | Now it is the Martian''s turn to inquire of the Hebrew whether the latter had ever read this story to his own daughter? |
20248 | Or did the Divine Father know that even a self- respecting germ could not inhabit the filthy floor of the Tabernacle? |
20248 | Or, the story of Abraham''s affair with Hagar, his handmaiden? |
20248 | Professor James T. Shotwell when speaking of paganism reminds us,"Who of us can appreciate antique paganism? |
20248 | Surely, Jesus could not misinterpret his own words or deeds, if the religionists contend that we are now misinterpreting the Bible? |
20248 | Surely, a man is not burned at the stake for his scepticism in this age; but is he not done to death? |
20248 | That I have ten coats in my wardrobe while he goes naked? |
20248 | That at each of my meals enough is served to feed his family for a week? |
20248 | That the crops and trees grow downward? |
20248 | That the rains and snow and hail fall upwards toward the earth? |
20248 | The oft- repeated question still admits of no answer,"Who created the creator"? |
20248 | Then again, has it not occurred to this apologist that he is in all futility attempting to prove something which is a contradiction within itself? |
20248 | Then was heard the last despairing cry of the desolate, dying martyr,"My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
20248 | To confuse the evil spirit causing the disease? |
20248 | Truly, Jehovah at that time must have loved them well, or did some other Deity form the Egyptians? |
20248 | Was it the brotherhood of man that Christianity bestowed on the conquered Mexican and Peruvian nations, and on the Indians of our own country? |
20248 | What could be more explicit? |
20248 | What did the prophetic movement do with his sacred powers? |
20248 | What effect has Christianity had upon our moral life, upon crime, drug- addiction, sexual immorality, prostitution, and perversion? |
20248 | What immense structures have been founded on these shifting sands, on this morass of ignorance and childish fable? |
20248 | What is the cause? |
20248 | What is the value of a church that has claimed the moral leadership of the world when such things can happen? |
20248 | What kind of brotherhood did Christians bestow on Jews or heretics in the Middle Ages? |
20248 | What of those countless millions of men that died before Christ came to save the world from damnation? |
20248 | What sort of person would be the father who would announce divine punishment or reward in order to obtain the love and respect of his children? |
20248 | What supernatural in their deeds? |
20248 | What wisdom poured forth from their lips which did not come from other philosophers? |
20248 | When the minds of men are from infancy perverted with these ideals, how can mankind build a virile race? |
20248 | Who does not feel the absurdity of the opinion that the lavish care for a sick child by a mother is given because of a belief in God and immortality? |
20248 | Why do n''t the masses go to Church?'' |
20248 | Why does the ecclesiastic not leave off his advances until the child reaches a mature age, an age when he can reason? |
20248 | Why, therefore, not give Allah, the leading icon in Arabia, an opportunity? |
20248 | Why? |
20248 | Wieman, Macintosh, and Otto:"Is There a God? |
20248 | Will he endeavor to analyze it at all? |
20248 | Years ago I was asked,''Why do n''t people accept religion? |
1994 | ''I am disinclined to seem impertinently curious,''I answered,''but the ladies in this fair, smiling country-- have the gods made them poetical?'' 1994 ''In what can my knowledge of the Paradise of Poets be serviceable to you, sir?'' |
1994 | ''Is there nobody here,''said I,''who is happy with his Ideal-- nobody but has exchanged Ideals with some other poet?'' 1994 ''Then wherefore,''I interrupted,''do I see Robert Burns loitering with that lady in a ruff,--Cassandra, I make no doubt-- Ronsard''s Cassandra? |
1994 | And to me, the least and the youngest, what gift for the slaying of ease? 1994 Any of them married?" |
1994 | For where was that Charity that buildeth upon the foundation of Humility, which is Christ Jesus? 1994 How?" |
1994 | Is he a poet like Sir Walter Scott? |
1994 | Mr. Witham,said Lady Violet,"did you meet your ideal woman when you were in the Paradise of Poets?" |
1994 | Sir,said Poole, looking Mr. Utterson in the eyes,"was that my master''s voice?" |
1994 | Very well, fork it out; you must give a dinner, all new fellows must, and_ you_ are not going to begin by being a stingy beast? |
1994 | Where, or at what time, was I ever innocent? |
1994 | Who ever loved like the poets? |
1994 | Why? |
1994 | Will it last? 1994 ''And now, will you kindly tell me why these ladies are here, if they were not poets?'' 1994 ''May we not be let off with the preface?'' 1994 ''May we not glance at the table of contents and be done with it?'' 1994 ( 2) The Russian Princess, her friend( need I add that, to meet a public demand,_ her_ name was Vera?). 1994 And then what do her words mean? 1994 And what do the nested swallows chirrup to each other in their sleep? 1994 And what was the end of it all? 1994 And who? 1994 Are we to end happily, with a marriage or marriages, or are we to wind all up in the pleasant, pessimistic, realistic, fashionable modern way? 1994 As to Dick, is he to be a Lothario, or a lover_ pour le bon motif_? 1994 But have they penetrated into the chill galleries of the Castle of Udolpho? 1994 But how to be in earnest, how to keep the note of disbelief and derisionout of the memorial"? |
1994 | But what had Miriam and the spectre of the Catacombs done? |
1994 | But where are they now? |
1994 | Can anything be more"amazing horrid,"above all as there are mysterious figures in and about the tower? |
1994 | Can this be she-- The lady who knelt at the old oak tree?" |
1994 | Can we suppose that Monica laughed, or was it only the heathen father who approved of"roughing it?" |
1994 | Close to the letter of the Greek he usually keeps, but where are the surge and thunder of Homer? |
1994 | Did the ghost of Darius, in"AEschylus,"frighten the Athenians? |
1994 | Do we not see and hear a little too much of him? |
1994 | Do you care for the"first lover,"the Photographer''s Young Man? |
1994 | Does not this solve the vexed question whether lobsters are fish, in the French sense?" |
1994 | Get over all this quicker? |
1994 | Have they shuddered for Vivaldi in face of the sable- clad and masked Inquisition? |
1994 | He ends with,"How much tin have you got?" |
1994 | Here he finds, in a large chest-- what do you suppose he finds? |
1994 | How can I discount the"personal bias"? |
1994 | How could I do a Tory leader? |
1994 | How did she leave her home with Paris-- beguiled by love, by magic, or driven by the implacable Aphrodite? |
1994 | How did the passion come to them? |
1994 | How far it is really beautiful how can I tell? |
1994 | How long did it stay? |
1994 | How many sisters have you?" |
1994 | How? |
1994 | In the Paradise of Poets has he discovered the secret? |
1994 | Is Mary to drown the baby in the Muckle Pool? |
1994 | Is he to plunge into vice till everybody is virtuous again? |
1994 | Is it not the motive of half our politics, and too much of our criticism? |
1994 | Is she to suffer the penalty of her crime at Inverness? |
1994 | Is this not a pleasing opportunity for Gentlemen, and Others, whose Aunts have beheld wraiths, doubles, and fetches? |
1994 | Is this not a very original, striking, and affecting situation; provocative, too, of the utmost curiosity? |
1994 | It is blasphemy to ask the question, but is the ghost in"Hamlet"quite a success? |
1994 | Lady Alice de la Barde hears of the death of her knight:--"ALICE"Can you talk faster, sir? |
1994 | Most of us have gone through that, the Millevoye phase, but who else has shown such a wise and gay acceptance of the apparently inevitable? |
1994 | Now, does any grown- up man call this state of society civilisation? |
1994 | Of what do babies dream? |
1994 | On the frontier of Italy, why should he not do as the Italians do? |
1994 | Poor man, why should I stay thee? |
1994 | Probably she already had a lover; how should she behave to that lover? |
1994 | Radcliffe?). |
1994 | Seek''st thou for maggots such as have affinity With those in thine own brain, or dost thou think That all is sweet which hath a horrid stink? |
1994 | Shall not my soul be subject to God, for of Him is my salvation? |
1994 | That she did so was no good reason for hanging or burning a number of parishioners; but, did she float, and, if so, how? |
1994 | The Smolletts were not"kinless loons"; they had connections: but who, in Scotland, had money? |
1994 | The great question, which I shall not answer, is,_ what did the Black Veil conceal_? |
1994 | The literary life is very like any other, in London, or is it that we do not see it aright, not having the eyes of genius? |
1994 | The men at Oxford asked,"Did he come in the''One Hoss Shay''?" |
1994 | The story was entitled"Where is Rose?" |
1994 | Then they all prayed, and a Voice came from under the bed:"Would you know the Witches of Glenluce?" |
1994 | Then, why, some one may ask, write about"The Death Wake"at all? |
1994 | There_ must_ be an explanation of proceedings so highly unconventional, and what can the reason be? |
1994 | They had not travelled long together before the young lady, turning to the squire, said,"_ Vous parlez francais, Monsieur_?" |
1994 | This needs a great deal of subtlety, and what is to become of the hero? |
1994 | To be sure Roderick does befriend"a reclaimed street- walker"in her worst need, but why make her the_ confidante_ of the virginal Narcissa? |
1994 | Was her heart ever with Paris? |
1994 | Well, one has run away to literature since, but where is the matutinal beer? |
1994 | What did he want? |
1994 | What did she want? |
1994 | What did the lady in the Geni''s glass box want with the Merchants? |
1994 | What had occurred? |
1994 | What harm can the story do to a child? |
1994 | What is frank, natural verse, if not that of the old_ Pastourelles_? |
1994 | What is her secret? |
1994 | What is poetical, if not the"Song of Roland,"the only true national epic since Homer? |
1994 | What is the mysterious art by which these things are done? |
1994 | What is_ Qrart_? |
1994 | What makes the well- told story seem real, rich with life, actual, engrossing? |
1994 | What new idea is gained by this title but one subversive of all credit-- which the tale should force upon us-- of its truth?" |
1994 | What so natural as that, disguised as a page, her Majesty should come spying about the Court of Holyrood? |
1994 | What was it that Mr. Green knew? |
1994 | What was it-- the"sight to dream of, not to tell?" |
1994 | What was so taking in him? |
1994 | What was the horror she revealed to the night in the bower of Christabel? |
1994 | What was the use of it, who ever spoke in it, who could find any sense in it, or any interest? |
1994 | What''s your father?" |
1994 | When did the Muse say good- bye? |
1994 | Whence did she come? |
1994 | Where are Warrington, and Foker, and F. B.? |
1994 | Where is the back- kitchen? |
1994 | Where is the lad of twenty who has written as well to- day-- nay, where is the mature person of forty? |
1994 | Where is there_ naivete_ of narrative and unconscious charm, if not in_ Aucassin et Nicolette_? |
1994 | Where is"Ajalon of the Winds"? |
1994 | Where was the secret? |
1994 | Where_ was_ Rose? |
1994 | Who was she? |
1994 | Who was the spectre? |
1994 | Who were these base and pitiless dastards? |
1994 | Who will end for me the novel of which Byron only wrote a chapter; who, as Bulwer Lytton is dead? |
1994 | Why dost thou make Haut- gout thy sole divinity? |
1994 | Why is Hermes"The Flitter"? |
1994 | Why reward Strap with her hand? |
1994 | Why rouse again the nightmare of a boy of twenty? |
1994 | Why should they not be revived, these strangely coloured and magical dreams? |
1994 | Would I contribute? |
1994 | Would I do a"leader"? |
1994 | Would life be worth living( whatever one''s religious consolations) on these terms? |
1994 | You fellow, what''s your name?" |
1994 | _ Ou le didacticisme va t''il se nicher_? |
1994 | what meant all these conversations between the Fat Knight and_ Ford_, in the"Merry Wives"? |
1994 | { 11} Can not the reader guess? |
1994 | { 11} If Coleridge knew, why did he never tell? |
31511 | Hath shee done it? |
31511 | Old Alice[ Norrington?] |
31511 | Was this woman fitting to live?... 31511 You have foure Imps, have you not? |
31511 | ''Did you not send such an Impe to kill my child''? |
31511 | ''Yes''....''Are not their names so and so''? |
31511 | ***** Justice.-- Come, come: firing her thatch? |
31511 | 1674? |
31511 | And the keeper of the wardrobe, what was the part that he played? |
31511 | And was I not there enjoyned by a necessity to the discoverie of this Brood?" |
31511 | And why? |
31511 | And, supposing these narratives were true, would they prove anything? |
31511 | But is it not possible to believe that the social grouping of these men had an influence? |
31511 | But what were the rector of Stanford Rivers and the keeper of the great wardrobe doing there? |
31511 | But why go into details? |
31511 | But why should we trace out the confessions, charges, and counter- charges that followed? |
31511 | Can we doubt that their decisions were influenced by that fact? |
31511 | Did he write soon after the events, when they were fresh in his memory? |
31511 | Did that detection of fraud never occur to the judges, or had they never heard of the famous boy at Bilston? |
31511 | Did the pamphleteer himself hear and see what he recorded, or was his account at second hand? |
31511 | Did the parties that were said to have been killed by witchcraft really die at the times specified? |
31511 | Does his narrative seem to be that of a painstaking, careful man or otherwise? |
31511 | Given a personal Devil who is constantly intriguing against the kingdom of God( and who would then have dared to deny such a premise? |
31511 | Had Doctor Cole been appointed in recognition of the claims of the church? |
31511 | Had her sister perhaps suggested that the justice was offering mercy to those who confessed? |
31511 | How are we to account for these phenomena? |
31511 | How did it happen that just at this particular time so drastic a measure was passed and put into operation? |
31511 | How was it known that she went half a mile? |
31511 | How, then, were real cases of bewitchment to be recognized? |
31511 | I? |
31511 | I? |
31511 | If this were true, what would become of all those bulwarks of religion furnished by the wonders of witchcraft? |
31511 | Is it not likely that there were in England itself certain peculiar conditions, certain special circumstances, that served to forward the attack? |
31511 | Is this the Joan Baker of Exeter mentioned a few lines above? |
31511 | Katherine Earle struck a Mr. Frank between the shoulders and said,"You are a pretty gentleman; will you kisse me?" |
31511 | Mrs. Crosse had once kept a girls''school-- could it be that there was some connection between teaching and witchcraft? |
31511 | Now, the problem that arose at once was this: How can the souls of witches leave their bodies? |
31511 | Or did the assize courts, which resumed their proceedings in the summer of 1646, frown upon him? |
31511 | Or was he meeting with increased opposition among the people? |
31511 | Shall we, they asked, discredit all human testimony? |
31511 | That, of course, he was not; and his leaning towards superstition on these points makes one ask, What did he really believe about witchcraft? |
31511 | The Tryal, Examinations, and Confession... before the Lord Chief Baron Wild.... By James[ Edmond?] |
31511 | The attorney then asked,"When dyd thye Cat suck of thy bloud?" |
31511 | The practical question is, not how would the law operate, but how did it operate? |
31511 | The question naturally arises, What was the occasion of this law? |
31511 | Then arose the problem: How does this process differ from death? |
31511 | This brings us back to the point: What had the conjurers to do with witchcraft? |
31511 | Was it because the men of the law possessed more of the matter- of- factness supposed to be a heritage of every Englishman? |
31511 | Was it because their special training gave them a saner outlook? |
31511 | Was it not their province to overcome the machinations of the black witches, that is, witches who wrought evil rather than good? |
31511 | Was the attorney- general acting as presiding officer, or was he conducting the prosecution? |
31511 | Was there a falling off in interest? |
31511 | Was this the Christiana Weekes of Cleves Pepper, Wilts, who in 1651 and 1654 was again and again accused of telling where lost goods were? |
31511 | Well neighbour, sayth one, do ye not suspect some naughty dealing: did yee never anger mother W? |
31511 | Were they harmless beings with malevolent minds? |
31511 | Were they not good witches? |
31511 | What is witchcraft? |
31511 | What was the nature of the delusion seemingly shared by eight people? |
31511 | What was to be done with it? |
31511 | What was to be done with the witches? |
31511 | What were these witches, then? |
31511 | When all the fraud and false testimony and self- deception were excluded, what about the remaining cases of witchcraft? |
31511 | Who knew that it was seven minutes? |
31511 | Why did they leave out the very essential of the witch- monger''s lore? |
31511 | Why did they not speak at all of the compacts between the Devil and witches? |
31511 | Would he have stood by this when pushed into a corner? |
31511 | [ 17] Can we wonder that a student at such pains to discover the fact as to a wrong done should have used barbed words in the portrayal of injustice? |
31511 | [ 22]_ Ibid._, 5; John Darrel,_ An Apologie, or defence of the possession of William Sommers..._( 1599? |
31511 | [ 50] What, then, were they? |
28653 | And your father''s name? |
28653 | Better? 28653 Is not this better,"murmured he,"than what we dreamed of in the forest?" |
28653 | Shall we not meet again? |
28653 | Shall we not spend our immortal life together? 28653 That is to say,"we replied,"the blockheads were not born in Concord; but who said they were? |
28653 | Where''s Brom Dutcher? |
28653 | Where''s Van Bummel, the schoolmaster? |
28653 | Who are they? |
28653 | And how looks it now? |
28653 | And is this difference of no importance? |
28653 | And, after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
28653 | Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear"whether he was Federal or Democrat?" |
28653 | Are there engagements, to the performance of which we are held by every tie respectable among men? |
28653 | Are we entitled, by nature and compact, to a free participation in the navigation of the Mississippi? |
28653 | Are we even in a condition to remonstrate with dignity? |
28653 | Are we in a condition to resent or to repel the aggression? |
28653 | Are your wife and children destitute of a bed to lie on, or bread to live on? |
28653 | Art thou too sluggish? |
28653 | Art thou too weak, that wast so powerful? |
28653 | Ask''d her what sum she would give me, if she should dy first? |
28653 | Besides, what were you sent into the world for but to add this observation?" |
28653 | But do not the Abbe de la R---- and the Abbe M---- visit her?" |
28653 | But if you say you can still pass the violations over, then I ask, hath your house been burnt? |
28653 | But now thou wilt?" |
28653 | But what have ye put over the redskin?" |
28653 | But what is your practise after dinner? |
28653 | But where is that favored land? |
28653 | But why will not Congress forward part of the powder made in your province? |
28653 | Can anything be imagined more exquisitely opposed to the true spirit of chivalry? |
28653 | Can no one bear it for me? |
28653 | Canst thou not brush the fly away? |
28653 | Coming back, near Leg''s Corner, Little David Jeffries saw me, and looking upon me very lovingly, ask''d me if I was going to see his Grandmother? |
28653 | Did you embrace it, and how often? |
28653 | Do we owe debts to foreigners, and to our own citizens, contracted in a time of imminent peril, for the preservation of our political existence? |
28653 | Has it yet vanished? |
28653 | Hath your property been destroyed before your face? |
28653 | Have you lost a parent or a child by their hands, and yourself the ruined and wretched survivor? |
28653 | His error does me no injury, and shall I become a Don Quixote, to bring all men by force of argument to one opinion? |
28653 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
28653 | In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name? |
28653 | Is a violent and unnatural decrease in the value of land a symptom of national distress? |
28653 | Is commerce of importance to national wealth? |
28653 | Is it a cat watching for a mouse, or the devil for a human soul? |
28653 | Is it not I who, in the character of your physician, have saved you from the palsy, dropsy and apoplexy? |
28653 | Is it not the foundation of a greater or less share of beauty in the two races? |
28653 | Is private credit the friend and patron of industry? |
28653 | Is public credit an indispensable resource in time of public danger? |
28653 | Is respectability in the eyes of foreign powers a safeguard against foreign encroachments? |
28653 | Is there no other sound? |
28653 | Not brush away a fly? |
28653 | Of the condition of the Middle Ages from the single romance of"Ivanhoe"than from the volumes of Hume or Hallam? |
28653 | Or are all the deep- laid schemes of yesterday as stubborn in his heart, and as busy in his brain, as ever?... |
28653 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
28653 | Rip had but one question more to ask; but he put it with a faltering voice:"Where''s your mother?" |
28653 | Stand any here that question God''s judgment on a sinner? |
28653 | The Leather- Stocking stared at the sound of his own name, and a smile of joy illumined his wrinkled features as he said:"And did ye say it, lad? |
28653 | The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"on which side he voted?" |
28653 | Then tell me what thou seest?" |
28653 | Thou art not stirred by this last appeal? |
28653 | Welcome home again, old neighbor-- why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
28653 | What have I done to merit these cruel sufferings? |
28653 | What is the hour? |
28653 | What was to be done? |
28653 | What would you advise us to do?" |
28653 | When I hear another express an opinion which is not mine, I say to myself he has a right to his opinion, as I to mine; why should I question it? |
28653 | Where is our universe? |
28653 | While the mornings are long, and you have leisure to go abroad, what do you do? |
28653 | Who is there to take notice of our flinching?" |
28653 | Will Judge Pyncheon now rise up from his chair? |
28653 | Will he go forth, and receive the early sunbeams on his brow? |
28653 | Will he never stir again? |
28653 | Will not these heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
28653 | Yet of what avail was the frenzied despair of the unarmed youth? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ But do you charge, among my crimes, that I return in a carriage from Mr. Brillon''s? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ How can you so cruelly sport with my torments? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ Is it possible? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ Not once? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ What, then, would you have me do with my carriage? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ Who is it that accuses me? |
28653 | cried he--"Young Rip Van Winkle once-- old Rip Van Winkle now!--Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
28653 | echoed Edwards,"whither do you go?" |
28653 | echoed Elizabeth, trembling with her feelings;"do you not call these endless forests woods?" |
28653 | exclaimed the youth;"where is it, Natty, that you purpose going?" |
28653 | have you then got the old man''s name cut in the stone by the side of his master''s? |
28653 | my enemy in person? |
28653 | what has startled the nimble little mouse? |
17217 | A son-- your wife!--what, you, Karlee,_ you_? |
17217 | And what then? 17217 Are n''t the sufferings of one generation under that dispensation enough for you? |
17217 | Are the ladies at home? |
17217 | Can you paint? |
17217 | Do you keep more than one wife? |
17217 | Does he think we can afford wood enough to warm all out- doors with? |
17217 | Does she know? |
17217 | Does_ she_ sing now? |
17217 | Hast thou in search of Truth been true,-- True to thyself and her,-- And been with many or with few Her_ honest_ worshipper? 17217 How came she to know?" |
17217 | How did she take it? |
17217 | How did you know all this? |
17217 | Is she going to die? |
17217 | Master have command for Karlee? 17217 Miss Nelly?" |
17217 | O,said she, looking rather pleased;"then is n''t he coming to- day?" |
17217 | Pretty, is n''t it? |
17217 | S''pose Sahib like,_ Belatta pawnee_ have got? |
17217 | Sha''n''t we be too early? |
17217 | Shall I tell you how I enjoy it, ma''am? |
17217 | Shall we make a bargain, then? |
17217 | Spirit, my spirit, hath each stage That brought thee up from youth To thy now venerable age Seen thee in search of Truth? 17217 Then what should you say to Philip, now?" |
17217 | Then why does she not sing? |
17217 | Then why in hell do n''t you go? |
17217 | Then, why do n''t you talk to him? |
17217 | Tiger Lily? 17217 Was it like this?" |
17217 | We can hardly feed one; why should we keep more? |
17217 | Well, and what came of it all? |
17217 | Well, there was one girl in the school,--I dare say she_ was_ a giggling, mischief- making thing, for everybody said so--"Is she living now? |
17217 | Were you there? |
17217 | What had happened yesterday? |
17217 | What made her have it? |
17217 | Where on earth is your good husband? |
17217 | Why should n''t_ you_ say she was pretty? |
17217 | Why, is it dangerous? |
17217 | Why? |
17217 | Why? |
17217 | Wo n''t you walk in? |
17217 | _ You_ know? |
17217 | ''_ And_--_then_''--what?" |
17217 | *****"Spirit, thy race is nearly run; Say, hast thou run it well? |
17217 | A belief in good luck sometimes helps men to the enjoyment of good luck,--and if men, why not nations? |
17217 | A friend? |
17217 | And now-- what next? |
17217 | And then would he proclaim his shame and cowardice among men? |
17217 | And was she not the most perfect of all aristocratically governed nations? |
17217 | And what is it?" |
17217 | Any wrong thing happen, master? |
17217 | Are not there my little people back from school?" |
17217 | As I neared the door, I heard her voice, which was not dulcet, from the parlor- kitchen:"What''s this here winder open for?" |
17217 | But how of her husband? |
17217 | But is it to be found on this coast?" |
17217 | But when he assured them that his purpose was fixed, that he should go, alone if necessary, they replied:"What is the use of our remaining behind? |
17217 | By the way, speaking of her, what_ did_ you mean by what you said that day about female physicians?" |
17217 | Campbell had opened the"Pleasures of Hope"with"Why to yon mountains turns the musing eye, Whose sunbright summits mingle with the sky?" |
17217 | Can not you?" |
17217 | Can such a temper as this be misunderstood? |
17217 | Canst thou copy in verse one chime Of the wood- bell''s peal and cry? |
17217 | Could I refuse? |
17217 | Did n''t you have faculty of yourself enough to know that they''d got to be picked over before they went into the pot? |
17217 | Did not Venice endure so long that, when she perished as a nation, within living memory, she was the oldest of great communities? |
17217 | Do not you?" |
17217 | Do they really imagine that piracy is to be suppressed by argument and preaching?" |
17217 | Do you like roses?" |
17217 | Do you not?" |
17217 | Go_ home_!--without my home- mates?--leave them here?--with no kiss,--no good- night? |
17217 | Have n''t I brought in the famous words that our new schoolmaster astonished us with at the teachers''meeting? |
17217 | Have you studied it long?" |
17217 | Have you that museum now?" |
17217 | Have you time to- day?" |
17217 | Have_ I_ described Miss Dudley? |
17217 | He was utterly discouraged as a lawyer; he knew nothing of business; he had no capital; and what on earth was he good for? |
17217 | His conclusions might be wrong, his inferences faulty, though honest; but how were they to be counteracted? |
17217 | How long would it last? |
17217 | How would American cities appear in comparison with this poor Dyak and heathen metropolis? |
17217 | How would you like yourself to be called Philemon?" |
17217 | I hope Mrs. Physick did not hear,"said the Doctor;--"domestic balance of power shall I say, my love,--or system of compromises?" |
17217 | If he was given over to delusion, to be buffeted by Satan, whose fault was it? |
17217 | If they could not comprehend matters of fact at the beginning of last June, why should we conclude that they will be Solomons hereafter? |
17217 | Is it generous, is it just in a novelist, to lift us up to a pitch of tragic frenzy, and then drop us down into the last scene of a comic opera? |
17217 | It is asked, said Henry Clay, on a memorable occasion, Will slavery never come to an end? |
17217 | Must I go back to it? |
17217 | On the north(?) |
17217 | Sahibs make visit? |
17217 | Shall we go in?" |
17217 | The inquisitive traveller crossed the street, and, deferentially approaching the new genus, lisped,"Ha-- ah-- how d''do, ha? |
17217 | The"kind o''poor- lookin'', pale- lookin'', queer- lookin''lady,"that Miss Mehitable had described,--was this she? |
17217 | Then what should I do for her husband? |
17217 | Under such circumstances, what was a poet, a scholar, and a lawyer, without any knowledge of business, to do? |
17217 | Was he not a man fearing God in 1818,--forty- eight years ago?--or, rather, loving God with that perfect love which casteth out all fear? |
17217 | Well does Rajah Brooke proudly ask,"Could such success spring from a narrow and sordid policy?" |
17217 | What are you driving at?" |
17217 | What did I think? |
17217 | What did she wear?" |
17217 | What do some gentlemen expect? |
17217 | What do you think of that?" |
17217 | What has come over you?" |
17217 | What is the end? |
17217 | What need Of words? |
17217 | What should you have done if he had been a girl?" |
17217 | What should you say, first, to a walk with me?" |
17217 | What undertake? |
17217 | What was the matter with her?" |
17217 | What was to be done? |
17217 | What''s the good news, old man?" |
17217 | When might I come here to sleep? |
17217 | Where is that mantle? |
17217 | Where is the Prophet? |
17217 | Whither should he go? |
17217 | Why should not Protestant England rejoice with Protestant Prussia, and see her successes with gladness? |
17217 | Would he preach when he saw his daughter dishonored and his son murdered? |
17217 | Would he preach? |
17217 | Write in a book the morning''s prime, Or match with words that tender sky? |
17217 | You are not tired? |
17217 | You liked her, then?" |
17217 | You wo n''t serve it so another time,_ will_ you? |
17217 | _ Dhobee_[15] come? |
17217 | _ Mehtur_[16] not sweep room? |
17217 | _ Punka- wallah_[17] run away? |
17217 | and_ therefore_ Pierpont began his"Portrait"with"Why does the eye with greater pleasure rest On the proud oak with vernal honors drest?" |
17217 | dost thou think him a Christian that he would go about to deceive thee?" |
17217 | has she really-- been here? |
17217 | have you seen Bellysore Tom?" |
17217 | how can she say so?" |
17217 | what will you say next?" |
17217 | what''s all this?" |
17217 | what_ do_ you mean?" |
17217 | when I was ill. Where shall we go, Miss Morne?--to the garden or the shore? |
30306 | [ 10] The fact is unquestionable, but the question remains, In what sense were these people exalted? 30306 [ 7] Granted; only one would like to know what reason there is for not deriving virtues as well as vices from the same source? |
30306 | And if not called into being then, from what other source could they have been derived? |
30306 | And, deeper enquiry still, may not the religious interpretation itself be a product of the special environment of the period? |
30306 | But is it true? |
30306 | But why are we to limit science to_ physical_ facts only? |
30306 | Did their exalted sensibility really bring them into touch with a form of existence hidden from persons of a coarser fibre? |
30306 | First, whether or no these children were bewitched? |
30306 | Has science the knowledge or the ability to deal with the extraordinary as well as with the ordinary facts of life? |
30306 | Have you no pity on the torments that I suffer? |
30306 | How can we discriminate between the two classes of cases? |
30306 | How comes it that this idea has not by now disappeared from civilised society? |
30306 | How far has the one been mistaken for the other? |
30306 | How far may religious experience be explained as a misinterpretation of normal non- religious life? |
30306 | If the former, how can we differentiate between the mystic and the admittedly hysterical patient? |
30306 | If the latter, what ground is there for placing the mystic in a category of his own? |
30306 | In that case, would the belief in the supernatural have ever existed? |
30306 | In what respect, then, do the favoured few differ from their fellows? |
30306 | Is it a fact that the non- religious explanation breaks down so completely? |
30306 | Is there anything in later scientific knowledge that would ever have suggested the supernatural? |
30306 | It certainly leaves unanswered the question_ Why_ should people have drawn together in the face of danger? |
30306 | One writer pertinently asks:--"What does the ordinary seminary graduate know of the histology, anatomy, and physiology of the soul? |
30306 | Or are we to seek a less romantic explanation with the aid of known tendencies and forces in human nature? |
30306 | Or did it belong to a class of cases which in a more violent form comes within the province of the physician? |
30306 | Secondly, whether the prisoners at the bar were guilty of it? |
30306 | Shall I think of a mother''s tears? |
30306 | The question is, therefore, why should the line of growth, general with all at adolescence, be, in the case of some, diverted into religious channels? |
30306 | To what causes are we to attribute the persistence of this belief in the supernatural? |
30306 | To what extent have pathological nervous states influenced the building up of the religious consciousness? |
30306 | To what extent have people accepted the outcome of pathological conditions as proofs of intercourse with an unseen spiritual world? |
30306 | Under what conditions did the hypothesis that supernatural beings control the life of man come into existence? |
30306 | What are the causes that have given it such a lengthy lease of life? |
30306 | What does the graduate know about sexuality, so closely allied with certain forms of religious manifestations? |
30306 | What does the ordinary graduate understand about doubt? |
30306 | What is the character of the force that binds the members of a group so closely together? |
30306 | What is the inevitable conclusion? |
30306 | What is the nature of this fact of sociability? |
30306 | What kind of evidence is it that throughout the ages religious people have accepted as conclusive? |
30306 | What kind of evidence is it, then, that has been accepted as proof of the supernatural? |
30306 | What possible scientific warranty is there for any such distinction? |
30306 | What, then, are we to make of those who experience a similar feeling, but who are without the certainty of eternal life? |
30306 | Whence did the pest of the Agapetà ¦ creep into the Church? |
30306 | Whence is this new title of wives without marriage rites? |
30306 | Whence these harlots cleaving to one man? |
30306 | Whence this new class of concubines? |
30306 | Who is there that may not love Thy lovely face? |
30306 | Whose heart is so hard that may not melt at the remembrance of Thee? |
30306 | Why do these facts not immediately present themselves in their true nature? |
30306 | Why do things happen? |
30306 | Why does the sun rise and set, why does rain fall, thunder crash, rivers flow? |
30306 | Why should the ordinary classification break down at this point? |
30306 | Why should this have been the case? |
30306 | Why should this normal change from childhood to maturity be the period during which_ religious_ conversion is experienced? |
30306 | Why, then, has not supernaturalism died out? |
30306 | With what else has religion always associated itself? |
30306 | With what else should a healthy religion associate itself but the ordinary motives or feelings of human life? |
30306 | Would Santa Teresa or Catherine of Sienna have used the language they did use to express their relations to Jesus had they been wives and mothers? |
30306 | Would it not have been like a tree divorced from the soil? |
30306 | Would not one be surprised if any other result than this had been achieved? |
30306 | Would the medieval monk have been tempted by Satan in the form of beautiful women had he been happily married? |
30306 | Would the religious idea have persisted in the way that it has done? |
30306 | Would the thousand and one''spiritual beings''of primitive society have ever had being? |
30306 | [ 103] Marie de L''Incarnation addresses Jesus as follows:--"Oh, my love, when shall I embrace you? |
30306 | and what had they exactly in their several individual minds, when they delivered their utterances? |
30306 | who may not love Thee, lovely Jesus? |
14849 | And is mine one? |
14849 | ''Twas doing nothing was his curse-- Is there a vice can plague us worse? |
14849 | A common friendship-- who talks of a common friendship? |
14849 | A useless flint o''er which the waters flow? |
14849 | All is beauty: And knowing this, is love, and love is duty: What further may be sought for or declared? |
14849 | All the world cries,"Where is the man who will save us?" |
14849 | Am I wrong to be always so happy? |
14849 | And Jehovah said unto Joshua, Get thee up; wherefore art thou thus fallen upon thy face? |
14849 | And do our loves all perish with our frames? |
14849 | And dost thou hear the word ere it be spoken, And apprehend love''s presence by its power? |
14849 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? |
14849 | And it is n''t the fact that you''re hurt that counts, But only-- how did you take it? |
14849 | And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more noble to repay? |
14849 | And the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
14849 | And they said one to another, Was not our heart burning within us, while he spake to us in the way, while he opened to us the scriptures? |
14849 | And thou sayest, What doth God know? |
14849 | And what of that? |
14849 | And where are thy playmates now, O man of sober brow? |
14849 | And which of you by being anxious can add one cubit unto the measure of his life? |
14849 | And who will walk a mile with me Along life''s weary way? |
14849 | And why art thou disquieted within me? |
14849 | Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? |
14849 | Are not ye of much more value than they? |
14849 | Are the stars too distant? |
14849 | Are you in earnest? |
14849 | Art little? |
14849 | At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse? |
14849 | But he is in one mind, and who can turn him? |
14849 | But the little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is n''t God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?" |
14849 | But what if I fail of my purpose here? |
14849 | But whoso hath the world''s goods, and beholdeth his brother in need, and shutteth up his compassion from him, how doth the love of God abide in him? |
14849 | Can a fig tree, my brethren, yield olives, or a vine figs? |
14849 | Can he judge through the thick darkness? |
14849 | Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee? |
14849 | Can you add to that line That he lived for it too? |
14849 | Canst thou prophesy, thou little tree, What the glory of the boughs shall be? |
14849 | Didst fancy life was spent on beds of ease, Fluttering the rose- leaves scattered by the breeze? |
14849 | Didst fondly dream the sun would never set? |
14849 | Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years? |
14849 | Dost fear to lose thy way? |
14849 | Doth God exact day labor, light denied? |
14849 | Exceeding peace made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
14849 | Feeling the way-- and if the way is cold, What matter? |
14849 | For doth not that rightly seem to be lost which is given to one ungrateful? |
14849 | For what shall a man be profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and forfeit his life? |
14849 | George W. F. Hegel born 1770. Who are thy playmates, boy? |
14849 | God will not seek thy race, Nor will he ask thy birth; Alone he will demand of thee, What hast thou done on earth? |
14849 | Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? |
14849 | Have we not darkened and dazed ourselves with books long enough? |
14849 | Have we not groveled here long enough eating and drinking like mere brutes? |
14849 | Have we not stood here like trees in the ground long enough? |
14849 | Have you an ancient wound? |
14849 | Having eyes, see ye not? |
14849 | He said:"My child, do you yield? |
14849 | He went out, and found others standing; and he saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle? |
14849 | How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to stand the test of ridicule? |
14849 | How many smiles?--a score? |
14849 | How to constitute oneself a man? |
14849 | I will lift up mine eyes unto the mountains: From whence shall my help come? |
14849 | If a man die, shall he live again? |
14849 | If heard aright It is the knell of my departed hours: Where are they? |
14849 | If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell, And the crier rang the bell, What would you buy? |
14849 | In the hour of distress and misery the eye of every mortal turns to friendship; in the hour of gladness and conviviality, what is your want? |
14849 | Is all that we see or seem But a dream within a dream? |
14849 | Is life a noxious weed which whirlwinds sow? |
14849 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
14849 | Is n''t it interesting to get blamed for everything? |
14849 | Is not God in the height of heaven? |
14849 | Is not the life more than the food, and the body than the raiment? |
14849 | It is not worth the keeping: let it go: But shall it? |
14849 | Josephine born 1763 Could we by a wish Have what we will and get the future now, Would we wish aught done undone in the past? |
14849 | Know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God? |
14849 | Look full into thy spirit''s self, The world of mystery scan; What if thy way to faith in God Should lie through faith in man? |
14849 | Loved the wild rose, and left it on the stalk? |
14849 | NOVEMBER Who said November''s face was grim? |
14849 | O God, can I not save One from the pitiless wave? |
14849 | Say, dost thou understand the whispered token, The promise breathed from every leaf and flower? |
14849 | Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
14849 | Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights at my side, In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree? |
14849 | Shall I give up the friend I have valued and tried, If he kneel not before the same altar as me? |
14849 | Shall I hold on with both hands to every paltry possession? |
14849 | Shall days spring up as wild vines grow, Unheeding where they climb or cling? |
14849 | Shall two walk together, except they have agreed? |
14849 | Shall we have ears on the stretch for the footfalls of sorrow that never come, but be deaf to the whirr of the wings of happiness that fill all space? |
14849 | Summer and flowers are far away; Gloomy old Winter is king to- day; Buds will not blow, and sun will not shine: What shall I do for a valentine? |
14849 | Temptation sharp? |
14849 | The great Gods pass through the great Time- hall; Who can see? |
14849 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain? |
14849 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain? |
14849 | There is sunshine without and within me, and how should I mope or be sad? |
14849 | Though you have but a little room, do you fancy that God is not there, too, and it is impossible to live therein a life that shall be somewhat lofty? |
14849 | Thy bountiful care what tongue can recite? |
14849 | Unarmed faced danger with a heart of trust? |
14849 | Was it hard for him? |
14849 | Was it thus that he plodded ahead, Never turning aside? |
14849 | Was the trial sore? |
14849 | Well, what of that? |
14849 | Well, what of that? |
14849 | What do you live for if it is not to make life less difficult for each other? |
14849 | What doctor possesses such curative resources as those latent in a single ray of hope? |
14849 | What does your anxiety do? |
14849 | What have you done with your soul, my friend? |
14849 | What if no bird through the pearl rain is soaring? |
14849 | What if no blossom looks upward adoring? |
14849 | What is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
14849 | What is the essence and life of character? |
14849 | What is your life? |
14849 | What shall we do with it? |
14849 | What though to- night wrecks you and me If so to- morrow saves? |
14849 | What would be the use of immortality for a person who can not use well half an hour? |
14849 | What''s hallowed ground? |
14849 | When I hear a young man spoken of as giving promise of high genius, the first question I ask about him is always-- Does he work? |
14849 | When the heart overflows with gratitude or with other sweet and sacred sentiment, what is the word to which it would give utterance? |
14849 | Whence comest thou?" |
14849 | Where else can we live? |
14849 | Who is the happiest person? |
14849 | Who is wise and understanding among you? |
14849 | Who knoweth not in all these, That the hand of Jehovah hath wrought this? |
14849 | Who said her voice was harsh and sad? |
14849 | Who stands ready to act again and always in the spirit of this day of reunion and hope and patriotic fervor? |
14849 | Who would fail, for a pause too early? |
14849 | Who would fail, for one step withholden? |
14849 | Who would fail, for one word unsaid? |
14849 | Who would not rather have a right to immortality than to be immortal without a right to be? |
14849 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
14849 | Why are we so glad to talk and take our turns to prattle, when so rarely we get back to the stronghold of our silence with an unwounded conscience? |
14849 | Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
14849 | Why comes temptation but for a man to meet And master and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph? |
14849 | Why comest thou?" |
14849 | Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
14849 | Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
14849 | Why, why repine, my pensive friend, At pleasures slipped away? |
14849 | Will ye leave the flowers for the crown?" |
14849 | are they thine, When round thy brow the wreaths of glory shine; While rapture gazes on thy radiant way,''Midst the bright realms of clear mental day? |
14849 | each a space Of some few yards before his face; Does that the whole wide plan explain? |
14849 | little loveliest lady mine, What shall I send for your valentine? |
14849 | what do we see? |
14849 | when the eve is cool? |
11727 | Ah, you think you are past it now, I suppose? |
11727 | And why should not letters change? |
11727 | Any tidings of the fugitive? |
11727 | But how shall I find time to follow out even one of these exercises? |
11727 | Can my little light keep you from ruin? |
11727 | Dead? |
11727 | Did I speak? |
11727 | Did you? |
11727 | Had n''t you better wait? |
11727 | Have n''t I? 11727 How long would he stay, if he had his own way?" |
11727 | How many are Filibusteros? |
11727 | How soon? |
11727 | I guess, if I should show a letter he wrote me once----But what am I talking about? |
11727 | If the faith is disturbed,answered Miss Agnes,"what use in asking what has disturbed it? |
11727 | Miss Prissy, do you think it will be necessary to cut it off at the bottom? 11727 Now, did I ever?" |
11727 | Now, do n''t she look beautiful? |
11727 | Really, Mrs. Scudder,said gallant old General Wilcox,"where have you kept such a beauty all this time? |
11727 | Well, now, Miss Scudder, really!--did I ever see anything more beautiful? 11727 Well, the shares, then?" |
11727 | What did he come for, then? |
11727 | What is the collateral? |
11727 | What would become of all the wedding- clothes for everybody else? |
11727 | What''s the good o''namin''him, and allus talkin''about him, when yer do n''t never know as he ar''n''t byside ye? |
11727 | Who is that lovely creature? |
11727 | Yes,--what has become of her? |
11727 | _ Est il possible_ that I am going to Italy? |
11727 | ''Tis the air I love to breathe,--yet come, I will watch the stars with you awhile; But you wo n''t talk nonsense, you promise me? |
11727 | ***** WHY DID THE GOVERNESS FAINT? |
11727 | --"Who, then, wrote the history of Bernal Diaz?" |
11727 | --''Yes; but do you make a good living?'' |
11727 | ----How do I know that? |
11727 | And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong,--"What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done? |
11727 | And constantly an accusing voice asked,"Why did n''t you come down?" |
11727 | Besides, do you think you have nothing to do but rush into Alice''s arms when you find her? |
11727 | But a sudden thought struck him, and he asked eagerly,--"But the money,--haven''t you got it still?" |
11727 | But why have n''t you been looking for her?" |
11727 | Can I be of service to you?" |
11727 | Can they be the same that, an hour ago, were so composed, so jovial, so full of dangerous defiance to the old man of the sea? |
11727 | Can you let a fancy, an old story in a ring, disturb your faith in me?" |
11727 | Do n''t you see that heap of shawls yonder, lying in the sun, and heated up to about 212 degrees Fahrenheit? |
11727 | Do we give it all that expression, or has it some life of its own?" |
11727 | Do you like her hair? |
11727 | Do you think old fellows like me have lost recollection as well as feeling? |
11727 | Does not Mr. Bryant say, that Truth gets well if she is run over by a locomotive, while Error dies of lockjaw if she scratches her finger? |
11727 | For to what but to Dante''s"Inferno"can we liken this steamboat- cabin, with its double row of pits, and its dismal captives? |
11727 | From what source does he imagine them to have been derived? |
11727 | Had not Mrs. General Wilcox once been obliged to call in her aid on a dress sent to her from Paris? |
11727 | Has Mr. Wilson taken this course? |
11727 | Has he diligently and carefully examined the"standard Spanish authorities"? |
11727 | Has he met with clear and resolute argument the accounts which he denounces as"fabrications"? |
11727 | Has he read all the works in question? |
11727 | Has he"conned musty folios innumerable"? |
11727 | He accosted us as follows:--"Go ashore? |
11727 | He goes into State Street, and, struck with the great crowds of people, asks the solemn question,"Whither are they going?" |
11727 | He stopped them with his fingers; again the persistent voice asked,"Why did n''t you come down?" |
11727 | Heartsick, and weary, and sad, and strange,-- Ashes and dust where swept the fire? |
11727 | Holes? |
11727 | How could she be so thoughtless? |
11727 | How do we compare with them in vigor and attention to gymnastics and health- giving exercises? |
11727 | How much more forcible is this than the vulgar"Is it possible?" |
11727 | How shall we explain this fact? |
11727 | How, then, does he account for them? |
11727 | I am sorry for you, but I can not change.-- Did you see that star fall from the Lyre? |
11727 | I did not make your lilies grow; Will they bloom for me now they are dead? |
11727 | I does''em all in pencil, and puts a little color on their faces, but all the rest in pencil,--d''ye see?'' |
11727 | I had no sooner come to the end than Fanny said,"Who is going to take care of the children she leaves at home?" |
11727 | I knew she would not tell anybody, so I could not help sharing my wonder with her,--what could have made Miss Agnes faint so suddenly? |
11727 | I said to my friend, after satisfactory definition of the Pine Rat;"what fiend may he be, if you please?" |
11727 | If a man picks your pocket, do you not consider him thereby disqualified to pronounce any authoritative opinion on matters of ethics? |
11727 | If we ca n''t understand them, because we have n''t taken a medical degree, what the Father of Lies do they ask us to sign them for? |
11727 | If we understand them, why ca n''t we discuss them? |
11727 | In a couple of closely- printed pages, devoted to the subject, he asks himself, again and again, the questions,--"Who, then, was Bernal Diaz?" |
11727 | Is there not danger in introducing discussions or allusions relating to matters of religion into common discourse? |
11727 | Its fiends are the stewards who rouse us from our perpetual torpor with offers of food and praises of shadowy banquets,--"Nice mutton- chop, Sir? |
11727 | Many a time he had taken the risk of lending large sums to brokers and others; but who would trust him, a man without estate, in a time like this? |
11727 | May I ask why you do not try the experiment yourself? |
11727 | Meanwhile, what have modern nations done to atone for the neglect of the ancient gymnasium? |
11727 | Miss Agnes smiled and said,"They tell children it is naughty to cry; but sometimes you ca n''t help crying, can you?" |
11727 | Mrs. Q., looking up from her bundle of Sewing- Society work,"you are_ not_ going to let Mary marry the Doctor?" |
11727 | Mud? |
11727 | My dear Madam, is not that just what you did, yourself, after having turned off three or four fascinating young sinners as good as James any day? |
11727 | Now peach- trees, I s''pose, might bear just as good peaches without the pink blows, but then who would want''em to? |
11727 | Now what means are in use among us to furnish the needed stimulant of exercise? |
11727 | Now, then,_ how_ shall we live? |
11727 | Ogling the youth with the foreign air!-- The moon was bright and the winds were low, The lilies bent listening to what we said? |
11727 | Oh, yes, if you like it.--Turtle? |
11727 | Old? |
11727 | Only two summers ago, you say, Two autumns, two winters, two springs, since you---- Will you hold for a moment my bouquet? |
11727 | Or shall it cleave no more to her bosom, but transfer its endearing dependence to a stranger, or learn to call a bottle its mother? |
11727 | Perhaps, though, you''ve got some_ cousin_ that looks arter your bills?" |
11727 | Shall we, then, be so untrue to our craft,--shall we, in short, be so unguardedly natural, as to confess that"Bitter- Sweet"has surprised us? |
11727 | Suppose a minister were to undertake to express opinions on medical subjects, for instance, would you not think he was going beyond his province? |
11727 | Sweeter its music than all the rest? |
11727 | The following is a free rendering of their conversation:--"Any Americans on board?" |
11727 | The party- leader who makes his name and influence serve him in obtaining loans which he never intends to pay,--shall we call him a beggar? |
11727 | There is n''t anything to eat there.--Fruit? |
11727 | There''s nothing to see; the island is n''t bigger than a nut- shell, and does n''t contain a single prospect.--Go ashore and get some dinner? |
11727 | To see something, eh? |
11727 | Was there a tragedy, a mystery, in all Newport, whose secret closet had not been unlocked by Miss Prissy? |
11727 | Well, methinks I hear Betsey and Lucy say,"What is cousin''s dress?" |
11727 | What are these sighs, groans, and despairing noises, but the_ alti guai_ rehearsed by the poet? |
11727 | What became of the girls? |
11727 | What do you mean? |
11727 | What for? |
11727 | What if I should sometimes write to please myself? |
11727 | What shall he do to restore the balance? |
11727 | What shall we do with it? |
11727 | What should he know of dress- makers, good soul? |
11727 | What was the meaning of this? |
11727 | Where is she? |
11727 | Why did n''t you come down this morning? |
11727 | Why would n''t you all try it, especially as the captain of the"Karnak"is an excellent sailor, and the kindest and manliest of conductors? |
11727 | Would you, then, banish all allusions to matters of this nature from the society of people who come together habitually? |
11727 | You ca n''t buy a pair of scissors on the island, nor a baby''s bottle;--broke mine the other day, and tried to replace it; couldn''t.--Society? |
11727 | You hate the rooms and the heartless hum, The thick perfumes and the studied smile? |
11727 | You must come and see My new home, and soon.--What was it you said? |
11727 | You remember Mrs. Sandford, the charming widow?" |
11727 | You would not attack a church dogma-- say, Total Depravity-- in a lyceum- lecture, for instance? |
11727 | You_ will_ do it to- morrow,--won''t you, now?" |
11727 | [_ very indifferently, and with the falling inflection._]"Why, do n''t you want to know?" |
11727 | against all human and divine authority? |
11727 | he said,"do you come to lay your pure self down in the scale against my follies and all my passions? |
11727 | hush!--that whisper,--"Where is Mary''s boy?" |
11727 | if he had himself the means of consulting the works from which Prescott''s account was derived? |
11727 | plate of soup?" |
11727 | roast- turkey? |
11727 | said Fletcher,--"Bullion is in there for fifty thousand, to be sure; but what is that? |
11727 | said I,''are you an artist?'' |
11727 | what''s this?" |
37191 | And who is this Thompson they''re talking about? |
37191 | How is that? |
37191 | The Townsmen,says Besse,"seeing a Ship with_ English_ Colours, soon came on board, and asked for the Captain? |
37191 | What kind of a fellow is this Whittier? |
37191 | ''Do you know who wrote that?'' |
37191 | ''I love you: on that love alone, And not my worth, presuming, Will you not trust for summer fruit The tree in May- day blooming?'' |
37191 | ''What if a son of mine was in a strange land?'' |
37191 | *****"Do bird and blossom feel, like me, Life''s many- folded mystery,-- The wonder which it is_ To Be_? |
37191 | *****"This conscious life,--is it the same Which thrills the universal frame?" |
37191 | And who does not delight to do him honor? |
37191 | But the folk- lore of the early days,--where is it? |
37191 | But would a wise man be in love with a false nose, though ever so rich, and however finely made?" |
37191 | Can such hollow sympathy reach the broken of heart, and does the blessing of those who are ready to perish answer it? |
37191 | Did he abandon his principles and retire from the arena? |
37191 | Did he quail before the storm? |
37191 | Does it hold back the lash from the slave, or sweeten his bitter bread? |
37191 | For a specimen of our author''s vein of pleasantry take the following bit of satire on"The Training":"What''s now in the wind? |
37191 | He continued:--"I am sometimes asked,''Is the poet Whittier really a Quaker or only one by inheritance?'' |
37191 | How could he? |
37191 | How little he wrote-- did he ever write anything--"which, dying, he could wish to blot?" |
37191 | Is that thy answer, strong and free, O loyal heart of Tennessee? |
37191 | One Sunday after meeting at Amesbury he said to his life- long friend, Miss Gove,"Abby, has thee a spare room up at thy house?" |
37191 | Or stand I severed and distinct, From Nature''s chain of life unlinked?" |
37191 | Shall we go into my room?'' |
37191 | Shall we have one more stanza about this lovely little school- idyl? |
37191 | She replies:"''Nor frock nor tan can hide the man; And see you not, my farmer, How weak and fond a woman waits Behind this silken armor? |
37191 | They asked,_ Whether he had any Letters_? |
37191 | Was there ever before a revenge so complete and so sublime?" |
37191 | What gave such fascination to the grand Homeric encounter between Christian and Apollyon in the valley? |
37191 | What on earth are you here for?'' |
37191 | What strange, glad voice is that which calls From Wagner''s grave and Sumter''s walls? |
37191 | What workman would not be glad to carol such stanzas as the following, if they were set to popular airs? |
37191 | Whence came I? |
37191 | Whither do I go? |
37191 | Who does not admire and love John Greenleaf Whittier? |
37191 | Who ever heard of a persecuting Quaker? |
37191 | Why did I follow Ossian over Morven''s battle- fields, exulting in the vulture- screams of the blind scald over his fallen enemies? |
37191 | Why do n''t you throw off your Quaker coats as I do mine, and show yourselves as you are?'' |
37191 | Why should he? |
37191 | Why should my moul- board gie thee sorrow? |
37191 | Why was Mr. Greatheart, in Pilgrim''s Progress, my favorite character? |
37191 | With a rapid glance at Wilson, he said,''Henry, who is thy young friend?'' |
37191 | [ Footnote 27: What is the subtle fascination that lurks in such bits of winter poetry as the following, collected by the writer out of his reading? |
37191 | [ Illustration: Handwriting: John G. Whittier] And what is love of freedom but the mainspring of Democracy? |
37191 | are they not in his Wonder- Book?" |
37191 | darest thou lay A hand on Elliott''s bier? |
37191 | they exclaimed,"so you are the one who is with Thompson, are you?" |
37272 | And what are you after? |
37272 | Ca n''t you hear the clock strike? |
37272 | Did you save their chists? |
37272 | How long was they sick? |
37272 | How near was they? |
37272 | Let''s see how he looks,swaggered the young blade;"where''s a window whence we can peep at him?" |
37272 | Wait, wait, ca n''t you,he answered the imperative call of his visitor,"till I get my galluses on?" |
37272 | Was they hopefully pious? |
37272 | Was they near friends? |
37272 | Was they seafaring men? |
37272 | What did they die of? |
37272 | Where did they die? |
37272 | Where do we take the barge then, and when? |
37272 | Who could have done it? |
37272 | Who''s that? |
37272 | Why, Sarah,he asked in surprise,"why are you cutting down your splendid great cherry tree?" |
37272 | ''What should I say?'' |
37272 | --"It''s true,"answered the driver, with much astonishment;"how could you tell?" |
37272 | --"Why, yes,"answered the driver in surprise,"do you know him?" |
37272 | After riding nearly half an hour we called out despondingly to the driver,"When do we reach the wharf?" |
37272 | And how should you feel if he was to go and break open your barn or take down your oxen, cows, horses, and sheep?'' |
37272 | And when did the lamb and dolphin ever meet, except upon a sign- post? |
37272 | Do I not withold more than is meet from charity? |
37272 | Gone where? |
37272 | Have I done well to get me a Shay? |
37272 | Have I not been too fond& too proud of this convenience? |
37272 | In a few minutes the passengers asked,"What are you doing there?" |
37272 | In the meantime where were the two"knights of the bedchamber,"as the chap- book calls them? |
37272 | Is it cold? |
37272 | Is it warm? |
37272 | Now, what can you give me for dinner?''" |
37272 | Shines in your hearts the morning star''s first ray? |
37272 | Should I not be more in my study and less fond of driving? |
37272 | The accompanying lines read:--"Thou mortal man that livest by bread, What makes thy face to look so red? |
37272 | The fox and goose may be supposed to have met, but what have the fox and the seven stars to do together? |
37272 | To the distracted landlord the Yankee drawled out,"Do you think them passengers was going away without something for their money? |
37272 | What were on his fore paws? |
37272 | Where are you goeing? |
37272 | Who are you? |
37272 | Who comes to meet the day, And to the Lord of Days his homage pay? |
37272 | You get upset in a rail- car-- and, damme, where are you?" |
37272 | _ The ill effects of drinking would you see? |
37272 | double- pegged mittens, leather gauntlets, fur gloves, wristlets, and muffettees? |
37272 | he said, staring at her,"how came you here and in them clothes?" |
37272 | shall I pay twelve pence for the fragments which the grand jury roages have left?" |
36343 | But why should we suppose personality to involve limitation? |
36343 | Whither does the soul go? |
36343 | And so rapid and marvelous have been the discoveries that the human mind stands paralyzed with wonder and amazement and asks, What next? |
36343 | Are all Suns and Worlds Inhabited? |
36343 | Are all suns and worlds inhabited? |
36343 | Are these things consistent with a God who cares? |
36343 | Are you endowing them with the intellect of true manhood, or crystallizing into atoms all manner of distorted brains? |
36343 | But as only light came, did the"cause"bring it or did it come with its own velocity? |
36343 | But have we two kinds of energy? |
36343 | But is it right? |
36343 | But where is that wondrous shore, and where will all of the now living inhabitants of earth be a century hence? |
36343 | CHAPTER XVI ARE ALL SUNS AND WORLDS INHABITED? |
36343 | Can any one believe they are kept in their places by a mere balancing force? |
36343 | Can the soul partake of the character of electricity? |
36343 | Did it not reveal forces in nature that would allow men to hear voices at great distances? |
36343 | Does He make men of us with all the trouble and care that comes inside of seventy years, and then throw us away? |
36343 | He says:"What is it that holds together the parts of which this ultimate atom may be imagined to consist? |
36343 | How does it do it? |
36343 | How frail and uncertain is the argument based on such doubtful and assumed facts? |
36343 | I ask why? |
36343 | I said,"Can you do that again?" |
36343 | I was surprised and said,"Have you enough fire in your body to light the gas?" |
36343 | If the Creator of all keeps faith with all other creatures, why not with man? |
36343 | Is it not right, by the eternal law of cause and sequence and unanswerable logic, that life should return to the fountain of life? |
36343 | May not each planet have its own peculiar current, and its own peculiar attracting power, and the sun give each a different electricity? |
36343 | Of what substance are you moulding the grand army of the future race? |
36343 | The question may often arise, Does God perfect humanity and then destroy it? |
36343 | Then, is universal energy and law psychical or physical? |
36343 | There was no flow of lava, but can any one imagine the crater discharging what was said to have issued from it?... |
36343 | They have been the means of determining the answer to the one great question,"What is life?" |
36343 | Vibrations of what? |
36343 | Was the polestar ever obscured by the interposition of a world in formation? |
36343 | Wave motions of what? |
36343 | What cause exceeds the speed of light, which is deemed the swiftest thing in the universe? |
36343 | What constitutes the solidity of this bar of iron? |
36343 | What did the telephone reveal thirty years ago? |
36343 | What is electricity? |
36343 | What is this but pantheism of the rankest old, obsolete, pagan kind? |
36343 | What of the big fish that eat the little ones, or the destruction of life by flood and storm, or human trials, sickness and death? |
36343 | What was it surprised the scientists and came to us with many times the supposed speed of light? |
36343 | Why does the comet, when it approaches just so near to the sun, dart away so quickly? |
36343 | Why should man be an exception? |
36343 | Why? |
36343 | Why? |
36343 | Why? |
36343 | Why? |
36343 | Will man never cease slandering the good Deity, and libeling the beneficent Creator of all good? |
36343 | Will they listen to France''s Macedonian call and the law of love and life written in their womanly natures? |
36343 | Will they receive the gift of eternal life? |
36343 | what qualities are you weaving in your thread of thought? |
36343 | who can know? |
17480 | ''I''ll appeal to yourself in this question, What other knowledge have you of God but what you have within the circle of the Creation? 17480 (?) |
17480 | (?) 17480 (?) |
17480 | A man shall have meat and drink and clothes by his labour in freedom, and what can he desire more in Earth? 17480 And what is the reason that Farmers and others are so greedy to rent land of the Lords of Manors? |
17480 | And who now must we be subject to, seeing the Conqueror is gone? 17480 But shall not one man be richer than another? |
17480 | But shall not one man have more Titles of Honor than another? 17480 But some may say, What is that I call Commonwealth''s Land? |
17480 | But what hinders you now? 17480 But you will say, Is not the land your brother''s? |
17480 | Do not your Ministers preach for to enjoy the earth? 17480 Dost thou pray and fast for Freedom, and give God thanks again for it? |
17480 | For what is the reason that great gentlemen covet after so much land? 17480 HOW MUST THE EARTH BE PLANTED? |
17480 | If any ask me, what Kingly Power is? 17480 It being thus with you, what other spiritual and heavenly things do you seek after more than others? |
17480 | Now saith the People, By what Power do these maintain their Title over us? 17480 Shall every man count his neighbour''s house as his own, and live together as one family? |
17480 | Shall we have no Lawyers? 17480 The Elder Brother replies,''What, will you be an Atheist, and a factious man, will you not believe God?'' |
17480 | WHAT IS COMMONWEALTH''S GOVERNMENT? 17480 WHAT IS GOVERNMENT IN GENERAL? |
17480 | WHAT IS LAW IN GENERAL? |
17480 | WHAT IS THE JUDGE''S COURT? 17480 WHAT IS THE WORK OF A COMMONWEALTH''S PARLIAMENT IN GENERAL?" |
17480 | WHERE BEGAN THE FIRST ORIGINAL OF GOVERNMENT IN THE EARTH AMONG MANKIND? |
17480 | WHO THEN ARE FIT TO BE CHOSEN OFFICERS? 17480 What is the reason that most men are so ignorant of their Freedoms, and so few fit to be chosen Commonwealth''s Officers? |
17480 | _ Q._ But may not a man call Him God till he have this experience? 17480 _ Q._ When can a man call the Father his God? |
17480 | _ Q._ When then may I call him God, or the Mighty Governor, and not deceive myself? 17480 ), he expresses the same thought in the following words--Is there not yet upon the spirits of men a strange itch? |
17480 | ... And was it fit for them to sit heavy upon others? |
17480 | 7), and can He not to- day also save His own? |
17480 | APPENDIX C WHAT MAY BE THOSE PARTICULAR LAWS, OR SUCH A METHOD OF LAWS, WHEREBY A COMMONWEALTH MAY BE GOVERNED? |
17480 | And doth not the Land Lord require Rent that he may live in the fullness of the Earth by the labor of his Tenants? |
17480 | And if all work alike, is it not fit for all to eat alike, have alike, and enjoy alike privileges and freedoms? |
17480 | And is our eight years''war come round about to lay us down again in the Kennel of Injustice as much or more than before? |
17480 | And now it is come to the point of fulfilling that Righteous Law, will you not rise up and act? |
17480 | And then what need have we of imprisoning, whipping or hanging laws to bring one another into bondage? |
17480 | And to what end is this but to kill their Pride and Unreasonableness, that they may become useful men in the Commonwealth? |
17480 | And what hardship is this? |
17480 | And what hath occasioned this distance among friends and bretheren, but long continuance in places of honor, greatness and riches?" |
17480 | And who can be offended at the poor for doing this? |
17480 | And will you now destroy part of them that have preserved your lives? |
17480 | Are not all these carnal and low things of the earth? |
17480 | Are not these men guilty of death by their own Law, which is the word of their own mouth? |
17480 | Are we no farther learned yet? |
17480 | But I would fain know what the soldier hath fought for all this while? |
17480 | But have not the Commoners cast out the King, and broken the band of that Conquest? |
17480 | But how? |
17480 | But now what will you do? |
17480 | But should God hear the peasants, who sincerely desire to live according to His word: Who will oppose the will of God? |
17480 | Did not William the Conqueror dispossess the English, and thus cause them to be servants to him? |
17480 | Do not all Professors strive to get earth, that they may live in plenty by other men''s labors? |
17480 | Do not all strive to enjoy the land? |
17480 | Do not professing Lawyers, as well as others, buy and sell the Conquerer''s justice that they may enjoy the earth? |
17480 | Do not the Ministers preach for maintenance in the Earth? |
17480 | Do we not see that all Laws were made in the days of the King to ease the rich Landlord? |
17480 | Do you not make the earth your very rest? |
17480 | Doth not the Soldier fight for the Earth? |
17480 | Doth not the enjoying of the earth please the spirit in you? |
17480 | For whatsoever rules as king in his flesh, that is his God...."_ Q._ But I hope that the Father is my Governor, and therefore may I not call Him God? |
17480 | For whose benefit was the war being waged, the burden of which had fallen so heavily upon him? |
17480 | Having food and raiment, lodging, and the comfortable societies of his own kind, what can a man desire more in these days of his travel? |
17480 | How then can Anti- Christians denounce the Gospel as a cause of rebellion and disobedience? |
17480 | How was it going to advantage the masses of the people? |
17480 | If you and those in power with you should be found walking in the King''s steps, can you secure yourselves or posterities from an overturn? |
17480 | If you want earth, and become poor, do you not say, God is angry with you? |
17480 | Is it ingenuous to ask liberty and not to give it? |
17480 | Is it not a flat denial of God and Scripture?" |
17480 | Is not that part of the Kingly Power? |
17480 | Knowledge, Why didst thou come, to wound and not to cure? |
17480 | O Power where art thou? |
17480 | O ye Rulers of England, when must we turn over a new leaf? |
17480 | Oh why are you so mad as to cry up a king? |
17480 | The Lawyers plead causes to get the possessions of the Earth? |
17480 | Then what will become of your power? |
17480 | WHAT IS FREEDOM? |
17480 | WHAT IS TO RULE? |
17480 | Was it ever intended that it should benefit them? |
17480 | Was not King Charles the direct successor of William the First? |
17480 | What is in you more than in others? |
17480 | What made it necessary? |
17480 | What was the aim and object of that incessant struggle out of which he had just emerged"beaten out of both estate and trade"? |
17480 | When will the Veil of Darkness be drawn off your faces? |
17480 | Whether Lords of the Manor have not lost their royalty to the common land by the recent victories? |
17480 | Whether the laws that were made in the days of the king do give freedom to any but the gentry and clergy?" |
17480 | Who dare resist His majesty? |
17480 | Who will impeach His judgment? |
17480 | Why do men work? |
17480 | Why do you heap up riches? |
17480 | Will you always hold us in one lesson? |
17480 | Will you always make a profession of the words of Christ and Scripture, the sum whereof is this-- Do as you would be done unto, and live in love? |
17480 | Will you be Slaves and Beggars still when you may be Freemen? |
17480 | Will you live in straits and die in poverty when you may live comfortably? |
17480 | Will you not be wise, O ye Rulers?" |
17480 | Winstanley then proceeds to consider the question, What is Law? |
17480 | and do you not live in them and covet them as much as any, nay more than many which you call men of the world? |
17480 | thou must mend things amiss; Come, change the heart of Man, and make him Truth to kiss: O Death, where art thou? |
17480 | was it possible that it should do so? |
17480 | who really benefited by it? |
17480 | why do you eat and drink, and wear clothes? |
17480 | wilt thou not tidings send? |
17480 | wouldst thou have thy government sound and healthful? |
11119 | But what,he asked,"can I say? |
11119 | Does the object precede or follow the verb? |
11119 | Have you any knowledge of the strata constituting Rocky Mountains? 11119 Have you,"he says,"seen_ Long''s Second Expedition?_ We have only one copy on the Point, and I have only had time to look at the map. |
11119 | If I visit Mackinaw, can I readily cross the country to the Mississippi, and what length of time will be required on the journey? 11119 If they( the Chippewas) say''A man loves me,''or''I love a man,''is there any variation in the word_ man_?" |
11119 | Is there any account of the expedition of Pamphilo Narvaez into Florida in 1528? |
11119 | Should I go to Prairie du Chien, would you not like the trip? 11119 Should thy lies make men hold their peace? |
11119 | The spider,it is said,"taketh hold with her hands, and is in king''s palaces;"and should a man have less perseverance than a_ spider?__ 4th_. |
11119 | What,he said,"did we come here for? |
11119 | When will the next annual payment be made at Mackinaw, and how many tribes, and what number of people do you think will assemble on that occasion? 11119 With regard to our daily occurrences, ought not something to be done? |
11119 | _Are we to have a narrative of the two expeditions in print? |
11119 | ''Is he honest? |
11119 | ''[ 78] Is the Indian Prince, who was traveling in these parts a while ago, one of the getters up of this affair? |
11119 | A shrewd and discriminating judge of literary things in New York, writes:"Have you seen the last number of Hoffman''s Magazine? |
11119 | Another is as follows:"Do they use any words equivalent to our habit of swearing?" |
11119 | Are there appropriations for his support? |
11119 | At what time is this work to appear, and what are its plan and objects? |
11119 | Birds could fly from island to island, snakes and dogs might swim, but how came the sloth and the other quadrupeds of the torrid zone? |
11119 | But can not this be easily redeemed from waste hours, when the object is to add to the moral gratifications of others? |
11119 | But can not_ we supply a remedy by drawing on the aboriginal vocabulary_? |
11119 | But could this have been said truly even ten years ago? |
11119 | But is it so? |
11119 | But is not variety at hand to contest the palm? |
11119 | But is there any sound criticism without sternness? |
11119 | But will not the graver male sex look for more? |
11119 | By the way, have you seen Mr. Lea''s splendid monograph( with colored plates) of Unios, in the_ Transactions of the American Philosophical Society? |
11119 | Can you find any of the other Spanish writers describing or alluding to this expedition? |
11119 | Can you give me particulars about the Indian fairies?" |
11119 | Did our English Elizabeths, James'', and Charles'', ever doubt their full right of sovereignty? |
11119 | Did you ever see such a protuberance?" |
11119 | Did you suppose the God of white men would permit you to go unpunished? |
11119 | Did you think you had got so far in the woods that no person could find you out? |
11119 | Do geology and the natural sciences afford external evidence of the truth of God''s word? |
11119 | Do n''t you remember that I told you not to go to---- for revision? |
11119 | Do n''t you think the latter the better term? |
11119 | Do tell me, has a Potawattomie a soul, And have the tribes a language? |
11119 | Do you feel the importance and necessity of obtaining one who is already acquainted with the Indian language? |
11119 | Do you know any one living near such rocks, whom I could hire to take copies of them, and upon the accuracy of whose work reliance can be placed? |
11119 | Do you wish to engage one for that station, who is in sentiment a Presbyterian? |
11119 | Do you? |
11119 | Does he understand the languages? |
11119 | Does the prince go to''profane stageplays and such like vanities,''as the dear old Puritans would say? |
11119 | Father, we ask you to know; we ask of you to tell_ why_ this strange man has so strangely gone to smoke with the great chief of the"long knives?" |
11119 | Fish, have you any? |
11119 | Gilman inquires,"Is the rock at Gros Cap granite? |
11119 | Have you a missionary engaged for that station? |
11119 | Have you any means of communicating with your friend? |
11119 | Have you particularly examined any on rocks; and if so, were they mere paintings, or were they inscribed thereon? |
11119 | He asks:"Please to say whether you desire such a man as I have described? |
11119 | He replied, Where am I called? |
11119 | How is the level with you? |
11119 | How long will he probably be wanted there? |
11119 | How much can you raise for his support? |
11119 | How much will be necessary to sustain him and his family with suitable economy? |
11119 | How shall a man say"raca,"or"that fox,"if there be no equivalents for the words in barbarous languages? |
11119 | How shall we dance? |
11119 | How shall we sing? |
11119 | I have frequently thought, should I be bereft of my_ mother_, what other friend, like her, would watch over the uneasy hours of sickness? |
11119 | If the latter, in what manner do they appear to have been done-- pecked in with a pointed instrument, or chizzled out? |
11119 | Is he capable?'' |
11119 | Is it possible for me to procure drawings of them? |
11119 | Is it primitive, or is it graywacke like Catskill Mountains? |
11119 | Is not this the origin of the name Quebec? |
11119 | Is the place yet filled?" |
11119 | It is learning that calls them; but tell me, can schools Repay for my love, or give nature new rules? |
11119 | May the government turn pirate with impunity? |
11119 | Mr. Theodore Dwight, Jr., writes:"Can not a syllabic, or semi- syllabic alphabet, be applied to our Indian tongues?" |
11119 | One of the printed queries before me is,"Do they( the Indians) believe in ghosts?" |
11119 | Ought not an author to put himself out a little to make his work as high, in all departments, as he can? |
11119 | Query, had this been a pot trammel of some ancient explorer? |
11119 | RAFINESQUE.--This erratic naturalist being referred to, he said--"Who is Rafinesque, and what is his character?" |
11119 | Say, father? |
11119 | Shall we receive them, when we refused our brethren, who are more nearly related to us? |
11119 | Should thy lies make men hold their peace, and when thou mockest shall no man make thee ashamed?" |
11119 | Some one recently told me, that the true orthography of Illinois is Illinwa, like Ottawa,& c. Do you think that the fact? |
11119 | Talk of an Indian-- why the very stare Says, plain as language, Sir, have you been there? |
11119 | Tell me, shall I have it?" |
11119 | The Good Spirit heard this, and, after assembling his angels to counsel, said to them, What shall we do to better the condition of man? |
11119 | The faculty have pressed upon the minds of us all the duty of examining early the question,''Ought I to be a missionary?''" |
11119 | Was it not to kill?" |
11119 | Was this an allegory of the destructive effects of the storm, mixed with my banquet to my Indian friends, the Menomonies and Winnebagoes? |
11119 | What are your views of that country?" |
11119 | What can we do in such a case? |
11119 | What constitutes, mainly, the predominating geognostic features of Lake Superior, the Upper Mississippi, and the Missouri? |
11119 | What do they say at Washington, and what do you say about Gen. Macomb''s''Pontiac? |
11119 | What is the name of this tribe? |
11119 | What must be done? |
11119 | What my eyes have seen and my ears have heard, I must believe; and what is their testimony respecting the condition of the Indian on the frontiers? |
11119 | What other friend would bear its petulance, and smooth its feverish pillow?" |
11119 | What then is to be done? |
11119 | What under the sun do the learned world suppose the Indians are made of? |
11119 | What was to be done? |
11119 | What will be his business particularly? |
11119 | What will be his peculiar trials?" |
11119 | What, in your opinion, is the prospect of his usefulness there?" |
11119 | When will geographers cease to talk about the mouth of the Niger? |
11119 | Where has the worthy Postmaster- General picked up his military information? |
11119 | Where is that voice attuned to love, That bid me say"my darling dove?" |
11119 | Whither has fled the rose''s hue? |
11119 | Who can assert that there has not been a powerful disruptive geological action in the now peaceable Pacific? |
11119 | Who can say, after this, that the Chippewas have not some imagination? |
11119 | Who hail''d my form as home I stept, And in my arms so eager leapt, And to my bosom joyous crept? |
11119 | Who have you at the Sault that writes such pretty poetry? |
11119 | Who looks to him for exaltation of sentiment, liberality and enlargement of views, or as an exemplar of political truth? |
11119 | Who was it wiped my tearful eye, And kiss''d away the coming sigh, And smiling, bid me say,"good boy?" |
11119 | Who was it, looked divinely fair, Whilst lisping sweet the evening pray''r, Guileless and free from earthly care? |
11119 | Who would have imagined that these wandering foresters should have possessed such a resource? |
11119 | Who, if the name and authority were concealed, but would suppose the remarks were made of some of the tribes of the North American Indians? |
11119 | Why undertake to make a map of a part of the country which he did not see? |
11119 | Why, he exclaimed, did the Good Spirit create me to know death and misery so soon? |
11119 | Will it be best for him to go this fall, or wait until next spring? |
11119 | Will the government then have the mines worked? |
11119 | Will the task be equal to the reward?" |
11119 | Will you be able to spare me( that is, to let me copy) any of your drawings? |
11119 | Will you be kind enough to furnish me with the locations of those with which you are acquainted? |
11119 | Will you do me the favor to settle this question? |
11119 | Will you not feel some ambition in being connected with the first American expedition of discovery?" |
11119 | Would it not be consistent with your time and occupations to do this, and forward me the article? |
11119 | Y.)? |
11119 | You ask when the war will terminate? |
11119 | [ 47][ Footnote 47: Who was it nestled on my breast, And on my cheek sweet kisses prest, And in whose smile I felt so blest? |
11119 | [ 77] By the way, why have you, and all other Indian travelers, used the French word''lodge,''instead of the Indian wigwam? |
11119 | _ Why_ did he leave without notifying_ me_, and the other men of_ influence_ of my tribe, of the nature of his mission? |
11119 | and what evidence is there that they are not Souriquois or Miemacks, who have been known to us since the first settlement of Acadia and Nova Scotia? |
11119 | and when thou mockest, shall no man make thee ashamed?" |
11119 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
11119 | how can I think of you and feel regret that I have known you? |
11119 | land of my mother, compared unto thee? |
11119 | not, Have you any fish? |
11119 | thy coral lips are pale-- Can I believe the heart- sick tale, That I thy loss must ever wail? |
11119 | what are these conflicts with an Indian? |
11119 | what language do they speak? |
11119 | why has that Indian shot me? |
38963 | And what can a real lover of the rights of man say in vindication thereof? |
38963 | Another query was:"Shall members in union with us be at liberty in any case to purchase slaves?" |
38963 | Can he learn to think? |
38963 | Can he understand the significant things of life as expounded by mathematicians, scientists, and philosophers? |
38963 | How could the motives of the white Baptists be lofty, moreover, if they did not believe that Negroes should rise in the church and school? |
38963 | How were these bishops then to stand? |
38963 | How will the sons of oppression answer for their conduct when the great proprietor of all shall call them to account?" |
38963 | In the midst of their mocking, they asked him if he believed? |
38963 | The next question was:"Shall we join Bishop Allen?" |
38963 | These emancipators began by inquiring:"Can any person whose practice is friendly to perpetual slavery be admitted a member of this meeting?" |
38963 | They inquired, moreover:"Is there any case in which persons holding slaves may be admitted to membership into the church of Christ?" |
38963 | This, to be sure, had the desired effect, for these inquirers concluded:"If such be the servant, what must the master be?" |
38963 | To make the challenge more concrete, can a Negro master the grammar, language, and literature of Latin, Greek, and Hebrew? |
38963 | Two important questions were propounded at this meeting, one being:"Shall we return to the white people?" |
38963 | Was there such a thing as a senior bishop or were they on equality? |
38963 | What then was this peculiar feature of Baptist policy which explains the unusual growth? |
38963 | Would these dreams come true? |
32119 | ''An actress? 32119 Ai n''t you gettin''wake, father darlin''?" |
32119 | And the priest? |
32119 | And what about Bach? |
32119 | But you have a gold ring on your finger; why did you not sell it? |
32119 | Cassandra, my sweet Cassandra,said Zeuxis,"why that tear, that sigh?" |
32119 | Did you ever get into Brown''s confidence? |
32119 | Do n''t you ever expect to get married? |
32119 | Do you want to queer the show when so much depends on it? |
32119 | Have you felt slippers, sir? |
32119 | How did I make my start? |
32119 | How far is it to the Owl Creek Bridge? |
32119 | How much do you expect to clear to the acre? |
32119 | I bequeath unto my son, Peter-- and never was there a better son, or a decenter boy!--have you that down? 32119 I fear indeed I''m pegging out; But then what boots it, love? |
32119 | In a few hours came this laconic dispatch:Do you need any more dynamite?" |
32119 | Is he composing nowadays? |
32119 | Is there no force on this side the creek? |
32119 | Must I first bear the taunts of that boy, and then, in the face of thousands, have him challenge me to a trial? 32119 Not beside the corpse?" |
32119 | Sure ye would n''t be mean enough to go against yer father''s dying words? |
32119 | Well, well,said he,"explain to me and I''ve no more to say; Can you go anywhere to- morrow and come back to- day? |
32119 | Well,answered Mr. Sirius Barker, irritably,"why do n''t some of them try it?" |
32119 | What can I do for you? |
32119 | What was costly? |
32119 | Where was I, Billy Scanlan? |
32119 | Why did you not buy it? |
32119 | Why? |
32119 | Would you see your Cassandra happy? |
32119 | You would n''t be mean enough to betray me? |
32119 | = The Treacle Bible=( 1568)--From its rendering of Jeremiah viii:22:"Is there no treacle[ instead of balm] in Gilead?" |
32119 | A COLLEGE CAREER-- IS IT WORTH WHILE? |
32119 | ARE WE SURFEITED WITH WIT AND HUMOR? |
32119 | And why? |
32119 | And, discussing the struggle for success, what is success? |
32119 | Are the neighbors listening? |
32119 | Are we sated? |
32119 | Are ye listening? |
32119 | At last my father unbolted the door, and I heard him say,"Oh, Mr. Peter, what''s the matter? |
32119 | Blodgett-- You see that homely woman hanging to that strap? |
32119 | But how, I should like to know, are people to insure who make ducks and drakes of their five pounds? |
32119 | But what do you care for that? |
32119 | But who is to afford pickles when folk are always lending five pounds? |
32119 | But why thy hope? |
32119 | Could I take one step without crushing them? |
32119 | Could Petroleum V. Nasby get a hearing to- day? |
32119 | Do you hear that shutter, how it''s banging to and fro? |
32119 | Do you hear the mice running about the room? |
32119 | Ever see John Ward as short- stop? |
32119 | Everybody says I do n''t dress as becomes your wife-- and I do n''t; but what''s that to you, Mr. Caudle? |
32119 | For the Ahkoond I mourn; Who would n''t? |
32119 | Foster-- How do you know she is homely? |
32119 | Gods, has it come to this?" |
32119 | Have we had too much humor? |
32119 | However, what''s your family to you, so you can play the liberal creature with five pounds? |
32119 | I shall never close my eyes all night; but what''s that to you, so people can call you liberal, Mr. Caudle? |
32119 | I wonder where little Cherub is? |
32119 | IS THE RICH YOUNG MAN HANDICAPPED? |
32119 | Is Billy Scanlan listening?" |
32119 | Is it down, Billy Scanlan? |
32119 | Is it money? |
32119 | Is it not about time to show that even a democracy can learn something? |
32119 | Is it not just?" |
32119 | Is the ould man worse?" |
32119 | Is this because the emotional strain is so much greater in the case of a clergyman? |
32119 | Is wealth a hindrance to a young man starting out in life? |
32119 | Mr. Goodwin,"she cried,"is the moon up to- night?" |
32119 | My Lords: What have I to say why sentence of death should not be pronounced on me, according to law? |
32119 | Now if from here to Morrow is a fourteen- hour jump, Can you go to- day to Morrow and come back to- day, you chump?" |
32119 | Now, when she grows up, who''ll have her? |
32119 | Or the Danbury News Man, or"Peck''s Bad Boy"? |
32119 | Said I,"I guess you know it all, but kindly let me say, How can I go to Morrow if I leave the town to- day?" |
32119 | Said I,"I want to go to Morrow; can I go to- day And get to Morrow by to- night, if there is no delay?" |
32119 | Said I,"My boy, it seems to me you''re talking through your hat, Is there a town named Morrow on your line? |
32119 | See those slender pennants waving? |
32119 | So shalt thou rest; and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
32119 | The Judge--"Why did you steal the loaf?" |
32119 | The great philosopher seldom marries-- for is not the experience of Socrates a warning? |
32119 | Thinkest thou yet of the worthless Parrhasius-- even now, upon the eve of thy nuptials with the noble Thearchus?" |
32119 | Turning from the recluse to the men of the world, where can we find a more distinguished bachelor than Voltaire? |
32119 | Two strikes? |
32119 | Want you Postage Stamps from Africa, America, Asia, Oceania? |
32119 | Was n''t it a corkin''game? |
32119 | What is wealth-- what nobility and the applause of the people, if the affections of the heart have no participation therein? |
32119 | What, what, what, What''s the news from Swat? |
32119 | What? |
32119 | When did it happen?" |
32119 | Who is the poorest man in the world? |
32119 | Would not a Burdette writing for the more exacting twentieth- century perception find his occupation gone? |
32119 | Wouldst thou see thy father rivaled, and the voice of Athens-- of the world-- loud in praises of another?" |
32119 | You know him, then?" |
32119 | _ Bible_--"What is man that Thou art mindful of him? |
32119 | _ Set a trap for''em?_ But how are people to afford the cheese, when every day they lose five pounds? |
32119 | _ Set a trap for''em?_ But how are people to afford the cheese, when every day they lose five pounds? |
39141 | [ 25] By 1796 Gatty( or Gatti?) 39141 ( c.1744- 1830? 39141 1740-?) 39141 1744- 1830? 39141 1748?-1830? 39141 1753 Philadelphia( practitioner) Hagger, Benjamin c. 1769- 1834 Boston and Mathematical; King Baltimore surveying Hagger, William c. 1744- 1830? 39141 1765- 1821? 39141 1765-?) 39141 1790 Philadelphia Glass Folger, Peter 1617- 1690 Nantucket( practitioner?) 39141 A compass card by Paul Revere(?). 39141 Dean, William(?-1797), Philadelphia; also made nautical instruments. 39141 Dean, William(?-1797), Philadelphia; also made surveying instruments. 39141 Nantucket: Peter Folger( 1617- 1690), practitioner(?). 39141 On January 5, 1837, he deeded to his aunt(? 39141 RHODE ISLAND Newport: William G. Hagger( c.1744- 1830? 39141 William Dean(?-1797); surveying and nautical instruments. 39141 [ 115] SILVIO A. BEDINI,A Compass Card by Paul Revere(? |
39141 | _ Early American observatories: Which was the first astronomical observatory in America?_ Williamstown, Mass. |
39632 | A Laurell? |
39632 | Asking if all were well with him--''How can that be,''he replied,''when the state is so agitated with storms and I myself am yet in the open sea? |
39632 | Did Mr Wesley( to take his case) receive a mere hallucinatory set of pushes? |
39632 | How would you like some day to see a whole shelf full of books, written by your son, with''Hawthorne''s Works''printed on their backs?" |
39632 | Is then the felt vibration part of the hallucination? |
39632 | On the 13th of September the travellers entered Mongolia, and on the 14th(?) |
39632 | The opening lines--"What might I call this Tree? |
39632 | Thyraeus raises the question, Are the experiences hallucinatory? |
39632 | Was the hair of a friend of the writer''s, who occupied a haunted house, only pulled in a subjective way? |
39632 | When the sounds are heard, has the atmosphere vibrated, or has the impression only been made on"the inner ear"? |
39632 | what news do you hear of that good Gabriel Huffe- Snuffe, Known to the world for a foole, and clapt in the Fleete for a Runner?" |
39632 | who can forgive thee this? |
40244 | Who run? |
40244 | It may be demanded, Why should you be so furious( as some have said), should not christians have more mercy and compassion? |
40244 | Men asked themselves the question,"had the settlers returned, or had they died in this so- called land of promise"? |
40244 | What, then, was the effect of the capture of Canada upon the settlers of the Thirteen Colonies? |
4069 | Who were these nations, and how was their presence to be accounted for? |
35950 | ''But you are not afraid to die?'' 35950 ''What''s the matter?'' |
35950 | And he said,''Who can?'' 35950 And who was Abraham the First?" |
35950 | He stopped me, and said,''Is that there?'' 35950 How could he elevate the people?" |
35950 | What if I could be the first and only maker of such ware in France? |
35950 | What''s the trouble? |
35950 | Why do not the younger landscape painters walk-- walk alone, and endlessly? |
35950 | Would your father prevent your doing an act of charity? |
35950 | ''Then,''said he,''where are the primers?'' |
35950 | A poem by William Knox, found and read at this time, became a favorite and a comfort through life,--"Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" |
35950 | And where was this"obscure hole"? |
35950 | And who was this founder? |
35950 | And who was this man whom thousands came to hear? |
35950 | Besides, he was never idle, he was economical, his habits were the best, and why should not such a boy succeed? |
35950 | But do you wish to know how to be safest of all? |
35950 | But he took courage; for, had he not made one real invention? |
35950 | But how could he obtain the money? |
35950 | But what can I at last expect? |
35950 | But with the strength of a noble and heroic nature, he adds,"What is poverty that a man should whine under it? |
35950 | Ca n''t you possibly let me in to have one last look?" |
35950 | Could he not improve steel also? |
35950 | Dare he go and meet such people as Goethe, and Schiller, and Herder, and Weiland, whom for twelve long years he had hoped sometime to look upon? |
35950 | Did anybody ever think then that he would be rich and famous? |
35950 | Did he not need recreation after the hard day''s work? |
35950 | Did one failure discourage him? |
35950 | Do you believe yourself fitted for a curacy in Finmark or a mission among the Laps? |
35950 | Do you hear? |
35950 | Five years before this, he had written in his diary:"What is''t that comes in false, deceitful guise, Making dull fools of those that''fore were wise? |
35950 | Have I not told you a thousand times that I do n''t care in the least what the world thinks about these things?" |
35950 | He had given nearly five millions; could the world expect any more? |
35950 | He leaned his elbows on the cot and clasped his hands together, and said,''That''s good; wo n''t you read it again?'' |
35950 | He now wrote ten essays on"What is Death?" |
35950 | He said,''My business is prosperous; why should not my men share in my prosperity?'' |
35950 | He used to walk the room in those dying hours, saying sadly,"This is the hardest trial of my life; why is it? |
35950 | How could he earn more money, since the poor people about him had no need for painted glass? |
35950 | How could the world be made interested? |
35950 | I can not freeze, but where shall I get wood without money? |
35950 | I said to myself,''What in the world will I set this man to doing? |
35950 | Is it any wonder that the poor are disconsolate? |
35950 | Is it any wonder that they regard the wealthy as usually cold and indifferent to their welfare? |
35950 | Mason opened his somewhat calloused hands, and, looking at them, said,"Are_ you_ ashamed of dirtying yourselves to get your own living?" |
35950 | Mason?" |
35950 | Mr. West came an hour or two later, and said, in anger,"Did you hire that fool?" |
35950 | Shall I go on?" |
35950 | She saw him bending toward the floor, and asked,"Have you dropped something?" |
35950 | Should he buy an immense estate, and live like a prince? |
35950 | Should he give parties and grand dinners, and have servants in livery? |
35950 | Surprised at his success among learned men, Mr. Lincoln once asked a prominent professor"what made the speeches interest?" |
35950 | The Emperor Joseph said to him one day,"Why did you not marry a rich wife?" |
35950 | The first question asked in any project was,"Have you seen Ezra Cornell? |
35950 | The line between Baltimore and Washington proved successful despite its crudities; but what should be done with it? |
35950 | The mother was also in debt, but in some way she managed to obtain the money; for what will a mother not do for her child? |
35950 | The neighbors called him a fool; the wife joined in the maledictions-- and who could blame her? |
35950 | The next day, one of the teachers asked,"Thorwaldsen, is it your brother who has carried off the prize?" |
35950 | Was the confusion trying to his thoughts? |
35950 | Was the wood- carver''s son proud of all these honors? |
35950 | Was there, then, the possibility of a place in the Royal Institution? |
35950 | What could he do? |
35950 | What could he do? |
35950 | What could he do? |
35950 | What did Zaccheus think now of his boy of whom he prophesied"would never know more than enough to come in when it rains"? |
35950 | What more fitting than that he should marry pretty Félicie Villeminot, and share with her the precious life she had saved? |
35950 | What need for four hundred holes in a die, when a single date was more effective? |
35950 | What would so stimulate these people to good citizenship as comfortable and cheerful abiding- places? |
35950 | What would the noble man, now over eighty, do next with his money? |
35950 | What''ll ye be good for if ye keep a- goin''on in this way?" |
35950 | What''s that the wise man always strives to shun, Though still it ever o''er the world has run? |
35950 | When he told his employer that he was going to give up business, he was asked,"Where will you get your support?" |
35950 | When she left the room, Mr. Moody said,"What is the matter?" |
35950 | When the men were seen going up the hill, Grant asked by whose orders that was done? |
35950 | Who could be entrusted with such a formidable undertaking as the capture of this stronghold? |
35950 | Who sufficiently daring, skilful, and loyal? |
35950 | Who would care for his little children, or be to him what he had often called her,"the comfort of his life"? |
35950 | Why could he not discover the process of making it? |
35950 | Wilkins, greatly confused, replied,"What would the world think if it found out that the chancellor dined with his servant?" |
35950 | Will you let my name stay on the old sign till I come back from Washington?" |
35950 | Will you meet me to- morrow morning at Mr. Harrison''s, the split- ring maker?" |
35950 | why is it?" |
12421 | ''Got any luck?'' 12421 If I will that he_ tarry_ till I come, what is that to thee?" |
12421 | O ye sons of men, how long will ye turn my glory into shame? 12421 Who_ besides_ us knows this?" |
12421 | Wife, dost---- know that all the world seems queer except---- and me; and sometimes I think even---- art a little queer? |
12421 | Will I go? |
12421 | _ we substitute for the nounsinging"another noun,"song;"thus,"Do you remember_ Katharine( Katharine''s) song? |
12421 | ---- I fetch a chair for you? |
12421 | ---- I find you at home? |
12421 | ---- I have another piece of cake? |
12421 | ---- I have some more lemonade? |
12421 | ---- I have the use of your sled? |
12421 | ---- I leave the room? |
12421 | ---- I put more coal on the fire? |
12421 | ---- I trouble you to get me a glass of water? |
12421 | ---- I write at your desk? |
12421 | ---- am I supposed to be? |
12421 | ---- are you going to call on next? |
12421 | ---- are you going to give that to? |
12421 | ---- are you going to vote for? |
12421 | ---- can this letter be from? |
12421 | ---- did he refer to, he( him) or I( me)? |
12421 | ---- did you expect to see? |
12421 | ---- did you say went with you? |
12421 | ---- did you see at the village? |
12421 | ---- did you suppose it was? |
12421 | ---- do men say that I am? |
12421 | ---- do men think me to be? |
12421 | ---- do you take me to be? |
12421 | ---- do you think I saw in Paris? |
12421 | ---- do you think it was that called? |
12421 | ---- do you think she looks like? |
12421 | ---- do you think they will select? |
12421 | ---- do you think will be elected? |
12421 | ---- does he think it could have been? |
12421 | ---- either of you going to the village? |
12421 | ---- he find gold there? |
12421 | ---- he have time to get his ticket? |
12421 | ---- is that for? |
12421 | ---- there be time to get our tickets? |
12421 | ---- we by searching find out God? |
12421 | ---- we find any? |
12421 | ---- we have time to get our tickets? |
12421 | ---- we hear a good lecture if we go? |
12421 | ---- were you talking to just now? |
12421 | ---- what does happiness consist? |
12421 | ---- whom can I rely? |
12421 | ---- whom did they rent the house? |
12421 | ---- you be at leisure after dinner? |
12421 | ---- you be elected? |
12421 | ---- you be sorry to leave Boston? |
12421 | ---- you be surprised to hear it? |
12421 | ---- you do me the favor to reply by return mail? |
12421 | ---- you have time to get your ticket? |
12421 | ---- you tell me which is Mr. Ames''s house? |
12421 | 11. Who is there? |
12421 | 11. Who was that fat old---- who kept us all laughing? |
12421 | 25. Who first asserted that virtue_ is_(_ was_) its own reward? |
12421 | 33. Who would have thought it possible_ to receive_(_ to have received_) a reply from India so soon? |
12421 | 5.--- it seem strange that they--- come? |
12421 | 9. Who---- hears Professor C. read the court scene from"Pick wick"does not go away delighted? |
12421 | Are you not afraid that you---- miss the train? |
12421 | Are you surprised at it( its) being him( he)? |
12421 | At about what time will father return? |
12421 | BESIDE, BESIDES.--_Beside_ means"by the side of;"_ besides_ is now used only in the sense of"in addition to,""other than:"as,"Who sits_ beside_ you?" |
12421 | Ca n''t you remember---- you gave it to? |
12421 | Did Macaulay die of---- heart disease? |
12421 | Did he graduate---- Oxford or---- Cambridge? |
12421 | Did you hear Ruth( Ruth''s) singing? |
12421 | Did you hear that Waldo has-- his leg? |
12421 | Did you never bear false witness against---- neighbor? |
12421 | Did you see him( his) riding? |
12421 | Did you watch him( his) entering the room? |
12421 | Did you_ suspect_(_ expect_) us? |
12421 | Did your father bring the boat to Harry? |
12421 | Do n''t you----strawberry short- cake? |
12421 | Do you know that man---- is just entering the car? |
12421 | Do you know---- you can get to take my trunk? |
12421 | Do you like---- sort of pen? |
12421 | Do you remember my( me) speaking to you about your penmanship? |
12421 | Do you remember---- he married? |
12421 | Do you think I should( would) go under the circumstances? |
12421 | Do you think we---- have rain? |
12421 | Do you_ allow_ to go to town to- day? |
12421 | Dost---- talk of revenge? |
12421 | Had you not better-- down a while? |
12421 | Has Edward-- you his yacht? |
12421 | Has everybody finished---- exercise? |
12421 | Has the last bell--? |
12421 | Has the---- of Professor Richard''s house been fixed? |
12421 | Has---- of you two gentlemen a fountain- pen? |
12421 | Has---- of you who have just come from the ball- field seen Julian? |
12421 | Have you any doubt of Kathleen( Kathleen''s) being happy? |
12421 | Have you ever---- on a bicycle? |
12421 | Have you nothing to tell us---- what we have already heard? |
12421 | Have you read the--- novel? |
12421 | Have you seen my pincers? |
12421 | Have you seen the picture of-- three girls in a boat, taken by Mr. B.? |
12421 | Have you-- your brother? |
12421 | He speaks---- well, does n''t he? |
12421 | His host burst out laughing and said,"Of course; did you think of taking them out of your mouth and leaving them at home? |
12421 | How are we to---- to labor its due honor? |
12421 | How can we tell---- to trust? |
12421 | How can you thus address me,--, who am your friend? |
12421 | How do you like---- style of shoe? |
12421 | How is this passage in Virgil to be----d? |
12421 | How many shot( shots) did you count? |
12421 | How---- of your peaches have you sold? |
12421 | If I fail on this examination,---- I be allowed to take it over again? |
12421 | If he---- come to- day, would( should) you be ready? |
12421 | If she did not take after Anne,---- did she take after? |
12421 | In the midst of some preparations for a fishing excursion he said to his host,"Shall I take my_ gums_ along?" |
12421 | In what---- is he held by his townsmen? |
12421 | In which seat did you----? |
12421 | Is he very sick? |
12421 | Is it-- you wish to see? |
12421 | Is the Governor''s wife_ stopping_ at the Springs Hotel? |
12421 | Is the---- that wants a carriage at dinner or in his room? |
12421 | Is this a dagger---- I see before me? |
12421 | May John and-- go to the ball- game? |
12421 | OF GOOD USE Why is it that for the purposes of English composition one word is not so good as another? |
12421 | STAY, STOP.--"_Stay,_ as in''At what hotel are you staying?'' |
12421 | Shall I give your son a stimulus( stimulant)? |
12421 | Shall he come? |
12421 | Shall you be glad to come? |
12421 | Shall( will) you be a candidate? |
12421 | Shall( will) you stay at home to- night? |
12421 | Tell me in sadness---- is she you love? |
12421 | The next question that presents itself to one who wishes to use English correctly is, How am I to know what words and expressions are in good use? |
12421 | The reason for this becomes evident if, in the sentence"Do you remember_ Katharine( Katharine''s) singing? |
12421 | Thus,_ Teacher_: Who was Benjamin Franklin? |
12421 | Was it you or the wind---- made those noises? |
12421 | Was it-- that you saw? |
12421 | Was it---- that did it? |
12421 | What building_ is_(_ was_) that which we just passed? |
12421 | What do you think about this cloth( cloth''s) wearing well? |
12421 | What do you think of Marguerite( Marguerite''s) studying Latin? |
12421 | What if Nemesis---- repayment? |
12421 | What is my grief in comparison---- that which she bears? |
12421 | What is the good of your( you) going now? |
12421 | What is---- but the power of doing a thing? |
12421 | What put this idea---- your head? |
12421 | What shall I---- you from Paris? |
12421 | What use is there in a man( man''s) swearing? |
12421 | What use is this piece of ribbon? |
12421 | What was the matter---- him? |
12421 | What were you and---- talking about? |
12421 | What---- of paper is needed for one issue of_ Harper''s Weekly_? |
12421 | What---- we do without our friends? |
12421 | What_ is_(_ are_) the gender, the number, and the person of the following words? |
12421 | When shall we arrive---- Rome? |
12421 | When---- I come to get my paper? |
12421 | When---- we have peace? |
12421 | When---- we three meet again? |
12421 | Where did you say Gettysburg_ is_(_ was_)? |
12421 | Where did you say Pike''s Peak_ is_(_ was_)? |
12421 | Which can run the_ faster( fastest),_ your horse or mine? |
12421 | Which do you prefer most, apples or oranges? |
12421 | Which is the_ better( best)_ of the two? |
12421 | Which is the_ farther( farthest)_ east, Boston New York, or Philadelphia? |
12421 | Which is the_ larger( largest)_ number, the minuend or the subtrahend? |
12421 | Which word in the following pairs should an American prefer? |
12421 | Whom can I trust, if not----? |
12421 | Whose Greek grammar do you prefer-- Goodwin or Hadley? |
12421 | Why did you not---- the gift? |
12421 | Why do you--- your house go to ruin? |
12421 | Why--- he answer? |
12421 | Why--- she come? |
12421 | Will Mr. L.---- his reasons for disagreeing with the rest of the committee? |
12421 | Will either of you gentlemen lend me----( third person) pencil? |
12421 | Will he come? |
12421 | Will he let us look at( the) stars through the( a) telescope? |
12421 | Will you dine with me to- morrow? |
12421 | Will you let Brown and-- have your boat? |
12421 | Will you---- my factory against fire? |
12421 | Will you_ loan_ me your sled for this afternoon? |
12421 | Will your brother be there, too? |
12421 | Will( shall) he who fails be allowed to try again? |
12421 | Will( shall) the admission fee be twenty- five or fifty cents? |
12421 | Would he have been willing_ to go_(_ to have gone_) with you? |
12421 | Would you go, if you were--? |
12421 | [ 39] Is"relationships"the proper word here? |
12421 | _ Which of the following forms is preferable? |
12421 | _ Which of the following forms should be used? |
12421 | _ Which of the italicized words is preferable? |
12421 | _ Which, of the italicized forms is preferable? |
12421 | how long will ye love vanity, and seek after_ leasing_?" |
12421 | the lessons are equally short and the emphasis is unceasingly laid on the question"Why?" |
12421 | would mean,"Is it my intention to go?" |
38448 | And when is all this going to happen? |
38448 | But they will not deny us a confessor? |
38448 | How so? |
38448 | Surely not princesses of the royal blood? |
38448 | Are they, on that account, nothing more than creatures of our imagination, set free by night and darkness? |
38448 | But the murdered man was not satisfied yet; he showed himself once more to the president and asked how he could prove his gratitude? |
38448 | Canst thou put no limit to thy thirst of conquest? |
38448 | Cazotte?" |
38448 | Do you see the Prince of Condé there? |
38448 | Finally the victim was conducted into a dark room, where he was suddenly asked by a stern, imperious voice:"Do you not see that woman in white?" |
38448 | Had not the same Academy pronounced against the use of quinine and vaccination, against lightning- rods and steam- engines? |
38448 | He asked her roughly what she was doing there? |
38448 | He stopped the driver and asked him what he had hidden in his wagon? |
38448 | Laharpe now asked:"And about me you say nothing, Cazotte?" |
38448 | Nor was this a solitary case, for on the same day a girl of fourteen, living near the city of Orleans, had asked her father, Simonne, what a king was? |
38448 | Then he asked the girl what she saw now? |
38448 | They cried out:"Who on earth has made you think of prisons, poison, and the executioner? |
38448 | They suggest the interesting but difficult question, whether visions and ecstasy can extend to large numbers of men at once? |
38448 | What have these things to do with philosophy and the reign of reason, which we anticipate and on which you but just now congratulated us?" |
38448 | What then can we learn from modern magic? |
38448 | When he asks if it is a good angel or a demon, no answer is given; but the question: Art thou the Devil? |
38448 | and if objects were placed against the sole of her foot, she would often exclaim:"What is that? |
38448 | will you not take time to translate the book? |
39882 | And what is the story of their hopes, their experiments, and their disappointments? |
39882 | But what is justice or mercy when the welfare of churches and the rescue of imperiled souls is to be considered? |
39882 | Cotton compares Jesuits and heretics to wolves, and says,"Is it not an acceptable service to the whole Country to cut off the ravening Wolves?" |
39882 | Ralegh says that Yucatan means merely"What say you?" |
39882 | Shall we say that when subjected to this great man''s influence the rustics of Scrooby and Bawtry and Austerfield were clowns no longer? |
39882 | Virginia had forests: why should she not produce these things? |
39882 | Was the colony of 1621 or its charter of 1623 intended to supply a refuge, if one should be needed, for Englishmen of the Catholic faith? |
39882 | What manner of men were their leaders? |
39882 | What more could one ask? |
39882 | What propulsions sent them for refuge to a wilderness? |
39882 | What visions beckoned them to undertake the founding of new states? |
39882 | Who can tell?" |
39882 | Who were the beginners of English life in America? |
39882 | Who will not stop in the street to hear one clown rail cleverly at another? |
39882 | Why should the historian linger thus over the story of this last surviving remnant of the"Brownists"? |
19099 | It is n''t a very pretty baby, is it, mother?'' 19099 What is the matter, Mary?'' |
19099 | ''''Have you seen''Titia?'' |
19099 | ''A horse? |
19099 | ''An''''ou wusn''t a gwine ter leff massa Preston''s own chile be sole widout bein''yere; wus''ou, massa Kirke?'' |
19099 | ''And where are you now?'' |
19099 | ''Are all the negroes sold?'' |
19099 | ''Are these gentlemen here?'' |
19099 | ''Are you much hurt, Ally?'' |
19099 | ''Are you sure it is not all a dream?'' |
19099 | ''Before you visit your father and mother?'' |
19099 | ''But can he raise money enough for the whole?'' |
19099 | ''But do n''t you want to borrow some to help out your pile?'' |
19099 | ''But how will_ you_ get on?'' |
19099 | ''But tell me, good fellow, where Great Heart dwells?'' |
19099 | ''Do you know you''ve done me the greatest service in the world? |
19099 | ''Have a drink, sir?'' |
19099 | ''How do you know?'' |
19099 | ''How much is said for these prime negroes?'' |
19099 | ''I say, Jack,''said an officer at Pittsburg Landing to an old crony who was serving as private in another company,''where did you get that turkey?'' |
19099 | ''Is there any more bid for this excellent couple?'' |
19099 | ''Joe, you know your master''s plans, I suppose?'' |
19099 | ''Never done anything, eh?'' |
19099 | ''Ou woan''t leff har be sole fur no sech money as dat, will''ou, massa Joe?'' |
19099 | ''Start where?'' |
19099 | ''Tell me, Hester,''he said, in a hoarse voice,''what is the meaning of this? |
19099 | ''Then it''s a trade?'' |
19099 | ''Then you''ve heard how things have been going on?'' |
19099 | ''Well, Frank,''said Cragin,''what do you say to hitching horses with me? |
19099 | ''Well, old gentleman, what do_ you_ say-- will you move the old stool?'' |
19099 | ''What do you mean?'' |
19099 | ''What is it, father?'' |
19099 | ''What news?'' |
19099 | ''What shall I do?'' |
19099 | ''What will you do with them?'' |
19099 | ''Where did they go?'' |
19099 | ''Where is master Joe, or Miss Selly?'' |
19099 | ''Will you not promise me that until you die, you will, regardless of self, use every effort in your power against it?'' |
19099 | ''You hate it?'' |
19099 | And do they not betoken a future of anarchy in the event of the establishment of this most pernicious and monstrous of doctrines? |
19099 | And is it a necessity of social life that these great interests should jar? |
19099 | And what is the precedent against which we have to contend? |
19099 | And who has ever gazed long at a corpse without fancying that it moved? |
19099 | Are these not the signs of the times? |
19099 | As Cragin was lighting his cigar, I said to him:''Have you heard the news?'' |
19099 | But now, what constitutes order? |
19099 | But war moight ye hev seed me, stranger?'' |
19099 | But what better conduct of a suit can you expect from a she- advocate-- an attorney- in- petticoats? |
19099 | But what in the other event? |
19099 | But what of the result? |
19099 | But what shall we say of that scheme which aims at a reconstruction of the Union by leaving New England out? |
19099 | But what should she do? |
19099 | But while jails stand and some men fear the LORD, How_ can_ ye tell what ye may chance to get? |
19099 | By William L. Stone, 703 Virginia, 714 Visit to the National Academy, 715 Was He Successful? |
19099 | Can art exist as an accidental fact in the bosom of society? |
19099 | Can the soul return to it again? |
19099 | Can we be far wrong in such a view? |
19099 | Come, what do you say to Frank''s going in with me? |
19099 | Could there be a happier illustration of the fine compliment paid by President Lincoln in his message of last summer to the rank and file of our army? |
19099 | D-- n the woman; did n''t she know better than that?'' |
19099 | Did n''t find those charges work so well at Waterloo, did you?'' |
19099 | Did she know this? |
19099 | Do n''t you see how necessary my work is?'' |
19099 | Do you tell me that we can not conquer so united, so brave, and so desperate a people? |
19099 | Drag through a miserable life till death came happily to relieve it? |
19099 | F. P. Stanton, 674 Cloud and Sunshine, 687 Is there Anything in It? |
19099 | Fifty, sixty years of travel over a dreary, barren waste, with no joy upon it? |
19099 | Finding her so calm, and so willing to reason on what she had seen, I ventured to ask:''And what did Ackermann say to her?'' |
19099 | Gentlemen, how much is bid for old Deborah?'' |
19099 | Has it begun?'' |
19099 | He stopped short, and exclaimed aloud:''What have I done? |
19099 | Her face was pale, and there was a nervous twitching about her mouth, but she quietly said:''You have come for me?'' |
19099 | Her manner indicated great depression; and I looked at her a moment and said,''My dear child, what is the matter with you this evening?'' |
19099 | Hev a eye- opener?'' |
19099 | His highest destination is_ symbolical_, for is he not made in the Divine image? |
19099 | How could I tell Mrs. Grove, who had showed herself to be a weak and nervous woman, the wonderful story of our night walk? |
19099 | How did you manage to get it? |
19099 | How far is it?'' |
19099 | How much do you say?'' |
19099 | How much is bid for all this piety done up in black crape?'' |
19099 | How much shall I have for her? |
19099 | How then would the case stand on that supposition? |
19099 | I feel that I would have the power to do it, had I but health and strength; but what can a dead body do? |
19099 | I_ can not_ tell it to you: can you help me without knowing it?'' |
19099 | If the heart is tossed by a thousand passing and selfish passions, how can its solemn but simple and tender voice be heard? |
19099 | If, say they, the colored man becomes a freeman, then why not entitled to all the privileges and franchises which other freemen enjoy? |
19099 | In the first place, I ask you-- who are all familiar with the record-- if an undue sympathy for the defendant, Antonio, was not felt on the trial? |
19099 | Is he not kind? |
19099 | Is it asked in what consists this resemblance? |
19099 | Is it not rather an important means for the development of the finer feelings of the heart, the higher faculties of the soul? |
19099 | May we not, we say again, rest in an all but certain hope that the Divine Being will see fit to preserve His own work? |
19099 | Men, can ye rest in peace While the cursed lash sounds? |
19099 | Miriam heard them, did not care for them-- why should I? |
19099 | Mr. Kirke, is this you? |
19099 | Perceiving me, he said:''How is ye, stranger? |
19099 | Shall any one say that this is but the result of the war? |
19099 | Shall it be? |
19099 | Shall the father grieve for the loss of half his wealth which goes to redeem his only son from death-- his''darling from the power of the lions''? |
19099 | Shall the felon begrudge the last cent of his earthly possessions that purchases his relief from the gallows? |
19099 | Shall the house- holder grumble over the reward he has offered for the rescue of his wife and little ones from the burning house? |
19099 | Shall we growl over the paltry taxes which, even yet, are scarcely felt? |
19099 | Shall we grumble at the cost of the war? |
19099 | Shall we make a peace now, only that we may again go to war among ourselves? |
19099 | She asked;''you understand its vileness, and hate it?'' |
19099 | She had been my friend during her whole life-- why should she harm me now? |
19099 | She had many more friends than Miriam, for who could resist the charm of her face and manner? |
19099 | Then she turned to me and said:''Hester, would you not like to see your sister very much?'' |
19099 | Then where did it go? |
19099 | Uncultured as they may be, is it not, indeed, among the people that we see the most vivid sympathies with the really great artists, the true poets? |
19099 | WAS HE SUCCESSFUL? |
19099 | Was he living in town-- how long since he had come to New York-- was he engaged with Mr. Bennett-- what was he doing? |
19099 | We may well ask''what sustains the hopes of the rebels?'' |
19099 | What can it be?'' |
19099 | What do_ you_ know about military matters?'' |
19099 | What foes, what dangers shall Columbia fear? |
19099 | What has she for all those years? |
19099 | What is its essential nature? |
19099 | What is the point of difference between them? |
19099 | What is this difference? |
19099 | What is this plan or method? |
19099 | What the deuce does it mean?'' |
19099 | What then? |
19099 | Where did it come from?'' |
19099 | Where does the soul go?'' |
19099 | Where then does history record a like instance? |
19099 | Where was it? |
19099 | Who that has lost a friend does not find it impossible to realize that the form is utterly without life? |
19099 | Who would quarrel with a friend because he had roamed through many a clime to find flowers for a wreath woven for our pleasure? |
19099 | Why do the masses always accord in their estimation of the just and unjust? |
19099 | Why do you ask?'' |
19099 | Why do you look at me so strangely-- so horribly? |
19099 | Why have we been forced into this desperate, unexpected conflict? |
19099 | Why should she not undertake to do them? |
19099 | Why then was there an increase in those ten States, while in the other twenty- four there was an actual decrease? |
19099 | Why? |
19099 | Will ye surrender Freedom''s last hope on earth? |
19099 | Will you bring her here?'' |
19099 | With such a prospect before them-- with existence itself hanging in the balance-- why are the people of the North asleep? |
19099 | With these remarks, we enter upon our topic:''Why is the Union priceless?'' |
19099 | Would she be able to help me if she knew it? |
19099 | Would this not be literally''jumping out of the frying pan into the fire''? |
19099 | Would you take his life needlessly?'' |
19099 | Ye''re in a hurry, hain''t ye?'' |
19099 | You do n''t remember me? |
19099 | how shall we ever persuade the people of the South to live in amity with a race so cordially hated and despised? |
19099 | what of the night? |
19099 | what was it? |
19099 | why do they always agree about glory and shame, vice and virtue, courage and cowardice? |
19099 | why do they always find Beauty in the success of suffering virtue, the triumph of oppressed innocence, the rescue of the wronged and helpless? |
40604 | As a steel- engraver, who in this century has produced work that is much superior to his superb engraving of Vanderlyn''s"Ariadne?" |
40604 | But he died young, and( shall we not say?) |
40604 | Have we none with the knowledge or the power to render the subject with the vigor it demands? |
40604 | If such a topic is permissible in letters, may it not also be allowed sometimes in painting? |
40604 | What is art but a reaching out after the ideal, the most precious treasure given to man in this world? |
40604 | When shall we see his like again? |
40604 | Who has not seen his splendid painting of the"Gorge of the Yellowstone,"now in the Capitol at Washington? |
40604 | Who has not seen the famous"Greek Slave,"inspired by the enthusiasm for the Greeks struggling with the Turk for existence? |
40604 | Who of our artists has been able both to design and to engrave such a work as his"Musidora?" |
40604 | Why have none of our artists attempted to paint them? |
40604 | Why is it that his colors are as brilliant, as pure, as forcible, as harmonious, to- day as when he laid them on the canvas nearly a century ago? |
40780 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
40780 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
40780 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
40780 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
40780 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
40780 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
39068 | Did he preach-- did he pray? 39068 Why?" |
39068 | ''To whom?'' |
39068 | Are there such sights yet? |
39068 | But how was he to do this? |
39068 | Can no generous giver be found who will contribute the money necessary to bring the east window from London?... |
39068 | Do you believe you could bear that patiently? |
39068 | Does Isaac take learning freely? |
39068 | Has he become fond of school?" |
39068 | He called his place"Sherwood Forest,"with grim humor; for was he not an outlaw, in the opinion of the Whigs, just as really as was Robin Hood? |
39068 | How does she improve in her writing and reading? |
39068 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
39068 | It is an easy thing to correct this fault, and unless you do so, how can you be fit for law business?" |
39068 | Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view-- And what could you, what should you, what would you do? |
39068 | Shall it appeal in vain?" |
39068 | Soon after I went in Mrs. V. says,''Well, Mr. Johns, what say you to a ride below with me, and bringing Miss Nancy up?'' |
39068 | The future President asked himself,"What is the best thing for dinner?" |
39068 | The outspoken preacher replied, so that every one could hear:"What is that if General Jackson has come in? |
39068 | Then came the question,"Where do you live?" |
39068 | Then came the strange marriage scene:"Can this be Martha Hilton? |
39068 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
39068 | What was the explanation of the father''s changed attitude to his son that led him to make his bequest in such unpleasant terms? |
39068 | What would they have? |
39068 | What, no? |
39068 | Who could withstand such a lover? |
39068 | Why do you go looking so? |
39068 | Why in such rash attempts engage As they can ne''er perform?" |
39068 | Why stand here idle? |
39068 | Will you have the goodness to send me some seed, both of the water and musk melons?" |
39068 | Would it be in the paper which his father had in his hand as he seated himself before the fire? |
39068 | afraid of what? |
39068 | of death? |
39068 | she asked;"because I am afraid? |
23743 | And who could have ordered you to drain my mere? |
23743 | Any English here? |
23743 | Begging your pardon, it was never put at all; nor do I see--"What, not at the inquest? |
23743 | But do n''t you think,said Jenny,"that something might be added and amended in the state of society our fathers established here in New England? |
23743 | Culprit, how wilt thou be tried? |
23743 | Did she get here in time? 23743 Did you get the letter?" |
23743 | Drain the water? 23743 Excuse me,"said Houseman;"but would it not be better for me to go? |
23743 | Fear? |
23743 | For the wants of this period what safe provision is made by the Church, or by the State, or any of the boy''s lawful educators? 23743 From whom had you the black horse you ride?" |
23743 | Get off with you, will you? |
23743 | Hath he been seen since? |
23743 | How many years must I rely on my aids? |
23743 | I mean, when did you hear from him last? |
23743 | I say, are these your Italian skies? 23743 If he is dead,"said she,"what matters it? |
23743 | If she can find him? 23743 In love with her?" |
23743 | In the boys''academies of our country, what provision is made for amusement? 23743 Is that credible? |
23743 | No, what letter? 23743 She-- lies-- in Carlisle jail?" |
23743 | Think you I can not tell? 23743 Was Janet here?" |
23743 | Was it not then a victory? |
23743 | What does she? 23743 What is that to_ me_?" |
23743 | What provision is there for the amusement of all the shop girls, seamstresses, factory girls, that crowd our cities? 23743 What, at this time of night? |
23743 | What, the minister, too? |
23743 | Where is he, though? |
23743 | Who was that other man? 23743 Why can not we Americans learn to amuse ourselves peaceably, like other nations?" |
23743 | Why do I feel then as if something had happened,--something disagreeable? 23743 Why hate her? |
23743 | You''re not sorry that I''ve found you out after such a hunt? 23743 [ B] Accepting this definition, can we say that Harvard College, as at present constituted, is a University? |
23743 | _ Wo n''t_ you take a lady and children away from here? |
23743 | ***** But now what was to be done by Dr. Saunders? |
23743 | -- Again upon the atmosphere The self- same words fell:"_ I Am Here._""Here? |
23743 | An author has somewhere asked, What signify our telegraphs, our anà ¦ sthetics, our railways? |
23743 | And did n''t you say you''d no objection to her visiting the wards?" |
23743 | And do n''t we, after all? |
23743 | And now, before him whose prerogative was Victory, what vision did arise? |
23743 | And what might not patience, and better management, and gentler and more noble demeanor towards her, have done for her? |
23743 | And where can she go? |
23743 | And where was that bedroom? |
23743 | Anglais?" |
23743 | Are the hired nurses making a row?" |
23743 | Are these governments republican in form?" |
23743 | Are they not the countries where the people are most oppressed, most unhappy in their circumstances, and therefore in greatest need of amusement? |
23743 | Are we any the more or less men? |
23743 | As we approached, the lady had taken the child by the hand, with the words,"What is your address?" |
23743 | Before he could recover this little facer, she said, quietly,"What is your name?" |
23743 | But he was afraid to take her at her word; and yet what was the use to persist in what his own eyes told him was the wrong course? |
23743 | But hope,--what had he to do with hope, especially with such a hope as this? |
23743 | But how can there be a right to representation when there is nobody to be represented? |
23743 | But how was I, in the beginning, to guess at the motives of the writers? |
23743 | But presently she said, sternly,"What does that woman say for herself?" |
23743 | But the question yet remained, What could be done for Nancy? |
23743 | But what sort of parents can she have, do you think, twelve years old, and writing a thing like that?" |
23743 | But what will not men risk when destruction is at their heels? |
23743 | Can there be a doubt about duty?" |
23743 | Can you help us? |
23743 | Confounded thing this, ai n''t it? |
23743 | Could we escape, or should we again have to seek refuge from the flames? |
23743 | Did you know Ezra Cramer had come back?" |
23743 | Do people go out of doors at one o''clock in the morning, to pray? |
23743 | Do you know how great a work, you dingy old Dalton blacksmith? |
23743 | Do you know where Mrs. Gaunt is at this moment?" |
23743 | Does it ordain impartial suffrage? |
23743 | Does it ordain universal suffrage? |
23743 | Does it proscribe, disfranchise, or expatriate the recent armed enemies of the country, or confiscate their property? |
23743 | For why? |
23743 | HOW SHALL WE BE AMUSED? |
23743 | Has the murderer fled? |
23743 | He asked her would she come to the trial as a witness? |
23743 | He comes for exercise and amusement,--he gets these, and a ticket to destruction besides,--and whose fault is it?" |
23743 | I looked, around me, and above, And cried aloud:"Where art thou, Love? |
23743 | If education in that direction were possible,--to what purpose? |
23743 | If he could plead for himself the force and constraint of circumstances, should not the same defence be set up for her? |
23743 | If their art were lost, does not the ideal of humanity remain the same so long as the nature of humanity endures? |
23743 | Is Nice no better than this? |
23743 | Is it because he desires to have the Federal debt repudiated? |
23743 | Is it because he thinks it intolerable that a negro should have civil rights? |
23743 | Is it because he wishes to have the Rebel debt paid? |
23743 | Is it not for the future we live? |
23743 | Is this the spirit to build up a"National Union Party"? |
23743 | Is this the tone of pardoned and penitent treason? |
23743 | It is the slave who dances and sings, and why? |
23743 | May I ask you one?" |
23743 | Men do not ride so hot with good tidings,--what need to make such haste with evil? |
23743 | Mercy answered coldly,"How should I know where she is?" |
23743 | Must, the angels show their wings before they shall have recognition? |
23743 | Of the present chief lights of American literature and science, how many, if graduates of Harvard, took the first honors of the University here? |
23743 | On his way to them he asked himself this question,"How many times must a man be born before he is fit to live?" |
23743 | Shall a man attempt to extenuate his failures? |
23743 | She had rightly calculated the chances; he did touch it, and started and said:"Who''s here? |
23743 | Stop a bit, will you? |
23743 | Surely the work of destruction would stop before it reached India Street? |
23743 | That she might become his equal when the strength of his hope that he had done with her was lying merely in this, that they were unequal? |
23743 | The Colonel knew his step, and said,"Doctor, look here; is this Lizzie?" |
23743 | The pith of the whole amendment is in the last clause; and is there anything in that to which reasonable objection can be made? |
23743 | The very changes in her character, which had made her not to be endured,--how far was he whose name she bore responsible for them? |
23743 | Then there came a tap against our_ coupà ©_ window, and an unmistakably British accent was heard to say:"Anglais? |
23743 | Then with a firmer grasp he seized the unresisting fingers, and exclaimed,"My God, am I dreaming? |
23743 | These are:"Have these States organized governments? |
23743 | To what end have we so much of Mr. Brock? |
23743 | Was he endeavoring to deceive himself and others into the belief that he was a mourning man? |
23743 | Was he the same man in Dalton that he had been in his youth? |
23743 | Was it not out of the pit that he himself had been digged? |
23743 | Was_ he_ the same man he was when he went away from Dalton? |
23743 | What could I do with such a man? |
23743 | What did they hear, gentlemen? |
23743 | What family, what neighborhood, claimed him? |
23743 | What for the thousands of young clerks and operatives? |
23743 | What had become of her brown hair? |
23743 | What had he to do with hope, who had come forth from Dalton as from a pit of despair? |
23743 | What had the real Thomas Leicester on his feet that night?" |
23743 | What heavenly angel turned her eyes away? |
23743 | What is a university? |
23743 | What is provided for their physical development and amusement? |
23743 | What is the result? |
23743 | What matter the myriad frets that then beset him in the flesh? |
23743 | What matter? |
23743 | What signifies our knowledge of the earth''s structure, of the stars''courses? |
23743 | What to do?" |
23743 | When I leave a town in the morning, some one is sure to enter the car and greet me in a loud voice:"How are you, Mr. Green? |
23743 | When did you see him last?" |
23743 | Where was this life a moment since? |
23743 | Where were her red cheeks? |
23743 | Whither will it fleet a moment hence? |
23743 | Who ever saw the ghastly corpse of the victim weltering in its blood, and did not feel his own blood run cold through his veins? |
23743 | Who went after her?" |
23743 | Who wrote to me?" |
23743 | Who''s in the ditch now, getting all the favor you used to show to me?" |
23743 | Why should I not also"pursue the triumph and partake the gale"? |
23743 | With such firm feet we have walked in the lighted way that we gaze back upon, how can we fear the Valley of the Shadow? |
23743 | Wonderful? |
23743 | Would the daylight never come? |
23743 | do I seem so vain a creature as to believe all this?" |
23743 | it was Miss Amey,--Amey? |
23743 | madam,"said he, roughly:"why did you not tell me this before?" |
23743 | what about him, I wonder?" |
23743 | what''s_ he_ permoted to?" |
23743 | when you are in love with her? |
12353 | Can you read them, or tell me the name of the author? |
12353 | What is he doing? |
12353 | Where is he? |
12353 | Whom is he writing to? |
12353 | ''About ten minutes past[ to?] |
12353 | ''And what is the evidence for the truth of Coleridge''s legend?'' |
12353 | ''And wherefore should a breach be made in the laws of nature, yet its purpose remain unknown?'' |
12353 | ''Both heard, at the same time, an[ objective?] |
12353 | ''Cagn made all things, and we pray to him,''thus:''O Cagn, O Cagn, are we not thy children? |
12353 | ''How came he into the world?'' |
12353 | ''How,''it has been asked,''could all mankind forget a pure religion? |
12353 | ''IV.--On Thursday, March--? |
12353 | ''In default of any experimental evidence''( how about Mr. William Crookes''s?) |
12353 | ''My heathen brother, you have a sister who is a demoniac?'' |
12353 | ''Under the physical[ psychical?] |
12353 | ''[ 11] How can we pretend to understand a religion if we do not know its secret? |
12353 | ''[ 13] Did early man, then, find_ in experience_ that apparitions of his friends were''connected in fact''with their deaths? |
12353 | ''[ 2] But why does he think the Israelites did all this? |
12353 | ''[ 3] The dead man becomes a ghost- god, receives prayer and sacrifice, is called a Mulungu(= great ancestor or= sky? |
12353 | ''[ 40] Whence came the idea of Taa- roa? |
12353 | ''[ 9] But whence came that higher worship which seems to have intervened immediately after the cessation of nomadic habits? |
12353 | ( 2)''What are those human shapes which appear in dreams and visions? |
12353 | ), 1855, 1830(?! |
12353 | ), 1864(? |
12353 | --"Of what colour,"I asked,"is the stuff which he pours out?" |
12353 | After Miss Angus had described the large building and crowds of men, some one asked,''Is it an exchange?'' |
12353 | Ah, say what Spirit, or Body, is this Body, That fills the world around, Speak, man, ah say What Spirit, or Body, is this Body?'' |
12353 | And what have we to oppose to such a cloud of witnesses, but the absolute_ impossibility, or miraculous nature_ of the events which they relate? |
12353 | And what is the''mind''? |
12353 | And who was El? |
12353 | And why was that manifested to the eye, which could not unfold its tale to the ear?'' |
12353 | Are the things bound to be''connected in fact''? |
12353 | As Frank and the native were cross- cutting a tree, the native stopped suddenly, and said,"What are you come for?" |
12353 | Asked,''what substance?'' |
12353 | But how did it come to be thought that a spirit dwelt in a lifeless and motionless piece of stone or stick? |
12353 | But how does it apply when, as by the Kurnai, the Supreme Being is reckoned an ancestor? |
12353 | But the word in the latter case would react on the thought, till the Roman inhaled( as his life?) |
12353 | But this is arguing in a circle; What is''a properly receptive state''? |
12353 | But we can both say''the ultimate form of the religious consciousness is''( will be?) |
12353 | But what do we mean by''hysterical''? |
12353 | But wherefore do they crystallise round Zeus? |
12353 | But, had they a God( on the Australian pattern) whom they have forgotten, or have they not yet evolved a God out of Animism? |
12353 | By what other considerations? |
12353 | Can you tell me what book it is?" |
12353 | Do his experience and their belief coincide by pure chance?] |
12353 | Do these produce, or probably produce, many empty hallucinations_ not_ coincident with death or any great crisis? |
12353 | Do you not see us hunger? |
12353 | Does Mr. Payne mean that a great creative spirit is_ not_ a god, while a spirit kept on board wages in a tangible object is a god? |
12353 | Does Mulungu, as Creative God, receive sacrifice, or not? |
12353 | First, what was the process of development? |
12353 | Frank replied,"What do you mean?" |
12353 | Frank said,"Where is he?" |
12353 | Given Animism, then, or the belief in spiritual beings, as the earliest form and minimum of religious faith, what is the origin of Animism? |
12353 | Granting a primal religion relatively pure in its beginnings, why did it degenerate? |
12353 | Granting the belief in souls and ghosts and spirits, however attained, how was the idea of a Supreme Being to be evolved out of that belief? |
12353 | Has fetishism one of its origins in the actual field of supernormal experience in the X region? |
12353 | Have critics and manual- makers no knowledge of the science of comparative religion? |
12353 | He does not ask''Are the phenomena real?'' |
12353 | He is called"Dendid"( great rain, that is, universal benediction?).'' |
12353 | How are these to be explained? |
12353 | How can we know that he was envisaged, originally, as_ Spirit_? |
12353 | How did it work? |
12353 | How do we explain his lack of adoration? |
12353 | How else, thinkers would say, can the seer visit the distant place or person, and correctly describe men and scenes which, in the body, he never saw? |
12353 | How in the world can you deify a person whom you do n''t remember? |
12353 | How were these contradictions to be reconciled? |
12353 | How were they evolved out of the notion of a confessed artificial bogle? |
12353 | How, then, did men come to believe in_ him_ as a terrible, all- seeing, all- knowing, creative, and potent moral being? |
12353 | I say''creative''because''he made all things,''and( as the bowler said about a''Yorker'')''what else can you call him?'' |
12353 | If so, where, precisely, ends its power of carrying facts? |
12353 | If we are not to call it''degeneration,''what are we to call it? |
12353 | If you can not have''an established ancestor- worship''till you abandon nomadic habits, how, while still nomadic, do you evolve a Supreme Being? |
12353 | In any case we ask for evidence how, in the''impenetrable forests''did a new Supreme Deity become universally known? |
12353 | In heaven''s name, why not? |
12353 | Is Mtanga evolved out of an ancestral ghost? |
12353 | Is it because, in a sufficient ratio of cases to provoke remark, early man has found the appearance and the death to be''things connected in fact''? |
12353 | Is it not certain that such a being could be conceived of by men who had never dreamed of ghosts? |
12353 | Is the idea that, by loosing the bonds, the seer demonstrates the agency of spirits, after the manner of the Davenport Brothers? |
12353 | It is a logical creed, but how was the Supreme Being evolved out of the ghost of a''people- devouring king''like Powhattan? |
12353 | Langlois?" |
12353 | Lastly, when were medicine- men such notable moralists? |
12353 | Miss Angus now asked,''Where is my little lady?'' |
12353 | Mr. Bissett asked,''What is the man''s expression?'' |
12353 | Mr. Oxford know? |
12353 | Now, how does this theory of false memory bear on coincidental hallucinations? |
12353 | On any such theories as these the belief in a moral Supreme Being is a very late( or a very early?) |
12353 | On what does he suppose that the belief of the savage is based? |
12353 | One of John Nicholson''s native adorers killed himself on news of that warrior''s death, saying,''What is left worth living for?'' |
12353 | Otherwise we might ask: Does Mr. Clodd prefer to be considered not''competent''or not''veracious''? |
12353 | Supposing that the arguments in this essay met with some acceptance, what effect would they have, if any, on our thoughts about religion? |
12353 | Surely you quite understand my reasoning?'' |
12353 | The South Guinea Creator, Anyambia(= good spirit? |
12353 | The question thus arises, Is there any truth whatever in these world- wide and world- old stories of inanimate objects acting like animated things? |
12353 | The real question is, Do such events occur among lower and higher races, beyond explanation by fraud and fortuitous coincidence? |
12353 | The remoteness of the occurrences is more remarkable, for, if these things happen, why were so few recent cases discovered? |
12353 | The watcher of conduct, the friendly, creative being of low savage faith, whence was he evolved? |
12353 | Then, of course, Nyankupon would receive the best sacrifices of all, as the most powerful deity? |
12353 | Therefore a corpse is not a thing( within the meaning of my General Law)''? |
12353 | This is very plausible, is it not? |
12353 | This_ must_ be so, because the Danites asked the young Levite whether it was not better to be priest to a clan than to an individual? |
12353 | To Mr. Tylor''s arguments, when I read them, I replied in the''Nineteenth Century,''January 1899:''Are Savage Gods Borrowed from Missionaries?'' |
12353 | To the psychologist who objects that our modern instances are mere anecdotes, we reply by asking,''Dear sir, what are_ your_ modern instances? |
12353 | Tom said to me,"Will you go with us to Joe''s, and you will see something you have never seen before?" |
12353 | Was He? |
12353 | Was there a coincidence at all in the Society''s cases printed in the Census? |
12353 | Was this simply a coincidence?'' |
12353 | We meet our old problem: How has this God, in the conception of whom there is so much philosophy, developed out of these hungry ghosts? |
12353 | What do you know of"Mrs. A.,"whom you still persistently cite as an example of morbid recurrent hallucinations? |
12353 | What do you want?" |
12353 | What is their practical tendency? |
12353 | What kind of creature was man when he first conceived the germs, or received the light, of Religion? |
12353 | What led Herr Parish, an honourable and clearheaded critic, into this maze of incorrect and contradictory assertions? |
12353 | What were the processes of the conversion of Twanyirika? |
12353 | What, not even if all hallucinations, or ninety- nine per cent., coincided with the death of the person seen? |
12353 | What, then, is the origin of Animism? |
12353 | Whence came the moral element in the idea of Jehovah? |
12353 | Where did she live? |
12353 | Where shall we find such a number of circumstances, agreeing to the corroboration of one fact? |
12353 | Who vouches for her, who heard her, who understood her? |
12353 | Why did Association choose that day, of all days in my life, for her solitary freak? |
12353 | Why do you not name a few out of the distinguished crowd? |
12353 | Why does he not take care when he pours it out?" |
12353 | Why on earth is association so fond of dying people-- granting the statistics, which are''another story''? |
12353 | Why only that once? |
12353 | Why was Nyankupon, the supposed new god of a new powerful set of strangers, left wholly unpropitiated? |
12353 | Why, or how, did a silly buffoon, or a confessed''bogle''arrive at being regarded as a patron of such morality as had been evolved? |
12353 | Why, then, is the phantasm supposed by savages to announce death? |
12353 | Why, then, when the wraith is seen, is the owner believed to be dying? |
12353 | Yet again, whence comes the moral element in Jehovah? |
12353 | Yet is this true, or are such experiences only ignored and put aside without serious consideration?'' |
12353 | [ 14] What, then, is the cause of the belief that a phantom of a man is a token of his death? |
12353 | [ 22] Who is right? |
12353 | [ 9] Here is the scientific explanation of Herr Parish:''The shimmer of a reflecting surface[ the sideboard?] |
12353 | _ C''est là le miracle!_''How much for this little veskit?'' |
12353 | _ Why_ do they perform these rites? |
38073 | Has not every restitution of the ancient Saxon laws had happy effects? 38073 [ 274] Was this a veiled threat? |
38073 | About seven o''clock of the evening of that day he awoke and, seeing me staying at his bedside, exclaimed,"Ah, Doctor, are you still there?" |
38073 | Are we not the better for what we have hitherto abolished of the feudal system? |
38073 | Are we then to see again Athenian and Lacedemonian confederacies? |
38073 | B. Colvin, he took up again the same question:"In what circumstances is it permitted for the man in charge to assume authority beyond the law?" |
38073 | But what compensation? |
38073 | But why not quote also from another traveler, John Mellish, who spoke of the impetus given to manufactures and home industries? |
38073 | CHAPTER II JACOBIN OR AMERICAN? |
38073 | Can any condition of society be more desirable than this? |
38073 | Could these undesirables be pushed into the Spanish sphere of influence? |
38073 | Does it mean that Jefferson should be accused of plagiarism? |
38073 | Finally in answer to Fortescue Aland''s question why the Common law of England should not now be a part of the Common law of England? |
38073 | Has it not been the practice of all other nations to hold their lands as their personal estate in absolute dominion? |
38073 | He concurred in it from the first dawn of the question, What was the political relation between us and England? |
38073 | He then asked,"Is it the Fourth?" |
38073 | Her good faith? |
38073 | If therefore, on leaving our harbors we are certain to lose them, is it not better, as to vessels, cargoes and seamen, to keep them at home? |
38073 | In God''s name, from whence have they derived this power? |
38073 | Is he capable? |
38073 | Is he faithful to the Constitution? |
38073 | Is it from any principle in our new constitution expressed or implied? |
38073 | Is not it''s history well known, and the purposes for which it was introduced, to wit, the establishment of a military system of defense? |
38073 | Is this a democratic view in the modern sense of the word? |
38073 | May not our government be more homogeneous, more peaceable, more durable? |
38073 | Or can it hesitate to believe with us, that nothing but our own exertions may defeat the ministerial sentence of death or abject submission? |
38073 | Or is this the tocsin of merely a servile war? |
38073 | Suppose 20 millions of republican Americans[ were] thrown all of a sudden into France, what would be the condition of that kingdom? |
38073 | That of a horse jockey? |
38073 | That they are not to be violated but with his wrath?... |
38073 | The acquiescence of Bonaparte to the annexation of the Floridas? |
38073 | The death of George III? |
38073 | The next question was to determine where does the power rest to declare a law unconstitutional? |
38073 | The"law of nature"--what was meant by the word? |
38073 | To wage another Peloponesian war to settle the ascendency between them? |
38073 | Was Jefferson irritated and despondent at the ingratitude of his fellow citizens who had not rejected at once the charges made by Nicholas? |
38073 | Was he not rather a victim of overwork and overexertion? |
38073 | Was he so alarmed by the health of his wife that he did not feel that he could leave her even for a few days? |
38073 | Was it fair to ask Belinda to wait so long for him? |
38073 | Was it not afterwards made an engine of immense oppression?... |
38073 | Was it the Epicurean maxim of Horace,--"enjoy to- day and put as little trust as possible in the morrow?" |
38073 | Was the young republic of the United States to follow in their steps and accept such a humiliating compromise? |
38073 | Well, which of these kinds of reputation would I prefer? |
38073 | Were the United States going to be dragged into the European convulsions and would they have to side openly with their former ally? |
38073 | What was to be done in that case? |
38073 | What will be the conclusion? |
38073 | Which would be your second choice? |
38073 | Why did he send to Martha moralizing and edifying letters when he was traveling in Southern France and Italy? |
38073 | [ 114] This is indeed a charming letter; but why did he not write more often in this vein? |
38073 | a fox hunter? |
38073 | an orator? |
38073 | or the finest advocate of my country''s rights? |
41776 | What see you when you get there? |
41776 | As she ran up stairs, the Tory commander, thinking her a servant, called out,"Wench, where is your master?" |
41776 | As the Coney Island"Song of the Clam"has it:"Who better than I? |
41776 | His aid, recognizing that he was a conspicuous mark, had just observed:"Would it not be prudent for you to retire from this place?" |
41776 | When he was wearied and sore from wounds they asked,"Will you fight again?" |
41776 | in chowder or pie, Baked, roasted, raw or fried? |
37047 | And I ask you, of what order is that spirit? |
37047 | And here if the objectors return and say, who told you that there are spirits; Is not yours a precarious hypothesis? |
37047 | And is this, without laughing, true? |
37047 | And pray, replied Mr. Barnard, what reason have you beyond a pun to take him for a Jacobite? |
37047 | And shall a manifest experience be so easily exploded? |
37047 | And what sort of a boy is he? |
37047 | As big as you are? |
37047 | But then, say you, why can not those persons be cured by physicians? |
37047 | But what fools periods read for periods''sake? |
37047 | But what sort of a boy is that that meets you? |
37047 | Can we make it a scruple, whether God will permit innocent persons should be so traduced? |
37047 | Did the little boy appoint you? |
37047 | Do good spirits dwell so near us, or are they sent on such messages? |
37047 | Does he write? |
37047 | For how does a demon stir up raptures or ecstacies in men? |
37047 | For how many gipsies and pretenders to chiromancy have we in London and in the country? |
37047 | Hereupon, being much affrighted, he fell into an extreme sweat, so that his wife awaking and finding him all over wet, she asked him what he ailed? |
37047 | How many that are for hydromancy, that pretend in water to show men mighty mysteries? |
37047 | In what English book? |
37047 | Is not this hypothesis as precarious as any man may pretend that of spirits to be? |
37047 | Is not this like what you call hearing? |
37047 | Lying in his bed, pensive, Bocconi appeared to him; my Lord Middleton asked him if he were dead or alive? |
37047 | May not we have leave to recriminate in this place? |
37047 | Must he be so because his name is Perkin? |
37047 | Now the man that had the second- sight was to be tried; it was now to be put to the proof if he could tell names or no? |
37047 | Now what can be more infinitely profane than to use the prayer our Lord instituted in such a way? |
37047 | One of the fathers immediately asked him if he understood Latin? |
37047 | Or what should touch our consciences, being convicted by so many testimonies? |
37047 | Pray, who told Aristotle that there were intelligences that moved the celestial spheres? |
37047 | Shall his obstinacy confute the learned? |
37047 | Shall his want of faith be thought justly to give the lie to so many persons of the highest honour and quality, and of the most undoubted integrity? |
37047 | Shall we place him in the number of the rebels, whom their pride precipitated into the abyss? |
37047 | The reply Cantle made him was this; Does he not love ringing? |
37047 | Then it asked him whether he did not know him? |
37047 | This being thought extraordinary, and Sir Norman hearing one whisper him in the ear, asked who advised him so skilfully? |
37047 | To begin: how are children at first taught a language that can hear? |
37047 | To whom the fathers, being somewhat of an eager spirit, said; What should make us doubtful in this case? |
37047 | Upon this Sir Norman asked him how long it was since he had learned to play? |
37047 | What greater testimony would the most incredulous have? |
37047 | What interest could an earl and many noblemen have in promoting such an imposture? |
37047 | What noisy talker can thy magic boast? |
37047 | Will you imagine that you are in commerce with a spirit? |
37047 | _ My question._ But what was you staring at when I came in? |
37047 | _ My question._ How big is he? |
37047 | _ My question._ How does he do it? |
37047 | _ My question._ I will be sure to keep it secret; but how do you know you are to meet them there to- day? |
37047 | and what are those sounds, but tokens and signs to the ear, importing and signifying such and such a thing? |
37047 | and what sort of a lamb? |
37047 | and yet, retaining love to him, as Dives to his brethren, would have him saved? |
37047 | are they not taught by sounds? |
37047 | have aids from thee; Wilt thou, like witty heathens, lewdly given, To a Gehenna metamorphose Heaven? |
37047 | or is it his guardian angel? |
37047 | or is it the soul of some dead friend that suffers? |
37047 | or of the intelligences, who continued firm in faith and submission to their creator? |
37047 | though they are like other boys and other lambs which you see, they are a thousand times prettier and finer? |
37047 | will you not take time to translate that book which is sent unto you out of Germany? |
40863 | ( dispersed?) |
40863 | 16, 1857-Dec. 21,''57 James W. Denver 1"( 23") Dec. 21, 1857-May 12,''58 Hugh S. Walsh 4(5?) |
40863 | 1780? |
40863 | How is it possible for the individual thinking subject to connect together the parts of his experience in the mode we call cognition? |
40863 | Might not mathematics be a purely imaginary science? |
40863 | No glimmering of the further question, Whence come these notions and with what right do we apply them in cognition? |
40863 | Now, from another side, the supreme difficulty was presented-- how could such notions have application to any objects whatsoever? |
40863 | Of these_ na_ negatives the verb, as in_ chuh_, he is;_ chuna_, he is not;_ a_ asks a question, as in_ chwa_, is he? |
40863 | Or, it may be further asked, how is the individual really connected with the system of things apparently disclosed to him in conscious experience? |
40863 | So soon, however, as the critical question was put, On what rests the reference of representations in us to the object or thing? |
40863 | The subjoined genealogical tree will place Kaffir relations in a clearer light:-- Zuide( 1500? |
40863 | What is the nature of the distinction between knowledge gained by analysis of notions and knowledge of matters of fact? |
40863 | Where, then, are we to look for this realm of free self- consciousness? |
40863 | Who? |
40863 | Xosa( 1530?). |
40863 | _ ti_ adds emphasis, as in_ chuti_, he is indeed; and_ tya_ asks a question with emphasis, as in_ chutya_, is he indeed? |
40863 | in other words, How do we come to have knowledge of objects at all? |
40863 | or, did he make for him? |
40863 | what is the nature of the relation between himself as one part of the system, and the system as a whole? |
40863 | what is the precise significance of the existence which he ascribes both to himself and to the objects of experience? |
21012 | The gentleman asks when were the colonies emancipated? 21012 What then,"they ask,"remains to be done?" |
21012 | Will not a repeal of all other duties satisfy the colonists? |
21012 | ''I appeal to you,''said he, turning to Conway,''whether the House is not bent on obtaining a revenue of some sort from the colonies?'' |
21012 | ''Shall we abide by our resolutions?'' |
21012 | A.--Suppose a military force sent into America, they will find nobody in arms; what are they then to do? |
21012 | And how can it be inferred from thence that we suppose a provincial Act necessary to enforce an Act of Parliament? |
21012 | And would they not then object to make a duty?" |
21012 | Are not these bounties intended finally for the benefit of this kingdom? |
21012 | As civilized men, or rather as men who had forsaken a land of civilization for purer abodes of piety and peace? |
21012 | But suppose the requisitions are not obeyed? |
21012 | But, can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?" |
21012 | Can it be taken from them without their consent? |
21012 | Did the cruel and sanguinary laws of the preceding session answer any of the purposes for which they were proposed? |
21012 | Does crossing the sea change or annihilate the churchmanship of the missionary, or the passenger, or the emigrant? |
21012 | For how could one legislative body command what another legislative body should enact? |
21012 | Had they in any degree fulfilled the triumphant predictions, had they kept in countenance the overbearing vaunts of the Minister? |
21012 | Has our lenity inspired them with moderation? |
21012 | How then should a community of Christian men have dealt with them? |
21012 | I desire to know when they were made slaves? |
21012 | I enter not into the legal question; the more important question is, Was it honourable? |
21012 | I would ask the noble lord, Did the people of America set up this claim previous to the year 1763? |
21012 | If not, tell us when they were emancipated? |
21012 | If so, where is the peculiar merit to America? |
21012 | If these are deemed affronts, and the messengers punished as offenders, who will henceforth send petitions? |
21012 | If unknown, what rule of justice can punish the town for a civil injury committed by persons not known to them? |
21012 | Is not the Parliament? |
21012 | It may be asked in reply, what makes a Church but the presence of members of it? |
21012 | Must it not have been by denying the charges which all the world now knows to have been true? |
21012 | Q-- What do you mean by its inexpediency? |
21012 | Q.--"Does this reasoning hold in the case of a duty laid on the produce of their lands exported? |
21012 | Q.--And have they not still the same respect for Parliament? |
21012 | Q.--And what is their temper now? |
21012 | Q.--Are not the colonies, from their circumstances, very able to pay the stamp duty? |
21012 | Q.--Are not you concerned in the management of the post- office in America? |
21012 | Q.--But do they not consider the regulations of the post- office, by the Act of last year, as a tax? |
21012 | Q.--But is not the post- office, which they have long received, a tax as well as a regulation? |
21012 | Q.--But suppose Great Britain should be engaged in a war in Europe, would North America contribute to the support of it? |
21012 | Q.--But what do you imagine they will think were the motives of repealing the Act? |
21012 | Q.--But who are to be the judges of that extraordinary occasion? |
21012 | Q.--Can anything less than a military force carry the Stamp Act into execution?? |
21012 | Q.--Can anything less than a military force carry the Stamp Act into execution?? |
21012 | Q.--Considering the resolution of Parliament as to the right, do you think, if the Stamp Act is repealed, that the North Americans will be satisfied? |
21012 | Q.--Did the Americans ever dispute the controlling power of Parliament to regulate the commerce? |
21012 | Q.--Did the Secretary of State ever write for money for the Crown? |
21012 | Q.--Did you ever hear the authority of Parliament to make laws for America questioned till lately? |
21012 | Q.--Do the Americans pay any considerable taxes among themselves? |
21012 | Q.--Do you not think the people of America would submit to pay the stamp duty if it were moderated? |
21012 | Q.--Do you think it right that America should be protected by this country and pay no part of the expense? |
21012 | Q.--Do you think the Assemblies have a right to levy money on the subject there, to grant to the Crown? |
21012 | Q.--Don''t you know that the money arising from the stamps was all to be laid out in America? |
21012 | Q.--Don''t you think cloth from England absolutely necessary to them? |
21012 | Q.--Don''t you think the distribution of stamps, by post, to all the inhabitants, very practicable, if there was no opposition? |
21012 | Q.--For what purpose are those taxes levied? |
21012 | Q.--How can the commerce be affected? |
21012 | Q.--How then do you pay the balance? |
21012 | Q.--If an excise was laid by Parliament, which they might likewise avoid paying, by not consuming the articles excised, would they then object to it? |
21012 | Q.--If the Act is not repealed, what do you think will be the consequences? |
21012 | Q.--If the Stamp Act should be repealed, would not the Americans think they could oblige the Parliament to repeal every external tax law now in force? |
21012 | Q.--In what light did the people of America use to consider the Parliament of Great Britain? |
21012 | Q.--Is it in their power to do without them? |
21012 | Q.--Is it their interest not to take them? |
21012 | Q.--Is there not a balance of trade due from the colonies where the troops are posted, that will bring back the money to the old colonies? |
21012 | Q.--Is this all you mean-- a letter from the Secretary of State? |
21012 | Q.--Suppose an Act of internal regulations connected with a tax, how would they receive it? |
21012 | Q.--Then no regulation with a tax would be submitted to? |
21012 | Q.--To what causes is that owing? |
21012 | Q.--Was it an opinion in America before 1763, that the Parliament had no right to levy taxes and duties there? |
21012 | Q.--Were not you reimbursed by Parliament? |
21012 | Q.--What are the present taxes in Pennsylvania levied by the laws of the colony? |
21012 | Q.--What do you think a sufficient military force to protect the distribution of the stamps in every part of America? |
21012 | Q.--What is now their pride? |
21012 | Q.--What is the usual constitutional manner of calling on the colonies for aids? |
21012 | Q.--What is your opinion of a future tax, imposed on the same principle of that of the Stamp Act; how would the Americans receive it? |
21012 | Q.--What may be the amount of one year''s imports into Pennsylvania from Britain? |
21012 | Q.--What may be the amount of the produce of your province exported to Britain? |
21012 | Q.--What used to be the pride of the Americans? |
21012 | Q.--What was the temper of America towards Great Britain before the year 1763? |
21012 | Q.--What will be the opinion of the Americans on those resolutions? |
21012 | Q.--Why do you think so? |
21012 | Q.--Why may it not? |
21012 | Q.--Would they do this for a British concern; as, suppose, a war in some part of Europe that did not affect them? |
21012 | Q.--Would they grant money alone if called on? |
21012 | Q.--You have said that you pay heavy taxes in Pennsylvania; what do they amount to in the pound? |
21012 | Shall there be no reserved power in the empire to supply a deficiency which may weaken, divide, and dissipate the whole? |
21012 | Some of the questions and answers are as follows: Question.--What is your name and place of abode? |
21012 | Such was the free(?) |
21012 | That which the Lord our God hath given us, shall we not possess it? |
21012 | The question now arises, What were the effects of these measures upon the colonies? |
21012 | The question was whether they thought the colony of New York was worthy of a hearing? |
21012 | This, however, is of little importance in comparison with the question, what was the proportion of electors to non- electors in the colony? |
21012 | Was any other part of their policy more commendable or more successful? |
21012 | Was it according to the intention of the King in granting it? |
21012 | Was it doing as one would be done by? |
21012 | Was it loyal? |
21012 | Was the indemnity held out to military power lenity? |
21012 | Was their proceeding straightforward? |
21012 | Was there any precedent, and has there ever been one to this day, for such a proceeding? |
21012 | Were the King and Privy Council to be precluded from inquiring into such complaints? |
21012 | Were they to contend as savages or civilized men? |
21012 | What has deprived us of so many thousands of Christians who desired, and in all other respects deserved, to hold communion with us? |
21012 | What is your opinion they would do? |
21012 | What should be done? |
21012 | What was this but telling the Americans to stand out against the law, to encourage their obstinacy, with the expectation of support from hence? |
21012 | What were the powers claimed and exercised under it by the Massachusetts Puritans? |
21012 | What were the provisions of the Charter itself on the subject of religion? |
21012 | What will be the consequence when the people of this moderate province are informed of this treatment? |
21012 | When the news of these things reached England, and the colonial agents made their remonstrances, it was asked,"Will the colonies resist?" |
21012 | Wherein did it involve any more than rightful attention to Imperial authority and interests? |
21012 | Will they yield it to the arbitrary disposal of any men or number of men whatsoever? |
21012 | and who will deliver them? |
42701 | Whence came the native races of America? |
14583 | ''After all,''said he, the while,''what use would a rooster be to me, if I had to die of hunger?'' |
14583 | ''All the children? |
14583 | ''And if there is?'' |
14583 | ''And what does it cost you to support each hand?'' |
14583 | ''But have your other aged slaves the same comforts that Aunt Lucy has?'' |
14583 | ''But who does your work? |
14583 | ''Can you tell me what that word means up there?'' |
14583 | ''Dee ye tink Massa Davy wud broke his word, sar?'' |
14583 | ''Did you find it uncomfortable?'' |
14583 | ''Did you leave your card?'' |
14583 | ''Do you see that building?'' |
14583 | ''Doctor,''queried one of the fair,''what will cure a man who has been hanged?'' |
14583 | ''Eight days to make a pair of shoes?'' |
14583 | ''Hallo, Jim,''I said;''have you got back?'' |
14583 | ''Have you always lived with him?'' |
14583 | ''Have you any milk to spare?'' |
14583 | ''How d''ye do?'' |
14583 | ''How much?'' |
14583 | ''How so?'' |
14583 | ''I seem to be quite a"What- is- it?"'' |
14583 | ''Is not the support of that class a heavy tax upon you?'' |
14583 | ''Is that you, Aunty?'' |
14583 | ''Perhaps it is the name of the street, maybe of the city?'' |
14583 | ''So you admit that all anthropological characteristics as developed by climate are quite right?'' |
14583 | ''Sort o''smart, Massa Davy; sort o''smart; how is ye?'' |
14583 | ''The Colonel, then, has befriended you at some time?'' |
14583 | ''Then you know my cousin,--Jennie Gregory?'' |
14583 | ''Then_ why_ did you do it?'' |
14583 | ''Waiting for a frind is it?'' |
14583 | ''Well, neighbor,''said Peter,''how have you prospered in the town?'' |
14583 | ''Well, old lady,''said one of our fellows,''what do you think_ now_ about the fighting qualities of your men?'' |
14583 | ''What are ye doing here, Pat?'' |
14583 | ''What boys? |
14583 | ''What could he reply? |
14583 | ''What does the labor of a_ full_ hand yield?'' |
14583 | ''What ef he am crazy? |
14583 | ''What is the usual proportion of sick and infirm on your plantation?'' |
14583 | ''What proportion of your slaves are able- bodied hands?'' |
14583 | ''What? |
14583 | ''What? |
14583 | ''Where in creation have you been, my dear fellow?'' |
14583 | ''Where is Moye?'' |
14583 | ''Whereas, you think it would be more appropriate for her to worship Giove?'' |
14583 | ''Who is Madam P----?'' |
14583 | ''Who knows?'' |
14583 | ''Why did he?'' |
14583 | ''Why so, my dear fellow?'' |
14583 | ''Why, are not these people happy? |
14583 | ''Will you lay a wager on it?'' |
14583 | ''Wo n''t you ax Massa K---- to a cheer?'' |
14583 | ''Would it?'' |
14583 | ''Yes; just the same enjoyment that aunty''s pigs are having; do n''t you hear them singing to the music? |
14583 | ''You grew them?'' |
14583 | )_ Who knows but General Scott''s coachman had one or two? |
14583 | ***** IS COTTON OUR KING? |
14583 | After mutual inquiries and congratulations, says Dennis,''What are you doin''these days, Pat?'' |
14583 | Am I young enough to scamper, over hill and dale, after a she- goat? |
14583 | And the resignation of the gentle Griseldis-- what is it? |
14583 | And what is strength fit for if not to yield to weakness? |
14583 | And why? |
14583 | Another,''Roman Artickles Manofactorer''--hopes to be''honnoured with our Custom,( American? |
14583 | Are not the pride and the obstinacy growing stronger every day at the South? |
14583 | Are these good women to be found in plays, romances, or novels? |
14583 | Bates._ Aye, but how to be brought about? |
14583 | Bates._ I suppose you passed not a few interesting hours in this room at the twilight of Mr. Buchanan''s day, whilst holding_ my_ portfolio? |
14583 | Blair._ But what instructions would you give to the soldiers about this_ casus belli_? |
14583 | Blair._ Can any one tell me what is the General''s platform? |
14583 | Blair._ Then your old plan of the great national convention comes in vogue? |
14583 | But the legend? |
14583 | But then what are they? |
14583 | But what was that to men worn out with marching? |
14583 | But who is he, of tall and attenuated form, whose days are passed in his solitary study, secluded like a hermit from the common experience of life? |
14583 | Can any of our wise men re- discover the lost Pictish art of making good beer from that plant? |
14583 | Can not some means be devised to clothe and feed_ them_, or to exchange for them?'' |
14583 | Can one contradict the veracity of one''s own wife? |
14583 | Can streaming eyes and aching hearts Glow at the battle''s story, Or they who stake their all and lose Exult in fame and glory? |
14583 | Chase._ But if the South is to surrender pride, what are_ we_ to surrender? |
14583 | Closed thine eyes, Gently wise, Dost thou dream the while? |
14583 | Cloths( clothes?) |
14583 | Could it have been prevented? |
14583 | Could one have a finer opportunity to see in this a moral and twist a tail? |
14583 | Did General Washington spare the whisky stills in the time of the insurrection in Western Virginia when they were in his way? |
14583 | Did he not know as well as any one that the time of enlistment of many of Patterson''s men had nearly expired? |
14583 | Didst thou shrink From the fierce footsteps of fighting unto death At fair Rochelle? |
14583 | Do we find Australian emigrants writing home to their friends not to come out because they will not be able to work? |
14583 | Do you raise anything else?'' |
14583 | Does not the gentle Euripides show us the god,''his horned head with dragon wreath entwined?'' |
14583 | Hain''t you_ seed_ Massa Tommy, sar?'' |
14583 | Has danger ever yet base cravens found us? |
14583 | Hast thou no tale for me?'' |
14583 | Have you any thoughts of purchasing paintings?'' |
14583 | Have you ever thought what is to be the upshot of the contention? |
14583 | How can the North and the South hold together when even moderate men like you and me are so far apart?'' |
14583 | How can we estimate the injury to the cause of the Union inflicted in this way alone by a grossly inefficient Federal general? |
14583 | How did you fare all day?'' |
14583 | How many temperate men to the dozen in Scandinavia or Russia?'' |
14583 | How much morality is there in a tropical climate? |
14583 | How shall this be? |
14583 | How was this sum earned, and to whom was it paid? |
14583 | How, then, are we to retain our sway? |
14583 | I exclaimed;''who goes there?'' |
14583 | I jocularly added,''But ca n''t you tell us how you are going to do it?'' |
14583 | I meet people every day who congratulate me on my safe return, and say,''I suppose you are going again?'' |
14583 | If he were only to yield, on all occasions, would he be troubled? |
14583 | If one- ninth were white men in 1850, when the price of cotton was much less and the crop much smaller than of late years, how many are there now? |
14583 | If she were at the North she would take to pantaloons, and"stump"the entire Free States; would n''t you, Alice?'' |
14583 | In history? |
14583 | In the midst of it, the Colonel said to me, in an exultant tone,--''Well, my friend, what do you think of slavery_ now_?'' |
14583 | In the records of the law, then? |
14583 | In theology? |
14583 | Indeed, she has need to, for is not sensibility woman''s field of triumph, and are not tears the triumph of sensibility? |
14583 | Is not this perfect enjoyment?'' |
14583 | Lincoln( abruptly and familiarly)._ Talking of confidences, what do you think of the news about Zollicoffer? |
14583 | Lincoln( opening a drawer)._ Do you see this button? |
14583 | Lincoln._ Would the people stand such a charge? |
14583 | Lincoln._ You are the son of an editor, Montgomery; how do you stand on this subject of Colfax''s bill to carry all the papers in your mails? |
14583 | Need I say that the fault is, usually, in the husband? |
14583 | Now, upon the absurd supposition that a free man, with a will in his work, would do no more work than a slave, what would be the result of his labor? |
14583 | Now, who felt not a little surprised, and a little foolish too, to find himself shut up at home? |
14583 | Our night is dark, and perils vast surround us, But, firm in truth and right, what shall we fear? |
14583 | Poor little fellow!--what would become of it without kind and careful mamma?'' |
14583 | Pray how could you receive intelligence from him? |
14583 | Say, drank thus from The dews of Languedoc? |
14583 | Shall we ask these poor, deceived Unionists of Northern Virginia what they think of Gen. Patterson, and of the success of his campaign? |
14583 | Shall we fight a rebel in Charleston streets, and at the same time protect his negro by a guard in the Charleston jail? |
14583 | Smith._ But the three words? |
14583 | So, would n''t it be better to spare these arms of ours, now that they are growing old? |
14583 | Stanton( good humoredly)._ Will our friend the Secretary of State smoke fewer cigars when you come to tax tobacco? |
14583 | Stanton._ Mr. Secretary of the Interior, what is the average circulation of newspapers in the loyal section? |
14583 | Sweet mouth, is''t feigning this? |
14583 | The door of the mansion was bolted and barred; but, rapping for admission, I soon heard the Colonel''s voice asking,''Who is there?'' |
14583 | The riv- aire in the bag- ground is the Signora- pippi''....''The what?'' |
14583 | The truth flashed upon me; but could it be possible? |
14583 | The two rivaires that cir- cum- vent the city are the Lavar( Delaware?) |
14583 | Those are kay- kers( Quakers?) |
14583 | Those are not white balls on the ground, those are ship;--ships as have woolen growin''onto their sides( sheep?). |
14583 | Thus unto you those oysters are but bivalves; But unto me they''re-- P''raps you''ll stand a dozen?'' |
14583 | Was I in South Carolina or in Utah? |
14583 | Well-- and why not? |
14583 | Welles._ Doughfacery? |
14583 | Welles._ Would you arm them? |
14583 | Were they on that subject? |
14583 | What could have pleased Johnston better? |
14583 | What do you pay for your corn, your pork, and your hay, for instance?'' |
14583 | What does that Moor, with the white lady in his arms? |
14583 | What does your hay cost?'' |
14583 | What is that cockatoo doing there? |
14583 | What is the tenderness of Baucis, or the long fidelity of Penelope? |
14583 | What need had we of a horse? |
14583 | What need we of a rooster? |
14583 | What though across the swelling, broad Atlantic Comes scornful menace? |
14583 | What though you fall in the battle''s rush, And the velvet leaves of the greensward blush With your young life''s crimson tide? |
14583 | What woman ever abandoned this exalted privilege? |
14583 | What would we have done with a goose? |
14583 | When I come to think of it, what could I have done with a hog? |
14583 | When we were seated, I said to Scip,''What induced you to lay hands on the Colonel? |
14583 | Where did they come from? |
14583 | Where is a centaur first mentioned? |
14583 | Where is the horse? |
14583 | Where, indeed, if this be true, did Fielding obtain the originals for the ordinary at Newgate, or''parson Trulliber''in Joseph Andrews? |
14583 | Who of us has not conquered pride and obstinacy in the nursery? |
14583 | Who will say now that a republic does not work as well as a monarchy? |
14583 | Who would be delighted to see her husband returning in triumph, like a Roman general? |
14583 | Who''ll rid me of this bawling, bellowing little beast? |
14583 | Why is it, then, that we find so many_ wealthy cotton planters_, whose riches consist entirely of their slaves and worn- out plantations?'' |
14583 | Why not strike boldly, and secure it by offering to pay all its loyal slave- holders for their property? |
14583 | Why should we toil for other people? |
14583 | With marble- dust and vitriol,''Twill sparkle bright and foam,-- Who will not pledge me in a cup Of champagne-- made at home? |
14583 | Without her, would he ever have known that patience is not the merit of fools? |
14583 | Would it be worth the having or the giving, The boon of endless breath? |
14583 | Would this not be protection to home industry in its most absurd extreme? |
14583 | Would you like to change places? |
14583 | Yet how was the confidence repaid which these loyal people thus reposed in Gen. Patterson? |
14583 | Yield? |
14583 | You find the class of Middle Age subjects most salable then?'' |
14583 | _ Are those savages in Nuova Jer- sais_? |
14583 | _ Is that the Ay- mer- i- cain eagill_? |
14583 | _ We need more faith!_ What though the means be weakness? |
14583 | _ What is that bust to flin- ders_? |
14583 | _ What is that road in Broo- klin_? |
14583 | _ What is that wash- tub_? |
14583 | _ You do not see the fly_? |
14583 | _ You_ certainly ca n''t do it?'' |
14583 | did you ask, Madame? |
14583 | neighbor Peter, what do you say to that? |
14583 | or slow uncoiled An infant fibre''mid the faithful mold Of smiling Roussillon? |
14583 | replied Dennis;''but where is yer shillaly thin?'' |
14583 | said she, planting her arms akimbo and her two fists on her haunches:''who''s the best housekeeper, pray? |
14583 | thanks, thanks a thousand times, with all my heart-- for, after all, how could I have got along with the ewe? |
14583 | thought Hugh;''where have I seen her?'' |
14583 | what influence could this North County scum have against_ me_?'' |
3673 | Do you think the porter and the cook have no experiences, no wonders for you? 3673 Is America a musical nation?" |
3673 | Is there any virtue in a man''s skin that you must touch it? |
3673 | 3 What is character? |
3673 | A newspaper music column prints an incident( so how can we assume that it is not true?) |
3673 | A painter paints a sunset-- can he paint the setting sun? |
3673 | And if so, of what will it be composed? |
3673 | And then-- what is the soul? |
3673 | At such times, shall he not better turn to those greater souls, rather than to the external, the immediate, and the"Garish Day"? |
3673 | But is Plato a classic or towards the remote? |
3673 | But where is the bridge placed?--at the end of the road or only at the end of our vision? |
3673 | But where is the definite expression of late- spring against early- summer, of happiness against optimism? |
3673 | But where is the divine substance? |
3673 | But, indeed, is not enough manifestation already there? |
3673 | Can an inspiration come from a blank mind? |
3673 | Can it DO this? |
3673 | Can it be done by anything short of an act of mesmerism on the part of the composer or an act of kindness on the part of the listener? |
3673 | Can music do MORE than this? |
3673 | Can not some of the most valuable kinds of utility and inspiration come from humility in its highest and purest forms? |
3673 | Can you read him today? |
3673 | Carlyle would have Emerson teach by more definite signs, rather than interpret his revelations, or shall we say preach? |
3673 | Could the art of music, or the art of anything have a more profound reason for being than this? |
3673 | Could you journey, with equal benefit, if they were less so? |
3673 | Does the progress of intrinsic beauty or truth( we assume there is such a thing) have its exposures as well as its discoveries? |
3673 | Does the success of program music depend more upon the program than upon the music? |
3673 | For does he not say that"wherever a man goes, men will pursue him with their dirty institutions"? |
3673 | For does not Emerson tell them this when he says"What you are talks so loud, that I can not hear what you say"? |
3673 | He would have found that painful,"for was he not a part with her?" |
3673 | How far afield can music go and keep honest as well as reasonable or artistic? |
3673 | How far can the composer be held accountable? |
3673 | How many masterpieces have been prevented from blossoming in this way? |
3673 | If Emerson''s manner is not always beautiful in accordance with accepted standards, why not accept a few other standards? |
3673 | If Genius is the most indebted, how much does it owe to those who would, but do not easily ride with it? |
3673 | If it does, what is the use of the music, if it does not, what is the use of the program? |
3673 | If nature is not enthusiastic about explanation, why should Tschaikowsky be? |
3673 | If so what? |
3673 | If so why? |
3673 | If there is a weakness here is it the fault of substance or only of manner? |
3673 | In how far does it sustain the soul or the soul it? |
3673 | Intuitions( artistic or not?) |
3673 | Is Classicism a poor relation of time-- not of man? |
3673 | Is Emerson or the English climate to blame for this? |
3673 | Is a demagogue a friend of the people because he will lie to them to make them cry and raise false hopes? |
3673 | Is a thing classic or romantic because it is or is not passed by that biologic-- that indescribable stream- of- change going on in all life? |
3673 | Is his music American or African? |
3673 | Is it a matter limited only by the composer''s power of expressing what lies in his subjective or objective consciousness? |
3673 | Is it a part of the soul? |
3673 | Is it all a bridge?--or is there no bridge because there is no gulf? |
3673 | Is it not program- music raised to the nth power or rather reduced to the minus nth power? |
3673 | Is it not the courage-- the spiritual hopefulness in his humility that makes this story possible and true? |
3673 | Is it not this trait in his character that sets him above all creeds-- that gives him inspired belief in the common mind and soul? |
3673 | Is it the composer''s fault that man has only ten fingers? |
3673 | Is not our weak suggestion needed only for those content with their own hopelessness? |
3673 | Is not the asking that it be made more manifest forgetting that"we are not strong by our power to penetrate, but by our relatedness?" |
3673 | Is that a doctrine? |
3673 | Now all of these translucent axioms are true( are not axioms always true? |
3673 | On the other hand is not all music, program- music,--is not pure music, so called, representative in its essence? |
3673 | Or is it enough to let the matter rest on the pleasure mainly physical, of the tones, their color, succession, and relations, formal or informal? |
3673 | Or is it limited by any limitations of the composer? |
3673 | Ruskin also says:"Suppose I like the finite curves best, who shall say I''m right or wrong? |
3673 | Someone says:"Be specific-- what great fundamentals?" |
3673 | Something that will help answer Alton Locke''s question:"What has Emerson for the working- man?" |
3673 | The composer, the performer( if there be any), or those who have to listen? |
3673 | Then the world may ask"Can the one true national"this"or"that"be killed by its own discoverer?" |
3673 | Was man governing himself? |
3673 | What does it all mean? |
3673 | What is behind it all? |
3673 | What is the source of these instinctive feelings, these vague intuitions and introspective sensations? |
3673 | What part of substance is manner? |
3673 | What part of these supplements are opposites? |
3673 | What part of this duality is polarity? |
3673 | What will you substitute for the mountain lake, for his friend''s character, etc.? |
3673 | Whence cometh the wonder of a moment? |
3673 | Where is the line to be drawn between the expression of subjective and objective emotion? |
3673 | Who can be forever melancholy"with Aeolian music like this"? |
3673 | Who knows but this pulpit aroused the younger Emerson to the possibilities of intuitive reasoning in spiritual realms? |
3673 | Why must the scarecrow of the keyboard-- the tyrant in terms of the mechanism( be it Caruso or a Jew''s- harp) stare into every measure? |
3673 | Will more signs create a greater sympathy? |
3673 | Will you substitute anything? |
3673 | Would you have the indefinite paths ALWAYS supplemented by the shadow of the definite one of a first influence? |
3673 | Would you have the universal always supplemented by the shadow of the personal? |
3673 | Would you have the youthful enthusiasm of rebellion, which Emerson carried beyond his youth always supplemented by the shadow of experience? |
3673 | You may be near when his stern old aunt in the duty of her Puritan conscience asks him:"Have you made your peace with God"? |
3673 | and if so who and what is to determine the degree of its failure or success? |
3673 | design to establish a"course at Rome,"to raise the standard of American music,( or the standard of American composers-- which is it?) |
21686 | And is it for that you refuse me my handkerchief? 21686 And where,"said I,"is monsieur?" |
21686 | And your friend who went by just now? |
21686 | And,added the man,"what the devil have you done to be still here?" |
21686 | Are you going to sleep alone? |
21686 | Baronet? |
21686 | Did I groan loud, or did I groan low, Wackford? |
21686 | Do they speak_ patois_ in England? |
21686 | Have you no remorse for your crimes? |
21686 | His papers are in order? |
21686 | I am an amateur of such wine, do you see? |
21686 | If anyone is a failure in the world, is it not I? 21686 In short,"suggested the_ Arethusa_,"you want to wash your hands of further responsibility? |
21686 | Little boy, would you like to play with me? |
21686 | Mademoiselle Ferrario chantera-- Mignon-- Oiseaux légers-- France-- Des Français dorment là-- Le château bleu-- Où voulez- vous aller? 21686 Nothing?" |
21686 | These gentlemen are pedlars? |
21686 | These gentlemen travel for their pleasure? |
21686 | Was it not you who passed in the meadow while it was still day? |
21686 | What is Paris? 21686 What would I have done with the crew who were such compromising witnesses, and were butchered?" |
21686 | Where are you going beyond Cheylard? |
21686 | Who are Hyde and Jekyll, my brethren? 21686 Why are you called Spirit?" |
21686 | Why? |
21686 | You are not of this Department? |
21686 | Your domicile? |
21686 | Your donkey,says he,"is very old?" |
21686 | Your father and mother? |
21686 | Your name? |
21686 | _ C''est bon, n''est- ce pas?_she would say; and when she had received a proper answer, she disappeared into the kitchen. |
21686 | _ Comment, monsieur?_he shouted. |
21686 | _ Comment?_ Gambetta moderate? 21686 _ Comment?_ Gambetta moderate? |
21686 | _ Connaissez- vous le Seigneur?_he said at length. |
21686 | _ Monsieur est voyageur_? |
21686 | A Scotsman? |
21686 | A flute at Fairmilehead? |
21686 | After all, being in a Judge''s house, was there not something semi- official in the tribute? |
21686 | Ah, an Irishman, then? |
21686 | An Englishman? |
21686 | And Clarisse? |
21686 | And his soul was like a garden? |
21686 | And if he fail, why should I hear him weeping?" |
21686 | And indeed, for a man who has been much tumbled round Orcadian skerries, what scene could be more agreeable to witness? |
21686 | And the_ Arethusa_? |
21686 | And we, what had we? |
21686 | And what although now and then a drop of blood should appear on Modestine''s mouse- coloured wedge- like rump? |
21686 | And what should more directly lead to charitable thoughts?.... |
21686 | And when the present is so exacting, who can annoy himself about the future? |
21686 | And where-- here slips out the male-- where would be much of the glory of inspiring love, if there were no contempt to overcome? |
21686 | And which is to pocket pride, and speak the foremost word? |
21686 | And yet had not he himself tried and proved the inefficacy of these carnal arguments among the Buddhists in China? |
21686 | As a parting shot, we had"These gentlemen are pedlars?" |
21686 | At what inaudible summons, at what gentle touch of Nature, are all these sleepers thus recalled in the same hour to life? |
21686 | Black, black was the night after the firelit kitchen; but what was that to the blackness in our heart? |
21686 | But do you not observe it is antique? |
21686 | But life is so full of crooks, old lady, that who knows? |
21686 | But to put in execution, with the heart boiling at the indignity? |
21686 | But what crowd was ever so numerous, or so single- minded? |
21686 | But what was the etiquette of Origny? |
21686 | But where one was so good and simple, why should not all be alike? |
21686 | But why, in God''s name, these holiday choristers? |
21686 | But, after all, what religion knits people so closely as a common sport? |
21686 | Come back? |
21686 | Delicacy? |
21686 | Do the stars rain down an influence, or do we share some thrill of mother earth below our resting bodies? |
21686 | Do you give in, as Walt Whitman would say, that you are any the less immortal for that? |
21686 | Do you remember the Frenchman who, travelling by way of Southampton, was put down in Waterloo Station, and had to drive across Waterloo Bridge? |
21686 | Do you then pretend to support yourself by that in this Department?" |
21686 | Do you think I regret my life? |
21686 | Do you think I would rather be a fat burgess, like a calf? |
21686 | Does a hard- working, greedy builder gain more on a monstrosity than on a decent cottage of equal plainness? |
21686 | Durst I address a person who was under a vow of silence? |
21686 | Et d''où venez- vous?_"A better man than I might have felt nettled. |
21686 | For will any one dare to tell me that business is more entertaining than fooling among boats? |
21686 | Had it been a country road, of course we should have spoken to them; but here, under the eyes of all the gossips, ought we to do even as much as bow? |
21686 | How, or why, or when, was this lymphatic bagman martyred? |
21686 | I advance, do I not? |
21686 | I ask myself; caught up into the seventh heaven? |
21686 | I knew well enough where the lantern was, but where were the candles? |
21686 | I think I hear you say that it is a respectable position to drive an omnibus? |
21686 | I was once asked; and when I told them not,"Ah, then, French?" |
21686 | I wonder if my friend is still driving the omnibus for the_ Grand Cerf_? |
21686 | I wonder was it altogether modesty after all? |
21686 | I wonder, would a negative be found enticing? |
21686 | If some benevolent genie, who understood Stevenson''s qualities and genius, could have directed his career, how would that spirit have educated him? |
21686 | In what other country will you find a patriotic ditty bring all the world into the street? |
21686 | Is it Torre del Greco that is built above buried Herculaneum? |
21686 | Is the word Gaelic misspelled? |
21686 | Is there any profit in a misplaced chimney- stalk? |
21686 | May I remark, as a balm for wounded fellow- townsmen, that there is nothing deadly in my accusations? |
21686 | Might he say that I was a geographer? |
21686 | Might not this have been a brave African traveller, or gone to the Indies after Drake? |
21686 | Morning? |
21686 | My God, is that life?" |
21686 | Nerli?" |
21686 | Nobody in the field asked''How''s that?''" |
21686 | Nor was the vision unsuitable to the locality; for after an hospital, what uglier piece is there in civilization than a court of law? |
21686 | Now may some Languedocian Wordsworth turn the sonnet into_ patois:_"Mountains and vales and floods, heard YE that whistle?" |
21686 | OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS_ I behold The House, the Brotherhood austere-- And what am I, that I am here?_ MATTHEW ARNOLD. |
21686 | Of what shall a man be proud, if he is not proud of his friends? |
21686 | People constantly ask men who have collaborated how they do the business? |
21686 | Perhaps the Bazins knew how much I liked them? |
21686 | Quoi?_"_ The Arethusa( perceiving and improving his advantage):_"Rob''rt- Lou''s- Stev''ns''n." |
21686 | Read one of these songs-- read this one-- and tell me, you who are a man of intelligence, if it would be possible to sing it at a fair?" |
21686 | Scott, like Stevenson, knew queer people, knew beggars-- but had not one of them shaken hands with Prince Charles? |
21686 | So far I am at one with the Catholics:--an odd name for them, after all? |
21686 | Suppose a dish were not to my taste, and you told me that it was a favourite amongst the rest of the company, what should I conclude from that? |
21686 | The children who played together to- day by the Sambre and Oise Canal, each at his own father''s threshold, when and where might they next meet? |
21686 | The picture may not be pleasing; but what else is a man to do in this dog''s weather? |
21686 | There is matter enough, in 1750- 1765, for scores of romances, but who now can write them? |
21686 | There is no discharge in the war of life, I am well aware; but shall there not be so much as a week''s furlough? |
21686 | They had sought to get a_ Hollandais_ last winter in Rouen( Rouen? |
21686 | To how many has not St. Giles''s bell told the first hour after ruin? |
21686 | Voyez- vous, je suis un homme intelligent!_"( With that? |
21686 | Was I going to the monastery? |
21686 | Was I to pay for my night''s lodging? |
21686 | Was it Apollo, or Mercury, or Love with folded wings? |
21686 | Was not this a graceful little ovation? |
21686 | Was there ever anything more wounding? |
21686 | Was this the imperturbable_ Cigarette_? |
21686 | What am I to say for my book? |
21686 | What could I have told her? |
21686 | What is he to say that will not be an anti- climax? |
21686 | What right has he, who likes it not, to keep those who would like it dearly out of this respectable position? |
21686 | What shall I say of Clarisse? |
21686 | What the devil was the good of a she- ass if she could not carry a sleeping- bag and a few necessaries? |
21686 | What was left of all this bygone dust and heroism? |
21686 | What went ye out for to see? |
21686 | What were his reflections as this second martyrdom drew near? |
21686 | What would happen when the wind first caught my little canvas? |
21686 | What would the genie have done for him? |
21686 | Where was it gone? |
21686 | Where were the boating men of Belgium? |
21686 | While we were thus agreeing, what should my tongue stumble upon but a word in praise of Gambetta''s moderation? |
21686 | Whither? |
21686 | Who shall say? |
21686 | Who was I? |
21686 | Why should it be cheaper to erect a structure where the size of the windows bears no rational relation to the size of the front? |
21686 | Why"shebeens"? |
21686 | Why, did I not know, he asked me, that it was nothing but locks, locks, locks, the whole way? |
21686 | Why, indeed? |
21686 | Will you dare to justify these words?" |
21686 | Would the wicked river drag me down by the heels, indeed? |
21686 | You are to understand there was now but one point of difference between them: what was to be done with the_ Arethusa_? |
21686 | _ Pour vous_? |
21686 | _ The Arethusa:_"Would you like to hear me sing? |
21686 | _ The Commissary( pointing to the knapsack, and with sublime incredulity):_"_ Avec ça? |
21686 | _ The Commissary( taking a pen):_"_ Enfin, il faut en finir._ What is your name?" |
21686 | _ The Commissary( with scorn):_"You call yourself an Englishman?" |
21686 | _ The Commissary:_"Humph.--What is your trade?" |
21686 | _ The Commissary:_"Why, then, do you travel?" |
21686 | _ The Commissary:_"Why?" |
21686 | _ The Commissary:_"You have no papers?" |
21686 | _ The Commissary:_"You know, however, that it is forbidden to circulate without papers?" |
21686 | _ Who hath loosed the bands of the wild ass?_ JOB. |
21686 | and as homely an object among the cliffs and orchards of the Seine as on the green plains of Sambre?) |
21686 | and if she did not sleep, how then? |
21686 | and look so beautiful all the time? |
21686 | and playing,"Over the Hills and Far Away"? |
21686 | and where the graces of Origny? |
21686 | he cried,"what does this mean?" |
21686 | not to mention that, at this season of the year, we should find the Oise quite dry? |
21686 | or come safely to land somewhere in that blue uneven distance, into which the roadway dipped and melted before our eyes? |
21686 | or in part a sort of country provocation? |
21686 | or perhaps a bit of fear for the water in so crank a vessel? |
21686 | perhaps they also were healed of some slights by the thanks that I gave them in my manner? |
21686 | said the foreman,"do you hear nothing?" |
21686 | thought I; and is this whole mansion, with its dogs and birds and smoking chimneys, so far a traveller as that? |
21686 | where the Judge and his good wines? |
21686 | why these priests who steal wandering looks about the congregation while they feign to be at prayer? |
21686 | why this fat nun, who rudely arranges her procession and shakes delinquent virgins by the elbow? |
39284 | Anything else? |
39284 | Boy or girl, eh? |
39284 | What name? |
39284 | With what face can they object to the king the bringing in of forraigners, when themselves entertaine such an army of Hebrewes? |
39284 | --_Anatomy of Melancholy._"Be the jacks fair within, the jills fair without, the carpets laid, and everything in order?" |
39284 | But was it gratitude, after all? |
39284 | But what else do we see in these same registers? |
39284 | But who will say that Drew, or Fulk, or Gavin, or Ingram are alive now? |
39284 | Doe''st not? |
39284 | He objected, but was informed that it was a Scripture name, and the verse"Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" |
39284 | He that the noble Percy''s blood inherits, Will he strike up a Hotspur of the spirits? |
39284 | His christian name is Zeal- of- the- land? |
39284 | If Alice is Alice in the registrar''s hands, not so in homely Chaucer:"This_ Alison_ answered: Who is there That knocketh so? |
39284 | In"Gammer Gurton''s Needle,"Gammer says to her maid--"How now, Tib? |
39284 | In"The Alchemist"appears_ Ananias_, a deacon, who is thus questioned by Subtle:"What are you, sir? |
39284 | It is Sir Christopher, the curate, who, in"The Ordinary,"rebels against"Kit:""_ Andrew._ What may I call your name, most reverend sir? |
39284 | Shakespeare seems to have been aware of it, for Hermione says--"My last good deed was to entreat his stay: What was my first? |
39284 | Subtle addresses the deacon:"What''s your name? |
39284 | Taylor, the Water- poet, seems to imply that Goliath was registered at baptism by the Puritan:"Quoth he,''what might the child baptized be? |
39284 | To which the gruff Labervele replies--"And you will try all this now, will you not? |
39284 | Turning to the woman who appeared to be indicated, he again asked,"What name?" |
39284 | Wanton addresses the Parson:"Was she deaf to your report? |
39284 | Was it a male She, or a female He?'' |
39284 | Was the stigma of a Puritan name a hindrance to the worldly advancement of the bearer? |
39284 | What about him? |
39284 | What can prove the effect of the Reformation on old English names as do such incidents as these? |
39284 | What is to be done? |
39284 | What passages have we on this subject in the works of the Restoration playwrights?" |
39284 | Who can say that they exist now? |
39284 | Why on earth should the fact that the Bible has been translated out of Latin into English strip us of these treasures? |
39284 | Why should this be so? |
39284 | Wo n''t somebody come to the rescue? |
39284 | Zeal- of- the- land is thus inquired of by Winwife:"What call you the reverend elder you told me of, your Banbury man? |
39284 | _ Cock._ How, Gammer? |
39284 | _ Gardiner._ What else? |
39284 | _ Lady N._ Where are you, childe? |
39284 | _ Subtle._ O, you are sent from Master Wholesome, Your teacher? |
39284 | _ Vintner._ Where are you? |
39284 | _ Wanton._ And Ugly, her abigail, she had her say, too? |
39284 | _ Welcome_ says--"Who are they which they''re enamoured so with? |
39284 | a baker, is he not? |
39284 | are you here, Numps? |
39284 | had your holy consistory No name to send me, of another sound, Than wicked Ananias? |
39284 | has the devil possessed you, that you swear no better, You half- christened c----s, you un- godmothered varlets?" |
39284 | heathen Greek? |
11117 | ''Did I?'' 11117 About-- what?" |
11117 | An''ye take yer pay out uv the store? 11117 Any connection of old Parson Kemp in the other parish?" |
11117 | Any more''n I be? |
11117 | Anything to preclude strict honesty? |
11117 | Are folks always so sober, when they''ve had a change of heart? |
11117 | But Cornelia? |
11117 | But is there anything in all this,you are asking,"to preclude the jobber''s telling the truth?" |
11117 | But where are the clowns and puppets, And imps with horns and tail? 11117 But, Aunt Mimy, what_ do_ you guess?" |
11117 | But,you are asking,"do only those succeed who are born to these extraordinary endowments? |
11117 | Ca n''t ye take up the heel? 11117 Come from Stephen''s place? |
11117 | Come home for Thanksgiving? |
11117 | Did he talk with you on the way? |
11117 | Did you remark Elsie''s ways this forenoon? |
11117 | Do you think her father has treated her judiciously? |
11117 | Does this look like it, Aunt Mimy? |
11117 | Emmie,says Stephen, as we were coming back, and he''d got hold of my hand in his, where I''d taken his arm,"what do you think of Aunt Mimy now?" |
11117 | Emmie,says he,"did you ever doubt that I loved you?" |
11117 | For what? |
11117 | Have you stay, my friend? |
11117 | Heow d''ye du, Emerline? 11117 Here''s a priest and there is a Quaker,-- Do the cat and the dog agree? |
11117 | How do you know they''re the same pair? |
11117 | How many have you got? |
11117 | How so? |
11117 | Is your appetite as good as usual? |
11117 | Jawin''abaout? 11117 Lor'', Miss Jemimy, do n''t you know better than to ask questions when I''m counting? |
11117 | Lurindy,says I,"a''n''t that Steve a- knocking?" |
11117 | Me, Stephen? |
11117 | Miss,says she, at length,"will you close your window? |
11117 | Miss,says she,"will you have the goodness to open your window? |
11117 | Oh,says she,"you be, be you? |
11117 | Own churnin''? 11117 Tell me, Byron,"said his wife, one day, not long after they were married, and he was moodily staring into the fire,--"am I in your way?" |
11117 | Well, Stebbins,said Mr. Dudley Venner,"have you brought any special message from the Doctor?" |
11117 | Well, how many? |
11117 | Well? |
11117 | Well? |
11117 | Whar he''s gone? 11117 What are you about?" |
11117 | What is it I see? |
11117 | What made you think of it last spring? |
11117 | What''r''you jawin''abaout? |
11117 | What''s fetched y''daown here so all- fired airly? |
11117 | Who''s took care o''them things that was on the hoss? |
11117 | Why do n''t they take her away from the school, if she is in such a strange, excitable state? |
11117 | Why should folk be glum,said Keezar,"When Nature herself is glad, And the painted woods are laughing At the faces so sour and sad?" |
11117 | Why, then, do the questions you have quoted continually recur? |
11117 | Would the old folk know their children? 11117 Would you know,"says Goethe,"the ripest cherries? |
11117 | Y''ha''n''t heerd nothin''abaout it, Squire, d''ye mean t''say? |
11117 | Yes,says she,--"why do n''t you go?" |
11117 | You follow me, Monsieur? 11117 You want to get out of the new church into the old one, do n''t you?" |
11117 | Young folks,said Aunt Mimy, after two or three minutes''silence,"did ye ever hear tell o''''Miah Kemp?" |
11117 | ''Cause Lurindy''s nussin''Stephen? |
11117 | ''Twas fate,--what could one do?" |
11117 | 480. Who was he? |
11117 | And Stephen went and got his hat and coat, and said,--"Miss Mimy, would n''t you like a little company to help you carry your bundles? |
11117 | And do you know who it is that has compelled this change? |
11117 | And he said,"Oh, do they?" |
11117 | And those who do succeed, are they, in fact, each and all of them, such wonderfully capable men as you have described?" |
11117 | And where are the Rhenish flagons? |
11117 | And where is the foaming ale? |
11117 | And where were our dear friends, the roughs, all this time? |
11117 | Any ducks in these days?" |
11117 | Are men compelled to lie and cheat a little in order to earn an honest living?" |
11117 | At five or ten or fifteen years old they put their hands up to their foreheads and ask, What are they strapping down my brains in this way for? |
11117 | At such a time, how should"Bell"Milbanke resist the intoxication,--even before the poet addressed himself particularly to her? |
11117 | But Monsieur is not a merchant, I think? |
11117 | But could it not be also made a notable instrument for wealth in_ one_ man''s hands? |
11117 | But who else was there? |
11117 | But, you ask, what seek I, then? |
11117 | By- and- by Stephen said, When would I come and be the life of his house and the light of his eyes? |
11117 | Can a man sell goods without lying? |
11117 | Can any master of Indian dialects tell us whether that word, too, means"him of the silver eye"? |
11117 | Could I not think of some means to increase her content? |
11117 | Dancers must have music, we know,--and what is music, but wild noise caught and trained? |
11117 | Did the tenants of the fatal ledge recognize some mysterious affinity which made them tributary to the cold glitter of her diamond eyes? |
11117 | Did you drive over?" |
11117 | Do I look on Frankfort fair? |
11117 | Does he become unconscious, too? |
11117 | Extray, Sir?'' |
11117 | Fame? |
11117 | Have these finny creatures their full revenge upon fishermankind, when a smack sinks foundered into the swallowing deep? |
11117 | Have they burned the stocks for oven- wood? |
11117 | Have they cut down the gallows- tree? |
11117 | He began, after an awkward pause,--"You would not have me stay in a communion which I feel to be alien to the true church, would you?" |
11117 | Heow many strings yer gwine ter give me fur the yarbs?" |
11117 | Heow much does Fisher give fur socks, Miss Ruggles?" |
11117 | His first inquiry is, What is the market- value of the note offered? |
11117 | How do we determine that we are not dreaming, and that we shall not wake up to- morrow morning and find ourself on the Arno? |
11117 | How, then? |
11117 | I said, it was lemon- pie, and the top- crust was made of kisses, and would he have some? |
11117 | I, the inventor of this thing, so glorious in its aspect, so incomputable in its results,--was I to permit myself to go without reward? |
11117 | If so,_ when does he come to his consciousness_? |
11117 | If this be not child of sympathy, what parentage shall we assign it? |
11117 | In what other country would it be considered creditable to an officer that he merely did not turn traitor at the first opportunity? |
11117 | Is it a fête at Bingen? |
11117 | Is it honest to ask one man more than you ask another? |
11117 | Is it honest to mark your goods as costing more than they do cost? |
11117 | Is it not a grandly simple thing, this telegraph of mine, Monsieur?" |
11117 | Is it not that he out- Yankees us all? |
11117 | Is it that men have abandoned the careful ways of the fathers, and do not confine themselves to small stores, small stocks, and cash transactions? |
11117 | Is that honest? |
11117 | Is the hypothesis altogether fanciful of chemical election and rejection,--of the kiss and the kick of the magnet? |
11117 | Is the only result of our admitting a Territory on Monday to be the giving it a right to steal itself and go out again on Tuesday? |
11117 | Is your curiosity piqued to know wherein buyers thus contrasted may differ? |
11117 | Knittin''sale- socks yet? |
11117 | Learn? |
11117 | Must there be any sacrifice? |
11117 | Neow you''ve got all you kin out uv me, the letter,''n''the mitt''ns, I may go, may I? |
11117 | Not a day passes but the question is asked by our youths who are being initiated in the routine of selling goods,--"Is this honest? |
11117 | Not at all.--You asked for information? |
11117 | Or do only the original thirteen States possess this precious privilege of suicide? |
11117 | Ought not the same price to be named to every buyer? |
11117 | Our''dumb beasts''yet have a language of their own, unguessed of us, yet perfectly intelligible to them,--how? |
11117 | Page has wrought with mind and hand? |
11117 | Page will ever forget the solemn, yet radiant tone pervading the landscape of sad Egypt, along which went the fugitives? |
11117 | S''pose I take this pat?" |
11117 | Shall more territory be yielded to the already wide- spread African, race? |
11117 | Shall this new Africa push its boundaries beyond their present limits? |
11117 | She grew still paler, as she asked,--"_ Is he dead?_"Dudley Venner started to see the expression with which Elsie put this question. |
11117 | Suppose he had never been trephined, when would his intelligence have returned? |
11117 | Suppose the blow is hard enough to spoil the brain and stop the play of the organs, what happens then? |
11117 | That they can no more be laid than Banquo''s ghost? |
11117 | The blesser of the world with infinite riches must nibble his crust_ au sixième._ Why, then? |
11117 | The question is no longer, How large a profit can I get? |
11117 | Then I said, I supposed he remembered how the latter lady was served by the Knave of Hearts in''Mother Goose''? |
11117 | Thus much of the painter;--now what of the artist? |
11117 | To whom shall the jobber sell his goods? |
11117 | To whom should she go in her vague misery? |
11117 | Vat make you in zat event? |
11117 | Vat zen? |
11117 | W''at ye got thet red flag out the keepin''-room winder fur? |
11117 | Whar''s the man gone th''t brought the critter?" |
11117 | What about Elsie?" |
11117 | What are the perplexities which beset the question, To whom shall the jobber sell his goods? |
11117 | What are we to make of the extraordinary confusion of ideas which such things indicate? |
11117 | What can determine this limitation of the range of the species? |
11117 | What cared I about_ causes_? |
11117 | What does he mean, quotha? |
11117 | What does he mean? |
11117 | What does this involve? |
11117 | What if you or I had inherited all the tendencies that were born with his cousin Elsie?" |
11117 | What is a dry- goods jobber? |
11117 | What is possible? |
11117 | What is speculation? |
11117 | What is the reason that these questions will keep coming up? |
11117 | What is the use of it all? |
11117 | What is''t the chap''s been a- doin''on? |
11117 | What shall I do?" |
11117 | What the deuse have we to do with Brahma? |
11117 | What yer doin''of? |
11117 | What''s in the wind? |
11117 | What, then, becomes of the surplus water? |
11117 | What, then, is his secret? |
11117 | What? |
11117 | When his breath ceased and his heart stopped beating? |
11117 | Where is his system? |
11117 | Whereat all our jolly English cousins beg to inquire,"What''s the row?" |
11117 | Why do you so shudder at sight of this or that innocent object? |
11117 | Why, Stephen,''s this you? |
11117 | Will you be my partner?'' |
11117 | Would the war come off? |
11117 | Would they own the graceless town, With never a ranter to worry And never a witch to drown?" |
11117 | Y''ha''n''t heerd noth''n''abaout it?" |
11117 | Yesterday was it, or a few weeks ago, that this"excellent canopy,"our modest roof, dwelt three thousand miles away to the westward of us? |
11117 | Yet, in imitation, where is the limit? |
11117 | You guess it''s neuralogy, Lurindy? |
11117 | You wo n''t? |
11117 | You_ a''n''t_ gwine now, be ye?" |
11117 | _ Eh, bien!_ What say you? |
11117 | _ Eh, bien, Monsieur!_ what is Instinct, but Sympathy? |
11117 | and above all, that his mysticism gives us a counterpoise to our super- practicality? |
11117 | and how came it that they were so quiet? |
11117 | and who gave them any choice in the matter? |
11117 | bound East? |
11117 | but, How small a profit shall I accept? |
11117 | do you say? |
11117 | must the world wait so long?'' |
11117 | profit? |
11117 | said I,--"with my face like a speckled sparrow''s egg?" |
11117 | said Keezar:"Am I here, or am I there? |
11117 | said the Doctor, with a pleasant, friendly look,--"have you stay? |
11117 | says the Doctor;"your name is n''t Lurindy, is it?" |
11117 | that he is equally at home with the potato- disease and original sin, with pegging shoes and the Over- soul? |
11117 | that his range includes us all? |
11117 | that, as we try all trades, so has he tried all cultures? |
11117 | was the dubious answer;"what can I learn there?" |
11117 | what bread would Fame butter? |
11117 | you''re sorry to leave Stephen?" |
39049 | Oh, far away in some serener air, The eyes that loved them see a heavenly dawn: How can they bloom without her tender care? 39049 What is this jolly smell all around here? |
39049 | Who is he? |
39049 | A friend says:"Do you think they will speak to you?" |
39049 | An old Narragansett coach driver called out to me,"Ye set such store on flowers, do n''t ye want to pick that Blue- pipe in Pender Zeke''s garden?" |
39049 | CHAPTER XXII ROSES OF YESTERDAY"Each morn a thousand Roses brings, you say; Yes, but where leaves the Rose of Yesterday?" |
39049 | Can you not believe that we love them still? |
39049 | Did you ever see a ghost in a garden? |
39049 | Do they not"smell sweet to the ear"? |
39049 | Do you care for color when you have such beauty of outline? |
39049 | Do you like its touch as well as its perfume? |
39049 | Do you like to bury your face in a bunch of Roses? |
39049 | Do you love to feel a Lilac spray brush your cheek in the cool of the evening? |
39049 | Do you suppose it can be natural? |
39049 | Edward Fitzgerald writes to Fanny Kemble:"Do n''t you love the Oleander? |
39049 | Have you ever smelt civet? |
39049 | Have you pleasure in the contact of a flower? |
39049 | Having this list of the names of these sturdy old annuals and perennials, what do you perceive besides the printed words? |
39049 | How many garden pictures have Hollyhocks? |
39049 | In answer to the question, What is the bluest flower in the garden or field? |
39049 | Is heliotrope a pale bluish purple? |
39049 | Is this because it is an herb instead of a purely decorative flower? |
39049 | Its readoption is advised with handsome dwellings in England, where ground- space is limited,--and why not in America, too? |
39049 | My contemplative girl lives in the city, how can she know that spring is here? |
39049 | No? |
39049 | S. was to indicate Black or Sable, and what letter was Scarlet to have? |
39049 | See the white Peony on page 44; is it not a seemly, comely thing, as well as a beautiful one? |
39049 | Some kind of a flower?" |
39049 | Sow Thistle| 5 A.M.| 11- 12 P.M. Yellow Goat- beard| 3- 5 A.M.| 9- 10(?) |
39049 | Still, who could write of sun- dials without choosing to transcribe these words of Lamb''s? |
39049 | The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table says:"Did you ever hear a poet who did not talk flowers? |
39049 | Then he said to his Mother,_ What Diet has Matthew of late fed upon_? |
39049 | Thus in the leaves of plants every shade of green is pleasing; then why is there no charm in a green flower? |
39049 | Was she of real life, or fiction? |
39049 | What could we send to the blind? |
39049 | What shall I say? |
39049 | When I visit the garden I always ask"Where is Job?" |
39049 | Where in all English verse are fairer flower hues? |
39049 | Who plants the seeds of Lupines in the barren soil? |
39049 | Who watereth the Lupines in the field?" |
39049 | Why are all the old appliances for raising water so pleasing? |
39049 | Why is it almost everywhere banished? |
39049 | Why should they live when her sweet life is gone?" |
39049 | You remember how commonplace their clothes were? |
39049 | You''ve read_ Lavengro_? |
39049 | all pink flowers near each other? |
39049 | all red flowers side by side? |
39049 | and what place has the Violet? |
39049 | is n''t this Crown- imperial a glorious plant? |
39049 | or shall we plant severely by colors-- all yellow flowers in a border together? |
39049 | the Flower de Luce? |
39049 | whence came thy dazzling hue? |
39049 | with Abundance and Variety? |
41365 | 4. Who may be liberal? 41365 And was it done like a gentleman,"fumed the fiery colonel,"to send that letter by the hand of a common post, to be read by everybody in Virginia? |
41365 | Did you save any of my books? |
41365 | Addressing himself to the Governor of Maryland, he burst out:"Captain Nicholson, did you receive a letter that I sent you from New York?" |
41365 | Berkeley''s taunting question to Bacon,"Have you forgot to be_ a gentleman_?" |
41365 | Did not Gay propose taking orders for a living, and did not Swift write from a deanery stuff too vile for print? |
41365 | Did not Sterne grace the cassock? |
41365 | Do you think the cursed rats( at his instigation, I suppose) did not eat up my pocket- book, which was in my pocket, within a foot of my head? |
41365 | Does it follow, then, that the lives of these men are not worth serious study? |
41365 | Edmund Cheesman, a follower of Bacon''s, being brought up for trial, Berkeley asked him:"Why did you engage in Bacon''s designs?" |
41365 | If we wonder that our ancestors could listen and look, will not our descendants wonder equally at us? |
41365 | Now what can you give me for dinner?''" |
41365 | Now, where does the Indian''s land lie?" |
41365 | Should we have read in these youthful faces a promise of the parts they were destined to play on the world''s stage? |
41365 | The Indian, turning to the circle around, remarked:"What sort of man is this? |
41365 | They call to you from one end of the table to the other:''Sir, will you permit me to drink a glass of wine with you?''" |
41365 | To the question,"Are there any schools in your parish?" |
41365 | To the question,"Is there any parish library?" |
41365 | What is to be given? |
41365 | What more could the most exacting subscriber demand? |
41365 | Where was the chivalry of that Cavalier blood on which Berkeley prided himself? |
41365 | With so much hostile feeling toward their clergy, how shall we account for the strong affection felt by the Virginians for their church? |
41365 | Would any one believe that I am master of slaves of my own purchase? |
41365 | Yet, do we not do the same thing every day? |
43810 | But who can measure the good done by Woodstock Academy, or by the different churches and other organizations of the town? |
43810 | What has the town done to make us proud of it? |
28012 | ''And the protagonist, Monsieur? 28012 At this period, it seemed as if the whole world was leagued against me; I was compelled to draw my purse- strings at every moment, and for whom? |
28012 | May not the inclined deposits that we see upon the slopes of mountains, have been deposited in inclined or vertical positions? 28012 ''But can you, in the mean time, point out to us any apartment that we can ransack? 28012 ''We are alone?'' 28012 ( Who could bear it? 28012 After such an address what could I say? 28012 And I turned myself to behold wisdom, and madness, and folly; for what can the man do that cometh after the king? 28012 And as to the numbers who appeared on these occasions, do we suppose it was a pair? 28012 And how dieth the wise man? 28012 And is this current so strong, that it can not be resisted? 28012 And what is it which the people of the United States are thus asked to surrender? 28012 And why should the Amazon who wields the pen, be more gently dealt with than she who meddles with cold iron? 28012 And why should there be a difference? 28012 Are doubtful notes so uncommon, that there is no latitude for shaving? 28012 Are our definitions indistinct? 28012 Are we borne without hope of rest upon the ebbing tide? 28012 Before the Spaniards could recover from their astonishment at this sudden act, he thus addressed them:''Why should you quarrel for such a trifle? 28012 But does any one believe that this delicate and important trust would always be exercised with impartiality and firmness? 28012 But if the number is already so great, what will it be a century or two hence? 28012 But if the remedy were effectual when attained, is it attainable? 28012 But if the stockholders were disposed to spend their money in electioneering, can they be prevented from acting so foolishly by putting down the bank? 28012 But is this a true understanding of the character of a written constitution, and of the oath which it enjoins? 28012 But what assurance have we, it may be inquired, that they speak the truth? 28012 But what said his royal master, the King of Spain, for such outrages upon the lives and liberty of his newly acquired subjects? 28012 But where did we leave our Ladyship? 28012 But would this measure have been effectual without a national bank? 28012 But, what has not been said of this extraordinary plant? 28012 Can any just and candid man doubt it after a sober perusal of his details, having a particular relation to this question? 28012 Can such a method be consistent with civilization? 28012 Can we avoid to ask what has all this to do with Louisiana? 28012 Can we not trace the influence of the changes and chances of this mortal state on the character and minds of mortal men? 28012 Did I not set meat and drink before thee, and welcome thee as a brother? 28012 Did not Clorinda receive her death wound from the hand of Tancred? 28012 Diogenes in his tub, and Alexander at the head of an army, was each pursuing his gratification; and who shall decide which was the more successful? 28012 Do the insurers on life omit to look after those who have taken out policies, and exhort them to temperance and exercise? 28012 Do the money changers grow weary of profits? 28012 Do we not call Titus the delight of the human race? 28012 Do we not praise his commonplace puerility,_ perdidi diem_, the exclamation of conceit, rather than of manliness? 28012 Does nature unfold her plots in five acts? 28012 Does the bank use its money in the elections? 28012 Does the interior still remain liquid, or has the induration proceeded until the whole internal mass has become solid? 28012 Dost thou doubt my faith? 28012 From affectation? 28012 From cool philosophy? 28012 Had it not better remain here? 28012 Have the underwriters nothing at sea to be anxious about? 28012 He had employed a porter to carry his goods, and might not that porter be found? 28012 How can the evidence of such characters be received? 28012 How shall we describe her? 28012 I immediately asked him, whether he had seen a fellow running that way from the constables who were taking him to jail? 28012 If there be such a one, it must be seen and felt; and we would ask in what way does it exert itself? 28012 If time did not hang heavy, what would become of scandal? 28012 In what way would it make amends for the immense amount of currency withdrawn from circulation? 28012 Is business so dull that bankers have nothing to do? 28012 Is it not clear, that all the expense, trouble, and loss of time attendant on the prosecution, are almost fruitlessly bestowed? 28012 Is it probable that these capitalists will be as ready to venture their money in the state banks, as in one chartered by the general government? 28012 Is there ennui there? 28012 Its matter is nothing more nor less than Miladi herself; and is she a novelty? 28012 Nay, may not the interior be hollow, as we have recently seen gravely maintained, and heard sage legislatures recommend to the public attention? 28012 On his return to the city, he was greeted withtears of gratitude"--why were they not perpetual? |
28012 | She asked me how I was, and where I was going? |
28012 | Should it be asked, what interest have the other states of the Union in this concern? |
28012 | Should the fact come to the knowledge of posterity, what will be thought of the literary taste of this generation? |
28012 | So we should imagine: if such a mode of riding, with one''s bowels in another man''s hands, will not produce perspiration, what will? |
28012 | Supposing it to take place, may we not, like bad tinkers, in stopping one hole, make two? |
28012 | Surely you do n''t mean to revive the allegorical personages in the mysteries of the middle ages?'' |
28012 | Then I said in my heart, As it happeneth to the fool, so it happeneth even to me; and why was I then more wise? |
28012 | Was he not disposed to introduce habits of a reasonable industry? |
28012 | Was it then expected, that the house of representatives, which had disregarded his recommendation, would now approve his project? |
28012 | Was not Trajan a moderate prince? |
28012 | We believe him most sincerely; and who does not? |
28012 | What Gnome would not take a fiendish delight in hovering over a pipe- loving beauty? |
28012 | What bursts of passionate violence did he exhibit? |
28012 | What can be more natural? |
28012 | What could be more trying than to lie at the mercy of rascals? |
28012 | What is more overpowering than the stale smell remaining in a room where several persons have been smoking? |
28012 | What is the consequence? |
28012 | What noise is that? |
28012 | What sylph would superintend the conveyance of this dust to the nostrils of a belle? |
28012 | What terrible explosion followed the sentence of the court? |
28012 | What was the evidence at this period, that is, on the 21st of January? |
28012 | What was to be done? |
28012 | What would have been the natural consequence? |
28012 | What, in such a case, does society gain by the severity of the law? |
28012 | When thou camest to my dwelling, did I meet thee with a javelin in my hand? |
28012 | Who can fail to perceive, in the above narrative, the satisfaction of the author in displaying his adroitness? |
28012 | Who is this lady? |
28012 | Who, then, could believe a practised villain, if he professed himself untainted by mendacity? |
28012 | Why were they alone up and stirring? |
28012 | Why were they debarred from taking their needful repose, and obliged to employ the time which should have been devoted to it, in active occupation? |
28012 | Why? |
28012 | Will you know the whole truth about him? |
28012 | Would it not be preferable, at the hazard of some injustice, to revert to the summary process of barbarism? |
28012 | Would they even venture it again in a national bank, after we had shown so vacillating a policy? |
28012 | Yet it was evident that a robbery had taken place, and to whom was it to be attributed? |
28012 | and what right have they to that name? |
28012 | are the bed of the ocean and the continents merely crusts formed upon the surface of a liquid globe? |
28012 | madame, mille pardons, qu''est ce que c''est?_"simultaneously issue from the mouths of the three worthies. |
28012 | or a score? |
28012 | or confine her operations to three hours by the parish clock?'' |
28012 | were potatoes not, Could grateful Ireland e''er forget thy claim? |
36897 | ,whence comes the dew, that stands on the outside of a tankard that has cold water in it in the summer time? |
36897 | Bless us,says he,"what an unaccountable thing is this? |
36897 | But, Mr. Faulkener,said my Lord,"do n''t you think it might be still farther improved by using Paper and Ink not quite so near of a Colour"? |
36897 | Friend Joseph,one Quaker is said to have asked of an acquaintance,"didst thee ever know Dr. Franklin to be in a minority?" |
36897 | Has not,he said,"the famous political Fable of the Snake, with two Heads and one Body, some useful Instruction contained in it? |
36897 | How so? |
36897 | I wonder,says she,"how you can propose such a thing to me; did not you always tell me you would maintain me like a Gentlewoman? |
36897 | Is it possible, when he is so great a writer? 36897 Its no matter,"he said,"its the Country''s Money, and if the Publick can not afford to pay well, who can? |
36897 | O Lord,she exclaims in despair,"where are my friends?" |
36897 | Of what use is a balloon? |
36897 | Of what use,he answered,"is a new- born baby?" |
36897 | Prithee,says he,( a little nettled,)"what do you tell me of your Captains? |
36897 | Sir,said Franklin,"_ is_ Philadelphia taken?" |
36897 | What new story have you lately heard agreeable for telling in conversation? |
36897 | What,says he,"is the Meaning of this[= O]IA? |
36897 | Why does the flame of a candle tend upward in a spire? 36897 Why so?" |
36897 | A little more interchange of conversation and poor Franklin in despair asks,"What then would you have me do with my carriage?" |
36897 | Am not I your Mother Country? |
36897 | And Judah said,"Let us also love our other brethren: behold, are we not all of one blood?" |
36897 | And after all, of what Use is this_ Pride of Appearance_, for which so much is risked so much is suffered? |
36897 | And what signifies Dearness of Labour, when an English shilling passes for five and Twenty? |
36897 | And when will that be? |
36897 | And who will deliver them? |
36897 | And will not one''s vanity be more gratified in seeing one''s adversary confuted by a disciple, than even by one''s self?" |
36897 | And would it seem less right if the charge and labor of gaining the additional territory to Great Britain had been borne by the settlers themselves? |
36897 | But since they agree in all particulars wherein we can already compare them, is it not probable they agree likewise in this? |
36897 | But what will fame be to an ephemera who no longer exists? |
36897 | Can I be assured that I shall be allowed to come back again to make the report?'' |
36897 | Did ever any Tradesmen succeed, who attempted to drub Customers into his Shop? |
36897 | Did he think the whole World were so stupid as not to take Notice of this? |
36897 | Did you embrace it, and how often? |
36897 | Did you never hear this old Catch? |
36897 | Do you imagine that Sloth will afford you more Comfort than Labour? |
36897 | Do you remember that of the 300 Lacedaemonians who defended the defile of Thermopylae, not one returned? |
36897 | Does it in the least savour of the pure Language of Friends? |
36897 | Had you not better sell them? |
36897 | How long, d''ye think, I can maintain you at your present Rate of Living?" |
36897 | How shall we be ever able to pay them? |
36897 | If these are deemed affronts, and the messengers punished as offenders, who will henceforth send petitions? |
36897 | If you were a Servant, would you not be ashamed that a good Master should catch you idle? |
36897 | Into what companies will he hereafter go with an unembarrassed face, or the honest intrepidity of virtue? |
36897 | Is not all Punishment inflicted beyond the Merit of the Offence, so much Punishment of Innocence? |
36897 | Is that not a sufficient Title to your Respect and Obedience?" |
36897 | Is''t not ridiculous and nonsense, A saint should be a slave to conscience? |
36897 | It is true that God has also taught men how to reduce wine to water; but what kind of water? |
36897 | Let''s bear with her humors as well as we can; But why should we bear the abuse of her man? |
36897 | May not different Degrees of Vibration of the above- mentioned Universal Medium occasion the Appearances of different Colours? |
36897 | Might not that Woman, by her Labour, have made the Reparation ordain''d by God, in paying fourfold? |
36897 | Mrs. Careless was just then at the Glass, dressing her Head, and turning about with the Pins in her Mouth,"Lord, Child,"says she,"are you crazy? |
36897 | Must a Tradesman''s Daughter, and the Wife of a Tradesman, necessarily and instantly be a Gentlewoman? |
36897 | Must not the regret of our parents be excessive, at having placed so great a difference between sisters who are so perfectly equal? |
36897 | One of his friends, who sat next to me, says,"Franklin, why do you continue to side with these damn''d Quakers? |
36897 | One present at this tale, being surprised, said,"But did the Queen and the Archbishop swear so at one another?" |
36897 | Or are these merely_ English_ ideas? |
36897 | Pray does that gentleman imagine_ there is any member of this House that does not_ KNOW what corruption is?" |
36897 | Qui dà © sarme les dieux peut- il craindre les rois?" |
36897 | Reader; does not this smell of Popery? |
36897 | So ignorant as not to know, that all Catholicks pay the highest Regard to the_ Virgin Mary_? |
36897 | This might be pardoned out of regard, as Franklin said, for his sedentary condition, but what is his practice after dinner? |
36897 | What Respect have_ you_ the front to claim as a Mother Country? |
36897 | What Time has Mary to knit? |
36897 | What of Franklin during the malignant assault? |
36897 | What of its climate, its trade, its people, its laws? |
36897 | What would you advise us to?" |
36897 | When will government be able to pay the principal? |
36897 | Who is the gainer by all these prohibitions? |
36897 | Who must do the Work, I wonder, if you set her to Knitting?" |
36897 | Why should he desire to drown the truth? |
36897 | Wo n''t these heavy Taxes quite ruin the Country? |
36897 | Would they caulk their Ships, would they fill their Beds, would they even litter their Horses with Wooll, if it were not both plenty and cheap? |
36897 | Would this be right even if the land was gained at the expense of the State? |
36897 | You saw that we, who understand and practise those Rules, believ''d all your stories; why do you refuse to believe ours?''" |
36897 | _ What is a Butterfly? |
36897 | for, in politics, what can laws do without morals? |
13631 | ''Are you T. Markham Worthington?'' 13631 ''Authorized to sell his picture in the Academy, Number----?'' |
13631 | ''But you do n''t mean to say,''I exclaimed,''that your contributors are expected to work from charity?'' 13631 ''Does it hang next to a lady in a purple shawl, by Huntington?'' |
13631 | ''Glad to see you, Sir,--hope you''ll continue your contributions,--Uncle Job,--good idea, Sir,--love the little ones? 13631 ''How much are you willing to give?'' |
13631 | ''How much does he ask for it?'' 13631 ''Will you give me my manuscripts?'' |
13631 | ''Will you give me my manuscripts?'' 13631 A bad match for her?" |
13631 | A friend of yours? |
13631 | And what of the last, or of both? |
13631 | And you intend to leave this wholesome world,--you, whose career might be such as few have it in their power to choose? 13631 Art beguiled you then, perhaps?" |
13631 | Can you imagine my feelings? |
13631 | Did they bring slaves? |
13631 | Did you ever hear of Herbert Vannelle? |
13631 | Did you ever paint again? |
13631 | Did you ever write poetry? |
13631 | Do you mean that pleasure must be an outgrowth of pain to be properly appreciated? |
13631 | Doctor,said King James to a Puritan divine,"do you go barefoot because the Papists wear shoes and stockings?" |
13631 | For who,as it was sometimes pertinently asked,"would charge anything for a poor little innocent child?" |
13631 | Give up? 13631 Has any one described to you this house or its contents?" |
13631 | Have you ever tried it? |
13631 | He has n''t a married look, has he? |
13631 | How do my good friends in Foxden? |
13631 | I wash my hands in de mornin''glory, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh? 13631 Is Mr. Clifton of Foxden in the library?" |
13631 | Is he married? |
13631 | Is it possible? |
13631 | Is it too late? |
13631 | Is it true that Dr. Dastick has presented his cabinet of curiosities to the town? |
13631 | Now what will you do, driver? |
13631 | On what? |
13631 | Pray, Tony, pray, boy, you got de order, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh? 13631 Tried it?" |
13631 | Wal, what''s the good on''t? 13631 Was it a man? |
13631 | Well, he don''t.--What do you say to these trunks? 13631 Well, when you grow up, you''ll probably get married, as other people do, and you''ll have your little children; now, what will you do with them?" |
13631 | Well, who''ll pay the teacher? |
13631 | What State? |
13631 | What are you going to do there? |
13631 | What are you going to do with the corn? |
13631 | What are you going to do with the cotton? |
13631 | What are you going to do with the money you get for it? |
13631 | What are you reading? |
13631 | What else are you going to do with your money? |
13631 | What else will you buy? |
13631 | What else? |
13631 | What has he done for you? |
13631 | What island? |
13631 | What town? |
13631 | What was this man? |
13631 | What''s this? 13631 When?" |
13631 | Where from now? |
13631 | Who brought them? |
13631 | Who came the same year to Plymouth, Massachusetts? |
13631 | Who is your Governor? |
13631 | Who is your President? |
13631 | Who''s going to pay him? |
13631 | A devil infernal? |
13631 | A street- boy of some sort? |
13631 | A teacher in Beaufort put these questions, to which answers were given in a loud tone by the whole school:--"What country do you live in?" |
13631 | After greeting his child, he said,"And how does mamma''s little girl like her leaving her?" |
13631 | An angel supernal?" |
13631 | And did I not vindicate triumphantly Miss Patty''s confidence? |
13631 | And how shall this be done? |
13631 | And now, Lewis, whence come you, and whither go?" |
13631 | And the blood in our veins, it is an infinite force: but of what temper? |
13631 | And what''s to be done with these three packages?" |
13631 | And where is that model race which shall sway them all? |
13631 | And, will the reader believe it? |
13631 | And_ how_? |
13631 | As Clifton emerged from the magical influence of Vannelle, was it not concentrated upon me? |
13631 | Babe in silken cradle lying, To low music tossed, Will they wake thee for my dying? |
13631 | But I must have dreamed it, or how should I have thought it the last trumpet, when it was only the stage- driver''s warning knock? |
13631 | But as they approached nearer,"What have they got with''em?" |
13631 | But how deal with what came to me from that wondrous writing in the ambiguities of common language? |
13631 | But how shall he do any good who bears about him a quick conscience, a skeptical understanding, sensitive religious affections, and a feeble will? |
13631 | But what is it in the sea which affects Lord Byron''s susceptibilities to grandeur? |
13631 | But what use to go on without the driver? |
13631 | But what were the authorities to do, when, in addition to all legal and Scriptural precedents, the prisoners insisted on entering a plea of guilty? |
13631 | But what, then, have you in there,--I mean, besides your shirts, etc.?" |
13631 | Did the famous Cambridge Platform rest, like the earth in the Hebrew cosmology, upon the waters,--strong waters? |
13631 | Did you ever go fishing in a dory when the wind was off shore?" |
13631 | Do you go to the Deacon''s?" |
13631 | Do you walk? |
13631 | Does it minister to Moloch, or to Apollo? |
13631 | Does the best stage- trick of your liberal clergy help them to anything but a plasticity of mind to be moulded into artistic forms of skepticism? |
13631 | For of what sort is this unusual activity? |
13631 | Had I a doubt? |
13631 | Had this refined probing and questioning deadened all sense of duty? |
13631 | Hence it happens that so many of our fellow- countrymen are at this moment asking the question with which we head these pages,--"Who is Roebuck?" |
13631 | His daughter arranged the blankets around them, saying,"Is that better, papa?" |
13631 | How can I describe the events and vicissitudes that befell us during this journey of three days and a half to New York? |
13631 | How can we love with our whole heart what we do not know with our whole mind? |
13631 | How can you come out from your partial dogmas to enter Truth and find it alone dogmatic and compulsive? |
13631 | How can you feel the delight of a definite, positive affirmation which accounts for and includes all creeds and lives of men? |
13631 | How give words to the singular emotions which soon possessed me? |
13631 | How is it that the time not thus occupied is spent?--in what remembrances, in what hidden thoughts, what passing dreams? |
13631 | How many drops? |
13631 | How many hours will it be before she can be here? |
13631 | How much of that which glorified De Quincey was due to opium? |
13631 | How would it seem among so many others? |
13631 | How, then, resist the inclination to see out the adventure upon which I had stumbled? |
13631 | Huddy oh? |
13631 | I wash my hands in de mornin''glory, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh? |
13631 | I would only faintly express how terribly real was the delusion( the world would so call it, and who am I to gainsay it?) |
13631 | If it is unusual or improper, why does he not deny the soft impeachment so much credited both in this country and in his own? |
13631 | If the proceeding in question is a usual one, why does he not openly avow it? |
13631 | In such pleasant chat( and why not? |
13631 | In which settlement of the Massachusetts Colony is the great observance to pass before our eyes? |
13631 | Is it certain that the same evidence which sufficed for the foundation of religious faith five hundred years ago will suffice equally well to- day? |
13631 | Is it through any high moral purpose or meaning that seems to sway the movements of destruction? |
13631 | Is it warm, or is it cold? |
13631 | Is n''t it the very worst specimen of art you ever saw?'' |
13631 | Is there not here some solution of the question of prejudice or caste which has troubled so many good minds? |
13631 | It is the old distinction; but for which is the ship built, to be afloat or to be at anchor? |
13631 | Like one caught in the whorls of some happy dream, who will not pause to ask,"Whither?" |
13631 | May it not be that God adapts the proofs of that which it is important that man should know to the intellectual progress of mankind? |
13631 | May it not be that the links connecting the two phases of existence are gradually to become more numerous and apparent? |
13631 | Mortimer, do you know where them are?'' |
13631 | Moving in another direction, I said to a soldier,--"What do you think of that regiment?" |
13631 | One is, Will the people of African descent work for a living? |
13631 | One night he said, when I entered the room,--"''Is that you, Horace?'' |
13631 | Pray, Tony, pray, boy, you got de order, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh? |
13631 | Shall we ever finish packing?" |
13631 | Shall we try again to compress the gigantic genie into the copper vessel? |
13631 | Should I take her to look at it? |
13631 | Should I tell her it was mine? |
13631 | So deep is the sky: but of what_ hue_, of what aspect? |
13631 | Some white soldiers seeing them approach from the wharf, one said,--"What are those coming?" |
13631 | Springing down, he went on, laughing, before us, now and then calling back to ask if we were nearly through? |
13631 | That is, do you like walking for four hours''_ on end_''--(which is our archaic expression for_ continuously_)? |
13631 | The questions and answers, in which all the pupils joined, were these:--"Where were slaves first brought to this country?" |
13631 | Then the question was put,--"What are you going to do Sundays?" |
13631 | Vannelle turned to me and said, slowly,--"Have you been here before?" |
13631 | WHO IS ROEBUCK? |
13631 | Was I bound to jeopard all the common good of life for the chance of-- just failing to know existence from a higher plane? |
13631 | Was any agency then expected which has not been forthcoming? |
13631 | Was he ever known to make his appearance at any dinner in season, or indeed at any entertainment? |
13631 | Was it good, after all? |
13631 | Was it his style? |
13631 | Was it learning? |
13631 | Was it only the Derry Presbyterians who would never give up a p''int of doctrine, nor a pint of rum? |
13631 | Was it were- wolf spectral, or bear aboriginal? |
13631 | Was this the end of my Absolute Philosophy, that the intellect should usurp the place of the conscience and the moral law? |
13631 | We had a dialogue substantially as follows:--"Children, what are you going to do when you grow up?" |
13631 | What blame to me, if I am here to do this? |
13631 | What can it be? |
13631 | What else is there?" |
13631 | What need to tell how I was fascinated, mesmerized, into a humble companionship? |
13631 | What sycophant could fawn and smirk in that chilly presence? |
13631 | What was De Quincey_ without_ opium? |
13631 | What was it, again, that entitled Johnson to kingly honors? |
13631 | What woman would kiss that ghastly cheek? |
13631 | What''s better than that?" |
13631 | What, then, was to be done? |
13631 | When they asked Mary Dyer,"Are you not ashamed to walk thus hand in hand between two young men?" |
13631 | Whence this marked difference? |
13631 | Where shall it be sent?'' |
13631 | Who had bought my picture? |
13631 | Who has ever scaled the rapture of the former, or fathomed the pathos of the latter? |
13631 | Who now remembers that our progenitors for more than a century disused religious services on both these solemn occasions? |
13631 | Who would buy it? |
13631 | Why art thou not with us? |
13631 | Why has not some poet celebrated the experience of thawing? |
13631 | Why not you?" |
13631 | Wifely love, the closer clinging When men need thee most, Shall I come, dishonor bringing? |
13631 | Will it shape the Madonna face, or the Medusa? |
13631 | Wine is strong, and so is the crude alcohol but what the_ mellowness_? |
13631 | Would Ellen like it? |
13631 | Would it be accepted? |
13631 | Yet who can say that this habit of agonizing introspection wholly shut out the trivial enjoyments of daily life? |
13631 | You are sure our names are down at the stage- office?" |
13631 | You take tea, I suppose? |
13631 | [ A] In de mornin''when I rise, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh? |
13631 | [ Footnote A: How d''y''do?] |
13631 | and the other is, Will they fight for their freedom? |
13631 | how I became inspired with his own mighty belief in the feasibility of the object he strove to attain? |
13631 | no habitant of earth thou art,-- An_ unseen_ seraph we believe in thee"? |
13631 | or the following:--"Who loves, raves,--''tis youth''s frenzy,"etc.? |
13631 | what avails it, if the spring be bright?'' |
13631 | what is that? |
42999 | Shall we say two hundred sterling a year? |
42999 | Well, then, in the first place, I resigned the office of advocate- general, which I held from the crown, which produced me-- how much do you think? |
42999 | At what price will you estimate them?" |
42999 | Does not this very want of permanence suggest, with much force, the need of perpetuating a noted house or site by some appropriate memorial? |
42999 | I also have a list of grievances; will you hear it?" |
42999 | In_ Measure for Measure_ the clown says,"''Twas in the Bunch of Grapes, where indeed you have a delight to sit, have you not?" |
42999 | What do you think of this item?" |
42999 | What is that worth?" |
42999 | Will you set that at two hundred pounds more?" |
42999 | You allow, then, I have lost four thousand pounds sterling?" |
42999 | [ Illustration:"HOW SHALL I GET THROUGH THIS WORLD?"] |
42552 | Also in geometry, what is a point? |
42552 | But how do we know that there is anything to reach? |
42552 | But in what sense is there"a half,"which is the same for"half a foot"as"half a pound"? |
42552 | But what are"five"and"ten"apart from the apples and pears? |
42552 | Furthermore, can we not complete the circle of the mathematical sciences by adding geometry? |
42552 | His books on_ Aids to the Study of German Theology, Can the Old Faith live with the New? |
42552 | In what sense then can it be one? |
42552 | Lastly, what are"dimensions"? |
42552 | So what is it that keeps unaltered in the moving triangle? |
42552 | The proprietors of Maryland were: Cecilius Calvert, second Lord Baltimore( 1605[? |
42552 | Virg._,"quæ est hæc porta nisi Maria? |
42552 | What authority belonged to Him and to the books that contain His history and interpret His person? |
42552 | What did Jesus signify? |
42552 | What is the relation of"the fifth"and"the tenth"to"five"and"ten"? |
42552 | [ 8]"Numquid quia ita deificata, ideo nostrae humanitatis oblita es? |
42552 | _ Phazemon?_), a town in the Amasia sanjak of the Sivas vilayet of Asia Minor, situated at the foot of the Tavshan Dagh. |
42552 | _ Types of Critical Questions._--What are numbers? |
39012 | ''Is your father here?'' 39012 ''So you have come up to take Henry home with you, have you?'' |
39012 | And why? |
39012 | But do you think it fair to repeat such stories about a man, and condemn one whom you do not dare to face? |
39012 | But when? |
39012 | Daniel, Daniel,said he, at last, with a searching look,"do n''t you mean to take that office?" |
39012 | Did it ever flash? |
39012 | Do you understand me? |
39012 | Have I ever flashed, except upon the compensation bill? |
39012 | How dare you,said Jackson,"ride up to my tent, after having murdered the women and children at Fort Mims?" |
39012 | My friend,said Clay,"have you a good rifle?" |
39012 | Well, Yank, when are you coming into town? |
39012 | Well, will you throw me away? |
39012 | What did you do with the rifle when it flashed?--throw it away? |
39012 | What is now their pride? |
39012 | What is to be done? |
39012 | What used to be the pride of the Americans? |
39012 | Why,thought he,"can I not write something for the new sheet?" |
39012 | Will you, then, go to his house to- morrow, and be introduced to him, if I promise to meet you there? |
39012 | ''So,''said he,''your farming is over, is it?''" |
39012 | Am I not right, then, in calling this bill the best on which Congress ever acted? |
39012 | Are they not strewn over a thousand battle- fields? |
39012 | As he walked up to the Capitol to make his last great speech upon the measure, he said to a friend accompanying him,"Will you lend me your arm? |
39012 | But how could a boy win his way without money? |
39012 | But what are all these evils when compared with the fate of which the Port Bill may be only a threat? |
39012 | Could he not go to school again? |
39012 | Could you get his endorsement?" |
39012 | Did the martyrs fail when with their precious blood they sowed the seed of the Church?... |
39012 | He is coming back again in the fall, I hope?'' |
39012 | He simply remarked,''Do you really think he can teach next winter?'' |
39012 | His first efforts in finding an office in which to study were unsuccessful, for who cares about a young stranger in a great city? |
39012 | How can you sleep on your pillow? |
39012 | How could he, I thought, with so large a family, and in such narrow circumstances, think of incurring so great an expense for me? |
39012 | How does that strike you?'' |
39012 | I can only account for it on the ground of long continued familiarity and friendship.... Has she not betrayed and slain men enough? |
39012 | Is not this Moloch already gorged with the bloody feast? |
39012 | Jurisprudence has many arrows in her quiver, but where is one to compare with that which is now spent in the earth?" |
39012 | Once, at a dinner party of gentlemen, he was asked by one present,"What is the most important thought that ever occupied your mind?" |
39012 | Perhaps the busy public life was over-- who could tell? |
39012 | The best they can do is to leave things to their ministers; and what are their ministers but a committee badly chosen?" |
39012 | The influence of such a lovable and strong nature over an ambitious youth, who can estimate? |
39012 | There was reputation to be made, and perhaps a fortune, but where and how? |
39012 | They must be educated; but how? |
39012 | Under temptations and difficulties, I would ask myself, what would Dr. Small, Mr. Wythe, Peyton Randolph do in this situation? |
39012 | Was Franklin discouraged? |
39012 | Was it a failure now? |
39012 | What course in it will insure me their approbation? |
39012 | What is that point of stable equilibrium? |
39012 | What nation, what individual was ever taught in the schools of ignominious submission these patriotic lessons of freedom and independence?... |
39012 | What should the mother do with her helpless flock? |
39012 | What would the condition of any of us be if we had not the hope of immortality?... |
39012 | When an officer, the son of one of Jackson''s best friends, said to him,"May I go to town to- day?" |
39012 | When will mankind be convinced of this, and agree to settle their differences by arbitration? |
39012 | Who can picture that meeting? |
39012 | Who should be the commander of this growing army? |
39012 | Who supposed then that he would some day be President of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania? |
39012 | Who would have thought then that one of these saplings would grow into a mighty tree, admired by all the world? |
39012 | Would he separate from the Whigs? |
39012 | Would you break up the only support of an aged man and seven children?" |
39012 | Years afterward, an old gentleman who knew Jefferson, when asked,"What was his power in the court- room?" |
39012 | You will lose your place; or, supposing you to retain it, what are you but a clerk for life? |
39012 | if God''s good will were so; For what is in this world but grief and woe?" |
39012 | the reply was,"Of course, Captain Livingston, you_ may_ go; but_ ought_ you to go?" |
42842 | And what do you think the fisherman found? 42842 The listening guests were greatly mystified, None more so than the rector, who replied:''Marry you? |
42842 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me? |
42842 | ''But what of my lady?'' |
42842 | Can this be Martha Hilton? |
42842 | His dim vision not discerning it, he shouted,"Where away? |
42842 | Samuel Adams Drake tells of asking the momentous question of a Maine fisherman getting up his sail on the Penobscot:"Whither bound?" |
42842 | The impatient Governor cried:''This is the lady; do you hesitate? |
42842 | Yes, that were a pleasant task, Your Excellency; but to whom? |
45177 | In his gloomy views of the War of 1812 he asks what Virginia can raise, and answers his question thus:"Tobacco? |
41221 | Are you the son of Eric the Red of Brattahlid? |
41221 | How dost thou like this place? |
41221 | I am called Gudrid; and what art thou called? |
41221 | I saw him,said Biörn:"What is your opinion of him?" |
41221 | [ 118]Is that true, my foster- father?" |
41221 | And when they had come into the boat, a young Icelander, who was the companion of Biarne, said:"Now thus do you intend to leave me, Biarne?" |
41221 | And whence came the Chesterton Mill itself? |
41221 | Biarne replied:"In this thing I do not see any other way;"continuing,"What course can you suggest?" |
41221 | But is it probable that the Northmen would have erected a baptistery like this, and, at the same time, left no other monument? |
41221 | But who were the Northmen? |
41221 | Errors like this abound in all early annals, and why should the Icelandic chronicles be free from them? |
41221 | Gudleif asked,"Who shall I say was the sender of this valuable gift?" |
41221 | He said his name was Thorer, and said he was a Northman;[122]"But what is your name?" |
41221 | He said:"What wilt thou have here, Freydis?" |
41221 | Is not this a stroke of genuine nature, something that a writer, framing the account of a fictitious voyage, would not dream of? |
41221 | Leif replied:"I mind my helm and tend to other things too; do you notice anything?" |
41221 | Leif said to him,"Why art thou so late, my foster- father? |
41221 | One day, early in the morning, some men came to their tent, and the leader asked them what people were in the tent? |
41221 | Said Joseph,''What''s the matter Brother? |
41221 | She went to where Gudrid was sitting, and said:"What art thou called?" |
41221 | The king asked,''What is the matter?'' |
41221 | Then Gudleif asked,"Who shall we say, if we reach our own country again, to have given us our liberty?" |
41221 | Then Karlsefne said to Leif:"Are you sick friend Leif? |
41221 | Then Karlsefne said:"What, think you, does this mean?" |
41221 | Then said Freydis:"Why are you carrying your things in here?" |
41221 | Then said Karlsefne,"What may this mean?" |
41221 | Then she said to Thorstein the Goodman,"Shall I give answer or not?" |
41221 | Thord said:"What will Thorodd say when he hears that the boy belongs to you?" |
41221 | Thorstein Ericsson then raised himself up and said,"Where is Gudrid?" |
41221 | Thorstein replies,"Two; who is it that asks?" |
41221 | We come, therefore, to the question: Did the Northmen actually discover and explore the coast of the country now known as America? |
41221 | Whither, then, should they go? |
41221 | Yet shall we infer from this that Popham never saw New England? |
41221 | [ 121] Then a man put in a word and said to Leif,"Why do you steer so close on the wind?" |
41221 | and why didst thou leave thy comrades?" |
41221 | how came you here?'' |
43764 | Do you know the reason of the discord? 43764 Savez por qui est la descorde? |
43764 | How can the flame of ideal sympathy with the great personalities of their country''s history fail to be kindled or kept alive in such a place? |
43764 | How did the town of Cambridge itself come to be a place of any importance in the early days? |
43764 | If the vesture of Christ be exhibited, where will we not go to kiss it? |
43764 | What can be more acute, more profound, or more refined than the judgment of Linacre? |
43764 | What has nature ever fashioned gentler, sweeter, or pleasanter than the disposition of Thomas More? |
43764 | Who does not admire in Grocyn the perfection of training? |
43764 | Who was the architect of this masterpiece? |
43764 | Why do we not rather venerate the living and breathing picture of him in these books? |
43764 | Yet who shall despise the day of small things? |
43764 | Zoar, is it not a little one? |
43764 | degree in 1635? |
43764 | what is five thousand pounds to buy the site, build and endow a College therewith?... |
18554 | ''A man who owed you a grudge of this kind would just come up and stab you, I suppose, and think nothing of it?'' |
18554 | ''A written denial that I am an assassin? |
18554 | ''Ah? |
18554 | ''Ah?'' |
18554 | ''Am I not trusting you? |
18554 | ''And have I waited on you all these years for this?'' |
18554 | ''And in France?'' |
18554 | ''And why should he have done so?'' |
18554 | ''And you never had a hand in any yourself?'' |
18554 | ''And you''ll give your washing to my mother and sister,_ hein_? |
18554 | ''Are you a bold man?'' |
18554 | ''Are you bold enough to commit a crime?'' |
18554 | ''Are you married?'' |
18554 | ''Ay, but if we do n''t? |
18554 | ''But when shall I see you again, Augustus?'' |
18554 | ''But why did you use it at all?'' |
18554 | ''Can I get anything for madame?'' |
18554 | ''Can you take me to town, to Madame Bernier''s, at the end of the new quay?'' |
18554 | ''Do you know a vessel named the_ Armorique_, a steamer?'' |
18554 | ''Do you know who that is, and what he is about?'' |
18554 | ''Do you know, Frank, they tell me I may look for a similar visitation at her age?'' |
18554 | ''Do you mean that for me?'' |
18554 | ''Do you suppose,''said Madame Bernier, in a few moments--''do you remember-- that is, can you form any idea whether you ever killed a man?'' |
18554 | ''For example?'' |
18554 | ''French?'' |
18554 | ''Had n''t you better take breath a moment?'' |
18554 | ''Has M. de Meyrau been here?'' |
18554 | ''Have you formed a plan?'' |
18554 | ''How am I to be sure of my affair?'' |
18554 | ''How so?'' |
18554 | ''How, delightful?'' |
18554 | ''How? |
18554 | ''I say,''said the other, in a louder tone,''do you mean that for me? |
18554 | ''In South America and those countries, when a man makes life insupportable to you, what do you do?'' |
18554 | ''Is M. Bernier here?'' |
18554 | ''Is he an old man?'' |
18554 | ''Is it possible to be so unfortunate?'' |
18554 | ''Is n''t there a right of self- defence?'' |
18554 | ''My age?'' |
18554 | ''My good man,''she said, in a very pleasant voice,''are you the master of one of these boats?'' |
18554 | ''No?'' |
18554 | ''Of your reward? |
18554 | ''On what ship?'' |
18554 | ''Shall I tell you what I have eaten to- day?'' |
18554 | ''Shall I trust you?'' |
18554 | ''Straight across?'' |
18554 | ''Such things as that? |
18554 | ''That''s a town boat, is n''t it?'' |
18554 | ''The person who--?'' |
18554 | ''The price-- the price?'' |
18554 | ''True heart that I spurned,''I cried,''can you forgive? |
18554 | ''Valentine,''said she to the cook,''what on earth can be the matter with Madame? |
18554 | ''Very well,''said Hortense;''will you do it?'' |
18554 | ''Was M. le Vicomte alone?'' |
18554 | ''Well, Hortense,''said he, in a very pleasant tone,''what''s the matter; have you fallen asleep?'' |
18554 | ''Well, well?'' |
18554 | ''Well?'' |
18554 | ''What can it be,''said she,''but that monsieur returns?'' |
18554 | ''What if he does come? |
18554 | ''What is sufficient ground in this country for killing a man?'' |
18554 | ''What is your business?'' |
18554 | ''What of that?'' |
18554 | ''What time, think you?'' |
18554 | ''Where are you going, Augustus?'' |
18554 | ''Where''s the master?'' |
18554 | ''Who admitted you?'' |
18554 | ''Who for?'' |
18554 | ''Why did n''t you come when you were called?'' |
18554 | ''Why did n''t you come, you unmannerly little brute, eh?--eh?--eh?'' |
18554 | ''Why do n''t you get some better work?'' |
18554 | ''Why do n''t you leave the place?'' |
18554 | ''Why, then,''she asked, carelessly,''with your insufficient strength, were you tempted to woo and follow me?'' |
18554 | ''Why, what do you mean? |
18554 | ''Will madame dine?'' |
18554 | ''Will madame have nothing more?'' |
18554 | ''Will you take me to the other side?'' |
18554 | ''Work that pays better? |
18554 | ''You are the owner of the block of''model houses,''as they are called?'' |
18554 | ''You want me to finish him in the boat?'' |
18554 | ''You yourself never put a man out of the world, then?'' |
18554 | ''You''re afraid, then, to risk anything?'' |
18554 | ''You''ve been a seaman then?'' |
18554 | ''You? |
18554 | ''Young lady, what do you think of that?'' |
18554 | All that artistic grace and tenderness can win for us? |
18554 | All that human genius and erudition can offer us? |
18554 | And has Poland well deserved this heartless indifference, this pitilessness of the nations? |
18554 | And is this all that the most advanced naturalism can do? |
18554 | And now where shall we look for the origin of this treasure? |
18554 | And why should that House be made the instrument of such a detestable purpose?'' |
18554 | Are you horrified?'' |
18554 | But can these gentlemen find none outside of their own society? |
18554 | But here description clouds each shining ray-- What terms of art can Nature''s powers display?'' |
18554 | But what has all this to do with the question before us? |
18554 | But why should we not accept the proffered aid, though the offer be prompted by selfish motives? |
18554 | By whom were these excavations planned and these pits fashioned, that tell of the pursuit of wealth so many centuries ago? |
18554 | Ca n''t you talk as well as they? |
18554 | Davis''s bitter complaints against the English cabinet but a sham, covering a deep- laid conspiracy with treacherous Albion? |
18554 | Did he really rise from the dead? |
18554 | Did he render any other service to the country? |
18554 | Do you know what an advantage I have over you? |
18554 | Do you read the pantomime? |
18554 | Do you remember what mother used always to prophesy about you? |
18554 | Do you want me to tell you what is the matter with you?'' |
18554 | Does not the mere fact of such an acquiescence argue the impostor? |
18554 | From what elements is it elaborated? |
18554 | Had I forgot? |
18554 | Has it come to this? |
18554 | Has she delivered none? |
18554 | Have you not sense enough to see that I am right?'' |
18554 | Hiram made no reply to the question, except to ask,''What is your name?'' |
18554 | I--''''Belle,''interrupted her father,''you little goose, what do you think I care for the scribbling of any fool that chooses to disgrace himself? |
18554 | In what way would our destruction benefit England? |
18554 | Is Alexander''s friendship kindled by our acts of emancipation? |
18554 | Is Emperor Maximilian quietly seated on the throne of Montezuma, and already marching his armies upon the Rio Grande? |
18554 | Is Hannibal_ ante portas_? |
18554 | Is the Prince of Peace appearing of whom your prophets tell? |
18554 | Is the cause of this great republic reduced to such extremities? |
18554 | Is the peril so great? |
18554 | Looking her in the face, he said:''Answer me, Belle-- am I not right? |
18554 | Madame has a piece of work for me?'' |
18554 | Meeker?'' |
18554 | Or will the fragments of ancient art give delight for their expressive beauty, visible though in broken forms? |
18554 | People talk, do they? |
18554 | Provided we climb high and dry, what do we care for them?'' |
18554 | Say, Earth, art thou drawing nearer that age, the promised of yore, When swords shall be beaten to ploughshares, and war be learned no more? |
18554 | Shall we turn?'' |
18554 | She reads to me whenever I desire; and she is so cheerful always, that--''''Has your Uncle Frank been here to- day?'' |
18554 | She, gleaming like ice, transfixed me coldly, and, slighting with her glance my work, asked:''Can you do no more?'' |
18554 | So you do n''t think there is anything in the idea that I shall be-- be-- struck with paralysis-- at about the same age that mother was?'' |
18554 | Suppose we try''standing at ease''for a little?'' |
18554 | The man was silent a moment, perhaps with surprise, for the next thing he said was:''Madame is Spanish?'' |
18554 | Then with a mock- solemn touch of his cap,''Will Madame still visit the cemetery?'' |
18554 | They were based upon reason: how could they be wrong? |
18554 | True, he should himself fade away and perish( he looked very much like it); what of that? |
18554 | WAS HE SUCCESSFUL? |
18554 | Was it because this remark jarred upon the expression which he was able faintly to discern in her eyes? |
18554 | Was the''very valuable gentleman,''we wonder, troubled like Saul with an evil spirit, that could be exorcised by music? |
18554 | What could the jury do, after these burning words, but acquit the prisoner? |
18554 | What do the papers say? |
18554 | What do you think? |
18554 | What is the natural tendency that would lead the czar, the upholder of despotism in the East, to sympathize with the model republic of the West? |
18554 | What shall be the Traitor''s gain? |
18554 | What should you, my daughter, care? |
18554 | What suddenly starts from the very top of yon cliff, and floats in the air, high, high, above you? |
18554 | What think you of it?'' |
18554 | What was to be done? |
18554 | What were Burr''s childish schemes, which would have fallen to the ground from their own weakness, compared with that? |
18554 | What were misery and death to him, compared with her ease and peace of mind? |
18554 | What will you do?'' |
18554 | What wonders did it work? |
18554 | What would be a reason there?'' |
18554 | What would her father do to punish the miscreant who had dared take such a liberty with her name? |
18554 | What''s in that jug? |
18554 | When her husband comes up to see what the crowd means, is there any lack of kind friends to give him the good news of his wife''s death?'' |
18554 | Where is your God in heaven? |
18554 | Who ever looked and spoke and smiled as did Aspiro? |
18554 | Who has been filling your ears with such stuff?'' |
18554 | Who has never heard of Russian batteries assaulted and carried by Polish scythes? |
18554 | Will an innocent man, attacked by assassins, repulse the aid of one hastening to save him, on the ground that he, too, is a murderer? |
18554 | Will it be able to cross the bar?'' |
18554 | Will you admire Michael Angelo''s colossal''Day and Night''? |
18554 | Would it not be better for the nation to grow more slowly, and have a more''homogeneous, more peaceable, and more durable''government? |
18554 | You and I,_ n''est- ce- pas_? |
18554 | You wo n''t obey your own uncle, eh?'' |
18554 | _ La bonne idée!_''''Why do n''t you get some work that pays better?'' |
18554 | aided none? |
18554 | and revere the mortal genius that can so impress the soul? |
18554 | and where on earth is your Christ? |
18554 | asked Josephine;''a_ tisane_, a warm drink, something?'' |
18554 | cried De Meyrau,''is this your boat?'' |
18554 | cried the man;''what have you got there? |
18554 | defended none? |
18554 | how did he come to say paralysis?'' |
18554 | how?'' |
18554 | is he going to leave me? |
18554 | is it possible?'' |
18554 | or is he simply going to pass these last hours in play and drink? |
18554 | served none? |
18554 | so imminent? |
18554 | you go without your necessary food?'' |
18554 | you mean my boat--_this_ boat?'' |
18554 | you''ve been there?'' |
14499 | Are you making a staircase to lead to something, taking it for a mansion, which you know not and have never seen? |
14499 | But, at least, thou knowest me, my conduct, my mind, my wisdom, my life, my salvation( i.e., thou knowest me as well as I know myself)? |
14499 | Hast thou known all the Buddhas that will be? |
14499 | How,they ask,"if you could not succeed in becoming a Buddha by asceticism, can we suppose that you become one by indulgence?" |
14499 | Thou seest that thou knowest not the venerable Buddhas of the past and of the future; why, then, are thy words so grand and bold? |
14499 | Through whose wisdom, through whose design do they come? |
14499 | What is discontent, and what is pleasure? 14499 Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the gods?" |
14499 | [ 109] Husbands or brothers or children of Dawn, the Horsemen are also S[=u]ry[=a]''s husbands, and she is the sun''s daughter( Dawn?) 14499 ''A man builds a staircase, and the people ask,Do you know where is the mansion to which this staircase leads?" |
14499 | ''Can there then be likeness between the Brahmans and Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | ''Has he self- mastery?'' |
14499 | ''How am I to keep thee?'' |
14499 | ''How my daughter, glorious woman?'' |
14499 | ''Is his mind depraved or pure?'' |
14499 | ''Is his mind full of anger or free from anger? |
14499 | ''Or did any one of their ancestors ever see Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | ''Unwisely does one consider:"Have I existed in ages past... shall I exist in ages yet to be, do I exist at all, am I, how am I? |
14499 | ''Well, did the most ancient seers ever say that they knew where is Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | ''What wilt thou save me from?'' |
14499 | ''Will they then after death become united to Brahm[=a] who is not at all like them?'' |
14499 | ''[ 47] It is screened by an Orphic philosophy, for is not Nature or Illusion the female side of the Divine Male? |
14499 | ( 19) 179# Vishnu#( vi[s.][n.]u like jishnu, ji[s.][n.]u, vi,''fly,''the heavenly bird? |
14499 | ), or_''whom? |
14499 | ); to the Derbiker( around Meru? |
14499 | 1- 9, thus translated by Müller: What then now? |
14499 | 10:"Who gives ten cows for my Indra? |
14499 | 13? |
14499 | 16 of 1892, 1893; epic language, Franke, Was ist Sanskrit? |
14499 | 20); he becomes identical(''how can one know the knower?'' |
14499 | 259; Müller,_ India, What Can It Teach Us_? |
14499 | 28:"Who knows man''s morrow? |
14499 | 4); or must the bull be_ soma_? |
14499 | Across air- spaces gazes he, the eagle, Who moves in secret, th''Asura,[25] well- guiding, Where is( bright) S[=u]rya now? |
14499 | Again, does Buddhism lose in the comparison from an intellectual point of view when set beside the mazy gropings of the Upanishads? |
14499 | Again, what use to mortify the flesh? |
14499 | Against the priests''novel and unjustifiable claim Y[=a]jñavalkya exclaims:''How can people have faith in this? |
14499 | An account of this Renaissance, as he calls it, will be found in Müller''s_ India, What Can It Teach Us_? |
14499 | And through which sky is now his ray extending? |
14499 | And what are these duties? |
14499 | And what is this? |
14499 | And why? |
14499 | Buddha answers:''Let us see; has any one of these Brahmans ever seen Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | But in what, from a wider point of view, lies the importance of the study of Hindu religions? |
14499 | But is it likely that a race would have come from the Northeast and another from the Northwest, and both have the same name? |
14499 | But which is truer? |
14499 | Can any one question that Vivasvant the''wide gleaming''is sun or bright sky, as he is represented in the Avesta and Rig Veda? |
14499 | Can this god,''most august of Vedic deities,''as Bergaigne and others have called him, have belonged as such to the earliest stratum of Aryan belief? |
14499 | Come, hast thou, then, known all the Buddhas that were?" |
14499 | Daksha may, perhaps, be the''clever,''''strong''one([ Greek: dexios]), abstract Strength; as another name of the sun(?). |
14499 | Did he expect to escape age, sickness, death, in this life by that means? |
14499 | Do they all lead to union with Brahm[=a]? |
14499 | Do they give up polytheism; are they inclined to do so, or are they taught to do so? |
14499 | Does he go to destruction like a cloud that is rent, failing on the path that leads to_ brahma_? |
14499 | Every one seizes his neighbor and asks,''Has it boiled?'' |
14499 | First, if_ brahma_ is a personal god, which of the gods is he, this personal All- spirit? |
14499 | For what hath man of all his labor and of the vexation of his heart, wherein he hath laboured under the sun? |
14499 | From an Aryan point of view how much weight is to be placed on comparisons of the formulae in the Atharvan of India with those of other Aryan nations? |
14499 | Hast thou not made horse- sacrifices, the_ r[=a]jas[=u]ya_-sacrifice, sacrifices of every sort(_ pu[n.][d.]arika,[84] gosava_)? |
14499 | Hast thou not worshipped with salutation and honored the priests, gods, and manes? |
14499 | Have I not told thee already that we must divide ourselves from all that is nearest and dearest? |
14499 | He established earth and heaven-- to what god shall we offer sacrifice? |
14499 | He too had already answered negatively the question Is life worth living? |
14499 | His sister is his mistress, and his mother is his wife( Dawn and Night?) |
14499 | How are these to be reconciled with this hymn? |
14499 | How can it be possible that a being born to die should not die? |
14499 | How can one know him through whom he knows this all, how can he know the knower( as something different)? |
14499 | How could it send forth jubilant disciples to preach the gospel of joy? |
14499 | How could such a religion inspire enthusiasm? |
14499 | How did he originate? |
14499 | How did such gods obtain their supremacy? |
14499 | How else could this distress have come upon my wife? |
14499 | How much of this is new? |
14499 | In Europe: does the soul wait for the Last Day, or get to heaven immediately? |
14499 | In that case, it may be asked, why not begin the history of Hindu religion with the Atharvan, rather than with the Rig Veda? |
14499 | In what does it consist? |
14499 | Is his mind full of malice or free from malice?'' |
14499 | Is it necessarily imported from Christianity? |
14499 | Is there not here perhaps a little irony? |
14499 | Is there, then, nothing with which to bridge this gulf? |
14499 | Is this poem of a"singularly refined character,"or"preëminently sacerdotal"in appearance? |
14499 | Is_ m[=a]s_ or_ candramas_( moon) a power of strength, a great god? |
14499 | It is therefore( perhaps with Bhaga?) |
14499 | It remains only to ask from which side is the borrowing? |
14499 | Mitra and Varuna met her, and said:''Who art thou?'' |
14499 | Now what think you, is Brahm[=a] in possession of wives and wealth?'' |
14499 | On the other hand, who will deny that in India certain mythological figures are eoian or solar in origin? |
14499 | On what errand of yours are you going, in heaven, not on earth? |
14499 | Or is Mr. Lang ignorant that the god Yima became Jemshid, and that Feridun is only the god Trita? |
14499 | Others say''not- being alone''... but how could being be born of not- being? |
14499 | Possibly Hermes as boundary- god may be connected with the Hermes that conducts souls; or is it simply as thief- god that he guards from theft? |
14499 | QUERY: Is the hymn addressed to the plant as it is pressed out into the pails, or to the moon? |
14499 | Said Manu:''Who art thou?'' |
14499 | The corresponding Power is Cerus in Cerus- Creator( Kronos? |
14499 | The friend is he of waters; First- born and holy,--where was he created, And whence arose he? |
14499 | The gods have mystic names, and these''who will dare to speak?'' |
14499 | The knight asks"What is_ brahma_, the Supreme Spirit, the supreme being, the supreme sacrifice?" |
14499 | The knight objects, not yet knowing that Krishna is the All- god:"How did''st thou declare it first? |
14499 | The mystery of these gods''origin puzzles the seer:"Which was first and which came later, how were they begotten, who knows, O ye wise seers? |
14499 | The native eras are discussed by Cunningham, Book of Indian Eras; and in Müller''s India, What Can It Teach Us? |
14499 | The parents of Up[=a]li thought to themselves:"What shalt we teach Up[=a]li that he may earn his living? |
14499 | The philosophers are pantheists, but what of the vulgar? |
14499 | The sages say to Vishnu:"All men worship thee; to whom dost thou offer worship?" |
14499 | Their sacra( totems?) |
14499 | Then said M[=a]itrey[=i]:''Lord, if this whole earth filled with wealth were mine, how then? |
14499 | Then said M[=a]itrey[=i]:''With what I can not be immortal, what can I do with that? |
14499 | Then the Blessed One called the brethren and said:"Where then, brethren, is[= A]nanda?" |
14499 | This is a being, whence is it come, whither will it go?" |
14499 | This one, pressing surely through the knotty( sieve?) |
14499 | Thou art thine own friend; why longest thou for a friend beyond thyself?... |
14499 | To this Upas[=i]va replies:"But has he only disappeared, or does he not exist, or is he only free from sickness?" |
14499 | To whom shall we give praises?'' |
14499 | Unconnected, unsupported, downward extending, why does not this( god) fall down? |
14499 | Varuna, despite phonetic difficulties, probably is Ouranos; but Asura( Asen?) |
14499 | Vishnu( may be the epithet of Indra in I.61.7) means winner(? |
14499 | Was it then a new morality, a new ethical code, that thus inspired them? |
14499 | Was it water, deep darkness? |
14499 | What are the necessary equipment of a Long Island witch? |
14499 | What avails it to collect a heap of books? |
14499 | What becomes of them that die ignorant of the ego? |
14499 | What does not close its eye when asleep, what does not move when it is born, what has no heart, what increases by moving? |
14499 | What hid( it)? |
14499 | What influence has she had upon Western cults and beliefs? |
14499 | What is he in reality? |
14499 | What is one to understand from this? |
14499 | What is the ego? |
14499 | What may again be put before( him) By which his court may be seen? |
14499 | What now is the relation of Vishnu- Krishna to the other divinities? |
14499 | What part in the pantheon is played by the moon when it is called by its natural name( not by the priestly name,_ soma_)? |
14499 | What reward does God get that he sends happiness to this sinful man( thy oppressor)? |
14499 | What then becomes of the virtue of a man who enters the absolute_ brahma,_ and descends no more? |
14499 | What then has Gautama done from the point of view of the Brahman? |
14499 | What to the Buddhist is the spirit, the soul of man? |
14499 | What will be the result of proselytizing zeal among these variegated masses? |
14499 | What word may be spoken by the mouth, Which having heard he may bestow love? |
14499 | What, then, is the religious belief and the moral position of the Hindu law- books? |
14499 | What, then, is the sacrifice? |
14499 | When had ever the moon the power to start the sun? |
14499 | When will ye take us as a dear father takes his son by both hands, O ye gods, for whom the sacred grass has been trimmed? |
14499 | When, however, pantheism, nay, even Vishnuism, or still more, Krishnaism, was an accepted fact upon what, then, was the wisdom of the priest expended? |
14499 | Where all delights? |
14499 | Where and in the protection of what? |
14499 | Where are blessings? |
14499 | Where are your cows sporting? |
14499 | Where are your newest favors, O Maruts? |
14499 | Where now? |
14499 | Which accords more with the facts as they are collected from a wider field? |
14499 | Which of these gives highest bliss? |
14499 | Who forgives sins? |
14499 | Who gives wealth? |
14499 | Who helps in war? |
14499 | Who is it, O Maruts, ye that have lightning- spears, that impels you within? |
14499 | Who knoweth the spirit of man whether it goeth upward? |
14499 | Who sends rain? |
14499 | Who weds Dawn? |
14499 | Who, sooth, are the gleaming related heroes, the glory of Rudra, on beauteous chargers? |
14499 | Whom, awful, they( yet) ask about:''where is he?'' |
14499 | Why is it that well- informed Vedic scholars differ so widely in regard to the ritualistic share in the making of the Veda? |
14499 | Why is''horse- grass''used in the sacrifice? |
14499 | Why should Gautama have so given himself to Yoga discipline? |
14499 | Why then does one find Çiva invoked by philosophy? |
14499 | Why? |
14499 | With Varuna stands Mitra, and besides this pair are found''the true friend''Aryaman, Savitar, Bhaga, and, later, Indra, as sun(?). |
14499 | With what nature goes he, who knows( literally,''who has seen'')? |
14499 | Without this name may one ascribe to India what is found in Iran? |
14499 | Would not this be foolish talk?... |
14499 | Yet, it may be said, why could not a poetic hymn have been written in a ritualistic environment? |
14499 | [ 11] What is the speech which the judge on the bench is ordered to repeat to the witnesses? |
14499 | [ 14] But, again, for a further question here presents itself, how much in India to- day is Aryan? |
14499 | [ 19] But what is the ego, spirit or self(_[= a]tm[=a]_)? |
14499 | [ 22] The name of the fire- priest,_ brahman_= fla(g)men(? |
14499 | [ 28] What is the reward for knowing this? |
14499 | [ Footnote 17: The word is_ a[.m]sala_, strong, or''from the shoulder''(?). |
14499 | [ Footnote 34: He is the''son of freeing,''from darkness? |
14499 | [ Footnote 37: Sun- worship( Iranian?) |
14499 | [ Footnote 45: One comparatively new god deserves a passing mention, Dharma''s son, K[=a]ma, the( Grecian?) |
14499 | [ Footnote 51: At Pushkara is Brahm[=a]''s only(?) |
14499 | and he should say,"I know not,"and the people should say,"Whom you know not, neither have seen, her you love and long for?" |
14499 | and he should say,"No"; and the people should say,"What is her name, is she tall or short, in what place does she live?" |
14499 | and he should say,"Yes,"--would not that be foolish? |
14499 | as the dull Br[=a]hmanas interpreted that verse of the Rig Veda which asks''to whom( which, as) god shall we offer sacrifice?'' |
14499 | should I be immortal by reason of this wealth?'' |
14499 | there is a passage like the great Ka hymn of the Rig Veda,''whom as god shall one worship?'' |
14499 | they jeered,"Did you not maintain that all was a mere illusion? |
14499 | this great spirit( Manabozho,_ mana_ is Manu?) |
14499 | who understands it? |
10435 | ''And is used for the same purpose now?'' 10435 ''Is any one in the library with Miss Purcill?'' |
10435 | ''You pity Hagar, then? 10435 A dragon?" |
10435 | And you are the man whose music has been so cheering many a time? |
10435 | Are they yours? |
10435 | Are you ill, Miss Splurge? |
10435 | Did he seem pleased? |
10435 | Did he seem to care for the flowers? 10435 Did n''t I know you would n''t for the world? |
10435 | Did you think I would complain of his standing by his window, Sandy? |
10435 | Do you see,continued Adolphus,"Elizabeth wo n''t speak of it again? |
10435 | Do you think it was the prison? |
10435 | Do you think that can be one of his scales? |
10435 | For my sake? |
10435 | How did I know you would like to be stared at? |
10435 | How did you hear all this, child? 10435 How?" |
10435 | Is that a rose- bush? 10435 Is this the mighty ocean?--is this all?" |
10435 | It is your little daughter that works in the garden so much? 10435 It looks so pleasant, eh?" |
10435 | Not if I acknowledge? |
10435 | Oh, yes, I did,said Mark;--"there, do n''t you see the end of his tail sticking out from under the largest stone? |
10435 | Oh,said she, looking away quickly, as if conscious of a wrong done,"what made you tell me?" |
10435 | Papa, do you know that Mr. Laval is going away? |
10435 | Perhaps Carl had better come and hear for himself,--don''t you think so, Bunny? |
10435 | See, Katrine, these white rabbits!--are they not pretty? |
10435 | Then we''re friends, a''n''t we? |
10435 | Then you like music? 10435 We, Miss?" |
10435 | Well, if I did,he answered,"can they do anything with me?" |
10435 | What chains? |
10435 | What do you want to look in for? |
10435 | What have they come here for? |
10435 | What is it? |
10435 | What would you have? 10435 Where is he, Mark? |
10435 | Who asked for your opinion? |
10435 | Who is he, then? 10435 Who is that?" |
10435 | Who knows but a cruel keeper may be put in Laval''s place? 10435 Who told you, Sandy?" |
10435 | Whose grave is this that you are taking such pains to clear? |
10435 | Why are you here, Mark? |
10435 | Why do you not speak? |
10435 | Why do you think I should know? |
10435 | Why, Master Bradford, who would have thought of seeing you here at this time? |
10435 | Why, Miss Splurge, what is the matter with you? 10435 Will he?" |
10435 | Will they get somebody to take his place? |
10435 | Wo n''t he, Sandy? |
10435 | You have read it? |
10435 | You wish we could, you child? |
10435 | _ October_ 3.--Ah, why was I so foolish? 10435 _ October_ 4.--What shall I do? |
10435 | ''Is it not pretty?'' |
10435 | ( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--"Gambrel?--Gambrel?" |
10435 | --"About those conditions?" |
10435 | --"What was the use in waiting? |
10435 | --Funny, wasn''it? |
10435 | --When paper money became so cheap, Folks would n''t count it, but said"a heap,"A certain RICHARDS, the books declare,( A.M. in''90? |
10435 | --You have n''t heard about my friend the Professor''s first experiment in the use of anaesthetics, have you? |
10435 | And I still live? |
10435 | And I still sin? |
10435 | And do I wish it? |
10435 | And from a by no means tranquil musing over them, she began to ask herself, What, after all, was home? |
10435 | And what had that Philip Withers to do with her trouble and her distraction? |
10435 | Are the tendencies adverted to so productive? |
10435 | Are we more than satisfied with their occupancy of that they already possess? |
10435 | Are you going? |
10435 | Besides, can we afford to England, France, Spain, a larger room in the world? |
10435 | But how, and where? |
10435 | But what do we care about his power of learning artificial music? |
10435 | But what if Comet has gone by? |
10435 | But what must she think of us? |
10435 | But who was Elizabeth Purcill?--what relation was she to me?--and how came she to die so young, and to be buried here?" |
10435 | But whom did you leave behind you that you would care most should know you are alive and in good hands?" |
10435 | But-- where did you come from? |
10435 | Could she not give up so little as a house, in order to secure the comfort of a son of misfortune,--a solitary man,--a dying prisoner? |
10435 | Could their false, barren life have maddened this proud Madeline? |
10435 | Did he tell you that?" |
10435 | Did she not, presuming upon her youth, her beauty, and her child, despise her mistress? |
10435 | Did she place it before my eyes as a warning to me? |
10435 | Did the rivulets propose or plan the river? |
10435 | Did they fear his release by the hands of one who hears the sighing of the prisoner, and gives to every bondman the Year of Jubilee? |
10435 | Did you kill Stolzen, or not?" |
10435 | Did you read what is on this card?" |
10435 | Did-- did I leave-- drop--?" |
10435 | Do you eat baked beans on Sunday?" |
10435 | Do you see me?" |
10435 | Does the Bunker- Hill Monument bend in the blast like a blade of grass? |
10435 | Else what did she mean by her''hot head''and her''fierce heart''? |
10435 | First, what is his pedigree? |
10435 | Had it fallen at once to the bottom of the well, and lain there for years, while he waited in vain for her coming or her token? |
10435 | Has the sea any language? |
10435 | Have they not gained a cornucopia of savages, to support new brigades at home by their enslavement, and new bishoprics abroad by their salvation? |
10435 | Have they not gained a whole world of gold and silver mines to buy jewelled cloaks and feathers and frippery with? |
10435 | Have we not read of the noble lady whose loveliness a painter''s eye was the very first to discover? |
10435 | Hence the much- blamed inquisitiveness,--"What is your name? |
10435 | Hope you do.-- Born there? |
10435 | How can I leave him thus? |
10435 | How could I tell you would, though? |
10435 | How could he greet the day, hail the light, bless Nature for her beauty, thank God for his life? |
10435 | How do you make that out?" |
10435 | How quick art thou? |
10435 | How quick art thou? |
10435 | I began abruptly:--Do you know that you are a rich young person? |
10435 | Is a young man in the habit of writing verses? |
10435 | Is any such genius really forming as is here claimed? |
10435 | Is it not a self- complacent dream? |
10435 | Is it not, on the contrary, now fully understood that the Americans are a commonplace people, meagre- minded money- makers, destitute of originality? |
10435 | Is not a fair spirit predestined conqueror of flesh and blood? |
10435 | Is not all this, they may say, over- sanguine and enthusiastic? |
10435 | Is not his love as much mine now as it ever was hers? |
10435 | Is the amiable Mr. Knox right, after all? |
10435 | Is this the case with the language of the sea? |
10435 | Know old Cambridge? |
10435 | Lee?'' |
10435 | Lee?'' |
10435 | Made_ me_ laugh,-- I''m too modest, I am, by half,-- Made me laugh''s_ though I sh''d split_,-- Cahn''a fellah like fellah''s own wit? |
10435 | No,--what right had she? |
10435 | Now I am stripping myself of one of the private comforts of my life,( but what will one not do for mankind?) |
10435 | Now here it was, and what would people say,--specially them as had always turned up their nose at her opinion?" |
10435 | Now the grand inquiry about any man is,--Does he belong to the great current, or to the lesser ones? |
10435 | Now whom_ did_ you hear say that?" |
10435 | Of the Avenger? |
10435 | Of what Avenger? |
10435 | Quick, thou sayest, is his vengeance? |
10435 | Quick? |
10435 | Rosamond drew a long breath,--"Is that all, Bradford? |
10435 | Shall I send it to him?" |
10435 | She hastened with it to the door,--Madeline had just stept into the street,--"This card is yours, I presume, Miss Splurge?" |
10435 | Should he show the journal to his aunt, or keep it to himself? |
10435 | Should she go to Mrs. Splurge and tell her all? |
10435 | Tell him the whole truth, and send him a ticket of admission to the Institution for Idiots and Feeble- minded Youth? |
10435 | Tell me, then, how quick? |
10435 | That was it.--But what had he been doing to get his head into such a state?--had he really committed an excess? |
10435 | The Englishman is undeniably a wholesome picture to the mental eye; but will not twenty million copies of him do, for the present? |
10435 | The primary question respecting men is this,--How far are they affected by the original axiomatic truths? |
10435 | The sea has its own customs, superstitions, traditions, architecture, and government; wherefore not its own language? |
10435 | Then I could offer consolation and sympathy; but now, if I saw her, what could I say? |
10435 | Then, quickly and fiercely, she snatched the card from Miss Wimple''s hand,--"Where-- where did you find this? |
10435 | These are but melancholy fancies;--because I am sad myself must I put all the world in mourning? |
10435 | They do n''t talk about him at all,--do they, Adolphus?" |
10435 | This Philip Withers,--was he a villain, after all? |
10435 | To be sure; is that so bad? |
10435 | To learn such a simple lesson Need I go to Paris and Rome,-- That the many make a household, But only one the home? |
10435 | To what inheritance of land has Nature invited our New Man? |
10435 | Wan''to hear another? |
10435 | Was happiness indeed dependent on locality when the heart of love was hers? |
10435 | Was it my fancy, or not? |
10435 | We might then suppose him to be repeating very moderately the words,"Do you hear me? |
10435 | Were they jealous and suspicious of the approach of Death? |
10435 | Were they not all together? |
10435 | What could a woman, so independent, so self- relying, so sufficient for herself, want of a lover? |
10435 | What do we mean by this? |
10435 | What do you mean by pleasant?" |
10435 | What do you say to that? |
10435 | What excites you so? |
10435 | What friends had she, if these were not her friends? |
10435 | What have you done? |
10435 | What is your business? |
10435 | What must she do but buy a small copper breast- pin and put it under"Schoolma''am''s"plate that morning, at breakfast? |
10435 | What shall I do about it? |
10435 | What sweeter promise could any one ask than that of this rare and admirable combination? |
10435 | What was her answer? |
10435 | What were England and France doing at Sebastopol? |
10435 | What, then, do they think is gained? |
10435 | Whence did it come? |
10435 | Whence, we ask, this power of endurance? |
10435 | Where are you going? |
10435 | Where do you live? |
10435 | Where else can so crowded and so short a career be found? |
10435 | Where is this monument? |
10435 | Where shall I go? |
10435 | Where the likeness? |
10435 | Who Massachusetts in whole for as many South American( or Southern) republics as would cover Saturn and all his moons? |
10435 | Who knows that it was_ not_ by an angel? |
10435 | Who would exchange Concord or Cambridge in Massachusetts for any hundred thousand square miles of slave- breeding dead- level? |
10435 | Why did I not go when I saw the danger so clearly, instead of cheating myself into the belief that there was none? |
10435 | Why had not Thornton found and kept the journal intended for him? |
10435 | Why should Europe go three thousand miles off to be Europe still? |
10435 | Would Elizabeth Purcill wish her Cousin Eleanor to read her written words as she once read her untold thoughts? |
10435 | Would it be so dreadful for you to live here, when we could always have music and the garden? |
10435 | Would you think that? |
10435 | You are not lying, girl?" |
10435 | You never heard anybody say where they thought the purse and slipper were hid,--did you?" |
10435 | You remember, though so young, when your Aunt Eleanor came to your father''s house on her way to your Uncle Erasmus in his last illness?" |
10435 | You think it was a harsh and cruel thing to drive her out into the wilderness with her child?'' |
10435 | You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL? |
10435 | _ Qu''est ce qu''il a fait?_ What has he done? |
10435 | _ Qu''est ce qu''il a fait?_ What has he done? |
10435 | and why should her mistress feel compassion for her? |
10435 | answered the philosopher, with superb innocence,--"don''t you see that it sticks to his heels?" |
10435 | are we not compelled to acknowledge that there must have existed, in those remote times, means of communication unknown to us? |
10435 | did he take any?" |
10435 | exclaimed a wide- eyed auditor;"upholds the earth? |
10435 | exclaimed that Chevalier Bayard in shabby, skimped delaine,"what was I going to do?" |
10435 | nor his own heart, What is right? |
10435 | or has each national tongue grafted into it the technology of the maritime calling? |
10435 | were not these their own household goods, around them? |
10435 | who shall aver it was_ not_ by the resistless Life? |
39079 | ''Going out, ladies?'' 39079 ''Return as what, madam?--prisoners or subjects?'' |
39079 | ''Well,''said the man,''do you wish to hear from them, or send any thing by way of refreshment to them? 39079 ''Will you?'' |
39079 | And hast thou forgotten, Friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? 39079 And why,"asked he,"is it called the rebel flower?" |
39079 | Does it enable you to sleep? |
39079 | When we got to the front door, we asked,''Who are you?'' 39079 Where do you live?" |
39079 | Who has dared to do this atrocious act? 39079 Why have you come so far away from your homes?" |
39079 | Why were you singing? |
39079 | Would you? |
39079 | ''Have you any? |
39079 | ''Is she killed? |
39079 | --''O, Lord North''s and Lord George Germaine''s, beyond all question; and where is the third head?'' |
39079 | ----When meet now Such pairs, in love and honor joined? |
39079 | And who would risk life in attempting it? |
39079 | And who, with her disposition and spirit, could not do something to aid the cause of God? |
39079 | As she recovered from a spasm, I said to her,"do you not often desire to depart, and be with the Saviour you love so fervently?" |
39079 | As the stranger drew near the table and saw the scantiness of the fare, he asked,"And is this all your store? |
39079 | Augustine?" |
39079 | Brewton?" |
39079 | But pray,''said he,''how came you here?'' |
39079 | But then the thought occurred to me, What can_ you_ do, a poor widow, with four small children to support, and your house rent to pay? |
39079 | But we are not so sure we have to die; do n''t you hear the crack of Melbury''s rifle? |
39079 | But when winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then? |
39079 | But, madam, do you not wrong your children by giving a part of your morsel to a stranger?" |
39079 | Can you comfort me? |
39079 | Dear President, will it be possible for you to do any thing? |
39079 | Dear father of the land of my birth, can you do any thing? |
39079 | Did the mother indulge the grief of her spirit, and sit down in despair? |
39079 | Do you not know what the---- rebels have been doing?" |
39079 | Do you offer a share to one you do not know? |
39079 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
39079 | Have chivalry''s bold days A deed of wilder bravery In all their stirring lays? |
39079 | He sees that there is much dross to refine away, and why should I wish against his will?" |
39079 | Hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?'' |
39079 | I cried,"do you never rest?" |
39079 | If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness, and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings? |
39079 | If, therefore, the proposed change should profit neither man, woman, nor the rising race, how can it benefit the world at large? |
39079 | Inquiries were made as to who had been killed, and one running up, cried,''Where is the woman that gave us the powder? |
39079 | Is it not the province of true wisdom to select such measures as promote the greatest good of the greatest number? |
39079 | It may be asked, What was the result? |
39079 | MATERNAL HEROISM Is there a man, into the lion''s den Who dares intrude to snatch his young away? |
39079 | Mr. Van Alstine, starting up in surprise, asked impatiently,''What the devilish Indian wanted?'' |
39079 | One day the physician of the hospital, inquiring--"How is Robert?" |
39079 | Rocks have been shaken from their solid base; But what shall move a dauntless soul? |
39079 | She scornfully replied:"And if I could act so dastardly a part, think you that General Washington has but one Captain Randolph in his army?" |
39079 | The only question which concerns me, is, are my motives pure and holy? |
39079 | Think''st thou there dwells no courage but in breasts That set their mail against the ringing spears, When helmets are struck down? |
39079 | To whom else could I look for comfort? |
39079 | Walking to the spot where she stood near the gate, he said fiercely:"Did I not order you, madam, to keep out of my presence?" |
39079 | Were these somewhat indefinite claims conceded, would the change promote her welfare? |
39079 | What bosom beats not in its country''s cause? |
39079 | What rhetoric didst thou use To gain this mighty boon? |
39079 | What then should she do? |
39079 | When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,''Elizabeth, why didst thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?'' |
39079 | Who can tell how much this republic is indebted to the prudence, integrity, courage and patriotism of Cornelia Beekman? |
39079 | Who shall find a valiant woman? |
39079 | Why do n''t you put powder in your guns?" |
39079 | Why need she be again tempted by pride, or curiosity, or glozing words, to forfeit her own Eden? |
39079 | Why should''st thou faint? |
39079 | Wilkinson?'' |
39079 | Will you ask for their release? |
39079 | Will you feel offended with me for appealing to you for comfort? |
39079 | With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man? |
39079 | Would she be a gainer by any added power or sounding title, which should require the sacrifice of that delicacy which is the life- blood of her sex? |
39079 | cruel fate, why have I lived to see this? |
39079 | do n''t you call that rebellion against their king, madam?" |
39079 | he exclaimed,''What are you doing there? |
39079 | not in rebellion against their king? |
39079 | replied he, with great surprise,"pray what can be your meaning in that?" |
39079 | what madness fires her? |
39079 | where is your master?" |
39316 | Again,he added,"by the same rule that we try them may not the enemy try any natural- born subject of Great Britain taken in arms in our service? |
39316 | Are these the sentiments of such people, and how many of them are there in the country? 39316 But what,"they asked,"have we gained by a war provoked and entered into by you with such a flourish of trumpets? |
39316 | Is this the object,Adams continued,"for which I have been contending?" |
39316 | A fleet of men- of- war to bring it to its duty? |
39316 | Again, on March 12, 1777, he said: You inquire whether I can not bear contempt and reproach, rather than remain any longer separated from my family? |
39316 | And did not the French Revolution produce all the calamities and desolations to the human race and the whole globe ever since?" |
39316 | And now, in God''s name, what is it that has brought us to this brink of destruction? |
39316 | And what do we give in return? |
39316 | Are not the bands of society cut asunder and the sanctions that hold man to man trampled upon? |
39316 | Are the dregs of Congress, then, still to influence a mind like yours? |
39316 | As to the army itself, what have you to expect from them? |
39316 | As to your little navy, of that little what is left? |
39316 | Brown,''Where are you going, Master?'' |
39316 | But had you, could you have had, the least idea of matters being carried to such a dangerous extremity? |
39316 | But we have lost nothing? |
39316 | Can any of us recover a debt, or obtain compensation for an injury by law? |
39316 | Can this be said of the Revolutionary leaders of Massachusetts, the so- called patriots, to whom the Revolution owes its inception? |
39316 | Can you indulge the thought one moment that Great Britain will consent to this? |
39316 | Can you tell me, sir, the reason why the public buildings and library at Washington should be held more sacred than those at our York? |
39316 | Did not the American Revolution produce the French Revolution? |
39316 | Dulaney( Daniel? |
39316 | For an explicit answer,"Do you propose to spend the remainder of your days abroad?" |
39316 | For what did she purchase New York of the Dutch? |
39316 | For what has she protected and defended the colonies against the maritime powers of Europe, from their first British settlement to this day? |
39316 | For what was she so lavish of her best blood and treasure in the conquest of Canada, and other territories in America? |
39316 | Had Great Britain failed, what would now be the position of the world? |
39316 | Has not the government of Great Britain been as mild and equitable in the colonies, as in any part of her extensive domains? |
39316 | Has she not been indulgent almost to a fault? |
39316 | Have not his countrymen loved, admired, revered, rewarded, nay, almost adored him? |
39316 | Have not ninety- nine in a hundred of them really thought him the greatest and best man in America? |
39316 | Have they not frequently abandoned you yourself in the hour of extremity? |
39316 | Have we not? |
39316 | He says,"Has not his merits been sounded very high by his countrymen for twenty years? |
39316 | How about the paper blockade? |
39316 | How can we, law- abiding citizens, applaud the"Boston Tea Party"and condemn the high- handed conduct of strike- leaders of the present time? |
39316 | If the object is defense and success, why is it to be waged against the adversary most able to annoy and least likely to yield? |
39316 | If the object of war is merely to vindicate our honor, why is it not declared against the first aggressor? |
39316 | In a letter to a friend in 1811, he thus moralizes:"Have I not been employed in mischief all my days? |
39316 | In a letter to his mother from Boston, the young man says:"Shall I whisper a word in your ear? |
39316 | In reply to the question,"What is their temper now?" |
39316 | In reply to the question,"What was the temper of America towards Great Britain before the year 1763?" |
39316 | Into what country will the fabrication of this iniquity hereafter go with unembarrassed face? |
39316 | Is it possible? |
39316 | Is not civil government dissolved? |
39316 | Is this one of the blessings of your independence to obtain which you sacrificed so many lives? |
39316 | Long before they left Philadelphia their dignity and consequence were gone; what must it be now since their precipitate retreat? |
39316 | One of the soldiers was left wounded on the bridge; what was the name of the"young American that killed him with a hatchet"? |
39316 | Take an impartial view of the present Congress, and what can you expect from them? |
39316 | The Loyalists of Massachusetts WHO WERE THE INHABITANTS OF THE NEW ENGLAND COLONIES AT THE TIME OF THE REVOLUTION? |
39316 | Under so many discouraging circumstances, can virtue, can honor, can the love of your country prompt you to proceed? |
39316 | Was it to raise up a rival state, or to enlarge her own empire? |
39316 | What about Grand Manan and Moose Island and the fisheries and our West Indian commerce?" |
39316 | What do they want now? |
39316 | What is the equivalent given to Great Britain for all the important concessions she has made? |
39316 | What mischief was not an artful man, who had obtained the confidence and guidance of such an enraged multitude, capable of doing? |
39316 | What then must we expect from such scourges of mankind when supported by imperial powers? |
39316 | What then? |
39316 | What was the alternative? |
39316 | What was the country to expect when this state of affairs should be laid before the king? |
39316 | What, then, can be the consequences of this rash and violent measure and degeneracy of representation, confusion of councils, blunders without number? |
39316 | Where are your''sailors''rights?'' |
39316 | Where is the indemnity for our impressed seamen? |
39316 | Who was the author, inventor, discoverer of independence? |
39316 | Why did the scheme fail? |
39316 | Why then, do you suffer them to be cruelly treated for differing in sentiment from you? |
11687 | ''Who, then, is this,''the soul says to the heart,''Who cometh to bring comfort to our mind? 11687 And what is it?" |
11687 | And why should I remember that? |
11687 | And would n''t you? |
11687 | And you propose to haul off from operating? |
11687 | And you wanted to raise some money on them? |
11687 | And you''re going on with your operations? |
11687 | Any babies? |
11687 | B''long''ere? 11687 Boy or girl?" |
11687 | But do n''t you think the darkest time has past? |
11687 | But how will it be possible,inquired Mrs. Scudder,"that so much less work will suffice in those days to do all that is to be done?" |
11687 | But when is the good time coming? 11687 Ca n''t you get out?" |
11687 | Ca n''t you get some one to become security? |
11687 | Can nothing be done? |
11687 | Did you ever consider? 11687 Difficult? |
11687 | Do n''t you think, now, Fletcher, that the ten thousand pays you for all you''ve done? 11687 Do you belong here, young chap?" |
11687 | Failed? |
11687 | For how much? |
11687 | For what man of you wishing to build a tower, does not first sit down and_ estimate the expense_? |
11687 | For which of you intending to build a tower sitteth not down first and_ counteth the cost_? |
11687 | Gotobed? 11687 H''mushbailyewant? |
11687 | Have you some notes in your possession payable to Walter Monroe? |
11687 | He do dat ar''? |
11687 | He has nothing to do, then? |
11687 | How d''e do, Ma''am? 11687 How is your Mistress, Candace?" |
11687 | Howd''yeknowIa''n''t? 11687 I hope the gentleman you speak of is not so much afraid of contact with what is disagreeable as you are?" |
11687 | Is Mr. Holworthy at home? |
11687 | Is he willing to work, even if the task should appear irksome? |
11687 | Is it Bullion who owes you? |
11687 | Is n''t he? |
11687 | It is easy to say_ sell_; but who will buy? 11687 Loaned_ him_ eight thousand dollars?" |
11687 | Misfortune? 11687 Mr. Greenleaf earns a good income, does n''t he?" |
11687 | No reason why Doctors should n''t hab good tings as well as sinners, is dere? |
11687 | No''bjection to light the gaas, I''spose, so''s''t a feller can read a paper? 11687 Oh, it''s settled, is it? |
11687 | Oh, well, no''fence, I hope? 11687 Oh, you wo n''t run off''ith anythin''? |
11687 | Perhaps you would have been pleased, if I had not come home at all? |
11687 | So John Boynton a''n''t a- comin''? 11687 So it''s merely to do me a kindness and make me safe and snug that you propose to keep back the six thousand that belong to me?" |
11687 | So this is Mr. Sandford''s room? |
11687 | So when they had dined, Jesus saith to Simon Peter, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these? 11687 Suppose I pay you the notes and a thousand or two more, and we call it square? |
11687 | Sure enough, why not? 11687 Tha''sit; who_ are_ you? |
11687 | Tha''swhat_I_wan''to know.--How''d_ you_com''ere? 11687 That is n''t failing, is it? |
11687 | To jail? |
11687 | Well, have I not been in business? |
11687 | Wha''nyewant? |
11687 | What brings you so early? |
11687 | What do you mean, Sir? 11687 What is the meaning of this?" |
11687 | What next, I wonder? |
11687 | What should I do with it, my duck? 11687 What_ you_ doin''on, you rasc''l, inagen''l''m''n''shouse thistim''o''night?" |
11687 | When should a man be jolly, if he ca n''t when he''s nothing to do? 11687 When therefore they had breakfasted, Jesus said to Simon Peter, Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these? |
11687 | Who asks the question? |
11687 | WhocallsCh''rl''s? 11687 Why do n''t you get your pay?" |
11687 | Why, Fletcher, sharp''s the word, is it? |
11687 | Why, you''re not going to fail? |
11687 | Will it change your situation at once? |
11687 | Yes,said Mr. Griswold, in a very abrupt way.--"Are you ready to go back, Miss Polly? |
11687 | You are Mr. Sandford''s brother, are you? |
11687 | You have friends and influence still? |
11687 | You would compel me, then, and threaten starvation as the alternative? |
11687 | Your all? 11687 Yours, you mean? |
11687 | ''Tell ye, when I pray for him, do n''t I feel enlarged? |
11687 | ''vcourseIdo; wherethedevilsh''dIb''long?" |
11687 | --Don''t interrupt me.--An old woman, whom I asked, said,''Do I know Mister''Olworthy? |
11687 | --Is this literal or correct? |
11687 | 19, 20, and 23,"soul"; thus,"I will say to my_ soul_,"find"Is not the_ soul_ more than the food?" |
11687 | 26,"life"; thus,"For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world and lose his_ life_?" |
11687 | 4. common version,--"Nicodemus saith unto him,''How can a man be born when he is old? |
11687 | A PLEA FOR THE FIJIANS; OR, CAN NOTHING BE SAID IN FAVOR OF ROASTING ONE''S EQUALS? |
11687 | A painter is a pretty butterfly for fine weather; what is he to do with his flimsy wings in such a hurricane as this?" |
11687 | Am I to be harassed by business all day, and have no peace when I come home?" |
11687 | And is his virtue of so potent kind, That other thoughts he maketh to depart?'' |
11687 | Are you going to marry him?" |
11687 | As Monroe entered, Tonsor ceased the conversation, and, looking up, said, blandly,"My young friend, can I do anything for you?" |
11687 | At length, with a bland voice, but a sharp, inquiring eye, he said,--"How is it about this painter, Marcia? |
11687 | Before this self- betrayal blank surprise Fills Achmed''s comrades, and their wondering cries Demand,"How shall thy foolish act be named?" |
11687 | But in that other heart how was it?--how with the sweet saint that was talking to herself in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs? |
11687 | But the baby?" |
11687 | But what is Eve doing in a Dance of Death? |
11687 | But, Fletcher, any_ reason_ why you particularly wanted to pay Sandford that thousand, to- day?" |
11687 | But, how happened it?" |
11687 | But, we submit, is this a fair objection? |
11687 | Can you bear it? |
11687 | Can you conceive of the wickedness? |
11687 | Death is not there; and the antiquaries ask in wonder, Why is the subject introduced? |
11687 | Did it premonish the passing away of old things, and herald the birth of a new order and a new social state? |
11687 | Did you indorse the notes to him?" |
11687 | Does n''t she carry a lump of opium in her pocket? |
11687 | Does truly this thy feature counterfeit?''" |
11687 | Errors excepted.--Did I hear some gentleman say,"Doubted?" |
11687 | Go through fire? |
11687 | Go''n''tocl''out? |
11687 | Go''n''tovacateprem''scs?" |
11687 | Good heavens, what is to be done? |
11687 | Greeks and Romans have sacrificed men; why should not we? |
11687 | Griswold.--"Sam, did you go over to the Corners, yesterday, about those sheep?" |
11687 | Has Mr. Sawyer, then, in his New Testament, given a strictly literal rendering? |
11687 | He flung his ragged cap twenty feet into the air, turned a somerset, and came up smiling as well as he could through the dirt,--''Don''t I, though? |
11687 | He has a house, it is true; so they need n''t sleep in the street; but how are the mouths to be fed, the backs to be clothed?" |
11687 | How can a man with a salary fail?" |
11687 | How could I? |
11687 | How could he meet her with the news he would have to carry? |
11687 | How does the new account stand?" |
11687 | How much better off shall I be here?" |
11687 | How shall we explain these inconsistencies, and, at the same time, grant Mr. Sawyer his claim to literalness of rendering? |
11687 | How was his surprise increased when, after a moment, Bullion inquired,--"Teeth cut yet? |
11687 | How''d you break in here, when you are so drunk you ca n''t stand? |
11687 | In a business as ticklish as stocks, you do n''t expect a man to come down with the ready without a consideration?" |
11687 | Is it extraordinary that your agent has done what you desired?" |
11687 | Is it unnatural? |
11687 | Is it, we ask, fairly to be supposed? |
11687 | Is n''t her cologne- bottle replenished oftener than its legitimate use would require? |
11687 | Is n''t it enough for a month or two''s work?" |
11687 | Is n''t there any old whisper which will tarnish that wearisome aureole of saintly perfection? |
11687 | Is this literal? |
11687 | Large fortunes were constantly being turned out in it, and what better Providential witness of its justice could most people require? |
11687 | Leave''nofficer''nth''ouse? |
11687 | Mr. Griswold heard the proposal with a rather misty look, as if he did n''t see why, and when his wife finished, said, gravely,--"What is it, Susan? |
11687 | Mr. Sandford is your agent, I presume?" |
11687 | Our Charley, and What shall we Do with Him? |
11687 | Pope or President? |
11687 | Sandford?" |
11687 | Sawyer''s version,--"Nicodemus said to him,''How can a man be born when he is old? |
11687 | She looked fixedly, as she replied,--"Why do you ask? |
11687 | Should he become a jolly, vinous, and Friar- Tuck sort of clergyman? |
11687 | Should he enter the realm of dogmatics, and become a learned and redoubted champion of the faith, passing his life amid exegesis? |
11687 | Should he renounce thorough thinking, and become a polished and popular pastor, an ornament of the pulpit and of society? |
11687 | Should religion be supplanted? |
11687 | Should venerable Royalty, after howling in the wilderness and storm, be again enthroned? |
11687 | So we would ask, should any one complain of girls being thus economized by men,--"Who, in the name of common sense, should, if not men? |
11687 | Soon after Beccaria, it was asked, if we mistake not, by Voltaire:"Of what use is the dead body of a criminal? |
11687 | Suppose the Vortex fails? |
11687 | The essential changes( improvements?) |
11687 | The merchant needed only a word, and broke out at once,--"Prospect? |
11687 | The variety of the review suited the versatility of his talent; the problem, What worthy thing shall I employ myself in doing? |
11687 | This immaculate woman,--why could n''t she have a fault or two? |
11687 | Want something to bite, little one?" |
11687 | Was not Fielding''s parson logical, who preferred punch to wine, because it is nowhere spoken ill of in Scripture? |
11687 | What are we to do? |
11687 | What is a Dance of Death? |
11687 | What is romance? |
11687 | What is virtue? |
11687 | What shall we do to be jolly?" |
11687 | What the devil does a woman know about business?" |
11687 | What then? |
11687 | What will He Do with It? |
11687 | What ye doin''on here?" |
11687 | What''s a guinea but a d-- d yellow circle? |
11687 | What''s the use of honor? |
11687 | What''s the use of truth? |
11687 | What''syerbusiness? |
11687 | Where would she come from? |
11687 | Who are you? |
11687 | Who can prove the contrary? |
11687 | Who can say that just at that minute she did not wish she had gone, too? |
11687 | Who forgets the great muster- day, and the collision of the classic with the democratic forces? |
11687 | Who is the luckless person?" |
11687 | Who is the lucky corpse that is out of his misery?" |
11687 | Why should he care about a homely little country cousin? |
11687 | Why was it, that, of all the books in the world, Charles Lamb should have fixed his affections chiefly on the old English dramatists? |
11687 | Why was their advent so late? |
11687 | Why, but to show that to him alone who would gladly welcome Death, Death will not come? |
11687 | Why, then, did he take to theology? |
11687 | Why, you are not in danger?" |
11687 | Wo n''t be back to- night, wo n''t he? |
11687 | Would it not be wiser to reassimilate the tender dear ones, and think of them ever after with smacking memory? |
11687 | Would n''t a gentle asphyxia by water, now, be the best thing for some of the Broad- Street cellarers?" |
11687 | Would not the delicacy of the prisoner have been an additional reason for finding her guilty with Fijian jurors? |
11687 | Would you have them perform that sacrificial duty for one another?" |
11687 | Would you own the bird without its cage? |
11687 | You remember, perhaps, in some papers published awhile ago, an odd poem written by an old Latin tutor? |
11687 | _ You_ do n''t have notes to pay? |
11687 | and how came you here?" |
11687 | and is it an improvement on the common version? |
11687 | and though afraid to turn her head that way, had she not felt that he was there every moment,--heard every word of the sermon and prayer for him? |
11687 | and where are we to go? |
11687 | and why should Death be painted dancing? |
11687 | are they not in his Wonder- Book? |
11687 | can he become an unborn infant of his mother a second time, and be born?''" |
11687 | can he enter the second time into his mother''s womb and be born?''" |
11687 | exclaimed Mr. Lindsay,--"_you_ have that sum?" |
11687 | how can I tell you?" |
11687 | how crush the spirits of his invalid wife? |
11687 | or did the trouble spring from innate madness in the"younger strengths"which were trying to overthrow the world''s kingdoms? |
11687 | or is it an improvement? |
11687 | or should men attempt to realize the fair ideals which the word Republic suggested? |
11687 | or should, perchance, the crosier of the Old Church be again waved over Europe? |
11687 | should Protestantism be confirmed? |
11687 | the house?" |
11687 | what ails thee?'' |
11687 | what shall we do?" |
11687 | what''s de use? |
11687 | whence comes it? |
28513 | --p. 170: Berecovered to Be recovered--p. 184: on to one( that rocks one to Sleep)--p. 193: The Sweet Waters of Stealth? |
28513 | 12.12.__ He knows he hath but a short time._ And how does he_ know_ it? |
28513 | 13.2, 3.__ Think ye that these were Sinners above others, because they suffered such Things? |
28513 | And have been heard calling upon their Familiar Spirits? |
28513 | And have been known to use Spells and Charms? |
28513 | And have not men been seen to do things which are above humane Strength, that no man living could do without Diabolical Assistances? |
28513 | And here, what shall I say? |
28513 | And how did men first come to know that Witches would be discovered in such ways as these, which have been mentioned? |
28513 | And how often has he pretended to be the Apostle_ Paul_ or_ Peter_ or some other celebrated Saint? |
28513 | And how shall Men live on the Earth, if the Devil may be permitted to use such Power? |
28513 | And if to touch him, why not to scratch him and fetch Blood out of him, which is but an harder kind of touch? |
28513 | And shall Men try whether God will work a Miracle to make a discovery? |
28513 | And to reveal Secrets which could not be discovered but by the Devil? |
28513 | And to shew in a Glass or in a Shew- stone persons absent? |
28513 | And what an Hour of Darkness was it? |
28513 | And what is the cause of this? |
28513 | And what use ought now to be made of so tremendous a dispensation? |
28513 | And why? |
28513 | Are all the other Instruments of thy Vengeance, too good for the chastisement of such transgressors as we are? |
28513 | Are we at our_ Boards_? |
28513 | B.__ What the Man''s Name was?_ his Countenance was much altered; nor could he say, who''twas. |
28513 | But have we safely got on our way thus far? |
28513 | But how should it be with_ us_, when we perceive that our_ Time_ is but_ short_? |
28513 | But is_ New- England_, the only Christian Countrey, that hath undergone such Diabolical Molestations? |
28513 | But now,_ What shall we do?__ I._ Let the Devils_ coming down_ in_ great wrath_ upon us, cause us to_ come down_ in_ great grief_ before the Lord. |
28513 | But the next Morning,_ Edmond Eliot_, going into_ Martin''s_ House, this Woman asked him where Kembal was? |
28513 | But what shall be done to cure these Distractions? |
28513 | But what shall be done, as to those against whom the_ evidence_ is chiefly founded in the_ dark world_? |
28513 | But what shall we now do, that we may be fortified against those Devices? |
28513 | But whereas''tis objected; where is Providence? |
28513 | But, O why should not_ New- England_ be the most forward part of the English Nation in such_ Reformations_? |
28513 | But,_ is not the Hand of Joab here?_ Sure, There is the_ wrath_ of the_ Devil_ also in it. |
28513 | Conjuring to raise Storms? |
28513 | Did she not hear the_ Drum_ beat? |
28513 | Do we stay till the_ Storm_ of his_ Wrath_ be over? |
28513 | E''en the same that was mutter''d in the Ear of the Afflicted_ Job_,_ Is not this the Uprightness of thy Ways? |
28513 | E._ Seems it at all marvellous unto us, that the_ Devil_ should get such footing in our Country? |
28513 | Has there not also been a world of_ discontent_ in our Borders? |
28513 | Have not many of us been_ Devils_ one unto another for Slanderings, for Backbitings, for Animosities? |
28513 | Have there been any disputed Methods used in discovering the Works of Darkness? |
28513 | He asked her, who did then? |
28513 | He demanded why? |
28513 | He would have us trie the Justice of God; but how? |
28513 | He would have us trie the Power of God; but how? |
28513 | He would have us trie the Promise of God; but how? |
28513 | He would have us trie the Threatning of God; but how? |
28513 | Hence we read about,_ The Prince of the power of the Air_: Our_ Air_ has a_ power_? |
28513 | How comes your Appearance to hurt these? |
28513 | How did our Lord silence the_ Devil_? |
28513 | How did the Devil assault the First_ Adam_? |
28513 | If the Devils_ Time_ were above a_ thousand years ago_, pronounced_ short_, what may we suppose it now in_ our_ Time? |
28513 | In fine, Have there been faults on any side fallen into? |
28513 | Is it not possible? |
28513 | It was for Us that our Lord overcome the Devil: and when he did but say,_ Satan, Get hence_, away presently the Tygre flew: Does the Devil molest Us? |
28513 | May we not say,_ We are in the very belly of Hell_, when_ Hell_ it self is feeding upon us? |
28513 | Must that which is there next mentioned, be next encountered? |
28513 | Must the plague of_ Old à � gypt_ come upon thee? |
28513 | Must this_ Wilderness_ be made a Receptacle for the_ Dragons of the Wilderness_? |
28513 | No sure; why may not the_ last_ be the_ first_? |
28513 | Of what use or state will_ America_ be, when the_ Kingdom of God_ shall come? |
28513 | On the one side;[ Alas, my Pen, must thou write the word,_ Side_ in the Business?] |
28513 | Once more, why may not_ Storms_ be reckoned among those_ Woes_, with which the Devil does disturb us? |
28513 | Remember, I pray thee, who ever perished, being Innocent? |
28513 | Said_ Joseph_,_ What''s the matter Brother? |
28513 | Shall we condemn him that is most just? |
28513 | Shall we sink, expire, perish, before the_ short time_ of the Devil shall be finished? |
28513 | Some time after,_ Bishop_ asked him, whether her Father would grind her Grist for her? |
28513 | The Chief Judg asked the Prisoner, who he thought hindred these Witnesses from giving their_ Testimonies_? |
28513 | The Devil himself, will Egg us on to many a_ Duty_; and why so? |
28513 | The Devil will fright men from doing those things, that are,_ the Things of their Peace_; but How? |
28513 | The Devil would have us to trie the Purpose of God, about our selves or others; but how? |
28513 | The Devil would have us trie the Mercy of God, but how? |
28513 | The Worshipful Mr._ Hathorne_ asked her,_ Why she afflicted those Children?_ She said, she did not Afflict them. |
28513 | The afflicted Persons asked her, why she did not go to the Company of Witches which were before the Meeting- House Mustering? |
28513 | Their Master.----_ Magistrate._ Their Master? |
28513 | There will be Devils to Tempt us unto Carnality; Are we in our_ Shops_? |
28513 | There will be Devils to Tempt us unto Sensuality: Are we in our_ Beds_? |
28513 | Thus would the Devil Elevate us into the_ Air_, above our Neighbours; and why so? |
28513 | Was it not a Miracle when_ Peter_ was kept from sinking under the Water by the Omnipotency of Christ? |
28513 | We are engaged in a_ Fast_ this day; but shall we try to fetch_ Meat out of the Eater_, and make the_ Lion_ to afford some_ Hony_ for our_ Souls_? |
28513 | We may say; and shall we not be_ humbled_ when we say it? |
28513 | What Credit can be given to those that say they can turn Men into Horses? |
28513 | What a Difficult, what an Arduous Task, have those Worthy Personages now upon their Hands? |
28513 | What a_ full_ Armoury then have we, in_ all_ the sacred Pages that lie before us? |
28513 | What hurt did I ever do you in my life? |
28513 | What is their Appearing sometimes Cloathed with_ Light_ or_ Fire_ upon them? |
28513 | What is their Covering of themselves and their Instruments with_ Invisibility_? |
28513 | What is their Entring their Names in a_ Book_? |
28513 | What is their Transportation thro''the_ Air_? |
28513 | What is their Travelling_ in Spirit_, while their Body is cast into a Trance? |
28513 | What is their causing of_ Cattle_ to run mad and perish? |
28513 | What is their coming together from all parts, at the Sound of a_ Trumpet_? |
28513 | What is their making of the Afflicted_ Rise_, with a touch of their_ Hand_? |
28513 | What is their stricking down with a fierce_ Look_? |
28513 | What needs now more witness or further Enquiry?_ XIV. |
28513 | What was it, that the Devil hurried our Lord Jesus Christ unto the Top of the_ Temple_ for? |
28513 | What was the design of our God, in bringing over so many_ Europà ¦ ans_ hither of later years? |
28513 | What_ Rulers_ would the Devil have, to command all mankind, if he might have his will? |
28513 | When our Lord was in his Penury, then says the Devil,_ If thou be the Son of God;_ he now makes an_ If_, of it;_ What? |
28513 | Whence had they this Supernatural Sight? |
28513 | Where was it, that the Devil fell upon our Lord? |
28513 | Who of us can say, what may be shewn in the_ Glasses_ of the Great_ Lying Spirit_? |
28513 | Why was that? |
28513 | Why, did the Devil say to our Lord,_ Cast thy self down_, but in hopes that our Lord would have broke his Bones, in the fall? |
28513 | Would we find a Covert from these_ Vultures_? |
28513 | Yet when she was asked, what she had to say for her self? |
28513 | _ A Devil._ What is_ that_? |
28513 | _ Magistrate._ But what do you think ails them? |
28513 | _ Magistrate._ Do n''t you think they are bewitch''d? |
28513 | _ Magistrate._ Is it not_ your_ Master? |
28513 | _ Magistrate._ Pray, what ails these People? |
28513 | _ Magistrate._ Well, what have you done towards this? |
28513 | _ Martin._ How do I know? |
28513 | _ N._ and said,_ Do you not see her? |
28513 | are you not ashamed, a Woman of your Profession, to afflict a poor Creature so? |
28513 | keeps us from such a Mishap; yet where have we an_ Absolute Promise_, that we shall every one always be kept from it? |
28513 | or by any unadvisableness contribute unto the Widening of our Breaches? |
28513 | or that he that governs the Earth hateth Right? |
28513 | whether the great Black Man? |
28513 | who do you think is their Master? |
15029 | Ai n''t Pop brave? |
15029 | Are we going all the way in the car? |
15029 | Are you busy, Uncle Cassius? |
15029 | Are you going to eat all those apples, Kit? |
15029 | Are you the young lady who has the renting of these tents which I see every once in a while? |
15029 | Billie, are you really after bugs and things-- I mean, are you going to really be a naturalist? |
15029 | But do n''t you think your mother will need you here? 15029 But what can you do about it, my dear? |
15029 | But what does it say? |
15029 | But where would you put her, dear? |
15029 | But, Aunt Daphne, does n''t he act just exactly as though he had been a retainer in our honored family for generations? |
15029 | But, Mrs. Peckham,pleaded Kit,"when you were Sally''s age, was n''t there ever anything that you wanted to do or be with all your heart and soul? |
15029 | But, brother, the Beaubiens won all their suits, did n''t they? |
15029 | But, brother, what about the child? 15029 Could I, Aunt Daphne? |
15029 | Dearest, am I domineering to you? 15029 Delphi?" |
15029 | Deserts, islands or mountain peaks? |
15029 | Did you call up Han Hicks? |
15029 | Did you hear them all talking about him over at Elmwood while we were there? 15029 Did you, child? |
15029 | Do n''t any of your brothers want to come? |
15029 | Do n''t they? |
15029 | Do n''t you feel''the rushing torrent of ambition''s flood sweeping away the barriers''and-- what else did the Dean say? |
15029 | Do n''t you have to take them in when it storms or the wind blows, just like sails? |
15029 | Do n''t you wish you''d been there when they dug them up? 15029 Do you know the Dean?" |
15029 | Do you mean Marcelle Beaubien? 15029 Do you remember, Piney, the place where Billie and I had our birch tepee long ago? |
15029 | Do you suppose Ra lives here, Uncle Cassius? |
15029 | Do you suppose he''d be willing to play''Home, Sweet Home''on that thing if we asked him to? 15029 Do you suppose he''ll survive, Shad? |
15029 | Do you suppose,Kit leaned forward impressively, as she sprang her plan,"do you suppose Charity would loan her room for a Founders''Tea?" |
15029 | Does Marcelle know? |
15029 | Does n''t it seem good to get some of Cousin Roxy''s huckleberry pancakes again, girls? 15029 Does n''t this remind you, Daphne, of some of the basket luncheons we used to have in England and France years ago?" |
15029 | Had n''t I better go for help? |
15029 | Have n''t you got some of that painted tinware, too, Sally? |
15029 | Have you ever heard her sing, mother? |
15029 | Have you? |
15029 | He does n''t act a bit important or dignified, does he? |
15029 | He''s about fourteen, is n''t he? 15029 Hello, Rex, are you coming over?" |
15029 | Historic tradition? |
15029 | How be you, Jerry? 15029 How could they smuggle way off here?" |
15029 | How did you find out about this, my dear? |
15029 | How did you find out? |
15029 | How do you do? |
15029 | How do you do? |
15029 | How do you like it here? |
15029 | How do you think you''re going to like Hope College? |
15029 | How on earth did you ever get way out here? |
15029 | I never thought it would look just like that, did you, Billie? |
15029 | I wonder-- I do n''t suppose you''d have any sale for braided rag rugs, would you? 15029 I''m afraid the Dean made a little mistake, did n''t he? |
15029 | In France? |
15029 | Is he here, now? |
15029 | Is he still alive? |
15029 | Is it very far down the bluff to the shore, Delia? |
15029 | Is n''t she going up to rehearsal? |
15029 | Is n''t she odd? |
15029 | Is that all? |
15029 | Is that you, Shad? |
15029 | Is this a truce, or a lasting peace? 15029 It is still another one of you?" |
15029 | It''s Dan Peckham, is n''t it? |
15029 | It''s our dormitory, do n''t you know? |
15029 | Just mummies? |
15029 | Like playing forfeits, is n''t it? |
15029 | Mind? |
15029 | Mother says I ought to dress very simply, but a Duke''s daughter would have even a stuff dress cut in fashion, would n''t she? 15029 Mother,"called Helen,"were you ever in Delphi, where Uncle Cassius lives?" |
15029 | Now, what are you going to eat, Anne? 15029 Now, what on earth do you suppose he meant by that?" |
15029 | Oh, are you the founder''s granddaughter? |
15029 | Oh, but I''d love to help,Kit pleaded,"and I did help before on the aborigines of Japan, did n''t I? |
15029 | Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud, sister mine? 15029 Poor little Peggy,"Charity murmured,"getting into trim for a Shakespeare drive? |
15029 | Queer? |
15029 | Reaching years of discretion, are n''t you, girlie? |
15029 | Semblance of verity? 15029 Smuggling?" |
15029 | Sounds just like Pope, does n''t it? |
15029 | That''s the new name, is n''t it? 15029 The Beaubiens on the shore, my dear?" |
15029 | They ai n''t calculatin''to fish over there beyond the dam, are they? 15029 They''re all older than you, are n''t they?" |
15029 | This is it, is n''t it? 15029 Those half- breed French Canadians?" |
15029 | Told me what? |
15029 | Uncle Cassius, what would you do if everything was just swept away from you, health, money, home and your work; what do you suppose you would do? 15029 Was everything all right?" |
15029 | Was he heading this way? |
15029 | Well, for pity''s sakes,exclaimed Kit, as she stood before the plain, squat, terra- cotta urn,"is that the royal urn? |
15029 | Well, what are they going to do about it? 15029 Well, what if it is?" |
15029 | Were n''t you telling me something about a place in China where they had a whole grove filled with sacred silkworms, Aunt Daphne? |
15029 | What did he want to sell us, Dorrie, lightning rods or sewing machines? |
15029 | What do you think of that? |
15029 | What do you want? |
15029 | What does it mean when the crows circle over Gilead? |
15029 | What does the inscription say? |
15029 | What if they did? 15029 What kind of branches?" |
15029 | What''s that? |
15029 | When? |
15029 | Where are you bound for? |
15029 | Where did you purloin that, Peg? |
15029 | Where do you find those, my dear? |
15029 | Where''s Anne? |
15029 | Whiskers? |
15029 | Who wants to meditate, anyway? |
15029 | Who was Ra? |
15029 | Why did n''t you try to catch me? 15029 Why do n''t you buy yourself some things that you''ve been wanting? |
15029 | Why on earth should n''t they? |
15029 | Why, I do n''t know; Walt Whitman, Ibsen, Longfellow, Joaquin Miller? 15029 Will you come down to the tent this afternoon and take me there? |
15029 | Will you tell me something, honest and true? |
15029 | Wo n''t he tell you his secrets, Uncle Cassius? |
15029 | Would n''t it be strange, Billie, if either of us were famous some day,she said, thoughtfully,"and this picture would just be priceless? |
15029 | Would you mind so very much, Miss Kit, asking if any one has telephoned a telegram up for me from the station? 15029 You did n''t? |
15029 | You do n''t know him very well, do you? |
15029 | You mean,she said,"supposing he decided that my brain measured up to his expectations of Jerry, Jr., and they wanted me to stay all winter? |
15029 | You miss the fun, being a day student, do n''t you? |
15029 | You''re in my class, are n''t you? |
15029 | ''Tain''t nothin''but a big fiddle, is it?" |
15029 | All I want to know is, who told you?" |
15029 | Another thing, Kit, do you suppose Marcelle would have any relics around of her grandfather that we could kind of spring on them unexpectedly?" |
15029 | Are n''t these apples bully though? |
15029 | Are n''t you glad the fire did n''t bum the cupola? |
15029 | Are they Chinese porcelains and jewels, or just mummy things?" |
15029 | Are you going to let her keep on painting?" |
15029 | Are you preparing a treatise?" |
15029 | Brought company with you, too, did n''t you? |
15029 | Can I borrow your steamer trunk, Jean? |
15029 | Come to stay a while? |
15029 | Could n''t I go to school there, just as well as here? |
15029 | Could n''t we fix up some kind of glorified lemonade?" |
15029 | Could n''t we start a regular tent colony? |
15029 | Did he tell Dad that?" |
15029 | Did n''t you ever just want to get away from what you had been doing for years, and start something new?" |
15029 | Did you save all the chickens, Shad?" |
15029 | Did you see old Hannibal''s face and Evie''s, too? |
15029 | Do n''t I wish I were twenty so I could do some Red Cross work and get over? |
15029 | Do n''t you love this old pond, Billie? |
15029 | Do n''t you notice, Anne, how I cling to all the soft pastel nondescript tones? |
15029 | Do n''t you realize that I''m fifteen and a half?" |
15029 | Do n''t you really think that I''m peculiarly fitted for this sort of a career? |
15029 | Do n''t you think it will be?" |
15029 | Do n''t you think so, Kit?" |
15029 | Do n''t you think that they look like the Breton fisher people in some of the old French paintings? |
15029 | Do n''t you want to, Marcelle?" |
15029 | Do you remember what Emerson had inscribed over his study door? |
15029 | Do you suppose it could mean the rim of the urn?" |
15029 | Do you suppose they''ll mind very much if we stay just a few minutes? |
15029 | Do you suppose, mother, that Mr. Peckham would let Sally manage anything like that up here? |
15029 | Do you think he will?" |
15029 | Do you think he''ll mind so very much when he sees me?" |
15029 | Do you think so, Hiram?" |
15029 | Do you think the boys would stand for that?" |
15029 | Enjoy it? |
15029 | Has Uncle Cassius got any pets at all?" |
15029 | Has anything happened?" |
15029 | Have I crushed your spirit, and made you all weak and pindlin''? |
15029 | Have you discovered all these shelves in your wardrobe? |
15029 | Have you seen Charity''s room? |
15029 | He''s playing on something, is n''t he?" |
15029 | Hicks?" |
15029 | Home folks or just visitors?" |
15029 | Home for Christmas?" |
15029 | How dare you keep back any news of my family from me?" |
15029 | How do you like the decoration?" |
15029 | How do you like your new brother, Kit?" |
15029 | How long can you stay?" |
15029 | How was I to know he was hunting gypsy moths and other winged beasts when I saw him bending over bushes in our berry patch? |
15029 | Howdy, Philemon? |
15029 | I am seventy- four now, and what heritage am I leaving to the world beyond a few books of reference, and my collections? |
15029 | I just caught him red handed as he was bending down right over the bushes, and what do you suppose he tried to tell me, Miss Kit? |
15029 | I wonder what people were thinking about back in those days to worship that sort of thing?" |
15029 | If there was any spot of earth that was peaceful and restful, and that you loved best, would n''t you want to go to it? |
15029 | Is Charity going to decorate the study for the festal occasion? |
15029 | Is n''t it a dear, drowsy dreamful place? |
15029 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
15029 | Is n''t it inspiring, Kit? |
15029 | Is n''t there anything at all that you long to do more than anything in the world? |
15029 | Is n''t there something besides just plain tea? |
15029 | Is n''t this a celestial rose jar? |
15029 | Is the statue very beautiful?" |
15029 | It will be sad, wo n''t it, if the royal princesses have to be launched without wedding chests and dowries? |
15029 | It''s so kind of solitary and restful, is n''t it, up here?" |
15029 | Just as they got to the veranda steps he said, under his breath:"Are you all right, Kit?" |
15029 | Kit repeated again, slowly:"''He shall lie in peace, encompassed by Ra,''That means surrounded by Ra, does n''t it, Uncle Cassius?" |
15029 | Kit''s going to dash off some little simple trifle in spare moments for us, are n''t you? |
15029 | Kit, my child, did you hear that? |
15029 | Kit, you big goose, what did you ever go in that boat alone for? |
15029 | Know him?" |
15029 | Let''s see, Jean, he would have been our great- great- great- grandfather, would n''t he? |
15029 | Maybe we could arrange a trip, do n''t you think so, mother?" |
15029 | Not the real west, either; I mean the interesting west like Saskatchewan and Saskatoon and-- and California; you know what I mean, Jean?" |
15029 | Oh, Kit, why do you suppose he keeps away from every one?" |
15029 | Oh, but was n''t she splendid, Anne? |
15029 | Peckham?" |
15029 | People do n''t do that out west, do they, Uncle Cassius? |
15029 | Something that you''ve thought and thought about for months and months until it became like a light ahead of you?" |
15029 | Sticking his head out through the tent flap, he called down to the beach:"Say, Stan, where''s the granite pot with the long handle?" |
15029 | There are four or five of them----""Boys or girls?" |
15029 | Tin,--ancient Britain-- and something about Carthage, or was that Queen Dido?" |
15029 | Tolstoi had long straggly ones, did n''t he?" |
15029 | Want me to''phone over for a rig to take you up? |
15029 | Was n''t it Rubenstein, Kit, who used to take his violin and play the music of the rain and falling water?" |
15029 | We admit the surge, but would you really and truly be willing to go to this place? |
15029 | We ought to have something sort of different, do n''t you think so?" |
15029 | What is Hecuba to you, or you to Hecuba?" |
15029 | What on earth, she used to argue, was the use of being a family if you did n''t all lean on each other and derive mutual strength and support? |
15029 | When were you in Gilead last?" |
15029 | Whereupon Piney would have to respond interestedly,"Fine or superfine?" |
15029 | Which dormitory was she in?" |
15029 | Who ever heard of raising hogs when they could raise anything else at all? |
15029 | Who on earth do you suppose, girls, wants to rent one of your tents for the whole summer?" |
15029 | Who on earth would he be getting a telegram from?" |
15029 | Who was that, Kit?" |
15029 | Who was the gentle poet that sang of the lady who buried her fond lover''s head in a flower pot and watered it with her tears?" |
15029 | Who''s against her?" |
15029 | Why did n''t you come earlier?" |
15029 | Why do n''t you just write to Jerrold and make known your willingness? |
15029 | Why, Kit?" |
15029 | Will you write to me when you are away?" |
15029 | Would n''t it be funny if she got proud and haughty, and marched away from our Founders''Tea?" |
15029 | Would she really be away from the home nest until next June? |
15029 | Ye secret, black and midnight hags, what is''t ye do?" |
15029 | You know Cousin Roxy, do n''t you, Uncle Cassius?" |
15029 | You know Marcelle Beaubien? |
15029 | You need n''t laugh, Doris,''cause Billie saw him too, did n''t you, Bill? |
15029 | You remember Mr. Howard, who came to look after our trees? |
15029 | You''ll be a nice crowd of farmerettes next summer, wo n''t you?" |
11118 | ''Deed, Mass Roger? 11118 And have n''t I as good a right to it as any?" |
11118 | And now? |
11118 | And that was----? |
11118 | And the jelly like molten rubies that I made? 11118 And what is mulled wine made with?" |
11118 | Anything fresh this morning? 11118 Are you going to Martinique?" |
11118 | But, massa,--s''pose I deserve a thrashing? |
11118 | Can I be of service to you, Sir? |
11118 | Cattle? 11118 Come, look here naow, yeou, don''stan''aäskin''questions over''n''over;--''t beats all I ha''n''t I tol''y''a dozen times?" |
11118 | Contraband? |
11118 | Did you? |
11118 | Do n''t you see Webster_ ers_ in the words cent_er_ and theat_er_? 11118 Do n''t you see?" |
11118 | Do you know what you promised me on my birthday? 11118 Do you know"--he broke out all at once--"why they do n''t take steppes in Tartary for establishing Insane Hospitals?" |
11118 | Do you mean that I shall go away? 11118 Do you remember your first repast at the Bawn?" |
11118 | Do you want money? |
11118 | Do? |
11118 | Has he made such a request? |
11118 | How can you go to Martinique? |
11118 | How is this? |
11118 | How much is very well? |
11118 | How, Sir? 11118 I mean-- How do you know that I do?" |
11118 | I? 11118 If I should go back to Martinique, I should become one in your remembrance,--should I not? |
11118 | If he spells leather_ lether_, and feather_ fether_, is n''t there danger that he''ll give us a_ bad spell of weather_? 11118 Indeed? |
11118 | Is Mr. Raleigh''s heart such a delicate organ? |
11118 | Is it ready now? |
11118 | Is n''t it a leetle rash to give him the use of his hands? 11118 It would n''t be possible for me to sit on the box and drive?" |
11118 | Mr. Raleigh,said Marguerite,"did you ever love my mother?" |
11118 | Mrs. Purcell,asked Mr. Raleigh, as that lady entered,"is this little banquet no seduction to you?" |
11118 | Must I go, mamma? |
11118 | Must I leave you? |
11118 | Naow get up, will ye? |
11118 | Not going? 11118 Now, then, Sir?" |
11118 | Reach home like Cinderella? 11118 Ruined? |
11118 | Sha''n''t I? 11118 So you prefer_ Cane_ to_ A bell_, do you?" |
11118 | Then you confess to being a myth? |
11118 | Then you have n''t any bad news for me? 11118 This is what the Inquisition calls applying the question?" |
11118 | Two affairs on hand at once? 11118 Unless I marry Mr. Heath, I lose my wealth? |
11118 | We shall be soon at home? 11118 Well?" |
11118 | What are you doing? |
11118 | What are you poisoning all this brood for? |
11118 | What do you mean? |
11118 | What do you suppose has become of that little miniature I told you of? 11118 What has this to do with it?" |
11118 | What have I to do with it? |
11118 | What if she had died? |
11118 | What is it? |
11118 | What is the matter, Cousin Elsie? 11118 What is the meaning of all this? |
11118 | What is this? |
11118 | What more felicity can fell to creature Than to enjoy delight with liberty? |
11118 | What then? |
11118 | What untoward fate cast him there? |
11118 | What''s the matter with your shoulder, Venner? |
11118 | When I reached this point, young Heath turned to me with that impudently nonchalant drawl of his, saying,--''And her property, Sir?'' |
11118 | When a fellah goes out huntin''and shoots a squirrel, do you think he''s go''n''to let another fellah pick him up and kerry him off? 11118 Where is Raleigh?" |
11118 | Where is she? 11118 Where shall I send your trunk after you from your uncle''s?" |
11118 | Which am I now? |
11118 | Which in particular? |
11118 | Who collects the money to defray the expenses of the last campaign in Italy? |
11118 | Who''a hurt? 11118 Why did you give it up?" |
11118 | Why do you think in French? |
11118 | Why is his way of spelling like the floor of an oven? 11118 Why not?" |
11118 | Why, how is that, Old Joe? |
11118 | Why, to see if there''s any_ corn under''em!_he said; and immediately asked,"Why is Douglas like the earth?" |
11118 | Will you hear''em now,--now I''m here? |
11118 | Will you mount? 11118 Would you give it such a character, Miss Rite?" |
11118 | You are not in toilet? |
11118 | You can not imagine? |
11118 | You did not know the original Raleigh? |
11118 | You do not anticipate any unpleasant effect? |
11118 | You have? 11118 You knew Mr. Raleigh thirteen years ago?" |
11118 | You think that absurd? 11118 You wo n''t?" |
11118 | You would n''t act so, if you were dancing with Mr. Langdon,--would you, Elsie? |
11118 | You would not, then, propose to an heiress? |
11118 | Your daughter is ignorant?--your wife? |
11118 | Yours? |
11118 | _ Buvez, Monsieur_,she said;"_ c''est le vin de la vie!_""Do you know how near daylight it is?" |
11118 | _ Comment?_cried Marguerite, breathlessly. |
11118 | _ Qu''avez vous?_she exclaimed. |
11118 | A cry?" |
11118 | And can I serve you at this point?" |
11118 | Any Conundrum?" |
11118 | Are you safe?" |
11118 | Beggar her to divide her property?" |
11118 | Berger?" |
11118 | But in this respect differs he much from those men who have wrought great things for the world, and whom the world is content to reverence? |
11118 | But would Italy be permitted to settle her quarrel with her old oppressor without foreign intervention? |
11118 | But would it be wisdom in the Free States to put themselves at the mercy of such a panic whenever the whim took South Carolina to be discontented? |
11118 | But, because one''s hands are tender, can not one''s nerves be strong, one''s will indomitable? |
11118 | By the way, what do you think of Mary Purcell''s engagement? |
11118 | Can you have seen it?" |
11118 | Did it break your heart?" |
11118 | Do n''t you think it will be safer-- for the women- folks-- jest to wait till mornin'', afore you put that j''int into the socket?" |
11118 | Do n''t you want to wait here, jest a little while, till I come back? |
11118 | Do you know what day it is?" |
11118 | Do you want to come?" |
11118 | During that time, Miss Fanny Gilbert wrote novels, and was unhappy: would she have been happy, if, in the interval, she had chronicled small beer? |
11118 | Even if the secessionists could accomplish their schemes, who would be the losers? |
11118 | Give it up? |
11118 | Has any one heard from the Colonel? |
11118 | Have we escaped the French fashions of_ Ã -la- mode_ watering- places, to be fastidious amid wigwams and unpeopled shores? |
11118 | Have you eyes to find the five Which five thousand could survive? |
11118 | He glanced at her keenly an instant, then handed her his cup, saying,--"May I trouble you?" |
11118 | Helen''s eyes glistened as she interrupted him,--"What do you mean? |
11118 | Here are dates; if you would n''t choose the things in themselves, truly you would for their associations? |
11118 | Here are nuts swathed in syrup; you''ll have none of them? |
11118 | I do n''t believe you have exercised enough;--don''t you think it''s confinement in the school has made you nervous?" |
11118 | I have been seeking you, and what sprite sends you to me?" |
11118 | If a woman''s happiness is to be found in love, and not in fame, the question nevertheless recurs,--What is she to do before the love comes? |
11118 | If he should make these demands, or either of them, would the other European Powers permit the Italians to comply with them? |
11118 | If it seem prosaic, what care we? |
11118 | Indeed? |
11118 | Is he ill?" |
11118 | Is it a good thing to"extend the area of freedom"by pillaging some feeble Mexico? |
11118 | Is it, then, impossible that she, having command of the house- hold, should have been able to substitute a dead for the living child? |
11118 | It is not long since we listened to an interesting discussion of this question:--Which was the more important year to Europe,--1859 or 1860? |
11118 | Ketched ye''ith a slippernoose, hey? |
11118 | Light and sparkling,--thin and tart,--isn''t it Solomon who forbids mixed drink?" |
11118 | May I dress it with sweet- brier to- night? |
11118 | Mowzer?" |
11118 | Mr. Bernard heard the answer, but presently stared about and asked again,_"Who''s hurt? |
11118 | Mr. Langdon, has anything happened to you?" |
11118 | My dear Laura Matilda, have you ever worked your way under ground, like the ghost Hamlet, Senior? |
11118 | No? |
11118 | Not a chocolate? |
11118 | On the contrary, you confess, but a dim idea of that peculiar mode of progression abides in the well- ordered mansion of your mind? |
11118 | Presently the Patriarch asked again,--"Why was M. Berger authorized to go to the dances given to the Prince?" |
11118 | Presently,--"Why, Bernard, my dear friend, my brother, it can not be that you are in danger? |
11118 | Shall a coat be synonymous with cowardice? |
11118 | Shall he insult the whole city with his solvency? |
11118 | Shall trousers deter us from the passage? |
11118 | Spec you mind dat time when all dese yer folks lib''d acrost de lake dat summer, an''massa was possessed to''most lib dar too? |
11118 | Tell me now, you are not in earnest, are you, but only trying a little sentiment on me?" |
11118 | The man a''n''t hurt,--don''t you see him stirring? |
11118 | The subjoined Conundrum is not allowed:--Why is Hasty Pudding like the Prince? |
11118 | The tale? |
11118 | WHO WAS CASPAR HAUSER? |
11118 | We have nerve; has it not been tested throughout the somewhat arduous journey of the preceding weeks? |
11118 | Well, one day, massa mind Ol''Cap''s runnin''acrost in de rain an''in great state ob excitement to tell him his house done burnt up?" |
11118 | What are the Bedouins to the Zouaves, who unquestionably would be as formidable in Lapland as in Algiers? |
11118 | What did you dream?" |
11118 | What do you stop for?" |
11118 | What does that signify? |
11118 | What is the boat to us but a means? |
11118 | What is the matter?" |
11118 | What other potentate did anything for that country in 1859, or has done anything for it since that memorable year? |
11118 | What then?" |
11118 | What was that? |
11118 | What were Indians, however deadly,--what starvation, however imminent,--what pestilence, however lurking,--to a solid obstacle like this? |
11118 | What were the Pyramids to that? |
11118 | What''n thunder''r''y''abaout, y''darned Portagee?" |
11118 | What''n thunder''s that''ere raoun''y''r neck? |
11118 | What''s happened? |
11118 | What''s happened? |
11118 | What''s happened?" |
11118 | What''s that''ere stickin''aout o''y''r boot?" |
11118 | Where were his ears and judgment on that occasion? |
11118 | Where, then? |
11118 | Who is there here that I can have any true society with, but you? |
11118 | Who shall define what makes the essential difference between those lowest and these loftiest types? |
11118 | Why cattle?" |
11118 | Why did he remain his protector, and thus make himself a party to the fraud? |
11118 | Why is a-- a-- a-- like a-- a-- a--? |
11118 | Why may we not form an harmonious quartette? |
11118 | Why were they not engaged before?" |
11118 | Why, then, did Stanhope wait for his death before he proclaimed the imposture? |
11118 | Will this first ladder never end? |
11118 | Will you allow me to invite them in here? |
11118 | Will you never be at peace?" |
11118 | Will you take me up- stairs?" |
11118 | Would all the mines of Peru tempt me?" |
11118 | You do n''t believe in presentiments, do you?" |
11118 | You would not leave us for another school, would you?" |
11118 | You would not marry an heiress?" |
11118 | You would think of me just as you would have thought of the Dryad yesterday, if she had stepped from the tree and stepped back again?" |
11118 | You''ll see to it,--won''t you, Abel?" |
11118 | Your servants could not explain it?" |
11118 | _ Le Roi est mort? |
11118 | _ Que sais- je_? |
11118 | _"Who''s hurt? |
11118 | and does the phrase become a bad one only when it means the peaceful progress of constitutional liberty within our own borders? |
11118 | and what''s all this noise about?" |
11118 | are you mad?" |
11118 | are you not brothers? |
11118 | he called out,"what have you got there? |
11118 | he replied,--"what do you call green?" |
11118 | is all right? |
11118 | or what marvel is an amphibian with the bill of a duck to him who has gazed aghast at the intricate anatomy of the bill of English? |
11118 | really?_ If the complexion of his politics were not accounted for by his being an_ eager_ person himself? |
11118 | really?_ If the complexion of his politics were not accounted for by his being an_ eager_ person himself? |
11118 | said Mr. Laudersdale, entering,"where is your mother?" |
11118 | said Mr. Raleigh, leaping from the other side of the brook to the mossy trunk,"is it you? |
39176 | Ah, who will understand him,she said;"who will comfort him when I am gone? |
39176 | And can not you turn to God? |
39176 | And can you bear to have your name sullied by this alliance with the wicked? 39176 And can you part with life thus triumphantly?" |
39176 | And have you then suffered so much? |
39176 | And is her word to be taken against the testimony of my whole life? 39176 And the picture,"said Edith;"why did he not claim it, and take it with him, to console him, as far as it could, for the loss of his beautiful bride?" |
39176 | And where,continued he,"is our young friend the student? |
39176 | And who told you I was so great a sinner? |
39176 | But what can we live for, if not for love? |
39176 | But where is she, who, at this calm hour, Watched his coming to see? 39176 Do you remember the fever you had soon after? |
39176 | Edith, my child,said her father,"what has happened?" |
39176 | Edith,he said at last, straining both her hands in his,"have you been able to think how cruel this death may be? |
39176 | Have I deceived myself? |
39176 | Have you forgotten my father? |
39176 | Is she now living? |
39176 | Is there any cause in nature that makes these hard hearts? |
39176 | Is this a tale? 39176 It is almost evening,"he said;"shall we not have prayers?" |
39176 | My dear Phoebe, do you remember the day when your grandmother died? 39176 O, my dear mistress, how?" |
39176 | Was it not too sad, that she should meet that dreadful fate just as her lover returned, and she was going to be so happy? |
39176 | What became of her lover? |
39176 | What have you done, that God should grant you the happiness to weep? |
39176 | Will they not say, and justly,''Go back to your plough; it is your destiny and proper vocation to labor?'' |
39176 | After a pause, Edith said,"Alas, there is no hope of escape: and why do you fold my hair so carefully? |
39176 | Ah, how can those who love be sufficiently grateful to God? |
39176 | Ah, when the frame round which in love we cling, Is chilled by death, does mutual service fail? |
39176 | Ah, who could live without love?" |
39176 | And was she indeed the same person? |
39176 | And you, Phoebe, you have loved me, have you not?" |
39176 | Are intercessions of the fervent tongue A waste of hope?" |
39176 | But why did she turn aside when they met? |
39176 | But will he remember me?" |
39176 | Can he give me back the innocence and peace of my cottage home in the green lanes of England, or the blessing of my poor old father?" |
39176 | Can he lift the leaden covering from the conscience? |
39176 | Can such revenge dwell in so young a heart?" |
39176 | Can you bear to think of it?" |
39176 | Could I esteem and honor you as I do, were you what you call yourself? |
39176 | Do you not know that God sees you and hears you, and that he will punish you for it? |
39176 | Have you forgotten how long, how truly, how fervently, I have loved you? |
39176 | Have you fortitude? |
39176 | He whom circumstance has invested at the moment with power? |
39176 | How did she die? |
39176 | How long, think you, before they will be like mine? |
39176 | Is tender pity then of no avail? |
39176 | Might I dare to hope that you would forgive, that you would pardon the poor, unknown, homeless scholar, that he has dared to love you?" |
39176 | O, my poor Phoebe, how can you be so wicked as to tell this dreadful lie? |
39176 | Of what avail has been a life of self- denial, of benevolence? |
39176 | Of what avail that I have striven to enlighten my own mind and to do good to others? |
39176 | Shall I appear as a beggar, or a peasant, to beg the trifling pittance of a book?" |
39176 | Shall I go again to my good friend at C----? |
39176 | She took her hand tenderly in hers, and whispered,"Can not you put your trust in God?" |
39176 | Slept? |
39176 | The young girl said,''Why do you despair now, my lady? |
39176 | Then she looked at the sleeping child:"Can the lamb dwell with the tiger, or the dove nestle with the hawk? |
39176 | Those who die as criminals are believed guilty of crimes; and can you consent to be remembered as the associate of evil spirits?" |
39176 | Was it only impatience at my lot which destined me to inexorable poverty?" |
39176 | What book shall be our evening reading? |
39176 | What could have been Seymore''s emotions when the cloud had vanished, and he stood in the clear sunshine of reason? |
39176 | What do you know of sorrow? |
39176 | What have they promised you for bringing this trouble on me?" |
39176 | What more do we want? |
39176 | What was her fate?" |
39176 | When the deacon visited her in the morning, she said, with much warmth,"Have the days of Queen Mary come back? |
39176 | Where did she live? |
39176 | Where now the solemn shade, Verdure and gloom, where many branches meet; So grateful, when the noon of summer made The valleys sick with heat? |
39176 | Who first spoke to you about it? |
39176 | Who is to judge what opinions are to be tolerated? |
39176 | Who was she? |
39176 | Who would die and be wholly forgotten? |
39176 | Why not apply to him again?" |
39176 | Will it be always thus? |
39176 | am I losing my memory, my mind?" |
39176 | and do you counsel this?" |
39176 | and is it for that you have brought on me this terrible evil? |
39176 | and is this to be the close of all?" |
39176 | and what does he know of the heart- broken? |
39176 | said Edith,--"how he lived among you? |
39176 | said Edith;"can not you pray? |
39176 | tell me: are you angry that I punished you? |
39176 | thought he,"is this madness? |
39176 | thought she;"will he think of me in''widowhood of heart?''" |
39176 | what have ye looked on since last we met?" |
39176 | what was her fate? |
39176 | where did she live? |
38588 | And so you do not consider the laying on of a Bishop''s hand necessary, to empower a man to preach the Gospel? |
38588 | And such it is,said he--"did you not hear my bell?" |
38588 | And why not, my son? |
38588 | Did you say all? 38588 Do you consider the Apostolical succession broken off, at the time of Dr. Freeman''s ordination?" |
38588 | How many corpses have you lifted, my old friend, in your six and thirty years of office? |
38588 | I have lived long-- did you count the strokes of my bell? |
38588 | If the crime was committed with a knife, or with the fists, how could it be committed with a hammer? |
38588 | Is n''t it a perfect pink, papa? |
38588 | Martin,said I,"I have always thought highly of your good opinion; but what can I say-- how can I serve you?" |
38588 | Perhaps not,I replied,"but now that you are dead, dear Martin, for Heaven''s sake, what''s the use of it?" |
38588 | This? |
38588 | WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH OUR CRIMINALS? |
38588 | Was there ever anything like this? |
38588 | What is it, dear mother? |
38588 | What, Peter? |
38588 | When are you going to skin Granny? |
38588 | Where is your father? |
38588 | Why, grandfather will be there, will he not? |
38588 | _ Your_ bell? |
38588 | --"Have you any other burden upon your conscience?" |
38588 | --"Is it unpleasant?" |
38588 | --"No postponement, on account of the weather?" |
38588 | --"Well, Martin,"said I,"what more?" |
38588 | --"What is it?" |
38588 | --"What,"I inquired,"at this time of night?" |
38588 | --------"Is your name Shylock? |
38588 | 21,_ My friends, there is no such thing as a friend_? |
38588 | 3, to have proclaimed that man happy, who had found even_ the shadow of a friend_? |
38588 | 73, p. 466, exclaims--"To what does it go? |
38588 | A creditor, having often knocked, and becoming impatient, knocked more violently;"will not your master see me?" |
38588 | All this I am ready to vouch for-- but, for what purpose, do you ask me to go with you?" |
38588 | And how did he receive them? |
38588 | And how shall_ we_ deal with the dead? |
38588 | And now the reader will inquire, what relation has this statement to the catacombs? |
38588 | And what will he not do, to work out this species of salvation, with fear and trembling? |
38588 | And whom does it benefit? |
38588 | Are these the words of truth and soberness? |
38588 | But are we not all liable to mistakes? |
38588 | By whom? |
38588 | Can you not remember, that you yourself, when a boy, were saluted now and then, with the title of"proper plague"--"devil''s bird"--or"little Pickle?" |
38588 | Caner?" |
38588 | Colvin gazed upon the chains, and asked--''What is that for?'' |
38588 | Dreams are marvellous things, certainly-- all this was a dream, I suppose-- for, if it was not-- what was it? |
38588 | Have n''t we lifted, head and foot, together, for six and thirty years?" |
38588 | How can I make thee amends?'' |
38588 | How shall_ we_ deal with the dead? |
38588 | How should you like that, gentlemen?'' |
38588 | I ask, in reference to this quotation from Croese, the same question? |
38588 | If he shall be proved to be innocent, who will not blush, that has contributed to fill the atmosphere, with a presentiment of this poor man''s guilt? |
38588 | In answer to the question, how slavery had been abolished in Massachusetts? |
38588 | In the course of the trial, Robinson said to Penn--"_You have been as bad as other folks_"--to which Penn replied--"_When and where? |
38588 | Is it not wise, and natural, and profitable, for the pilgrim to pause, and mark his lessening way? |
38588 | It need not be long, said one-- a line apiece, said the second-- shall I begin? |
38588 | Now I ask, in the name of historical truth, if Mr. Macaulay is sustained in his assertion, by Bonrepaux? |
38588 | Of what surgeon have I received a fee, for a skeleton, to blind mine eyes withal? |
38588 | Oh, hell- kite, all? |
38588 | So much for glory-- and what then? |
38588 | Starting suddenly, I beheld the well known features of an old acquaintance and fellow- spadesman--"Don''t you know me?" |
38588 | The courtly Quaker, therefore, did his best to seduce the college from the path of right."--Therefore!--Wherefore? |
38588 | The question is still before us,--How shall_ we_ deal with the dead? |
38588 | The question was not--"_can these dry bones live?_"--but are they the bones of the murdered Colvin? |
38588 | The work of corruption has gone forward-- the gases have escaped-- how and whither? |
38588 | This chivalry of the South-- what is it? |
38588 | This is well.--_Burials in tombs_ are still allowed.--Why? |
38588 | Turning his head to me, he said softly,''Dear father, hast thou no hope for me?'' |
38588 | Well: what is Mr. Macaulay''s authority for this? |
38588 | What is an herse of wax? |
38588 | What is the necessity of going back to the time of Draco, 624 years before Christ, for examples of inhuman, and absurdly inconsistent legislation? |
38588 | What shall we do to be saved? |
38588 | What sort of a Judge is this? |
38588 | What then shall be done? |
38588 | What was Solon, in comparison with David Crockett-- we are sure we are right, and why should we not go ahead? |
38588 | What will not such a man occasionally do, rather than submit gracefully, under such a trial, to the will of God? |
38588 | What, all my pretty chickens and their dam, At one fell swoop?" |
38588 | What, all? |
38588 | What_ seduction_? |
38588 | When that extraordinary man, Sir Thomas Browne, exclaimed, in his Hydriotaphia,"who knows the fate of his bones or how oft he shall be buried? |
38588 | Whence com''st thou, that thou art so fresh and fine? |
38588 | Wherein was ever the sin or the shame of negotiating, between the buccaneers of the Tortugas, and the parents of captive children, for their ransom? |
38588 | Who hath the oracle of his ashes, or whither they are to be scattered?" |
38588 | Who hath the oracle of his ashes, or whither they are to be scattered?" |
38588 | Who shall decide the question of_ nudum pactum_ or not? |
38588 | Who shall presume to say that contract is void, for want of consideration, or because the subject is_ malum in se_? |
38588 | Why charge such a man with_ malice prepense_? |
38588 | Why continue to bury in tombs? |
38588 | Why say, that he was_ instigated by the devil_? |
38588 | before us, as blotted all over, with official piracy and judicial murder? |
38588 | what are these boys here for?'' |
26295 | A capital subject,said Benjamin;"what do you say to taking that, Ralph?" |
26295 | A dollar and a half? 26295 A mean( humble) mechanic,--who can tell what an engine of good he may be, if humbly and wisely applied unto it?" |
26295 | Am I not going to Mr. Brownwell''s school any longer? |
26295 | And I go with you, did you say? |
26295 | And came all the way from Boston alone? |
26295 | And not go to school any more? |
26295 | And what is that? 26295 And what will be the probable expense of all these?" |
26295 | And where did you get your stones? |
26295 | And why do you deem such a pledge necessary? |
26295 | Any whistles? |
26295 | Are you about ready, Benjamin, to come into the shop and help me? |
26295 | Are you hungry? |
26295 | Are you satisfied,inquired Mrs. Franklin,"that Benjamin can not be prevailed upon to take the place of John in your shop?" |
26295 | Are you the young man,said Mickle,"who has lately opened a new printing- house?" |
26295 | Are your parents not willing that you should go to sea? |
26295 | Because Philadelphia is degenerating, and half the people are now bankrupt, or nearly so, and how can they support so many printers? |
26295 | Benjamin,said his father,"where was you last evening?" |
26295 | But did you not like the brazier''s business? |
26295 | But dost thou love life? 26295 But how can you expect to get all the business when there is another printer here, who has been established some time?" |
26295 | But would it not prove an advantage for you to be there yourself, to select the types, and see that everything is good? |
26295 | But your father was not thus persecuted, was he? |
26295 | By changing the name? |
26295 | Can I have more coppers when these are gone? |
26295 | Can I see him? |
26295 | Can any one particular form of government suit all mankind? |
26295 | Can it be,he exclaimed to Collins,"that you are intemperate?" |
26295 | Can it be? |
26295 | Can you take a friend of mine to New York? |
26295 | Can you take me in? 26295 Did they belong to you?" |
26295 | Did you not know that man? |
26295 | Did you not know that they belonged to the man who is building the house? |
26295 | Do n''t you believe it? |
26295 | Do you call me drunk? |
26295 | Do you intend to take Benjamin away from school at once? |
26295 | Do you know of any deserving young beginner lately set up, whom it lies in the power of the Junto any way to encourage? |
26295 | Do you think of anything at present in which the Junto may be serviceable to_ mankind_, to their country, to their friends, or to themselves? |
26295 | Do you think you will learn a lesson from this, and never do the like again? |
26295 | Do you understand all parts of it so that you can go on with it? |
26295 | Does Benjamin Franklin work for you? |
26295 | Doing? |
26295 | Go to see what? |
26295 | Going back? |
26295 | HOW MUCH DID YOU GIVE FOR YOUR WHISTLE? |
26295 | Hath any citizen failed in business, and what have you heard of the cause? |
26295 | Have you a subject to suggest? |
26295 | Have you any particular trade in view? |
26295 | Have you anything in view for him to do? |
26295 | Have you biscuit? |
26295 | Have you heard what they are doing in the Assembly? |
26295 | Have you lately heard of any citizen''s thriving well, and by what means? |
26295 | Have you lately observed any defect in the laws of your country, of which it would be proper to move the Legislature for an amendment? 26295 Have you met with anything, in the author you last read, remarkable, or suitable to be communicated to the Junto? |
26295 | Have you read them all? |
26295 | Have you seen all that is to be seen? |
26295 | Here I am among strangers without the means of returning, and what shall I do? |
26295 | How can you get away without letting him know it? |
26295 | How did you lose that? |
26295 | How does he feel about it? |
26295 | How does it happen, then, that some of their works are so popular? |
26295 | How far is it to Philadelphia? |
26295 | How happened it that he should come here with you? |
26295 | How is that,said James,"does he dislike your pieces?" |
26295 | How long ago was that? |
26295 | How long have you worked at the business? |
26295 | How long since you left home? |
26295 | How many copies of them would you print? |
26295 | How may smoky chimneys be best cured? |
26295 | How may the phenomena of vapours be explained? |
26295 | How much did you give for your whistle? |
26295 | How much do you make by boarding yourself, Ben? |
26295 | How much money have you? |
26295 | How much will you allow me a week if I will board myself? |
26295 | How old are you? |
26295 | How old is he? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How will it do to issue it in Benjamin''s name? |
26295 | How would you like to learn the printer''s trade with your brother James? |
26295 | I am from Boston? |
26295 | I should like to know where you discover the evidence of it? |
26295 | I suppose you can readily get work here, can you not? |
26295 | I suppose you do n''t mean to make me editor also? |
26295 | I would like such an enterprise myself,added Benjamin;"but can we succeed against Keimer? |
26295 | In what has he the advantage? |
26295 | Is the emission of paper money safe? |
26295 | Is there another printing- office here? |
26295 | Is there any man whose friendship you want, and which the Junto, or any of them, can procure for you? |
26295 | May I have some----? |
26295 | Mr. Franklin, what is the lowest you can take for this book? |
26295 | No work in Boston I''spose, hey? 26295 No work, hey? |
26295 | One dollar,said the lounger,"ca n''t you take less than that?" |
26295 | Shall I do it immediately? |
26295 | So you will decide to take that trade, will you? |
26295 | Then you are really in earnest? 26295 Then you deliberately resolved to steal them, did you?" |
26295 | Then you do not believe all that you have been taught about religion, if I understand you? |
26295 | Then you experienced the rigours of intolerance there, in some measure, did you? |
26295 | Then you think I am paying more a week for your board than it is worth? |
26295 | Then you think of opening a boarding- house for the special accommodation of Benjamin Franklin? |
26295 | Then, if you ca n''t go to sea, and you wo n''t be a tallow- chandler, what can you do? |
26295 | To New York? |
26295 | Used to the printing business? |
26295 | Want more gingerbread I''spose? |
26295 | Want to be a sailor? 26295 Want work at your old business, I suppose?" |
26295 | What are you going to buy? |
26295 | What can I do here now? |
26295 | What could possibly be your object in doing so? |
26295 | What did you come here for? |
26295 | What do you think of that, my son? 26295 What do you think of the prospect of getting work at some other office in the town?" |
26295 | What do_ you_ say, Ralph? |
26295 | What does your father say about your going off so far? |
26295 | What else is there for you to do, Benjamin? |
26295 | What had you to build it with? |
26295 | What happy effects of temperance?--of prudence?--of moderation?--or of any other virtue? |
26295 | What has happened now? |
26295 | What has happened to lead you to desire this? |
26295 | What has started you off there? |
26295 | What have you there, Benjamin? |
26295 | What have you there? |
26295 | What is that? |
26295 | What is that? |
26295 | What is the subject? |
26295 | What is there left to eat when meat is taken away? |
26295 | What is your opinion of my article? |
26295 | What is your opinion with regard to the truth of the Scriptures? |
26295 | What kind of a place is it? |
26295 | What kind of money do you have there? |
26295 | What particular service can I render? |
26295 | What qualifications have I for this that I have not for the cutler''s trade? |
26295 | What shall I ever want of Rhetoric or Logic? |
26295 | What shall you do now? |
26295 | What trade have you decided to follow, Benjamin? |
26295 | What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed or heard?--of imprudence?--of passion?--or of any other vice or folly? |
26295 | What was you doing there? |
26295 | What was your business? |
26295 | What would you have if you could get it,--roast chicken and plum pudding? |
26295 | What would you like to do? |
26295 | What ye goin''to Philadelphy for? |
26295 | What, then, shall I do? |
26295 | When shall I begin, if you decide to let me go? |
26295 | Where are you from, my lad? |
26295 | Where are you from? |
26295 | Where did you get your bread, boy? |
26295 | Where have you been, Ben? |
26295 | Where shall you go to find one? |
26295 | Where will you get your lumber? |
26295 | Where will you go? |
26295 | Which is least criminal,--a_ bad_ action joined with a_ good_ intention, or a_ good_ action with a_ bad_ intention? |
26295 | Whither bound? |
26295 | Who can the author be? |
26295 | Who is the author of it? |
26295 | Who is your friend? |
26295 | Who will prepare them? 26295 Why can I not attend school till I am old enough to help you?" |
26295 | Why did_ he_ bring home my turkey? |
26295 | Why do n''t he get work in Boston? |
26295 | Why have you not disclosed it before? |
26295 | Why is that? |
26295 | Why not? 26295 Why so, father?" |
26295 | Why, then, did you take them in the evening, after the workmen had gone home? 26295 Will you row now?" |
26295 | Will you tell me who the author is now? |
26295 | You have? 26295 You know?" |
26295 | ( turning to the drunken man)"how do you like diving?" |
26295 | After waiting some time he asked:"Is Mr. Franklin at home?" |
26295 | Again and again they allowed him to approach the boat, when they repeated the question:"Will you promise to row?" |
26295 | And have we now forgotten that powerful Friend, or do we imagine we no longer need his assistance? |
26295 | And how can you want to leave your good home, and all your friends, to live in a ship, exposed to storms and death all the time?" |
26295 | And, if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can arise without his aid? |
26295 | As he passed on, the young man turned to a person near by, and inquired,"Who is that polite old gentleman who brought home my turkey for me?" |
26295 | Do you ask how he likes it? |
26295 | Do you think I shall succeed in my business?" |
26295 | Does the young reader appreciate the privileges which he enjoys? |
26295 | Has he thought more of the quality of his food than of anything else at the family board? |
26295 | Have you any other pieces?" |
26295 | How can you tell whether they are mentally inferior or not, until they are permitted to enjoy equal advantages?" |
26295 | How could he write letters of credit, when he has no credit of his own to give? |
26295 | How did it happen that you formed this evil habit?" |
26295 | How long since you left home?" |
26295 | How long will it take to learn the trade?" |
26295 | I want to know whether you will lend me money to pay my bills here and go on my journey?" |
26295 | Is it not so?" |
26295 | Is there any other conveyance to Philadelphia?" |
26295 | May I have some, father?" |
26295 | Now, honestly, is not this much better for me, and for you, than the same amount of beer?" |
26295 | Perhaps he wanted to get away where he could eat as he pleased, with no one to say,"Why do ye so?" |
26295 | Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
26295 | Some of the questions discussed by the members of the Junto were as follows:--"Is_ sound_ an entity or body?" |
26295 | Then you are a poet, are you? |
26295 | This question being answered, he continued,"Have you friends in Philadelphia?" |
26295 | What is the matter with it?" |
26295 | What kin ye du?" |
26295 | What put that into your head?" |
26295 | What should he do? |
26295 | What''s your name?" |
26295 | When they came to the house, the young fop asked,"What shall I pay you?" |
26295 | When will you begin?" |
26295 | While sitting at the dinner- table, his host asked,"Where are you from?" |
26295 | Who is it?" |
26295 | Why did you not go after them when the workmen were all there?" |
26295 | Why may not truth appear in such a dress as successfully as fiction? |
26295 | Why may not_ actual_ lives be presented in this manner as vividly as_ imaginary_ ones? |
26295 | Why, you offered it yourself for one dollar and a quarter?" |
26295 | You like to study, do you not?" |
26295 | You mean to go?" |
26295 | a gambler, too?" |
26295 | all you have?" |
26295 | and away off here so far? |
26295 | back again?" |
26295 | exclaimed James, astonished almost beyond measure by the disclosure;"do you mean to say that you wrote those articles?" |
26295 | exclaimed his brother,"did you give all your money for that little concern?" |
26295 | exclaimed the heroic lad,"I never saw fear,--what is it?" |
26295 | inquired John,"I do n''t understand you?" |
26295 | is it you, Benjamin? |
26295 | or do you know of any beneficial law that is wanting?" |
26295 | poetry, is it? |
26295 | what sort of work are you after that you find it so scarce?" |
26295 | who can it be?" |
43970 | At how early a date was paint used on the exterior of a New England house? |
43970 | But how shall I do, said the master, when all my cattle are gone? |
43970 | But what is a"branched coverlet?" |
43970 | Could photographs more vividly picture the scene? |
43970 | Did all stand while"a blessing"was asked? |
43970 | Did the Judge eat in the same room in which the fowls were"rosted"and was the table furnished with woodenware or pewter, or both? |
43970 | Did the Judge wash his hands at the washbench in the kitchen and if not, where did he find the washbasin? |
43970 | Did they live peaceably and work together in building up the settlements? |
43970 | Did they set up in the wilderness domestic relations exactly like those they had abandoned overseas? |
43970 | For why keep an exact record of doings with which every one is familiar? |
43970 | May the result be attributed to John Adams''s eloquence and logic or to the vagaries of our jury system? |
43970 | Rather a valuable bed, or, may it have been the coverlet? |
43970 | Was a roasting jack fastened over the fireplace? |
43970 | Was the dinner served on a table- board? |
43970 | What constitutes a crime? |
43970 | What happened at the Plymouth Colony after the_ Mayflower_ came to anchor? |
43970 | What is a coverlet? |
43970 | What more natural? |
43970 | What pictures were on the parlor walls and was there a bedstead in the corner and if so, how was it furnished and how made? |
43970 | What was served for dessert? |
43970 | What was their conduct not only in their homes but in their relations with their neighbors? |
43970 | When passengers came aboard vessels bound for New England in those early days, how did they stow themselves and their possessions? |
43970 | Who can solve the problem? |
43970 | Who shall say that the men and women of the New England colonies did not dress well and live well in the early days according to their means? |
43970 | Who would not share the hardships and dangers of the frontier colony for opportunity of such rich gain? |
43970 | With twenty- seven particulars, could a Scotchman restrain his tongue? |
43970 | [ 92] Why was the woman deemed more culpable than the man in such instances of poisoning? |
43651 | And being asked how she could think it was Florence Newton that did her this prejudice? 43651 At Antrim in Ireland a little girl of nineteen( nine?) |
43651 | Nicholas Pyne being sworn, saith, That the second night after that the Witch had been in Prison, being the 24th[ 26?] 43651 And being asked how she knew that she was thus carried about and disposed of, seeing in her Fits she was in a violent distraction? 43651 And being asked the reason and wherefore she cried out so much against the said Florence Newton in her Fits? 43651 And being asked whether she perceived at these times what she vomited? 43651 And he said,_ Do you not see the old hag How she pulls me? 43651 Are you a good or a bad spirit? 43651 But then I asked him whom he was bidden kill? 43651 He asks him again, why he troubles him? 43651 His Honour to defendant:And did she lick it?" |
43651 | How are you regimented in the other world? |
43651 | I laid my arm about him, and asked him what ailed him? |
43651 | Instead of propounding Bishop Taylor''s shorter catechism, Taverner merely asked the ghost,"Are you happy in your present state?" |
43651 | Is it going to die you are in a strange place without your little red cap?" |
43651 | Mr. Peden sitting near to his landlord said,''Do you not see that? |
43651 | Mrs. Haltridge asked him several questions: Where he came from? |
43651 | That towards the south seem''d to chase the other with its stem[ stern?] |
43651 | Then he asked, for what cause it troubled him? |
43651 | To which the said Elenor said,_ Why, what hurt is that?__ Hurt?_ quoth he. |
43651 | To which the said Elenor said,_ Why, what hurt is that?__ Hurt?_ quoth he. |
43651 | Was he cold or hungry? |
43651 | Was its use ever legalised by Act of Parliament in either country? |
43651 | What station do you hold? |
43651 | When did witchcraft make its appearance in Ireland, and what was its progress therein? |
43651 | Where he was going? |
43651 | Where is your abode? |
43651 | Ye will not deny it afterwards?'' |
43651 | cit._; W.P.,_ History of Witches and Wizards_( London, 1700?). |
44962 | -------- Prepared for the New England Society in the City of New York[ 190-?]. |
44962 | 1657?] |
44962 | 1693?] |
44962 | 1720? |
44962 | 8=-------- New York: C. M. Saxton[ 1852?]. |
44962 | = Allen=, Mrs. Brasseya, 1760 or 1762- 18--? |
44962 | = Davis=, John, 1721- 1809? |
44962 | = NBB== Umphraville=, Angus, pseud.? |
44962 | = Standish=, Miles, the younger, pseud.? |
44962 | = Townsend=, Richard? |
44962 | Boston: Printed by Peter Edes[ 1784?]. |
44962 | Bound with and usually appended to, the author''s_ Mount Vernon, a poem_.... Philadelphia[ 1799?]. |
44962 | Green? |
44962 | H. Original poems, by a citizen of Baltimore[ i.e., Richard? |
44962 | Lines occasioned by the question--"What is love?" |
44962 | Philadelphia, 1800?] |
44962 | Samuel Green? |
44962 | [ 1728?] |
44962 | [ 1770?] |
44962 | [ 1776?] |
44962 | [ 1800?] |
44962 | [ 1800?] |
44962 | [ 1800?]. |
44962 | [ 1815?] |
44962 | [ A poem written at Yale College, 1815, by George Hill?]. |
44962 | [ Boston, 1730?] |
44962 | [ Boston? |
44962 | [ By James Rivington?] |
44962 | [ Cambridge? |
44962 | [ Newburyport, 1800?] |
44962 | [ Philadelphia, 1800?] |
44962 | [ Verses, n.p., 1815?] |
44962 | [ n.p., 181-?] |
44962 | n.t.-p.[ Boston? |
18422 | ''... Quis jam locus... Quæ regio in terris nostri non plena laboris?'' 18422 A State?" |
18422 | And pray, my young sir,asked a stern matron of forty,"will you please to tell us what is the appropriate sphere of woman?" |
18422 | And who are those gentlemen up there on the elevation looking so pale and frightened and eating nothing? |
18422 | Are ye, are ye,he would say, with a voice of exultation, and yet softened with melancholy,"Are ye our children? |
18422 | But whereabouts on your person? |
18422 | But,said I, anxiously,"do you really regard that circumstance as reflecting disparagingly upon the man''s work in the next room?" |
18422 | But,said the corporal,"President Lincoln knows, does n''t he?" |
18422 | Do you pretend to say Iowa has sent 39,000 men into this cruel Civil War? |
18422 | Have yez? 18422 How many men has she sent to this cruel war?" |
18422 | Is this one part of the great reward, for which my brethren and myself endured lives of toil and of hardship? 18422 Now, how could you get wounded in the face while on the retreat?" |
18422 | Now,he says,"we have arrived at the stairs; will you kindly tell me which way the stairs run?" |
18422 | Surely,said he,"you noticed that two- thirds of the works in the next room are already sold?" |
18422 | Well, perhaps, by and by? |
18422 | Well,he said,"you Dutch did lick us on the Excise question, did n''t you?" |
18422 | Well,says he,"where''s Iowa?" |
18422 | What are you looking at, Mike? |
18422 | What do you mean? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What may that be? |
18422 | What shall I do to make my son get forward in the world? |
18422 | Will you now kindly give the location of the hall in which the accident occurred? |
18422 | ( Need I say I mean his fishing- smack?) |
18422 | A friend came along, and seeing that the man did not look as pleasant as usual, said to him,"What is the matter? |
18422 | A traveller passing through Concord inquired,"How do all these people support themselves?" |
18422 | After that I had a very good mind to come back to America, and say, like the Queen of Uganda:"There, what did I tell you?" |
18422 | And can you not help the world abroad as well as at home? |
18422 | And how comes it that the workers of evil just as instinctively aim to fraudulently use it or silence it, and with such poor success? |
18422 | And the Cavaliers, who missed their stirrups, somehow, and got into Yankee saddles? |
18422 | And was not Eve, the first of orthodox women, the type of every feminine perfection? |
18422 | And what does a poet want that he does not find in New England? |
18422 | And what has Virginia done for our Union? |
18422 | And what was the answer? |
18422 | And who doubts it? |
18422 | And why not? |
18422 | And, if we should care to pursue the subject farther back, what about Ethan Allen and John Stark and Mad Anthony Wayne-- Cavaliers each and every one? |
18422 | Another servant came to him and said,"Sir, shall I take your order? |
18422 | Are they not? |
18422 | Are we a degenerate people? |
18422 | Are we going to cure it by more tinkering? |
18422 | Are we to be daunted, therefore, because the conditions are new? |
18422 | Beasley?" |
18422 | But did they forget the principles on which they acted because the conditions were unprecedented? |
18422 | But the question has also been asked, here and there-- and very naturally-- is a Minister to a foreign Court to be appointed for such a purpose? |
18422 | But to speak more seriously: Is modern journalism, then, nothing but a reflection of the frivolity of the day, of the passing love of notoriety? |
18422 | But what is a critic? |
18422 | But what is culture? |
18422 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
18422 | But where meanwhile is the substance of power? |
18422 | Did not John Bull, in his rough methods with the Celestial Empire, sometimes literally act"like a bull in a China shop"? |
18422 | Did they not discover new applications for old principles? |
18422 | Did you ever have anything to do with indorsements?" |
18422 | Do I err in supposing this an illustration of the supremacy which belongs to the triumphs of the moral nature? |
18422 | Do we need to look further for a reply to the question,"Why are the New Englanders unpopular?" |
18422 | Do you ever think of him? |
18422 | Do you ever think of his career, that of the prototype of our own Washington? |
18422 | Do you know what the effect will be? |
18422 | Do you remember to what circumstance Chicago owed its fame? |
18422 | Does he belong to the flag of the country? |
18422 | Does he rest under the eagle and the Stars and Stripes? |
18422 | Does that flag protect him? |
18422 | Does this scene of refinement, of elegance, of riches, of luxury, does all this come from our labors? |
18422 | Edwin Arnold, the author of"The Light of Asia,"said:"Do you think you can do all this?" |
18422 | Else how could this noble city have been redeemed from bondage? |
18422 | For what does America stand? |
18422 | Great heavens, men, do you want to live forever?" |
18422 | Have we lost the old principle and the old spirit? |
18422 | Have we not been rook- shooting with Mr. Winkle, and courting with Mr. Tupman? |
18422 | Have we not played cribbage with"the Marchioness,"and quaffed the rosy with Dick Swiveller? |
18422 | Have we not ridden together to the"Markis of Granby"with old Weller on the box, and his son Samivel on the dickey? |
18422 | Have we not together investigated, with Mr. Pickwick, the theory of Tittlebats? |
18422 | Have we not walked with him in every scene of varied life? |
18422 | He poked his head out of the upper berth at midnight, hailed the porter and said,"Say, have you got such a thing as a corkscrew about you?" |
18422 | Her friend said,"Shall I pour some water in your whiskey?" |
18422 | His reward was what? |
18422 | How can I best serve them?" |
18422 | How can it be that any man should make a decent portrait of his fellow- man in these days? |
18422 | How did they achieve it? |
18422 | How shall we account for this reception? |
18422 | How was I to prove that what I have said is true? |
18422 | I am not here to urge a return to the Puritan life; but have you forgotten that the Puritans came into a new world? |
18422 | I am not only unlike other gentlemen, taken by surprise, but I am absolutely without a subject, and what am I to say? |
18422 | I came to civilization, and what do you think was the result? |
18422 | I know that what I say is true when I charge the Chairman with irony, for do not I feel his iron entering my soul? |
18422 | I mean by that, the lawyer says in a dignified way,"What principle is involved, and how can I best serve my client, always forgetting myself?" |
18422 | I regard true beauty as the divinest gift which woman has received; and was not Pandora, the first of mythical women, endowed with every gift? |
18422 | I said to him:"I never felt better in all my life; how do you feel?" |
18422 | I said:"What does that mean to me? |
18422 | I was received by the Paris Geographical Society, and it was then I began to feel"Well, after all, I have done something, have n''t I?" |
18422 | I will confess that I do not know what I mean by this; for what is beauty? |
18422 | I would enter a protest, but what use? |
18422 | If we give up that Constitution, what are we? |
18422 | In that hour of trial which you and I, sir, know to have been a menace and a reality to whom did she turn for succor? |
18422 | Is he an American-- is he of us? |
18422 | Is it a place?" |
18422 | Is it spelled with an O or a W?" |
18422 | Is it wonderful that we are delighted to see him, and to return in a measure his unbounded hospitalities? |
18422 | Is n''t it strange that two of the smallest sections of the earth should have produced most of the grandest history of the world? |
18422 | Is there a New Englander here who would wipe"Bunker Hill"from his list for any price in Wall Street? |
18422 | Is this magnificent city, the like of which we never saw nor heard of on either continent, is this but an offshoot from Plymouth Rock? |
18422 | Is this modern ideal to survive throughout the future? |
18422 | It has been said that a good woman, fitly mated, grows doubly good; but how often have we seen a bad man mated to a good woman turned into a good man? |
18422 | MR. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN:--[3]_Voulez- vous me permettre de faire mes remarques en français? |
18422 | May we not foresee the nature of the difference? |
18422 | Not the lawyer in politics; but"What is there in it for the people I represent? |
18422 | Now what are you going to do with a people like that? |
18422 | Now, here we are asked, why did Virginia go into the War of Secession? |
18422 | Now, what are we going to do? |
18422 | Now, who achieved that? |
18422 | Of our sweethearts the humorist hath it:--"Where are the Marys and Anns and Elizas, Lovely and loving of yore? |
18422 | One question, with its answer, and I shall have done: Are these Southerners in Wall Street divorced in spirit and sympathy from their old homes? |
18422 | Respecting the exact nature of the proposition I shall not reveal? |
18422 | Said some one to him when the prayer was over,"My dear brother, why were you so hard upon the Hottentot?" |
18422 | Said the man,"To Ireland? |
18422 | Shakespeare naturally said what every artist must feel; for what is an artist? |
18422 | Shall we learn the lesson which is taught us in this recent war? |
18422 | Shall we not imagine our foe in the future, as might well be the case, to be superior to the one over which we have been victorious? |
18422 | Shall we rest on the laurels which we may have won, or shall we prepare for the future? |
18422 | Should your country decide to keep the Philippines, what would be the consequences? |
18422 | That is the fact of the matter; nobody can deny that; but what are we going to do? |
18422 | The General said:"Why do n''t you work?" |
18422 | The President, Cornelius N. Bliss, proposed the query for Dr. Wayland,"Why are New Englanders Unpopular?" |
18422 | The commonplace question:"How is the weather going to be?" |
18422 | The first inquiry of the lawyer and politician is,"What is there in it?" |
18422 | The next question is, is there any practical means of improving this state of things? |
18422 | The old gentleman says:--"General, what troops are these passing now?" |
18422 | The politician, and not the statesman, says,"What is in it?" |
18422 | The question now arises, is such a state of things necessarily connected with a Republican government? |
18422 | The"Daily Telegraph''s"proprietor cabled over to Bennett:"Will you join us in sending Stanley over to complete Livingstone''s explorations?" |
18422 | Then how did we lose it? |
18422 | They are laughing in their sleeves and saying:"Watch him, watch him; did you ever hear lawyers talk as much for nothing? |
18422 | They may have their faults, but who has not? |
18422 | They opened that highway to you, and shall no honor be given to them? |
18422 | To which she returned the still more laconic autograph,"Wo n''t I?" |
18422 | Under all the circumstances, who will dispute the magnificence of that showing? |
18422 | Was the inexorable unrelaxing determination with which they, being so few and so poor, maintained their point somewhat wrought into their faces? |
18422 | We have had tariffs, have we not, every few years, ever since we were born; and has not the farmer become discontented under these conditions? |
18422 | Well, what about this Forefathers''Day? |
18422 | Well, what moved in your splendid Dix when he gave that order? |
18422 | What New England Society has ever made so good a showing of hospitality and good cheer? |
18422 | What am I to talk about? |
18422 | What are the Dutch? |
18422 | What are the ethics of the press of Chicago? |
18422 | What are the truths that have gone into her blood and made her strong and beautiful and dominant? |
18422 | What do you mean by 39th?" |
18422 | What has Virginia done for our common country? |
18422 | What is it? |
18422 | What is the Senate? |
18422 | What is the charm that unites so many suffrages? |
18422 | What is the matter now? |
18422 | What is the result? |
18422 | What is to become of our English landscape if it is to be simply a sanitary or advertising appliance? |
18422 | What made your section great, dominant, glorious in the history of our common country? |
18422 | What man would part with the fame of Harrison and of Perry? |
18422 | What more can a poet desire? |
18422 | What names has she contributed to your historic roll? |
18422 | What reflecting mind can contemplate some of those characters without being made more kind- hearted and charitable? |
18422 | What river is this?" |
18422 | What then was the course of Virginia? |
18422 | What was the answer? |
18422 | What would a poet sing about, I wonder, who lived on the Kankakee Flats? |
18422 | What, then, is the part of Her Majesty''s Government in this critical and difficult circumstance? |
18422 | When he got through she said,"How did you like that?" |
18422 | When he had finished his remarks a French gentleman sitting beside me inquired:"Where is he from?" |
18422 | Whence came these qualities? |
18422 | Where is there such a galaxy of great men known to history? |
18422 | Where will you look for its parallel? |
18422 | Who are Still first in colleges and letters in this land? |
18422 | Who asks what State you are from, in Europe, or in Africa, or in Asia? |
18422 | Who had the first chance on your destiny, your character, your development? |
18422 | Who in the imposing troop of worldly grandeur is now remembered but with indifference or contempt? |
18422 | Who is here to deny it? |
18422 | Who to- day are the first to rally to the side of a good cause, on trial in the community? |
18422 | Who, east or west, advocate justice, redress wrongs, maintain equal rights, support churches, love liberty, and thrive where others starve? |
18422 | Whoever saw a satisfactory definition of love? |
18422 | Why did n''t we see it before? |
18422 | Why should they not feast and why should they not dance? |
18422 | Why should we not welcome him as a friend? |
18422 | Why, I repeat it, the intense unpopularity of New England? |
18422 | Why? |
18422 | Will not old principles be adaptable to new conditions, and is it not our business to adapt them to new conditions? |
18422 | Will you have some of the chicken soup?" |
18422 | Would he gaze at you with sad, sad eyes, and weep over you as the degenerate sons of noble sires? |
18422 | Yes, but what would you have, gentlemen? |
18422 | Yet how should we get on without them? |
18422 | You, the father, come home, and you say:"Fannie, what are you doing in the kitchen? |
18422 | [ 3] TRANSLATION.--Will you kindly allow me to make my speech in French? |
18422 | [ A Voice:"Which is the eighth Commandment?"] |
18422 | and the woman replied,"For God''s sake, have n''t I had trouble enough already to- day?" |
18422 | enforcing it with the following quotations:"Do you question me as an honest man should do for my simple true judgment?" |
18422 | go back to Africa? |
18422 | is that a thunder- cloud in the North? |
18422 | maiden fair, wilt thou be mine? |
18422 | that makes 22,000 men?" |
18422 | where is Minnesota?" |
46727 | 100(? |
46727 | 50(?).--Eclecticism. |
46727 | But on second thought he returned to the study of medicine, asking:''Can anything be done to make operations less painful?'' |
46727 | But what now is to be said of the condition of dentistry to- day? |
46727 | Celsus, A.D. 1- 65(?). |
46727 | Is it strange that homoeopathy or any other heterodox system sprang up in the midst of such measures? |
46727 | John of Gaddesden, 1305--(?). |
46727 | Now, what led to this sudden awakening? |
46727 | The Four Masters, 1270(?). |
46727 | This reminds one of that famous response in the school of the Middle Ages to a question:"Why does opium produce sleep?" |
46727 | Was it chance, or the effect of certain causes which had long been operating''? |
38929 | ''In view of these facts, who should perform surgery? 38929 And are the contradictions and inconsistencies in discussions in medical journals kept from the public? 38929 And are they not to be classed as scoundrels? 38929 And it puzzles observing laymen sometimes to know why all the successful(?) 38929 And note the relevancy of these questions,Would not the medical man be angry? |
38929 | And while the fortunate few get most of the practice, and make most of the money, what are the unfortunate many doing? |
38929 | And would nature allow it to choke up or slip a cog just because a little thing like a worm got tangled in its gearing? |
38929 | Are not all symptoms of disease put before the people anyway, and from the worst possible sources? |
38929 | Are they men who took to graft and disgraced their profession because they loved that kind of life, and the stigma it brings? |
38929 | Are they not to blame? |
38929 | As a matter of right and wrong, who shall, in the opinion of the medical profession, advise and perform these responsible acts and who shall not? |
38929 | At least a worm was always found in the evacuated material, and how was the deluded one to know that it was in the vessel or matter injected? |
38929 | But what about Osteopathy? |
38929 | But when hope long deferred has made the soul sick, and hope itself dies, what then? |
38929 | But when"liberty of blood"is mentioned, what is meant by"liberty of arteries"? |
38929 | By what standard is the physician judged by the people who enter his office? |
38929 | Did you ever know a shyster to pad his library with Congressional reports? |
38929 | Do men choose the strenuous, money- grabbing life because they really love it, or love the money? |
38929 | Do you see now how Osteopaths get a"vast and perfect knowledge of anatomy"? |
38929 | Do you suppose that the law of"the survival of the fittest"determines who continues in the practice of Osteopathy and succeeds? |
38929 | Does it look as if Osteopathy has been standing or advancing on its merits? |
38929 | Does it not seem that Osteopathy, as a complete system, is mostly a_ name_, and"lives, moves, and has its being"in boosting? |
38929 | Does it seem funny to talk of adjusting lesions on one person for an hour at a time, three times a week? |
38929 | Ever since Osteopathy began to attract attention, and people began to inquire"What is it?" |
38929 | Gentlemen, can you explain your ex- brother''s meaning here? |
38929 | Going back to the physician who has the well- equipped office, is he a grafter in any sense? |
38929 | Had not nature made a machine, perfect in all its parts, self- oiling,"autotherapeutic,"and all that? |
38929 | Has it required advertising to keep people using anesthetics since it was demonstrated that they would prevent pain? |
38929 | Has it required boosting to keep the people resorting to surgery since the benefits of modern operations have been proved? |
38929 | Have you a"leading doctor"in your town? |
38929 | He has"silently folded his tent and stolen away,"and where has he gone? |
38929 | He was so busy(?) |
38929 | He went up to his office and-- went home again, day in and day out, year in and year out, and for what? |
38929 | How about tapeworms, gallstones and Osteopathy, do you ask? |
38929 | How about the worm exhibited? |
38929 | How shall the surgeon be best fitted for these grave duties? |
38929 | I think mainly because, being ignorant, they practice largely as quacks, and by curing(?) |
38929 | I was told by a responsible book man that the encyclopedia containing a learned(?) |
38929 | If I had been, to be consistent, I should have had to stimulate(?) |
38929 | If Osteopathy is so complete, why did so many students, after they had received everything the learned(?) |
38929 | If one has to be sick, why not have something worth while? |
38929 | If so, is there not enough in it alone to explain the apparent success of quacks? |
38929 | If these systems are fads and frauds, why do they so rapidly get and retain so large a following among intelligent people? |
38929 | If truth always grows under persecution, how can the American Medical Association kill Osteopathy when it is so well known by the people? |
38929 | In the treatment of worms the question was,"How do we treat worms?" |
38929 | Is it accidental, or the result of their innate stupidity? |
38929 | Is it to be wondered that intelligent laymen sometimes lose faith in and respect for the profession of medicine and surgery? |
38929 | Is it true worth and scholarly ability that get a big reputation of success among medical men? |
38929 | Is that enough? |
38929 | May it not be true that, for many cases at least, the diagnosis is wrong? |
38929 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
38929 | Or to the Osteopathic colleges, from which, in all cases of which I ever knew, they returned sadly disappointed? |
38929 | Or would espouse and proclaim anything that was not born of truth, and filled with blessing and benefaction for mankind? |
38929 | Should not its waters be pure and uncontaminated, so that the invalid who thirsts for health may drink with confidence in their healing virtues? |
38929 | Since people will be informed, why not let them get information that is authentic? |
38929 | Some Osteopaths and other therapeutic reformers(?) |
38929 | Strong case, do you say? |
38929 | Students soon learned that they were never to ask,"_ Can_ we treat this?" |
38929 | The man was taken into a darkened room for privacy(? |
38929 | The question may be fairly put:"Why not have more of such frankness from the physician?" |
38929 | The question was to be put,"_ How_ do we treat this?" |
38929 | There are not only these evidences of inconsistencies to edify(?) |
38929 | They did so, and a$ 100 incision was made after the X- ray had located(?) |
38929 | They live a sort of"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"life, and why? |
38929 | Was he squelched? |
38929 | Was it any wonder that students flocked to schools that professed to teach how common plodding mortals could work such miracles? |
38929 | What foundation is there for such a belief? |
38929 | What is the Osteopath doing, who rolls and twists and pulls and kneads for a full hour, if he is n''t giving a massage treatment? |
38929 | What is this disease? |
38929 | What more in therapeutics is left to be desired? |
38929 | What must we think of the one just given as a popular definition? |
38929 | What shall we think, in this enlightened age, of judges pleading for the healing(?) |
38929 | What standard, then, should be established, and what requirement should be made before one should be permitted to do surgery? |
38929 | What was its foundation? |
38929 | Where is that hope now? |
38929 | Why are they there? |
38929 | Why do the people have such erroneous conceptions of the X- ray? |
38929 | Why has it had such a wonderful growth in popularity? |
38929 | Why have nearly four thousand men and women, most of them intelligent and some of them educated, espoused it as a profession to follow as a life work? |
38929 | Why? |
38929 | With all respect for the devoted gentlemen among physicians we ask, Is it any wonder that the intelligent laity smile at such gush? |
38929 | Would he not feel like wiping off the earth all the Osteopaths?" |
38929 | Would he not feel like wiping off the earth with all the Osteopaths? |
38929 | Would not the medical man be angry? |
38929 | Yet the question has been very prominent and pertinent among Osteopaths:"Are you a lesion Osteopath?" |
38929 | You may ask,"Have there been many such medical men?" |
38929 | appear in those 15-cent papers published in Augusta, Me., and in many daily and even religious papers? |
38929 | mean when he said,"Upon the success of these efforts depends the weal or woe of Osteopathy as an independent system"? |
38941 | Ah,said the admiral,"you a Coffin too?" |
38941 | And now? |
38941 | Are they quite full? |
38941 | Are you General Prescott? |
38941 | But, Ben, do you believe in dreams? |
38941 | Certes,thought I,"if it''s none of your business, why do you ask?" |
38941 | Did you ever see Cotton Mather''s''History of New England?'' 38941 Do n''t you see the silvery wave? |
38941 | Do you see yonder cloud that''s almost in shape of a camel? |
38941 | Do you think they will take me in over there? |
38941 | Do you think,he was asked,"that in such a crowd it was the fashion or the desire for instruction which dominated?" |
38941 | Have you,demanded the emperor,"among your officers any one who is acquainted with Ragusa?" |
38941 | How old are you? |
38941 | Is the cool summer injuring your corn? |
38941 | Let him go,growls an old writer;"has not Sir Harry other sons but him?" |
38941 | May I ask your Majesty,said the_ ruse_ old Briton,"if this would be your policy in case the colonies had belonged to you?" |
38941 | Or like a whale? |
38941 | Says Tweed to Till,''What gars ye rin sae still?'' 38941 Shall_ we_ make the signal, sir?" |
38941 | There is, then,I suggested,"something in a name at sea as well as ashore?" |
38941 | Wa''al,said an old fellow, removing a short pipe from between his lips,"you was jest a- cannin''on it up, warn''t ye?" |
38941 | What are we poor fellows going to do when they catch up all the porgees? |
38941 | What constitutes a state? 38941 What do you call him?" |
38941 | What is your authority? |
38941 | What on airth do you want to look at that rock for? |
38941 | Whither bound? |
38941 | Will monseigneur deign to show me his commission? |
38941 | ( Do you know, Monsieur de Calonne, that my father is as crazy as ever?) |
38941 | And what has become of the gate- ways of a thousand palaces? |
38941 | And why not? |
38941 | At last West said,''Are you dead, Stuart?'' |
38941 | Bright eyes that followed fading ship and crew, Melting in tender rain?" |
38941 | But the fishing, what of that? |
38941 | Do n''t you hear the voice of God?" |
38941 | Does not this sufficiently show that all human power and greatness is in the soul of man? |
38941 | Here, indeed, was the town, but where were the people? |
38941 | History is said to repeat itself, and why may not the whale- fishing? |
38941 | How did Marblehead look in the olden time? |
38941 | How is the historian to follow such a clue? |
38941 | I know''tan''t none o''my business; but what might you be agoin''to Mount Desart arter?" |
38941 | I then asked if those Friends were Jesuits? |
38941 | I then demanded of him and his associates then present if they acknowledged themselves subject to the laws of England? |
38941 | I then said by what law do you put our friends to death? |
38941 | I was not at all surprised when accosted by one who, like me, wandered and wondered, with the question,"Does any body live in Nantucket?" |
38941 | Is it possible, you ask, that such a waste should ever be the cause of heart- burnings, or know the name of bond, mortgage, or warranty? |
38941 | It was after a visit to some such mansion that Daniel Webster asked,"Did those old fellows go to bed in a coach- and- four?" |
38941 | Its roof and tower are of wood, and, being here, what else could it have but a fish for its weather- vane? |
38941 | Met him, did I say? |
38941 | Or have we eaten of the insane root, That takes the reason prisoner?" |
38941 | Or is it, mayhap, a softening of his great, sluggish brain? |
38941 | Peters._"How dare you look into the court to say such a word?" |
38941 | Reader, are you? |
38941 | Shall we be baffled by such a one as this? |
38941 | Supposing this doctrine correct, it becomes an interesting question where the sailors of future navies are to come from? |
38941 | The stranger''s puzzled questioning is often met with,"You know that old house in such a street?" |
38941 | The tradition of the embassy of Alden, and of the incomparably arch rejoinder of Priscilla,"Prythee, John, why do n''t you speak for yourself?" |
38941 | The vaunting, the exasperating mockery of a savage, is in these lines:''Who is there here to fight with the brave Wattawamat?'' |
38941 | The word"[ Hudson?]" |
38941 | Turning to the by- standers, he exclaimed:"My maisters whar is your harts? |
38941 | We commiserate the situation of an individual out of business; what shall we, then, say of a town thrown out of employment? |
38941 | What do they say to us? |
38941 | What does he want with it? |
38941 | What if she designed to edify her own family in her own meetings, may none else be present?" |
38941 | What should a sheep see in the ocean? |
38941 | What would now be thought of domiciliary visits like the following? |
38941 | When the captain replied,"I suppose, my lord, Admiral Collingwood will now take upon himself the direction of affairs?" |
38941 | Where is he?" |
38941 | Who cares for them?" |
38941 | Who have passed this way? |
38941 | Why may not the cotton- wood, which propagates itself in the sand on the borders of Western rivers, prove a valuable auxiliary here? |
38941 | Why might they not say to those after- comers,"We are the Jasons; we have won the fleece?" |
38941 | Will it ever come down again? |
38941 | Would not Canonicus have led the white men to the spot, and there recounted the traditions of his people? |
38941 | _ Banquo._"Were such things here as we do speak about? |
38941 | _ Governor._"Who be they?" |
38941 | _ Governor._"Will you, Mr. Coggeshall, say that she did not say so?" |
38941 | he repeated;"why, Joe''s a living man; but where''s his mates?" |
38941 | how dare you go About the town half- dressed and looking so?" |
38941 | if I knew, could I not have all myself?" |
38941 | my fancie, whither wilt thou go?" |
18914 | A pretty picture of the country, truly; but let me ask how often do books reach you? |
18914 | Ah? 18914 Alone?" |
18914 | Am I, then,she exclaimed, quite as passionately as a woman need do,--"am I, then, cut off from a woman''s dearest joys? |
18914 | Among the devils? |
18914 | And I,said I,--"do you think I am never coming here again?" |
18914 | And his heart? |
18914 | And how long was he really confined in the tomb? |
18914 | And your husband,I said, after a pause,--"does your feeling represent his?" |
18914 | Are you well enough? |
18914 | But at least these prisons are on the site of Ecelino''s castle? |
18914 | But do you mean that most of the women serve in the army? |
18914 | But first,said the signor who had selected him,"how much is your brougham an hour?" |
18914 | But the custodian, how could he lie so? |
18914 | Can I do anything for you? |
18914 | Can it be possible,said I,"that the traditions of Sybaris really linger here?" |
18914 | Confess it? 18914 Could not you go by telegraph?" |
18914 | Demonish odd,said this gentleman,"was n''t it, Mr. Lindsay, that Miss Hazard should go off in that way? |
18914 | Did the chief suggest anything? |
18914 | Did you say women as well as men? |
18914 | Did you talk about books at all with the old man? |
18914 | Do n''t you know? 18914 Do you confess it?" |
18914 | Do you know of anything, yourself, Fred? |
18914 | Do you know what a bore is? |
18914 | Do you mean that_ I_ have? 18914 Do you mean there is no fixed election- day?" |
18914 | Does it never occur to you,I said,"that Laura can not live on earth forever?" |
18914 | Even if drank in Greenland? |
18914 | Go back where? |
18914 | Had he ever been beyond Peloro? |
18914 | Had she ever been outside? |
18914 | Hardly in keeping with''the eternal fitness of things,''eh? |
18914 | Have you forgotten anything? |
18914 | Have you many patients, Doctor? |
18914 | Heart? |
18914 | How are you, my fortunate friend? |
18914 | How came you to Boston,said I,"and when?" |
18914 | How is that wound? |
18914 | How is that? 18914 How,"thought I,"in the name of everything mysterious, has it happened that such a man should have turned up in such a place?" |
18914 | I wonder if the old man reads other novelists.--Do tell me, Deacon, if you have read Thackeray''s last story? |
18914 | Is it,I asked myself at such moments,"a great consecration, or a great crime?" |
18914 | May I come in? |
18914 | Miss Hazard, will you allow me to present to you my friend, Mr. Clement Lindsay? |
18914 | Never heard of him, sir,--was he in the Regular army? |
18914 | Not if he had himself made school- books? |
18914 | O Mr. Gridley, you are too bad,--what do I care for governors and presidents? 18914 Or has not the chief got a wishing carpet? |
18914 | Pray, what is that? |
18914 | So you would think me a sensible fellow, no doubt, if I would pick up this box and carry it off to Paris, or may be to New York? |
18914 | Sophy, have n''t you a surprise for the American? |
18914 | Thackery''s story? 18914 Then you would be inclined to think there is something unnatural, in short, mysterious, in my being here,--tastes, fancies, inclinations, and all?" |
18914 | This is ugly news, is n''t it? |
18914 | Wake this little dormouse? |
18914 | Was this skeleton found here? |
18914 | Well, sir? |
18914 | What are these tears about? 18914 What are your favorites among his writings, Deacon? |
18914 | What do you do in your off- terms? |
18914 | What do you want? |
18914 | What else could save them, if that did not? 18914 What good does it serve to know that?" |
18914 | What is it you wish, Richard? |
18914 | What of the night, sleeper?--what of the night? |
18914 | What''s Sophy want? |
18914 | Where did you meet her? |
18914 | Where? |
18914 | Which do you like best,--off- term or school? |
18914 | Who do you think is coming, Mr. Gridley? 18914 Who is this Clement Lindsay, Bathsheba?" |
18914 | Who''s there? |
18914 | Why not? |
18914 | Why separate the two? |
18914 | Why, do you suppose, have I come over this morning? |
18914 | Will you state, if you please-- I beg your pardon-- may I ask who is your own favorite author? |
18914 | Would you, indeed? 18914 Would you?" |
18914 | You know him then? |
18914 | You like not this Greenland odor? |
18914 | You think, then, because a fellow chooses to live in barbarous Greenland, he must needs turn barbarian? |
18914 | ''Tis a face that can never grow older, That never can part with its gleam;''Tis a gracious possession forever, For what is it all but a dream? |
18914 | ("Knows how to shut a fellow up pretty well for a young one, does n''t he?" |
18914 | A lady, eh? |
18914 | Ah, where was Richard? |
18914 | All very nice, but who''s Sophy? |
18914 | And chiefly the genteel form of doughnut called in the native dialect_ cymbal_(_ Qu._ Symbol? |
18914 | And if one may not be on the top of Katahdin, is there any place for sunrise like the very level of the sea? |
18914 | And then he added, he hardly knew why,"Are you going to bid good by to Miss Whittaker?" |
18914 | And when was it ever so full of life before?" |
18914 | Are the Children at Home? |
18914 | Are you going to make out that I am the guilty party? |
18914 | Are you not growing reconciled to it? |
18914 | At last I was provoked, and said:"What is the custom of your country? |
18914 | But do you not see that there is one spirit in the whole? |
18914 | But how much tax, does the reader suppose, is paid upon a fifteen- hundred- dollar grand? |
18914 | But is n''t this enough about myself?" |
18914 | But what of that? |
18914 | Can it be that the upright piano was an American invention? |
18914 | Can that be possible? |
18914 | Can the leaf fail with the spring? |
18914 | Can the tendril stay from twining When the sap begins to run? |
18914 | Can you, only for the asking, Give to other hands the clasping Of your rosy finger- tips?" |
18914 | Clever, is n''t it? |
18914 | Could she be an heiress in disguise? |
18914 | Did I ever walk in its gay streets in the golden air? |
18914 | Did anybody see the towers of Sybaris? |
18914 | Did he refuse you, as you refused me? |
18914 | Did n''t somebody say he was very handsome? |
18914 | Did you ever see her before?" |
18914 | Did you notice a pretty winged Mercury outside the station- house you came to?" |
18914 | Do not all booksellers like to huddle together as long as they can? |
18914 | Do you have to take a walk every eleven minutes and a quarter?" |
18914 | Do you know anything about him, Bathsheba? |
18914 | Do you mean to say you bring the earth they grow in from home?" |
18914 | Do you never shrink from permitting irreverent eyes to look on Laura''s beauty? |
18914 | Do you think that these people can, under any circumstances, be induced to strengthen their limbs with eating blubber or drinking train- oil? |
18914 | Do you want to make me lose my temper? |
18914 | Do you want to pick a quarrel with me? |
18914 | Does not Myrtle look more in her place by the side of Murray Bradshaw than she would with Gifted hitched on her arm?" |
18914 | Does not every manufacturing city practically do the same thing? |
18914 | Each day''s paper opens a new act in the play, and what matters it that the''news''is one year old? |
18914 | Great on Paul''s Epistles,--don''t you think so?" |
18914 | Had he been but a cat''s- paw after all? |
18914 | Had she beauty? |
18914 | Had they too much pride?--too little imagination? |
18914 | Have n''t I guessed right, now, tell me, my dear?" |
18914 | Have not thousands of brave men said it? |
18914 | Have you any commands for the city?" |
18914 | Have you anything to say? |
18914 | Her soul was far hence; and if that pure spirit could return, would it not be to shield him with her love? |
18914 | How could"society"go on without the occasional interposition of the piano? |
18914 | How long could he keep life in himself? |
18914 | How many hours had passed since then? |
18914 | I hope you are invited to Miss Eveleth''s this evening?" |
18914 | I said,"are you pleased to have your friends go?" |
18914 | If you had n''t spoken, how do you know but that I might?" |
18914 | Is it because I have not lived a life sufficiently absorbed in her? |
18914 | Is it possible that the dampness of the walls, which I must inhale with every breath, has supplied the need of water? |
18914 | Is n''t she at home?" |
18914 | Is not Wall Street at this hour a street of bankers? |
18914 | Is not the Boston Pearl Street a street of leather men? |
18914 | Is not the bridge at Florence given over to jewellers? |
18914 | Is there any law, human or divine, which says that at one and the same hour all men shall rise from bed in this world? |
18914 | Is there anything to be brought back? |
18914 | Is there anywhere to see sunrise like the Mediterranean? |
18914 | Is there, perhaps, in the youthful mind, rather a passion for"seeing the folly"of life a little in that direction? |
18914 | It had stopped at eleven,--but at eleven that day, or the preceding night? |
18914 | It is none the less news to me; and, besides, are not Gibbon, Shakespeare, and Mother Goose still more ancient?" |
18914 | Kenmure was motionless at first, then, looking over his shoulder, said merely,"What?" |
18914 | Must I tear my hair because a man of taste has resisted my unspeakable charms? |
18914 | Nitre, powder, lead, junk, hard- tack, mules, horses, pigs,_ polenta_, or_ olla podrida_, or other of the stores of war?" |
18914 | No? |
18914 | Now is not this a very remarkable thing? |
18914 | Of what duration had been his swoon? |
18914 | Or ca n''t you ride to Gallipoli? |
18914 | Or the dew- drop keep from shining With her body full o''the sun? |
18914 | Ought he not be at school? |
18914 | Published by the American Tract Society?" |
18914 | Richard Clare, how dare you use such language? |
18914 | She could not but suppose that he would come and bid her farewell, and what might not be the incidents, the results, of such a visit? |
18914 | Tell me, Mr. Bradshaw, who is there that I shall meet this evening if I go? |
18914 | The servant silently took his cloak and hat, with a special deference, Philip thought; but was he not now one of the family? |
18914 | Then might not the undertaker return for the candlestick, probably not left by design? |
18914 | Then suddenly he broke out,"In God''s name, sir, why do n''t you call me a blackguard? |
18914 | Thomas Scott, author of the Commentary?" |
18914 | Was Richard''s heart the place for her now, any more than it had been a month before? |
18914 | Was it his own fancy? |
18914 | Was it not cowardly to yield up without a struggle the life which he should guard for her sake? |
18914 | Was it not his duty to the living and the dead to face the difficulties of his position, and overcome them if it were within human power? |
18914 | Was not my valise, there, bought in Rome at the street of trunk- makers? |
18914 | Was she to apply for comfort where she would not apply for counsel? |
18914 | Was she to drown her decent sorrows and regrets in a base, a dishonest, an extemporized passion? |
18914 | Well, is not that true? |
18914 | What are you laughing at?" |
18914 | What can they mean? |
18914 | What cared he for the impression he made? |
18914 | What could the future add to his full heart? |
18914 | What did Nicholas Tillinghast use to say to the boys and girls at Bridgewater? |
18914 | What did it matter, a few years sooner or later? |
18914 | What did they care for the metaphysics? |
18914 | What do I deserve for the wrong I have done you?" |
18914 | What else is worth doing? |
18914 | What have you been doing?" |
18914 | What if they did, you old rat in the arras? |
18914 | What if they did? |
18914 | What sort of a man do you find my old friend the Deacon?" |
18914 | What was half an hour? |
18914 | What, then, have I to complain of? |
18914 | When at last Gertrude began to bethink herself of going, Richard broke a long silence by the following question:"Gertrude,_ do_ you love that man?" |
18914 | When did you ever hear such tones? |
18914 | Where is versatility, otherwise called presence of mind, so needed as in recitation at a public school? |
18914 | Where was he? |
18914 | Which of these doctrines will be most potent to lead our nation to high things? |
18914 | Who could blame her? |
18914 | Who would not thrill at the touch of some such memorial of Mary of Scotland, or of Heloise? |
18914 | Who_ do_ you think is coming?" |
18914 | Why have I failed? |
18914 | Why no, of course not; had not he made all proper inquiries about that when Susan came to town? |
18914 | Why not then? |
18914 | Why the_ diavolo_ did n''t he break it off, then? |
18914 | Why"a pair"? |
18914 | Why, then, should he be fluttered now? |
18914 | Will you look at my farm?" |
18914 | Would n''t he have you? |
18914 | Would you give each of them her miniature, perhaps to go with them into scenes of riot and shame?" |
18914 | Would you like to have the name"American"go down to all time, defined as Webster[B] defines Sybarite? |
18914 | Yet, in any event, what can I do but what I am doing,--devote my whole soul to the perpetuation of her beauty, through art? |
18914 | You have n''t been making a fool of yourself?" |
18914 | You modelled this piece on the style of a famous living English poet, did you not?" |
18914 | You that know him, why do you ask?" |
18914 | [ C] If a man wanted to write a mythical story, where could he find a better scene? |
18914 | and what was all the regal beauty of the past to him? |
18914 | cries Mona''s mother,"Will you, can you take another Name ere mine upon your lips? |
18914 | how can you write about Spain when once you have been there?" |
18914 | or is it that there is no permitted way by which, after God has reclaimed her, the tradition of her perfect loveliness may be retained on earth?" |
18914 | or was it some cruel necessity? |
18914 | said I,--"go fishing?" |
18914 | should n''t she be real happy to see him? |
18914 | what is life while thou''rt away? |
18914 | what might it not take away? |
43863 | Aunt has told you all hant she, Miss? |
43863 | HOW THE WHOLE PARISH WAS FRIGHTENEDWho does not know Lady Ducklington, or who does not know that she was buried at this parish church? |
43863 | What a Succession of Misfortunes befell this poor Girl? 43863 Who made the Scholar proud to show The Sampler work''d to friend and foe, And with Instruction fonder grow? |
43863 | A ghost, you blockheads, says Mr. Long in a pet, did either of you ever see a ghost, or know anybody that did? |
43863 | And staying at home, she read out of Mr. Cotton Mather-- Why hath Satan filled thy Heart? |
43863 | As soon as he opened the door what sort of a ghost do you think appeared? |
43863 | Could this have been Oliver Goldsmith? |
43863 | Did Dr. Holmes refer to one when he wrote his graceful line,"light as a loop of larkspur"? |
43863 | Do you think you came here for your pleasure?" |
43863 | He called it the great sin of the Daughters of Zion, and he bursts forth:--"Who were the Inventors of Petulant Dancings? |
43863 | He says,"How should you like to live in such a nunnery?" |
43863 | He wrote to a brother minister in 1657:--"Do your children and family grow more godly? |
43863 | How they spent their time, what good books they read? |
43863 | Is n''t it strange that these three lonely little ghosts of old- time schooling should be the only representatives of their regiments of classmates? |
43863 | Might it not be useful in the present day to prevent children having chilblains?" |
43863 | Ned answered,"Dear James, did you ever hear her name the Toss- about?" |
43863 | Now is n''t that stupid? |
43863 | Now tell me I pray What were our Ages on our Wedding Day?" |
43863 | She hath never been whipped before, she says, since she was a child( what can her mother and the late lady have been about I wonder? |
43863 | What signifies it to worry ourselves about beings that are and will be just so? |
43863 | What, then, must have been the notions of less thoughtful folk? |
43863 | What[ f.]hould induce the rooks to frequent gentlemen''s hou[f.]es only, but to tell them how to lead a prudent life? |
43863 | What_ Syntax_ here can you expect to find? |
43863 | When they came to his study, he would examine them,"How they walked with God? |
43863 | Whether they prayed without ceasing?" |
43863 | Will you teach me whom to set free and thus my Grace confine? |
43863 | _ How the whole Pari[f.]h was frightened._ Who does not know Lady Ducklington, or who does not know that[ f.]he was buried at this pari[f.]h church? |
43863 | do n''t you see? |
44955 | If your Governor''s son were slain,he said,"and several other men, would you ask counsel of another nation how and when to right yourselves?" |
44955 | Wha- cheer, netop?--Wha- cheer?--how are you, friend? |
44955 | What shall I do? |
44955 | An oath is too solemn a thing to be lightly taken-- why should we use it? |
44955 | And how came the shield altered into unmeaning scroll- work? |
44955 | And whence the rock and the waves, with light- house and ship in the distance, as is now frequently seen? |
44955 | And whither, indeed, could he go? |
44955 | But by what right could an English Parliament tax Americans? |
44955 | But how could the march of the invader be stayed? |
44955 | Did she wrap it in a napkin? |
44955 | Did the idea arise from the depressing circumstances of the time? |
44955 | How could its ravages be staid? |
44955 | How could the prejudice against inoculation, which still prevailed so widely even among the intelligent and well informed, be overcome? |
44955 | How far was she bound to send troops to the support of her sister colonies? |
44955 | How should these waters be subjected to the will of man? |
44955 | How would it meet the requirements of peace? |
44955 | How would the young and dissolute monarch look upon the claims of Rhode Island? |
44955 | If conscience was to be the supreme test in the relations between man and God, why should not conscience decide between man and man? |
44955 | If so, why was the word HOPE not added until seventeen years afterwards, and in comparatively prosperous times? |
44955 | In what does this differ from taxation without representation? |
44955 | Is there any more authority for these changes than the ill- informed fancy of the seal- engravers from time to time? |
44955 | Or did he, in exercising his acknowledged control as a husband, trench upon her right of conscience in religious concerns? |
44955 | Shall this little strip of land prevent us from completing a union so full of promise? |
44955 | Should Rhode Island be represented in it? |
44955 | Should the Board of Trade accept these accusations, what could preserve the Colony from a quo warranto? |
44955 | Should the legislature be asked to declare for it or against it? |
44955 | Should they be elected by the freemen in town meeting, or by the General Assembly? |
44955 | Sir Henry Vane, who had already been a firm friend of Rhode Island, wrote in a public letter,"Are there no wise men among you? |
44955 | Was there any reason why the legend"Colonie of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations"was omitted after the expulsion of Andros? |
44955 | Was this the"bearing"of the shield of the family of Roger Williams, or of any of the families who accompanied him? |
44955 | What was their legal position? |
44955 | Whence came the cable now surrounding the shank, and thus converting the anchor into a"foul anchor"? |
44955 | Whither will this lead us? |
44955 | Who should take the lead in restoring the charter government? |
44955 | Who were these bold men? |
44955 | Would she continue to hold it? |
44955 | no public, self- denying spirits who can find some way of union before you become a prey to your enemies?" |
39675 | And are these the only objections? |
39675 | And of what possible use,she exclaimed,"can the brains of old Chuang- tsze be to him now, I should like to know?" |
39675 | And what is it? 39675 And who,"asks the reader,"was Colonel Barnabas Clarke?" |
39675 | And, for Heaven''s sake, tell me what remedies do you employ? |
39675 | As for the coffin, what is it? 39675 HOW could the poor Abbé sustain himself against you all four?" |
39675 | My God,cried the lady,"has this ever happened before?" |
39675 | Surely you have not forgotten me,said he--"What name, sir?" |
39675 | Tell me instantly, will the brains of a man who died a natural death answer as well? |
39675 | Why give way,said Chuang- tsze,"to all this passionate outcry? |
39675 | Yes, madam,the old man replied.--"And pray,"asked the widow, eagerly,"what said he?" |
39675 | _ Who fought yesterday?_was the mode of inquiring after the news of the morning. |
39675 | ''Why so?'' |
39675 | *** num imperatorum scientia nihil est, quia summus imperator nuper fugit, amisso exercitu? |
39675 | **** And he stood, and cried unto the armies of Israel, and said unto them, why are ye come out to set your battle in array? |
39675 | --"Did he say so?" |
39675 | --"How so,"inquired the widow--"did you deliver my message correctly?" |
39675 | --"That is my business,"Mr. Hill replied.--"Then,"said Dr. Byles--"will you go with me, and still my wife?" |
39675 | --"Why so?" |
39675 | 13,"_ will pity a charmer, that is bitten with a serpent_?" |
39675 | A great many ask me what color of clothes and horses will be lucky for them? |
39675 | Am not I a Philistine, and ye servants of Saul? |
39675 | And what followeth? |
39675 | And why should he distress himself so needlessly, in regard to the second? |
39675 | Are you not ashamed of yourself, to talk in this cruel way? |
39675 | Can not cases innumerable be stated, to prove, that it is not? |
39675 | Can there be no such thing as a wise and prudent government, because Pompey has been often mistaken, even Cato sometimes, and yourself, now and then? |
39675 | Did not the Guerriere sail up and down the American coast, with her name, written on her flag, challenging those fir frigates? |
39675 | Did the dead bury the dead? |
39675 | Dr. Byles called on Mr. Hill, and inquired--"Do you still?" |
39675 | Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
39675 | Follow the tetotum doctor, and swallow a purge, if P. come uppermost? |
39675 | Have men agreed to banish from society every man, who refuses to fight a duel, when summoned to that refreshing amusement? |
39675 | Henry._ How fares my lord? |
39675 | How was it done? |
39675 | How, thought I, can I meet my beloved Chuang- tsze, in the garments of heaviness? |
39675 | If the reader is good at conundrums, will he be so obliging as to_ guess_, upon what evidence the worthy professor grounds this assertion? |
39675 | Is this a fact? |
39675 | On their way from church--"Molly,"said the bridegroom,"whereabouts is your ticket, with that fortunate number?" |
39675 | Or shall we follow the example of the mutual admiration society, and get up a mutual physicking association? |
39675 | Or shall we go for the doctor, who works the cheapest? |
39675 | Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught? |
39675 | Secondly: shall we give up the itinerant system, and have a market- house, on_ any_ conditions? |
39675 | Shall we say that God hath joined error, fraud, unfitness, wrath, contention, perpetual loneliness, perpetual discord? |
39675 | Surprised by his behavior, she called him to her private apartment--"Well,"said she,"have you executed the business, which I gave you in charge?" |
39675 | The question naturally arises, and, rather distrustingly, demands an answer-- what was"_ the celebrated Mather Byles_"--celebrated for? |
39675 | The question recurs-- what shall be done, for the correction of this increasing evil? |
39675 | The seal was broken, and there was the melon seed, in a blank envelope--"And what, sir, am I to understand by this?" |
39675 | The sentiment of Horace applies not here--------------ridentem dicere verum Quid vetat? |
39675 | There were two questions before the meeting-- first: shall a vote of thanks be passed to Peter Faneuil, for his liberal offer? |
39675 | They were sure to gain no reputation in the contest; and, if they failed, what was their lot? |
39675 | This greatly excited the ire of his wife--"How dare you talk in this outrageous manner,"said she,"of the whole sex? |
39675 | Was there a man in the country, who did not despise the American navy? |
39675 | Was there a public writer beside myself, who did not doom that navy to destruction in a month? |
39675 | What is then the part of wisdom? |
39675 | What shall we do? |
39675 | What, then, is there no such thing as military skill, because a great commander lately fled, and lost his army? |
39675 | Who ever heard of a truly faithful wuzzeer, that, after the death of his master, served another prince? |
39675 | Who has not seen a fire rekindle,_ sua sponte_, after the officious bellows have, apparently, extinguished the last spark? |
39675 | Who is so dull of hearing, as not to catch the context of those dying words? |
39675 | Whoever heard of a widower being burnt or even scorched, on a similar occasion? |
39675 | Will you have me?" |
39675 | _ An Medicina, ars non putanda est, quam tamen multa fallunt? |
39675 | and for issuing a privilege to our frigates to run away from one of those_ fir things with a bit of striped bunting at its mast head_? |
39675 | aut cruciet, quod Vellicet absentem Demetrius? |
39675 | aut quod ineptus Fannius Hermogenis lædat conviva Tigelli? |
39675 | canst thou hear me? |
36338 | For,said he,"I am often asked by those to whom I propose subscribing,_ Have you consulted Franklin on this business? |
36338 | How so? |
36338 | My dear friend,said he, pleasantly,"how can you advise my avoiding disputes? |
36338 | Why the d-- l,said one of them,"you surely do n''t suppose that the fort will not be taken?" |
36338 | ****_ Q._ Are all parts of the colonies equally able to pay taxes? |
36338 | ****_ Q._ Are there any_ slitting- mills_ in America? |
36338 | ****_ Q._ From the thinness of the back settlements, would not the stamp- act be extremely inconvenient to the inhabitants, if executed? |
36338 | ****_ Q._ What was the temper of America towards Great Britain_ before the year_ 1763? |
36338 | ***_ Q._ Do you think the assemblies have a right to levy money on the subject there, to grant_ to the crown_? |
36338 | **_ Q._ Can anything less than a military force carry the stamp- act into execution? |
36338 | And do they know that, by that statute, money is not to be raised on the subject but by consent of Parliament? |
36338 | And have we now forgotten that powerful friend? |
36338 | And if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid? |
36338 | And would they not then object to such a duty? |
36338 | But if Will Soc was a bad man, what had poor old Shehaes done? |
36338 | But shall we compare Saracens to Christians? |
36338 | But shall we imitate idolatrous papists, we that are enlightened Protestants? |
36338 | But shall white men and Christians act like a pagan negro? |
36338 | But, if he was, ought he not to have been fairly tried? |
36338 | Called in again._]_ Q._ Is the American stamp- act an equal tax on the country? |
36338 | Contrive day''s business, and What good shall{ 6} take the resolution of the day; prosecute I do this day? |
36338 | Do we come to America to learn and practise the manners of barbarians? |
36338 | How would the Americans receive it? |
36338 | How would the gods my righteous toils succeed, And bless the hand that made a stranger bleed? |
36338 | I done to- day? |
36338 | If an Indian injures me, does it follow that I may revenge that injury on all Indians? |
36338 | In Europe, if the French, who are white people, should injure the Dutch, are they to revenge it on the English, because they too are white people? |
36338 | Is not the Parliament? |
36338 | Now is not the_ want of sense_( where a man is so unfortunate as to want it) some apology for his_ want of modesty_? |
36338 | One of his friends, who sat next to me, said,"Franklin, why do you continue to side with those Quakers? |
36338 | The others said,"Let us row, what signifies it?" |
36338 | Those whom you have disarmed to satisfy groundless suspicions, will you leave them exposed to the armed madmen of your country? |
36338 | What could children of a year old, babes at the breast, what could they do, that they too must be shot and hatcheted? |
36338 | What could he or the other poor old men and women do? |
36338 | What is your opinion they would do? |
36338 | Will the people that have begun to manufacture decline it? |
36338 | You have imbrued your hands in innocent blood; how will you make them clean? |
36338 | _ A._ About three hundred thousand, from sixteen to sixty years of age? |
36338 | _ A._ I suppose there may be about one hundred and sixty thousand? |
36338 | _ A._ Suppose a military force sent into America, they will find nobody in arms; what are they then to do? |
36338 | _ Q._ And have they not still the same respect for Parliament? |
36338 | _ Q._ And what is their temper now? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are not all the people very able to pay those taxes? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are not ferrymen in America obliged, by act of Parliament, to carry over the posts without pay? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are not the colonies, from their circumstances, very able to pay the stamp duty? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are not the lower rank of people more at their ease in America than in England? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are not you concerned in the management of the_ postoffice_ in America? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are there any words in the charter that justify that construction? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are there any_ fulling- mills_ there? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are there no means of obliging them to erase those resolutions? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are they acquainted with the declaration of rights? |
36338 | _ Q._ Are they as much dissatisfied with the stamp duty as the English? |
36338 | _ Q._ Before there was any thought of the stamp- act, did they wish for a representation in Parliament? |
36338 | _ Q._ But can you name any act of Assembly, or public act of any of your governments, that made such distinction? |
36338 | _ Q._ But do they not consider the regulations of the postoffice, by the act of last year, as a tax? |
36338 | _ Q._ But is not the postoffice, which they have long received, a tax as well as a regulation? |
36338 | _ Q._ But must not he pay an additional postage for the distance to such inland town? |
36338 | _ Q._ But suppose Great Britain should be engaged in a_ war in Europe_, would North America contribute to the support of it? |
36338 | _ Q._ But what do you imagine they will think were the motives of repealing the act? |
36338 | _ Q._ But who are to be the judges of that extraordinary occasion? |
36338 | _ Q._ But will not this increase of expense be a means Of lessening the number of lawsuits? |
36338 | _ Q._ Can any private person take up those letters, and carry them as directed? |
36338 | _ Q._ Can the postmaster answer delivering the letter, without being paid such additional postage? |
36338 | _ Q._ Can there be wool and manufacture enough in one or two years? |
36338 | _ Q._ Can they possibly find wool enough in North America? |
36338 | _ Q._ Can we, at this distance, be competent judges of what favours are necessary? |
36338 | _ Q._ Did the secretary of state ever write for_ money_ for the crown? |
36338 | _ Q._ Did you ever hear the authority of Parliament to make laws for America questioned till lately? |
36338 | _ Q._ Did you never hear that a great quantity of_ stockings_ were contracted for, for the army, during the war, and manufactured in Philadelphia? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do n''t you know that the money arising from the stamps was all to be laid out in America? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do n''t you know that there is, in the Pennsylvania charter, an express reservation of the right of Parliament to lay taxes there? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do n''t you think cloth from England absolutely necessary to them? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do n''t you think the distribution of stamps_ by post_ to all the inhabitants very practicable, if there was no opposition? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do not letters often come into the postoffices in America directed to some inland town where no post goes? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do not you think the people of America would submit to pay the stamp duty if it was moderated? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do the Americans pay any considerable taxes among themselves? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do they consider the postoffice as a tax or as a regulation? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do you know anything of the_ rate of exchange_ in Pennsylvania, and whether it has fallen lately? |
36338 | _ Q._ Do you think it right that America should be protected by this country, and pay no part of the expense? |
36338 | _ Q._ Does not the severity of the winter in the northern colonies occasion the wool to be of bad quality? |
36338 | _ Q._ Does this reasoning hold in the case of a duty laid on the produce of their lands_ exported_? |
36338 | _ Q._ For what purposes are those taxes laid? |
36338 | _ Q._ Have any number of the Germans seen service as soldiers in Europe? |
36338 | _ Q._ Have you heard of any difficulties lately laid on the Spanish trade? |
36338 | _ Q._ How can the commerce be affected? |
36338 | _ Q._ How long are those taxes to continue? |
36338 | _ Q._ How many white men do you suppose there are in North America? |
36338 | _ Q._ How, then, can they think they have a right to levy money for the crown, or for any other than local purposes? |
36338 | _ Q._ How, then, could the Assembly of Pennsylvania assert, that laying a tax on them by the stamp- act was an infringement of their rights? |
36338 | _ Q._ How, then, do you pay the balance? |
36338 | _ Q._ If the Parliament should repeal the stamp- act, will the Assembly of Pennsylvania rescind their resolutions? |
36338 | _ Q._ If the act is not repealed, what do you think will be the consequence? |
36338 | _ Q._ If the stamp- act should be repealed, and the crown should make a requisition to the colonies for a sum of money, would they grant it? |
36338 | _ Q._ In what light did the people of America use to consider the Parliament of Great Britain? |
36338 | _ Q._ In what proportion had population increased in America? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is it in their power to do without them? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is it not necessary to send troops to America, to defend the Americans against the Indians? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is it their interest not to take them? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is it their interest to make cloth at home? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is not this a tax on the ferrymen? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is there a power on earth that can force them to erase them? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is there not a balance of trade due from the colonies where the troops are posted, that will bring back the money to the old colonies? |
36338 | _ Q._ Is this all you mean; a letter from the secretary of state? |
36338 | _ Q._ On what do you found your opinion, that the people in America made any such distinction? |
36338 | _ Q._ Suppose an act of internal regulations connected with a tax, how would they receive it? |
36338 | _ Q._ Then no regulation with a tax would be submitted to? |
36338 | _ Q._ To what cause is that owing? |
36338 | _ Q._ Was it an opinion in America before 1763, that the Parliament had no right to lay taxes and duties there? |
36338 | _ Q._ Was it not expected that the debt would have been sooner discharged? |
36338 | _ Q._ Was not the_ late war with_ the Indians,_ since the peace with France_, a war for America only? |
36338 | _ Q._ Were you not reimbursed by Parliament? |
36338 | _ Q._ What are the body of the people in the colonies? |
36338 | _ Q._ What are the present taxes in Pennsylvania, laid by the laws of the colony? |
36338 | _ Q._ What do you mean by its inexpediency? |
36338 | _ Q._ What do you think a sufficient military force to protect the distribution of the stamps in every part of America? |
36338 | _ Q._ What do you think is the reason that the people in America increase faster than in England? |
36338 | _ Q._ What is now their pride? |
36338 | _ Q._ What is the number of men in America able to bear arms, or of disciplined militia? |
36338 | _ Q._ What is the usual constitutional manner of calling on the colonies for aids? |
36338 | _ Q._ What is your opinion of a future tax, imposed on the same principle with that of the stamp- act? |
36338 | _ Q._ What may be the amount of one year''s imports into Pennsylvania from Britain? |
36338 | _ Q._ What may be the amount of the produce of your province exported to Britain? |
36338 | _ Q._ What number of Germans? |
36338 | _ Q._ What number of them are Quakers? |
36338 | _ Q._ What number of white inhabitants do you think there are in Pennsylvania? |
36338 | _ Q._ What used to be the pride of the Americans? |
36338 | _ Q._ What will be the opinion of the Americans on those resolutions? |
36338 | _ Q._ When did you communicate that instruction to the minister? |
36338 | _ Q._ When did you receive the instructions you mentioned? |
36338 | _ Q._ When money has been raised in the colonies upon requisition, has it not been granted to the king? |
36338 | _ Q._ Why do you think so? |
36338 | _ Q._ Why do you think so? |
36338 | _ Q._ Why may it not? |
36338 | _ Q._ Why so? |
36338 | _ Q._ Why so? |
36338 | _ Q._ Will it not take a long time to establish that manufacture among them; and must they not, in the mean while, suffer greatly? |
36338 | _ Q._ Would it be most for the interest of Great Britain to employ the hands of Virginia in tobacco or in manufactures? |
36338 | _ Q._ Would it not have the effect of excessive usury? |
36338 | _ Q._ Would the people at Boston discontinue their trade? |
36338 | _ Q._ Would the repeal of the stamp- act be any discouragement of your manufactures? |
36338 | _ Q._ Would they do this for a British concern, as suppose a war in some part of Europe that did not affect them? |
36338 | _ Q._ Would they grant money alone, if called on? |
36338 | _ Q._ Would they suffer the produce of their lands to rot? |
36338 | _ Q._ You have said that you pay heavy taxes in Pennsylvania; what do they amount to in the pound? |
36338 | and would not the lines stand more justly thus? |
36338 | had you not better sell them? |
36338 | or do we imagine we no longer need its assistance? |
36896 | ''Tis a very sensible Question you ask,he says,"how the Air can affect the Barometer, when its Opening appears covered with Wood?" |
36896 | But are not the Abbà © de la R---- and the Abbà © M---- still some times at her house? |
36896 | Dare I confess to you,he said, when he was still at Passy, and the Chevalier was still in America,"that I am your rival with Madame G----? |
36896 | Did you ever taste the ginger cake,she asked,"and think it had belonged to your fellow- traveller? |
36896 | Do you think, after this,he added,"that even your kindest invitations and Mr. Greene''s can prevail with me to venture myself again on such roads?" |
36896 | How so? |
36896 | If men are so wicked as we now see them_ with religion_, what would they be_ if without it_? |
36896 | Is not the Hope of one day being able to purchase and enjoy Luxuries a great Spur to Labour and Industry? |
36896 | What was your vision? |
36896 | When,he wrote to Gates from Passy,"shall we meet again in cheerful converse, talk over our adventures, and finish with a quiet game of chess?" |
36896 | Where are the old men? 36896 Who are they?" |
36896 | Why do you wear that old coat today? |
36896 | Why,says she,"_ yf_ spells_ Wife_; what else can it spell?" |
36896 | ''Why nobody will expect you to give them away; what then is the use of that word?'' |
36896 | ; and what can the Junto do towards securing it? |
36896 | ; and what have you heard or observed of his character or merits? |
36896 | ; and whether, think you, it lies in the power of the Junto to oblige him, or encourage him as he deserves? |
36896 | ; can a man arrive at perfection in this life? |
36896 | ; or do you know of any beneficial law that is wanting? |
36896 | ; whence comes the dew that stands on the outside of a tankard that has cold water in it in the summer time? |
36896 | ; why does the flame of a candle tend upward in a spire? |
36896 | And now what was the fate of poor Laish? |
36896 | And, if he loves me, can I doubt that he will go on to take care of me, not only here but hereafter? |
36896 | Are you still living? |
36896 | But what, asked_ Plain Truth_, would the condition of the Philadelphians be, if suddenly surprised without previous alarm, perhaps in the night? |
36896 | But why should I be so scrupulous when you have promised to absolve me of the future? |
36896 | But, my good Papa, why say that you write French badly,--that your pleasantries in that language are only nonsense? |
36896 | But, were you to succeed, do you imagine any Good would be done by it? |
36896 | By the way[ he asked] is our Relationship in Nantucket worn- out? |
36896 | Do you know of any deserving young beginner lately set up, whom it lies in the power of the Junto anyway to encourage? |
36896 | Do you please yourself with the fancy that you are doing good? |
36896 | Do you possess it? |
36896 | Do you see anything amiss in the present customs or proceedings of the Junto, which might be amended? |
36896 | Do you think of anything at present, in which the Junto may be serviceable to_ mankind_, to their country, to their friends, or to themselves? |
36896 | Does your conscience never hint to you the impiety of being in constant warfare against the plans of Providence? |
36896 | Hath any citizen in your knowledge failed in his business lately, and what have you heard of the cause? |
36896 | Hath any deserving stranger arrived in town since last meeting, that you have heard of? |
36896 | Hath any man injured you, from whom it is in the power of the Junto to procure redress? |
36896 | Hath anybody attacked your reputation lately? |
36896 | Have you any Money at Interest, and what does it produce? |
36896 | Have you any weighty affair on hand in which you think the advice of the Junto may be of service? |
36896 | Have you lately heard any member''s character attacked, and how have you defended it? |
36896 | Have you lately heard how any present rich man, here or elsewhere, got his estate? |
36896 | Have you lately heard of any citizen''s thriving well, and by what means? |
36896 | Have you lately observed any defect in the laws of your_ country_, of which it would be proper to move the legislature for an amendment? |
36896 | Have you lately observed any encroachment on the just liberties of the people? |
36896 | Have you or any of your acquaintance been lately sick or wounded? |
36896 | How am I going to spend the Wednesdays and Saturdays? |
36896 | How has my poor old Sister gone thro''the Winter? |
36896 | I happened there when the question to be considered was whether physicians had, on the whole, done most good or harm? |
36896 | I shall do my best that it may not be that of my daughters, but alas, shall I be mistress of their fate? |
36896 | If good be done, what imports it by whom''tis done? |
36896 | In what manner can the Junto or any of them, assist you in any of your honorable designs? |
36896 | Is it of Dr. Franklin, the celebrated philosopher, the profound statesman, that a woman speaks with so much irreverence? |
36896 | Is it right[ he asked] to encourage this monstrous Deficiency of natural Affection? |
36896 | Is not such a Letter of itself a Compliment? |
36896 | Is self interest the rudder that steers mankind? |
36896 | Is there any difficulty in matters of opinion, of justice, and injustice, which you would gladly have discussed at this time? |
36896 | Is there any man whose friendship you want, and which the Junto, or any of them, can procure for you? |
36896 | It is enough that I have lost my_ son_; would they add my_ grandson_? |
36896 | May I venture to ask you to remember us to your grandson? |
36896 | May I venture to beg you to give my kind regards to Mr. Franklinet? |
36896 | Mr. G. W.? |
36896 | My little Fellow- Traveller, the sprightly Hetty, with whose sensible Prattle I was so much entertained, why does she not write to me? |
36896 | Nettled by being reproved before so many persons, Logan replied,"_ I being thy servant, why did thee not order me to come down? |
36896 | No more Doubts to be resolv''d? |
36896 | No more Questions to ask? |
36896 | Of the Catechism, he retained only two questions( with the answers),"What is your duty to God?" |
36896 | Or do you do some kind of Business for a Living? |
36896 | Or have the mob of Paris mistaken the head of a monopolizer of knowledge, for a monopolizer of corn, and paraded it about the streets upon a pole?" |
36896 | Pray instruct me how far I may venture to practice upon this Principle? |
36896 | Should not that be settled first?" |
36896 | Sometimes he exchanges language like this for such bantering questions as these:"Have you finish''d your Course of Philosophy? |
36896 | Tell me frankly whether she lives comfortably, or is pinched? |
36896 | That Soldiers and Seamen, who must march and labour in the Sun, should, in the East or West Indies have an Uniform of white? |
36896 | The first does not fail to brag and show her letter everywhere; what do you wish to become of the other? |
36896 | The others said:"Let us row; what signifies it?" |
36896 | They could not all fly with their families, and, if they could, how would they subsist? |
36896 | To social Duties does his Heart attend, As Son, as Father, Husband, Brother,_ Friend_? |
36896 | Tomorrow, Wednesday, you will come to tea, will you not? |
36896 | We could not all conveniently start together; and why should you and I be grieved at this, since we are soon to follow, and know where to find him? |
36896 | What Assurance of the_ Future_ can be better founded than that which is built on Experience of the_ Past_? |
36896 | What benefits have you lately received from any man not present? |
36896 | What can be the reason? |
36896 | What could they desire more? |
36896 | What happy effects of temperance, prudence, of moderation, or of any other virtue? |
36896 | What new story have you lately heard agreeable for telling in conversation? |
36896 | What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed or heard; of imprudence, of passion, or of any other vice or folly? |
36896 | What was the consequence of this monstrous Pride and Insolence? |
36896 | What would you think of your beggar, if, the bishop having given him the"louis"which he asked, he had grumbled because he did not get two? |
36896 | When will Mankind be convinced of this, and agree to settle their Differences by Arbitration? |
36896 | Who would recognize the lover of Madame Brillon in this russet picture that he paints of himself in his eighty- third year in a letter to her? |
36896 | Whom do you know that are shortly going voyages or journeys, if one should have occasion to send by them? |
36896 | Why did you not tell me there were ladies here?" |
36896 | Why should I not call you so, since I love you with all the Tenderness, All the Fondness of a Father? |
36896 | Why then sh''d you continually be employed in injuring& destroying one another? |
36896 | Why then should we grieve, that a new child is born among the immortals, a new member added to their happy society? |
36896 | Will it tell_ how much_ he is afflicted? |
36896 | Will you come, and go with me? |
36896 | Would it not be as well, if you were of the Church of Ireland?" |
36896 | You adopted me as your daughter, I chose you for my father: what do you expect of me? |
36896 | You have imbrued your Hands in innocent Blood; how will you make them clean? |
36896 | _ Do those, who know him, love him?_ If they do, You''ve_ my_ Permission: you may love him too." |
36896 | and"What is your duty to your neighbor?" |
36896 | if so, what remedies were used, and what were their effects? |
36896 | says another,''have we then_ Thieves_ among us? |
11122 | Can you make old traditions? |
11122 | How can they help it? |
11122 | Is it at hand? |
11122 | Mamma,said one of the boys, gently touching her arm,"are you going to give away those things?" |
11122 | Mr. Ned Hazard, what do you call state rights? |
11122 | Who planted this old apple- tree? |
11122 | _ How shall I describe the effect of that announcement? 11122 *****Thou, the patient Heaven upbraiding,"Spake a solemn Voice within;"Weary of our Lord''s forbearance, Art thou free from sin?" |
11122 | After this, what are our emotions? |
11122 | Ah, the gods of wood and stone Can a single saint dethrone, But the people who shall aid''Gainst the puppets they have made? |
11122 | Am I not right, then, in calling this bill the best on which Congress ever acted? |
11122 | And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong.--"What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done? |
11122 | And could I see thee die? |
11122 | And ere the year was fully through, Did they not learn to foot it too, And such a dance as ne''er was known For twenty miles on end lead down? |
11122 | And have we now forgotten that powerful Friend? |
11122 | And if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid? |
11122 | And what does your law say? |
11122 | And what occasion is there for judging him, or for judging any one? |
11122 | And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war, and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country should leave us no more? |
11122 | And with his scholarship; knowledge of life, taste, and genius, what might not have been expected from its fulfilment? |
11122 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
11122 | Are not we equally guilty? |
11122 | Are our cities and villages, our schools and churches, in ruins? |
11122 | Are the earnings of past years dissipated, and the skill which gathered them forgotten? |
11122 | Are the stout muscles which have conquered sea and land, palsied? |
11122 | Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference, because they are greener? |
11122 | Are they awed? |
11122 | Are we elevated, or degraded, by its operation? |
11122 | Are ye empty worlds, and desolate, the sport of chance? |
11122 | Besides, what became of literature when the poet''s voice in the public bath, or library, where he recited, was drowned by the din of arms?... |
11122 | Bright eyes that followed fading ship and crew, Melting in tender rain? |
11122 | But by what spell, by what formula, are you going to bind the People to all future time? |
11122 | But how are we ruined? |
11122 | But is this all? |
11122 | But shall we fail to work because the end is far off? |
11122 | But what are the"artificial wants"to be encouraged? |
11122 | But what is this beauty, what is this grandeur, compared with that agency of God, to which they owe their being? |
11122 | But what will fame be to an ephemeron who no longer exists? |
11122 | But what would you have? |
11122 | But when shall we be stronger? |
11122 | But wherefore should we confine the edge of censure to our ancestors, or those from whom they purchased? |
11122 | But ye, who for the living lost That agony in secret bear, Who shall with soothing words accost The strength of your despair? |
11122 | By what right of primogeniture? |
11122 | Can I sign his death- warrant who has tolerated me about his grounds so long? |
11122 | Can we ever be cold or faithless? |
11122 | Can you submit to the thought that_ you_ should be torpid in your endeavors to disperse them, while the rest of Christendom is awake and alert? |
11122 | Canst thou no offering on his altar place? |
11122 | Could he look with affection and veneration to such a country as his parent? |
11122 | Death comes down with reckless footstep To the hall and hut; Think you Death will tarry knocking Where the door is shut? |
11122 | Deep in the stormy ocean''s hidden cave Buried, and lost to human care and sight, What power hath interposed to rend thy grave? |
11122 | Did not Christianity begin with a martyrdom? |
11122 | Did not our troops show great discerning, And skill, your various arts in learning? |
11122 | Did the discomfited champions of Freedom fail, who have left those names in history which can never die? |
11122 | Did the martyrs fail, when with their precious blood they sowed the seed of the Church? |
11122 | Did they not lay their heads together, And gain your art to tar and feather, When Colonel Nesbitt, thro''the town, In triumph bore the country- clown? |
11122 | Do man and nature exhaust the possibilities of being? |
11122 | Do we not challenge the respect of the whole world? |
11122 | Do we not feel ourselves on an eminence? |
11122 | Do you not value the Holy Scriptures? |
11122 | Does anybody doubt their fitness? |
11122 | Fleeting good too light to last? |
11122 | For eyes beneath their radiant shrine In kindlier glances answered mine: Can these their light restore? |
11122 | For what is life without liberty? |
11122 | For what rights of a citizen will be deemed inviolable, when a state renounces the principles that constitute their security? |
11122 | Hast thou aspired, like them, through all thy life, And rest and healing with thy shadow cast? |
11122 | Have deeds of thine brightened the world like flowers, And sweetened it with holiest charities? |
11122 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
11122 | He heedeth not ye anciente jests That witless sinners use; What feareth ye bolde tailyor- man Ye hissinge of a goose? |
11122 | How did they feel towards each other, the soldier of Frederick, and the soldier of Louis? |
11122 | How do they settle their claim to the homestead? |
11122 | How is this to be effected? |
11122 | How shall we effect this improvement? |
11122 | I am a countryman of Washington? |
11122 | I do not think that the announcement disturbed them much, except in speculation as to the fate of the child,"Can he live now?" |
11122 | If there is no existence for man beyond the present state, what can we suppose to be the design of his Creator in forming him a moral being? |
11122 | If you place it subsequently, let me ask the consequences? |
11122 | In short, why should Speculation and Scheming ride so jauntily in their carriages, splashing honest Work as it trudges humbly and wearily by on foot?" |
11122 | In this unhappy situation, what is to be done? |
11122 | In what a state will our institutions be left? |
11122 | In what condition has it placed us? |
11122 | In what state our liberties? |
11122 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
11122 | Is it enthusiasm, is it folly, is it hypocrisy, to say to such, a creature,"You must be born again before you can see the kingdom of God?" |
11122 | Is it possible that_ you_ should not see, in this state of human things, a mighty motion of Divine providence? |
11122 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
11122 | Is my lonely pittance past? |
11122 | Is not the sea- brine,--is not shipwreck, bitter enough, to make the cup of life go down here? |
11122 | Is the kind, nourishing earth about to become a cruel step- mother? |
11122 | Is the ocean dried up? |
11122 | Is there then hope that she can float?" |
11122 | It''s-- it''s--""It''s what?" |
11122 | Lifts my friend the latch no more? |
11122 | Must this conscious being cease-- this reasoning, thinking power, and these warm affections, their delightful movements? |
11122 | Must this eye close in an endless night, and this heart fall back upon everlasting insensibility? |
11122 | My little flowers, that with your bloom So hid the grass you grew upon, A child''s foot scarce had any room Between you,--are you dead and gone? |
11122 | Never airs that burst and blow From eternal summits, know? |
11122 | Never this monotony feel Shattered by a trumpet''s peal? |
11122 | O sailors, did sweet eyes look after you, The day you sailed away from sunny Spain? |
11122 | O say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed, at the twilight''s last gleaming? |
11122 | O, in return for such surpassing grace, Poor, blind, and naked, what canst thou impart? |
11122 | Oh, when its aged branches throw Thin shadows on the sward below, Shall fraud and force and iron- will Oppress the weak and helpless still? |
11122 | On hearing from the surgeon that death was certain,"I am glad of it,"he cried;"how long shall I survive?" |
11122 | Or is the teeming soil of this magnificent country sinking beneath our feet? |
11122 | Or with gladness are they full, For the night so beautiful, And longing for those far- off spheres? |
11122 | Or, if his life should not be invaded, what would its enjoyments be in a country odious in the eyes of strangers, and dishonored in his own? |
11122 | Outwent they not each native noodle By far, in playing Yankee- doodle? |
11122 | Saw you the savage man, how fell and wild, With what grim pleasure, as he passed, he smiled? |
11122 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
11122 | Shades of my ancestors,--where? |
11122 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
11122 | Shall we not do, for those who are to follow us, what has been done for us by our predecessors? |
11122 | Sir, what do we see? |
11122 | Sweeter couch hath who than I? |
11122 | The Pilgrim Fathers,--where are they? |
11122 | The great, who coldly pass thee by, With proud step and averted eye? |
11122 | There was a solemnity mingled with their pleased emotions; for who had made this grand picture, stretching out in its beauty and majesty before them? |
11122 | Thine eyes are full of tears; Are they wet Even yet, With the thought of other years? |
11122 | This gentleman, a stranger to me, stopped me one day at my door, and asked me if I was the young man, who had lately opened a new printing- house? |
11122 | Thou hast the form, And likeness of thy God!--who more? |
11122 | Thunder shall we never hear In this ordered atmosphere? |
11122 | Value them as containing your sweetest hope; your most thrilling joy? |
11122 | War and hunting are his only occupations.... Shall they be advised to remain, or remove? |
11122 | Was there no other one in that dark company who stood grimly around him, to whom he could look for the projection of his offspring? |
11122 | We are asked by the gentleman from Virginia, if the people want judges to protect them? |
11122 | We are_ tempting God_, and shall_ we_ be delivered? |
11122 | What arm hath brought thee thus to life and light? |
11122 | What cares ye valiant tailyor- man For all ye cowarde fears? |
11122 | What has given us this just pride? |
11122 | What has it left undone, which any government could do for the whole country? |
11122 | What has placed us thus high? |
11122 | What hast thou done here, child, that thy poor dust Should lie embosomed in such loveliness? |
11122 | What hast thou seen? |
11122 | What if all ponds were shallow? |
11122 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
11122 | What is our condition, under its influence, at the very moment when some talk of arresting its power and breaking its unity? |
11122 | What is patriotism? |
11122 | What is the consequence? |
11122 | What is there like it, or to be at all compared with it, in any mythology on earth? |
11122 | What is there that will not be included in the history of nature? |
11122 | What plant we in the apple- tree? |
11122 | What plant we in the apple- tree? |
11122 | What plant we in the apple- tree? |
11122 | What saith the herald of the Lord? |
11122 | What shall the tasks of mercy be, Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears Of those who live when length of years Is wasting this apple- tree? |
11122 | What shall we say, too, of inn porches? |
11122 | What then does she do? |
11122 | What though thy notes are sad and few, By, every simple boatman blown? |
11122 | What though thy shell protects thy fragile head From the sharp bailiffs of the briny sea? |
11122 | What though with mournful memories They sigh not for the past? |
11122 | What visions fair, what glorious life, Where thou hast been? |
11122 | What wealth can be created without capital? |
11122 | What were life to_ such as I_? |
11122 | What were they, in comparison with the great and good Being upon whose works they were gazing? |
11122 | What would they have? |
11122 | What''s the use of states, if they are all to be cut up with canals, and railroads, and tariffs? |
11122 | When men are free from restraint, how long will you suspend their fury? |
11122 | Where do we now stand? |
11122 | Where hast thou been this year, beloved? |
11122 | Where is that sweet image? |
11122 | Where is the man that can hit a turkey''s head at a hundred yards? |
11122 | Where will you have the scene? |
11122 | Where, in the land of freemen, was the right of petition ever placed on the exclusive basis of morality and virtue? |
11122 | White oak ai n''t bass, is it? |
11122 | Whither, midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day, Far through their rosy depths dost thou pursue Thy solitary way? |
11122 | Who assert his place, and teach Lighter labor, nobler speech, Standing firm, erect, and strong, Proud as Freedom, free as song? |
11122 | Who can doubt the result? |
11122 | Who is he?" |
11122 | Who is there in this assembly that would help to fasten a fetter upon Oregon or Mexico? |
11122 | Who is there that would not oppose every effort for this purpose? |
11122 | Who is there, then, that can vote for Taylor or Cass? |
11122 | Who is there, who would not cover his face for very shame? |
11122 | Who is thine enemy? |
11122 | Who shall rise and cast away, First, the Burden of the Day? |
11122 | Who were the people that built this city? |
11122 | Who, at the distance of fifty- seven years, would attempt, upon memory, to give even a sketch of it? |
11122 | Why did she not teach the learned Egyptians to abstain from worshiping their leeks and onions? |
11122 | Why not instruct the polished Greeks to renounce their sixty thousand gods? |
11122 | Why not persuade the enlightened Romans to abstain from adoring their deified murderers? |
11122 | Why not prevail on the wealthy Phoenicians to refrain from sacrificing their infants to Saturn? |
11122 | Why should a man able and eager to work, ever stand idle for want of employment in a world where so much needful work impatiently awaits the doing? |
11122 | Why should the gracious trees stand guard o''er thee? |
11122 | Why stand we here idle? |
11122 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
11122 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
11122 | Would it not react on the minds of men? |
11122 | Would such a style of oratory succeed there? |
11122 | You may have a union, but can you have a lasting union in these circumstances? |
11122 | _ Would he take a message?_ Just as lief as not; had nothing else to do; would carry it in no time. |
11122 | are ye? |
11122 | exclaimed Nathan, with a melancholy shake of the head;"thee would not have me back in the Settlements, to scandalize them that is of my faith? |
11122 | for in politics what can laws do without morals? |
11122 | or do we imagine we no longer need His assistance? |
11122 | that they are not to be violated but with his wrath? |
11122 | that whisper,--"Where is Mary''s boy?" |
11122 | the high In station, or in wealth the chief? |
11122 | thou foolish virgin, Hast thou then forgot? |
11122 | when shall it fall, That we may see? |
22939 | All but one? |
22939 | An''what''s that wan, sorr? |
22939 | And if threepence? |
22939 | And three ha''pence? |
22939 | And what do you talk? |
22939 | And what is that? |
22939 | And where are you_ tannin kenna_? |
22939 | And where is your house? |
22939 | And why? |
22939 | But how on earth does it happen that you speak such a language? |
22939 | Can you rakker Romanes? |
22939 | Can you_ thari shelta_,_ subli_? |
22939 | Could he remember any of these words? |
22939 | Did you ever read my Johnnykin? |
22939 | Did you ever see me before? 22939 Did you hear what the old woman said while she was telling your fortune?" |
22939 | Do the whole lay,--look so gorgeous? |
22939 | Do what? |
22939 | Do you know any of the---''s? |
22939 | Does tute jin any of the---''s? |
22939 | Eye- talians, ai n''t they? |
22939 | Gypsies live here, do n''t they? |
22939 | Has it been a_ wafedo wen_[ hard winter], Anselo? |
22939 | Have you got through all your languages? |
22939 | How do yer know he do n''t take the hoss? |
22939 | How far is it? |
22939 | I say, old woman,he cried;"do you know who you''re_ rakkerin_[ speaking] to? |
22939 | Is n''t there_ one_ left behind, which you have forgotten? 22939 It means,''Can you talk Rom?'' |
22939 | Master, you want me to tell you all the truth,--yes? 22939 Miro koko, pen mandy a rinkeno gudlo?" |
22939 | Mrs. Lee, why did n''t you bring your husband? |
22939 | Pen mandy a waver gudlo apa o chone? |
22939 | Rya, tute kams mandy to pukker tute the tachopen-- awo? 22939 Se adovo sar tacho?" |
22939 | Si lesti chorin a gry? |
22939 | Sossi kair''d tute to av''akai pardel o boro pani? |
22939 | That''s all? |
22939 | The Master said,''And what came of it?'' 22939 Well, are you going to see gypsies?" |
22939 | What are you saying? |
22939 | What do you ask for one of those flower- stands, Dick? |
22939 | What do you call yourself in the way of business? |
22939 | What do you do for a living? |
22939 | What flowers are those which thou holdest? |
22939 | What game is this you are playing on these fellows? |
22939 | What is good for a bootless bene? |
22939 | What is the charm of all this? |
22939 | What is yours? |
22939 | What is_ that_? |
22939 | What kind of fellers air they, any way? |
22939 | What will gain thy faith? |
22939 | When I say to you,''_ Rakessa tu Romanes_?'' 22939 Where did you get it?" |
22939 | Where is Anselo W.? 22939 Who is that talking there?" |
22939 | Why do n''t you tell us what they are sayin''? |
22939 | Will I have a glass of old ale? 22939 Will you give me a lesson?" |
22939 | Will you not take seats on the platform, and hear us play? |
22939 | Would I rather have wine or spirits? 22939 Would we hear some singing?" |
22939 | You are a nice fortune- teller, are n''t you now? |
22939 | You do n''t suppose I''ve come four miles to see you and stop out here, do you? |
22939 | You wish to hear them sing? |
22939 | You''re an old traveler? |
22939 | _ Can tute pen dukkerin aja_? |
22939 | _ Chivo_ means a knife- man? |
22939 | _ Does tute pen mandy''d chore tute_? |
22939 | _ E come lei piace questo paese_? |
22939 | _ Sarishan_? |
22939 | _ Siete Italiano_? |
22939 | _ Te adovo wavero rye_? |
22939 | ( And how do you like this country?) |
22939 | ( And that_ other_ gentleman?) |
22939 | ( And what made you come here across the broad water?) |
22939 | ( Are you an Italian?) |
22939 | ( Can you speak Romany, my mother?) |
22939 | ( Can you talk gypsy?) |
22939 | ( Can you tell fortunes already?) |
22939 | ( Do you talk Romany, my sister?) |
22939 | ( Do you think I would rob_ you_ or pick your pockets?) |
22939 | ( Do_ you_ believe in that?) |
22939 | ( Was it stealing a horse?) |
22939 | ( Where are they all?) |
22939 | A few days after, walking with a lady in Weybridge, she said to me,--"Who is that man who looked at you so closely?" |
22939 | After a very long drive we found ourselves in the gypsy street, and the_ istvostshik_ asked me,"To what house?" |
22939 | All at once a thought struck me, and I exclaimed,--"Do you know any other languages?" |
22939 | Am I a stranger here? |
22939 | An instant after I said,--"_ Ha veduto il mio''havallo la sera_?" |
22939 | An''sa se adduvvel? |
22939 | And I added,--"_ Wo n''t_ you talk a word with a gypsy brother?" |
22939 | And I spoke suddenly, and said,--"_ Can tute rakker Romanes_,_ miri dye_?" |
22939 | And did n''t I hear you with my own ears count up to ten in Romany? |
22939 | And does it not seem as if there were something in human nature pulling men back to a rude and simple life?" |
22939 | And how much will you take? |
22939 | And on that very[ true] day the lady Trinali heard how Merlin was[ is] a great, powerful wizard, and said,"What sort of a man is this? |
22939 | And what is it? |
22939 | And what was it like? |
22939 | And what was said of the Poles who had, during the Middle Ages, a reputation almost as good as that of gypsies? |
22939 | And who shall say they were not? |
22939 | Are over- culture, excessive sentiment, constant self- criticism, and all the brood of nervous curses to monopolize and inspire art? |
22939 | Arthur Mitchell, in inquiring What is Civilization? |
22939 | As I spoke I dropped my voice, and said, inquiringly,--"Romanes?" |
22939 | As if he could hardly believe in such a phenomenon he inquired,"_ Romany_?" |
22939 | As we went about looking at people and pastimes, a Romany, I think one of the Ayres, said to me,--"See the two policemen? |
22939 | But I laughed, and said in Romany,"How are you, my dears? |
22939 | But Owen the tinker looked steadily at me for an instant, as if to see what manner of man I might be, and then said,--"_ Shelta_, is it? |
22939 | But can any of you smoke?" |
22939 | Ca n''t you tell fortunes?) |
22939 | Can you bug Shelta? |
22939 | Can you recall no child by any wayside of life to whom you have given a chance smile or a kind word, and been repaid with artless sudden attraction? |
22939 | Can you talk tinkers''language? |
22939 | Can you thari Shelter? |
22939 | Denna Merlinos putcherdas,"Sasi lesters nav?" |
22939 | Did I ever in all my life steal a chicken? |
22939 | Did mandy ever chore a kani adre mi jiv? |
22939 | Did n''t your friend there talk Romanes? |
22939 | Did you ever see a two- headed halfpenny? |
22939 | Divested of diamonds and of Worth''s dresses, what would a girl of average charms be worth to a stranger? |
22939 | Do n''t I know our people? |
22939 | Do n''t she look just as Alfi used to look?" |
22939 | Do n''t you see there are ladies here? |
22939 | Do n''t you understand? |
22939 | Do not''well- constituted''men want to fish and shoot or kill something, themselves, by climbing mountains, when they can find nothing else? |
22939 | Do you know Lord John Russell?" |
22939 | Do you know me?" |
22939 | Do_ you_ know anythin''of Italian, sir?" |
22939 | Does not the exquisite of Rotten Row weary for his flannel shirt and shooting- jacket? |
22939 | Girl, wilt thou live in my dwelling, For pearls and diamonds true? |
22939 | Girl, wilt thou live in my home? |
22939 | Go where we may, we find the Jew-- has any other wandered so far? |
22939 | Good at a mill? |
22939 | Hast thou any more questions, O son?'' |
22939 | Have half a crown? |
22939 | He replied,"I am he; what is your name?" |
22939 | He that was_ staruben_ for a_ gry_?" |
22939 | Hear ye the mournful song he''s singing, Like distant tolling through the air? |
22939 | Hear ye the troika- bell a- ringing, And see the peasant driver there? |
22939 | His fingers relaxed their grasp of the shilling, his hand was drawn from his pocket, and his glance, like Bill Nye''s, remarked:"_ Can_ this be?" |
22939 | How are you? |
22939 | How do you do it up to such a high peg?" |
22939 | How was that? |
22939 | How''s your brother Frank? |
22939 | I had started one morning on a walk by the Thames, when I met a friend, who asked,--"Are n''t you going to- day to the Hampton races?" |
22939 | I have frequently been asked,"Why do you take an interest in gypsies?" |
22939 | I hear two maidens gently talking, Bohemian maids, and fair to see: The one on distant hills is walking, The other maiden,--where is she? |
22939 | I looked him fixedly in the eyes, and said, in a low tone,--"_ Ne rakesa tu Romanes miro prala_?" |
22939 | I paused before her, and said in English,--"Can you tell a fortune for a young lady?" |
22939 | I replied,--"If I had sixpence, how would you divide it?" |
22939 | I said nothing for a few seconds, but looked at her intently, and then asked,--"_ Rakessa tu Romanes_,_ miri pen_?" |
22939 | I turned, and the witch eyes, distended with awe and amazement, were glaring into mine, while she said, in a hurried whisper,--"Was n''t it Romanes?" |
22939 | If you say you are selling goods under cost, it''s very likely some yokel will cry out,''Stolen, hey?'' |
22939 | In an instant Ben had taken my hand, and said_ Sholem aleichum_, and"Can you talk Spanish?" |
22939 | In short, does it not appear that these conventionalities are irksome, and are disregarded when the chance presents itself? |
22939 | Is it not extremely probable that during the"out- wandering"the Dom communicated his name and habits to his fellow- emigrants? |
22939 | Is it true? |
22939 | Is joyous and healthy nature to vanish step by step from the heart of man, and morbid, egoistic pessimism to take its place? |
22939 | Is n''t he all Romaneskas? |
22939 | Loshools Flowers(_ lus_, erb or flower? |
22939 | Merrih Nose(?). |
22939 | Miesli, misli To go( origin of"mizzle"?) |
22939 | Mislain Raining( mizzle?). |
22939 | Mrs. Lee, why did n''t tute bring yer rom?" |
22939 | Mukkamen dikk savo lela kumi shunaben, te savo se o jinescrodiro?" |
22939 | Ne dikkdas tu kekker a dui sherescro haura? |
22939 | Now I look back to it, I ask,_ Ubi sunt_? |
22939 | Now thou art my darling girl, And I love thee dearly; Oh, beloved and my fair, Lov''st thou me sincerely? |
22939 | Now was n''t that wonderful?" |
22939 | Of course he knew a little of it; was there ever an old"traveler"who did not? |
22939 | Oh,_ rya_,"she cried, eagerly,"you know so much,--you''re such a deep Romany,--can''t_ you_ tell fortunes?" |
22939 | Or why is the pursuit of knowledge assumed among the half- bred to be an excuse for so much intrusion? |
22939 | ROLLIN( ROLAND?). |
22939 | Sa se tiro nav? |
22939 | Sa si asar? |
22939 | Same size, as this, was it? |
22939 | Seeing me he stopped, and said, grimly,--"Do you love your Jesus?" |
22939 | Shall I introduce you?" |
22939 | So I went up to the bar and spoke:--"How are you, Agnes?" |
22939 | Sobye(?) |
22939 | Sos tute beeno adre Anglaterra?" |
22939 | Tacho si? |
22939 | Te denna Merlinos pendas,"Jinesa tu sa ta kair akovo pennis sar kushto te tacho?" |
22939 | Te pa adovo tacho divvus i rani Trinali shundas sa Merlinos boro ruslo sorelo chovihan se, te pendas,"Sossi ajafra mush? |
22939 | That we, ourselves, were some kind of a mysterious high- caste Romany they had already concluded, and what faith could we put in_ dukkerin_? |
22939 | The little tot came up to me,--I had never heard her speak before,--a little brown- faced, black- eyed thing, and said,"How- do, Omany''eye?" |
22939 | The old dame stared at me and at the lady as if bewildered, and cried,--"In the name of God, what kind of gypsies are_ you_?" |
22939 | The question which I can not solve is, On which of the Celtic languages is this jargon based? |
22939 | Then Merlin inquired,"What is his name?" |
22939 | Then Merlin said,"Do you know how to make this business all nice and right?" |
22939 | Then he added,"You belongy Inklis man?" |
22939 | To him I said,--"_ Rakessa tu Romanes_?" |
22939 | To them it is a song without words; would they be happier if the world brought them to know it as words without song, without music or melody? |
22939 | Tu shan miri pireni Me kamava tute, Kamlidiri, rinkeni, Kames mande buti? |
22939 | Was adovo the Smith as lelled kellin te kurin booths pasher Lundra Bridge? |
22939 | Was it_ rest_? |
22939 | Was that the Smith who kept a dancing and boxing place near London Bridge? |
22939 | We stopped at a stylish- looking building, entered a hall, left our_ skubas_, and I heard the general ask,"Are the gypsies here?" |
22939 | Well, and what if you do? |
22939 | Were you born in England?" |
22939 | What do they call her?" |
22939 | What do you tell''em-- about-- what do they think-- you know?" |
22939 | What is your little game of life, on general principles?" |
22939 | What the gypsy meant effectively was,"How do you account to the Gorgios for knowing so much about us, and talking with us? |
22939 | What was it?" |
22939 | What will you have, sir?" |
22939 | What''s the drab made of that I sell in these bottles? |
22939 | What''s the use of your tryin''to make yourself out a Gorgio to_ me_? |
22939 | When any_ tour_ was deftly made the dark master nodded to me with gleaming eyes, as if saying,"What do you think of_ that_, now?" |
22939 | Whence come these white girls wreathing round me? |
22939 | Where do you live?" |
22939 | Where is she? |
22939 | Which means,"How are you, sir?" |
22939 | While she was forth, A. asked me,"Do you tell fortunes, or_ what_?" |
22939 | Who that knows London knoweth not Sir Patrick Colquhoun? |
22939 | Who was Mammy Sauerkraut?" |
22939 | Why are all those sticks dropped so suddenly? |
22939 | Why did n''t you come down into Kent to see the hoppin''? |
22939 | Why do n''t you answer her? |
22939 | Why haunt me thus, awake or dreaming? |
22939 | Why love these better than pictures, and with a more than fine- art feeling? |
22939 | Why, indeed? |
22939 | Will not the managers of the next world show give us a living ethnological department? |
22939 | With a wink, I answered,"Why not? |
22939 | Would I accompany him to the next tavern, and have some beer? |
22939 | Would we have some tea made? |
22939 | Would you have believed it?" |
22939 | Ye wonder how''t was come by? |
22939 | You dlinkee ale some- tim?" |
22939 | You understand me?" |
22939 | Yuv rakkeredas palall,"Me shom leste, sasi tiro nav?" |
22939 | _ Ca n''t tute pen dukkerin_?" |
22939 | _ Do I know of any Romany''s in town_? |
22939 | _ Do I notice any change in them after coming_? |
22939 | _ Have n''t you the change_? |
22939 | _ How did I learn it_? |
22939 | _ How do you do it_? |
22939 | _ No_? |
22939 | _ Would I like a drop of something_? |
22939 | _ Yes_? |
22939 | _ dovelo adoi_?" |
22939 | and what do the Romany chals kair o''the poris,''cause kekker ever dikked chichi pash of a Romany tan? |
22939 | and what do the gypsies do with the feathers, because nobody ever saw any near a gypsy tent? |
22939 | he exclaimed,"what is this I hear? |
22939 | what does it mean?" |
22939 | what is that there?) |
22939 | what_ is_ your name?" |
19323 | ''And I''m so absent- minded, sir, I put my clothes to bed And hang myself upon a chair; Is not that odd?'' 19323 And another thing: you''ve got to look me right dead in the eye, daddy; will you?" |
19323 | And did n''t he ever come back? |
19323 | And is mine one? |
19323 | And the backs all jist''as like as kin be? |
19323 | And what kind of a story-- illustrated story-- will it be for the papers? |
19323 | And when do our young people expect to be married? |
19323 | And you not to see but the back of the top one, when you go to''cut,''as you call it? |
19323 | Are you going to eat your supper? |
19323 | Aunt''Phrony,said Janey,"could n''t you tell us some more about the old hare while we sit here and get rested?" |
19323 | Before we move along,he resumed, after he had loaded himself with his merchandise,"perhaps you''d like to listen to a story?" |
19323 | But how could they think an owl was a man? |
19323 | But they do n''t need umbrellas in the Crypt, do they? |
19323 | But what do they do? 19323 But whatever one_ does_ call them,"Dickey persisted,"they still make you warm to carry them all about, do n''t they?" |
19323 | But where? |
19323 | But, Aunt Matilda, how do you know? |
19323 | But, aunty, did n''t it ever seem that way to you, sometimes? |
19323 | Carriage, ma''am? |
19323 | Certainly, ma''am, but where will you go to? 19323 Did I play base- ball?" |
19323 | Did n''t I tell you so, Ben? |
19323 | Did you ring? |
19323 | Do it, daddy? 19323 Do n''t you see daddy''s right down upon us, with an armful of hickories? |
19323 | Do they always keep a house closed up this way that has a piano in it? |
19323 | F''r why sh''u''d he be whaled? |
19323 | Father,said Rollo,"did you ever play base- ball when you were a young man?" |
19323 | For what? |
19323 | Had they? |
19323 | Has this person_ kissed_ you, or attempted to do so? |
19323 | Have you figured_ that_ out? |
19323 | How did you come here? |
19323 | How did you manage to reach it? |
19323 | How do I know what I think? 19323 How do I know?" |
19323 | How does that wood burn? |
19323 | I asked him,''Sir, what is your name?'' 19323 I asked you where you wanted to go?" |
19323 | I believe, then,announced Aunt Sarah, after due deliberation,"that you may now kiss our niece; may he not, Sisters Ann and Matilda?" |
19323 | I think I may safely say, may I not, Sisters Ann and Matilda, that this quite alters the case? |
19323 | If you''ve succeeded, why should we From constant toil be never free? 19323 In which direction were you going when I met you?" |
19323 | Indeed, and how ought a lecturer to look? |
19323 | Is it? |
19323 | Is n''t he a droll person? |
19323 | Is that a base- ball bat? |
19323 | Is that a log over there? |
19323 | Is that a sad mood? |
19323 | Is that thrue, Danny? |
19323 | It''s very warm work, sir,ventured Dickey, at last,"carrying all that stuff-- isn''t it?" |
19323 | It''s your business to protect the public, ai n''t it? |
19323 | Me to mix''em fust? |
19323 | Me? |
19323 | Now what have I done? |
19323 | Now, wha''d''ye think o''that? |
19323 | Now, what do you think of that? |
19323 | Oh stately man and old beside, Why dost gymnastics do? 19323 Oh, please, mamma,"they begged,"let Aunt''Phrony take us nutting? |
19323 | Please,he ventured at last,"wo n''t you show me now how you mend it?" |
19323 | Simon, how_ did_ you do it? |
19323 | So that''s a split infinitive, is it? |
19323 | Stuff? |
19323 | Sure? |
19323 | Then, if I_ split_ it, what else_ could_ it be but a split infinitive, I''d like to know? |
19323 | Think what? |
19323 | Two maids,they said,"could quickly flit From home to home, so why permit Expense that brings no benefit?" |
19323 | Very well, daddy; and ef the thing works up instid o''down, I s''pose we''ll say you give_ me_ Bunch, eh? |
19323 | Was that your''ol''Hyar'',''Aunt''Phrony; your ol''Hyar''you tell us all about? |
19323 | Well, ai n''t we the public? |
19323 | Well, madam,said Mr. Gummage,"what do you wish your daughter to learn? |
19323 | What am I to do? |
19323 | What are_ you_ doing? |
19323 | What d''ye think iv it? |
19323 | What did he do? |
19323 | What do you mend, sir? |
19323 | What is athletic? |
19323 | What saith the Scriptur''? 19323 What was it doin''down thar, Simon, my sonny?" |
19323 | What you doin''? |
19323 | What''d you butt in for, then? |
19323 | What''s in ye? 19323 What''s that?" |
19323 | What''s the charge? |
19323 | What''s the matter over there? |
19323 | What''s the matter, Danny? |
19323 | What''s the price of wood? |
19323 | What''s the row? |
19323 | What''s trumps? |
19323 | What, have you raised on_ your_ wood, too? 19323 Whatever did you do then?" |
19323 | Where do you go? |
19323 | Where do you go? |
19323 | Where''s Bud? |
19323 | Where''s the union? |
19323 | Where? |
19323 | Who said there was? |
19323 | Why do you have to run? |
19323 | Why should I keep out? |
19323 | Why so, Simon? |
19323 | Why, Aunt Mattie, what''s the matter? |
19323 | Why, Aunt''Phrony,said Ned,"he must have found a wife at last, for how about Mis''Molly Hyar''?" |
19323 | Why-- what--? 19323 Why? |
19323 | Will you stand it, daddy? |
19323 | You never seed nothin''like that in_ Augusty_, did ye, daddy? |
19323 | You''d jist as well not, daddy; I tell you I''m gwine to follow playin''cards for a livin'', and what''s the use o''bangin''a feller about it? 19323 You_ will_ stay, wo n''t you?" |
19323 | _ Bet_, did you says? |
19323 | _ Bob Smith_ says, does he? 19323 _ Now_ what has Castor got?" |
19323 | (''Way down yonner) Is you on dem sinful apples feedin''? |
19323 | ); But what on earth would poets do Without it? |
19323 | --Why is he so called? |
19323 | A BULLY BOAT AND A BRAG CAPTAIN_ A Story of Steamboat Life on the Mississippi_ BY SOL SMITH Does any one remember the_ Caravan_? |
19323 | Ai n''t I supposed to skip? |
19323 | Ai n''t you gwine to lemme hab''em?" |
19323 | All pallid was my beaded brow, The reeling night was late, My startled mother cried in fear,"My child, what have you ate?" |
19323 | Am I right?" |
19323 | And China Bloom at best is sorry food? |
19323 | And Rowland''s Kalydor, if laid on thick, Poisons the thirsty wretch that bores for blood? |
19323 | And do n''t you know that them that plays cards always loses their money, and--""Who wins it all, then, daddy?" |
19323 | And who would not throw off dull care And be like unto her, When happiness brings, as her share, One hundred dollars per----? |
19323 | And who''s_ Bob Smith_? |
19323 | Are we_ never_ to get to a cheaper country? |
19323 | Are you getting a chill? |
19323 | At that rate how long would it take to patch them all together?" |
19323 | Atter dat she useter go out ter de woods ev''y night ter see de young man, an''she alluz sing out ter him,''Whar is you, whar is you?'' |
19323 | BY JOHN PHILIP SOUSA"Have I told you the name of a lady? |
19323 | Be Misther McEwen:''Whose bones?'' |
19323 | Be Misther Vincent:''Will ye go to th''divvle?'' |
19323 | Ben, did you ever? |
19323 | By the by, have you seen the Flighty- wight?" |
19323 | Can she do all these in one quarter?" |
19323 | Can you guess it-- the name of the lady? |
19323 | Did I ring? |
19323 | Did his wife look as though she ought to be kilt? |
19323 | Did n''t the union tie up a plant once when you was discharged? |
19323 | Did ye ever hear the like of that? |
19323 | Do it? |
19323 | Do n''t that satisfy you? |
19323 | Do n''t you know that all card- players and chicken- fighters and horse- racers go to hell? |
19323 | Do you know the piece, Mr. Gummage? |
19323 | Do you think I could help coming?" |
19323 | Do you think I have visited the''Capitol''twice, and do n''t know how to treat fashionable society? |
19323 | Does a man ever endure such torture? |
19323 | Ef you wanter stay, whyn''t you sesso, stidder blowin''yo''se''f black in de face? |
19323 | Fun? |
19323 | Good game? |
19323 | HAVE YOU SEEN THE LADY? |
19323 | Had he joined the church before he started? |
19323 | Has she any turn for drawing?" |
19323 | Have I sung of the hair of a dove? |
19323 | Have I sung of the hair of a lady? |
19323 | Have I talked of the eyes of a lady? |
19323 | Have I talked of the eyes that are bright? |
19323 | Have I told you the name of a dear? |
19323 | Have you a vacancy?" |
19323 | Her mammy say,''You is, is you? |
19323 | How can you throw straight when you look at everything in the world except at the bat you are trying to hit? |
19323 | How could I, an interloper, say"no"to the rightful proprietor of that room? |
19323 | How d''ye sell your wood_ this_ time?" |
19323 | How to find her at that hour of the night? |
19323 | How? |
19323 | I heard the bell and the pilot''s hail,"What''s''_ your_ price for wood?" |
19323 | I isn''? |
19323 | I saw a light just ahead on the right-- shall we hail?" |
19323 | I suppose in the course of a fortnight Marianne will have learned drawing enough to enable her to do the pattern?" |
19323 | I wunner w''at mek him set wid his face turnt f''um de fire an''blinkin''his eyes all de time? |
19323 | Is it any ways similyar to the rule of three, Simon?" |
19323 | Is n''t it time we wint to supper?'' |
19323 | Is such example dignified To set before your crew?" |
19323 | Is you done fool ev''yb''dy all dese''ears an''den let yo''se''f git fooled by a passel er gals? |
19323 | It passed so close to Mr. Holliday''s face that he dropped the bat and his grammar in his nervousness and shouted:"Whata you throw nat? |
19323 | Katherine looked a little dazed and her voice trembled a bit as she said:"Would n''t you like to look at the flat?" |
19323 | MR. DOOLEY ON EXPERT TESTIMONY BY FINLEY PETER DUNNE"Annything new?" |
19323 | May I do so?" |
19323 | Mistah Hyar'', huccome you ain''darnse?'' |
19323 | Mistar Hyar'', you done ma''y off ev''yb''dy else an''stay single yo''se''f? |
19323 | Nen a grea''-big girl come through Where''s a gate, an''telled me who Am I? |
19323 | Now look here, Uncle Joe, there is no occasion to be foolish about a little--""Foolish? |
19323 | Oh, sinner, is you in de Gyardin uv Eden? |
19323 | Ol''Adam he say,"W''at dat you eatin''?" |
19323 | Presently she opened them to ask,"Is I uver tol''you''bout de time Mistah Hyar''try ter git him a wife? |
19323 | Question be th''coort:''Different?'' |
19323 | See? |
19323 | Should I go in search of the housekeeper? |
19323 | Should I scream? |
19323 | Should he get out a search warrant or a writ of replevin? |
19323 | So putting his mouth to the old gentleman''s ear, he shouted,"Where-- do-- you-- want-- to-- go?" |
19323 | So what''s the use of beatin''me about it?" |
19323 | Th''on''y question, thin, is Did or did not Alphonse Lootgert stick Mrs. L. into a vat, an''rayjooce her to a quick lunch? |
19323 | The other pilot''s voice was again heard on deck:"How much_ have_ you?" |
19323 | Then addressing his father, he asked,"War''n''t it, daddy?" |
19323 | There was a twinkle in Landon''s eyes as he said:"Are you quite ready for dinner, dear?" |
19323 | Thou''rt welcome to the town; but why come here To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee? |
19323 | W''at cur''ous sort er wood is dish yer dat ac''lak dis?'' |
19323 | W''at de use uv all dis scurryin''? |
19323 | Was n''t I discouragin''them? |
19323 | Was n''t I enforcin''them? |
19323 | Was n''t I organizin''? |
19323 | Was she wishing for the fleshpots of upper Fifth Avenue, or was it just physical weariness that would pass with the night? |
19323 | Was the trail of the serpent over them all? |
19323 | Was there a hotel? |
19323 | Was there more than one hotel? |
19323 | We presume that you can offer documentary evidence as to your own worth, sir?" |
19323 | Well, who de man?'' |
19323 | Whar you gwine? |
19323 | What are ye laughin''about?" |
19323 | What in the round creation of the yearth have you and that nigger been a- doin''?" |
19323 | What makes bettin''? |
19323 | What mattered it to Simon? |
19323 | What more could a humorist desire? |
19323 | What next? |
19323 | What right had they to condemn a sweet and affectionate creature such as she to a starved and morbid spinsterhood? |
19323 | What saith the Scriptur'', Simon? |
19323 | What shade do you say? |
19323 | What th''coort ought to''ve done was to call him up, an''say:''Lootgert, where''s ye''er good woman?'' |
19323 | What''s eatin''you, dad?" |
19323 | Where did Adnah, during my brief absence, get her sudden curiosity about the despicable sex?" |
19323 | Why do n''t he teach himself the same, an''stop others from doin''what he talks?" |
19323 | Why should not he do as his father and his father''s friends did? |
19323 | Why was it worse for one boy to do this than it was for some hundreds or thousands of men? |
19323 | Why,_ why_ was she such a confiding and altogether artless and bewitching little fool? |
19323 | Whyn''t you stay wid we- all?'' |
19323 | Wonder if I''m''predestinated,''as old Jed''diah says, to git the feller to it? |
19323 | Would he? |
19323 | Would you like me to show you how it''s done?" |
19323 | You do n''t call that kid a riot, do you?" |
19323 | You have n''t heard of such ingratitude before, I fancy?" |
19323 | _ Now_ what should he say? |
19323 | _ When did they sleep?_ Wood taken in, the_ Caravan_ again took her place in the middle of the stream, paddling on as usual. |
19323 | _ Why?_"the Fantasm fairly shouted. |
19323 | do I hear thy slender voice complain? |
19323 | do_ you_?) |
19323 | exclaimed his father,"why do you not follow my instructions more carefully? |
19323 | figures, flowers, or landscape?" |
19323 | he said at last,"you ai n''t got the nerve to charge this kid with assaulting you, have you?" |
19323 | repeated his father,"did I play ball? |
19323 | replied the Captain--(captains did swear a little in those days);"what''s the odd_ quarter_ for, I should like to know? |
19323 | rouge makes thee sick? |
19323 | said she,"is_ I_ uver tol''you''bout Mis''Molly Hyar''? |
19323 | the Itinerant Tinker exclaimed;"did n''t you just this minute see me split it?" |
19323 | what do boys have daddies for anyhow? |
41605 | But heyday, Mr. What''s your name, who taught you to threaten so violently? 41605 But the best story I have heard yet was his doctrine in a sermon from this text,''Lord, what shall we do?'' |
41605 | But, to be sober, I should really rejoice to come and see you, but if I wait till I get a( what did you call''em?) 41605 Can the best of friends recollect that for fourteen years past I have not spent a whole winter alone? |
41605 | Have you lost a penknife? |
41605 | Is n''t it time he was here? |
41605 | What have I done for myself or others in this long period of my sojourn, that I can look back upon with pleasure, or reflect upon with approbation? 41605 You once asked what does Mr. Adams think of Napoleon? |
41605 | ''And how do you think your father liked to lose it?'' |
41605 | ''And pray,''say you,''how were my aunt and cousin dressed?'' |
41605 | ''And who are the Boston seat?'' |
41605 | ''And, pray how do you like this country?'' |
41605 | ''Well,''methinks I hear Betsey and Lucy say,''what is cousin''s dress?'' |
41605 | ''Why, do n''t you love walking?'' |
41605 | A few days later he writes:"How are you all this morning? |
41605 | A pleasant picture indeed; and-- who knows? |
41605 | Abigail, naturally, has nothing to say about Lexington and Concord; how should she? |
41605 | Abigail, with her wit, beauty, gentle blood and breeding, marry"one of the dishonest tribe of lawyers,"the son of a small country farmer? |
41605 | Adams, have you got into your house? |
41605 | Advancing, he exclaimed,''Why are you here, sir? |
41605 | And does your heart forebode that we shall again be happy? |
41605 | And for these are we not justly contending? |
41605 | And now what return can I make you? |
41605 | And shall I see his face again? |
41605 | And what did Abby Adams wear, say in 1776, when she was ten years old? |
41605 | And what were young John and Charles doing, far from home and mother? |
41605 | But what shall we do for sugar and wine and rum? |
41605 | But''Will you come and see me?'' |
41605 | CHAPTER VII IN HAPPY BRAINTREE WHAT was home life like, when Johnny and Abby Adams were little? |
41605 | Can you form to yourself an idea of our sensations? |
41605 | Courage I know we have in abundance; conduct I hope we shall not want; but powder,--where shall we get a sufficient supply? |
41605 | Did Abby learn netting with all the rest? |
41605 | Did you never rob a bird''s nest? |
41605 | Do my friends think that I have been a politician so long as to have lost all feeling? |
41605 | Do they suppose I have forgotten my wife and children? |
41605 | Do we not read that Samuel Adams''barber''s bill"for three months, shaving and dressing,"was £ 175, paid by the Colony of Massachusetts? |
41605 | Do you look like the miniature you sent? |
41605 | Do you remember how the poor bird would fly round and round, fearful to come nigh, yet not know how to leave the place? |
41605 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
41605 | Have you found one?" |
41605 | Having read this dispute, in the public prints, he asked,''Who has revived those old words? |
41605 | How could George III, honest creature that he was, pretend to be glad to see the Minister of his own lost dominion? |
41605 | How could it be otherwise? |
41605 | How could you be so imprudent? |
41605 | How many more are to come? |
41605 | How shall it be conducted?" |
41605 | How should I not call up the scene at least thus briefly, when my own great- grandfather was one of the Mohawks? |
41605 | How, then, did Abigail get her education? |
41605 | Is not his measure full? |
41605 | Is that designed for me? |
41605 | It is said, if riches increase, those increase that eat them; but what shall we say, when the eaters increase without the wealth? |
41605 | Mr. Adams, what were you doing on the quarter deck? |
41605 | Mr. Garry returned to Philadelphia and Mr. Adams, meeting him, asked without a misgiving,"You delivered the tea?" |
41605 | Oh, why was I born with so much sensibility, and why, possessing it, have I so often been called to struggle with it? |
41605 | Or are they so panic- struck with the loss of Canada as to be afraid to correspond with me? |
41605 | Or have they forgotten that you have a husband, and your children a father? |
41605 | Pray, how do you like it?" |
41605 | Pray, how do you like the situation of it?'' |
41605 | Shall I live to see it otherwise?" |
41605 | Sick, weak, faint, in pain, or pretty well recovered? |
41605 | What can you expect from age, debility and weakness? |
41605 | What have I done, or omitted to do, that I should be thus forgotten and neglected in the most tender and affecting scene of my life? |
41605 | What should I write? |
41605 | What were these rich and various dresses? |
41605 | What would I give for some of your cider? |
41605 | Where are they to be put?'' |
41605 | Who were some of these people? |
41605 | Why do my thoughts so cluster round this year 1755? |
41605 | Why not take 1754, when Abigail was ten years old, or 1764, when she was twenty? |
41605 | Why should we borrow foreign luxuries? |
41605 | Why should we wish to bring ruin upon ourselves? |
41605 | Why, then, not put it out of the power of the vicious and the lawless to use us with cruelty and indignity with impunity? |
41605 | as Mrs. Placid said to her friend, by which of thy good works wouldst thou be willing to be judged? |
41605 | what art thou? |
41605 | what shall we do with it? |
59280 | Chapter VI OLIVER CROMWELL Chapter VII BENJAMIN FRANKLIN Chapter VIII BENJAMIN FRANKLINâ? |
59280 | my dear children", answered poor Queen Telephassa"Sacred Oracle of Delphi, wither shall I go"? |
59280 | said he"I am the king''s daughter"At the appointed hour he met the beautiful Medea"What is it"? |
38043 | But whom else? |
38043 | By you? |
38043 | Has secession culminated or is worse to come? 38043 I know, I know,"said Lincoln;"but can I get along if that State should oppose my administration?" |
38043 | Sir,said Dawes,"amid all these things is it strange that the public treasury trembles and staggers like a strong man with a great burden upon him? |
38043 | ***** What is property? |
38043 | ***** What was going on in the South during the thirties and forties of the last century? |
38043 | ... Can any party afford to treat its leading men as a part of the Republican press has been treating leading Republicans during the last few weeks? |
38043 | And for this purpose should the rebel states be counted as still in the Union? |
38043 | And how has it been from that day to this? |
38043 | And if he remained of the same opinions as before, what would become of the Republican party? |
38043 | And where was your navy? |
38043 | And who are the people of the South? |
38043 | And why not? |
38043 | Are our friends crazy?" |
38043 | Are we not the happiest people in the world? |
38043 | But did the freedom thus established involve nothing more than the exemption from actual slavery? |
38043 | But how could anybody draw the line between different tones of voice and different forms of expression? |
38043 | But they were to abolitionize Kansas, according to this report, and for what purpose? |
38043 | But until some event occurs, is it wise or prudent to give an impression of hostility for no earthly good? |
38043 | But whence do you derive power to cure it by congressional enactment? |
38043 | But whom shall I appoint?" |
38043 | But, sir, this question has been brought before us, and what shall we do? |
38043 | By a congressional enactment? |
38043 | By the way, if we should nominate him, how should we save ourselves the chance of filling his vacancy in the court? |
38043 | Can Brainard have any authority to make such a proposition? |
38043 | Can you come here and pass a day with me? |
38043 | Can you not forget our past delinquencies, to which, I confess, we have been too prone, and remember only the little good you discovered? |
38043 | Can you tell me why is Fort Sumter in possession of the United States? |
38043 | Carlin, and why? |
38043 | Did you state it to the Senate? |
38043 | Do n''t you think General Grant meditates the permanent usurpation of the Executive office? |
38043 | Do we not enjoy personal liberty and religious freedom? |
38043 | Do you mean by that you are going to march an army to coerce a state? |
38043 | Does anybody deny their equal rights in the territories? |
38043 | Does anybody propose to interfere with their domestic institutions? |
38043 | Does anybody suppose this was accidental? |
38043 | Does it, in this, speak the sentiments of the Republicans at Washington? |
38043 | Does the Senator from Illinois yield the floor? |
38043 | Else why were they discharged? |
38043 | For what? |
38043 | Have him hold on up to the moment of his inauguration? |
38043 | Have they concluded that the Republican cause generally can be best promoted by sacrificing us here in Illinois? |
38043 | Have you made yourself acquainted with what has been going on here all winter? |
38043 | Have you of the South suffered any wrong at the hands of the Federal Government? |
38043 | Hay?" |
38043 | How are we to explain this contradiction? |
38043 | How do you propose to cure all this? |
38043 | How? |
38043 | I ask you how is it sustained? |
38043 | I ask you, in all candor, till the disloyal of the South are willing to do this, ought they to complain if they are subjected to military control? |
38043 | I inquired,"Well, Mr. Lincoln, what reply did Mr. Baldwin make?" |
38043 | I said:"Shall I write this to Trumbull?" |
38043 | I then said,"Mr. Lincoln, will you authorize_ me_ to make that proposition? |
38043 | If he has influence with them, why do n''t he use it?" |
38043 | If it is a straw for us to yield, is it anything more than a straw for them to demand? |
38043 | If the Constitution should be amended, should it abolish slavery everywhere or only in the places designated by the President? |
38043 | Impeachment, two theories of, 312; a judicial or political process? |
38043 | Is firing into your vessels war? |
38043 | Is investing your forts war? |
38043 | Is it a ruse or a bona- fide patriotic effort? |
38043 | Is it abolitionizing a territory already free, and which was never meant to be anything but free, for Free State men to settle in it? |
38043 | Is it possible that the energies of a nation should be wasted by the incapacity of such a man? |
38043 | Is it the apprehension that you are going to suffer wrong at our hands? |
38043 | Is not the election news glorious? |
38043 | Is seizing your arsenals war? |
38043 | Is that government republican which rests upon military power for support? |
38043 | Is that the way to obtain compromises? |
38043 | Is there no delightful thrill of association still lingering in your bosom, when memory reverts to your sojourn among us? |
38043 | Is there not something in that?" |
38043 | Jackson Grimshaw writes from Quincy, December 3: Will the Senate confirm that miserable man Delahay for Judge in Kansas? |
38043 | Kansas, did Douglas intend it to be a slave state? |
38043 | King?" |
38043 | LYMAN TRUMBULL, DEAR SIR: What does the New York_ Tribune_ mean by its constant eulogizing and admiring and magnifying Douglas? |
38043 | Lincoln wrote under date, Chicago, Nov. 30, 1857:... What think you of the probable"rumpus"among the Democracy over the Kansas constitution? |
38043 | Now is this satisfactory? |
38043 | Now will he tell me whether they have the right_ before_ they form a state constitution? |
38043 | Now, do any of you, does any lawyer,... know how to write a stronger clause than that to end this claim? |
38043 | Now, sir, what are the remedies that are proposed for the present condition of things, and what have they been from the beginning? |
38043 | Sam Galloway, Columbus, Ohio, December 12, asks:"What means the movement of Douglas? |
38043 | Schurz says in his"Reminiscences? |
38043 | Seward?" |
38043 | She was met by Mrs. Judge McLean, who said to her,"Mrs. Toombs, are you going to leave us?" |
38043 | Should loyal slave- owners be compensated, as Lincoln desired? |
38043 | Should the Constitution be amended, or would an act of Congress suffice? |
38043 | Slaveholders? |
38043 | The Senator from Texas wants to know how we are going to preserve the Union; how we are going to stop the states from seceding? |
38043 | The second clause of that amendment was inserted for some purpose, and I would like to know of the Senator from Delaware for what purpose? |
38043 | Then the following conversation ensued: Why not? |
38043 | Then the question which perplexed Thomas Jefferson would come up afresh:"What shall be done with the blacks?" |
38043 | W. H. Herndon( Springfield, February 9):"Are our Republican friends going to concede away dignity, Constitution, Union, laws, and justice? |
38043 | Was Anthony himself deceived, or was he a party to the transaction? |
38043 | Was nothing more intended than to forbid one man from owning another as property? |
38043 | What are civil rights? |
38043 | What are the rights which you, I, or any citizen of this country enjoy? |
38043 | What are your personal relations? |
38043 | What complaints have they to make against us? |
38043 | What do his assailants expect-- to carry the country on the Massachusetts idea of negro suffrage, female suffrage, confiscation, and hanging? |
38043 | What do the New Yorkers at Washington think of this? |
38043 | What does this mean? |
38043 | What has been the policy of the expiring administration? |
38043 | What is it that the people of these Southern States would have? |
38043 | What is meant, then, by abolitionizing Kansas? |
38043 | What is one means and a very important means of securing the rights of person and property? |
38043 | What is the basis, the foundation of them all? |
38043 | What is the first section? |
38043 | What is to be gained by it? |
38043 | What is war? |
38043 | What occasion is there for breaking it up? |
38043 | What were the chances of getting such an amendment ratified by three fourths of the states? |
38043 | What would happen if the example of Missouri should overspread all of the reconstructed states? |
38043 | What would the Senator have thought of such action? |
38043 | When the name of Adolph Borie was announced for Secretary of the Navy, everybody began to ask, Who is Borie? |
38043 | Where and what is the mysterious power that sustains it? |
38043 | Where is his room?" |
38043 | Where is the evidence of such a design? |
38043 | While the forts in the South were left thus unprotected, and to be seized by the first comers, where was your army? |
38043 | Who could answer for the demoralizing effects of taking him for a leader? |
38043 | Who could say whether he would look northward or southward for the Presidency two years hence? |
38043 | Who proposes it? |
38043 | Who was to decide that question? |
38043 | Why are not these appeals made and these rebukes administered to the men who are involving the country in blood? |
38043 | Why did you not come here four days ago and tell me all this?" |
38043 | Why is Fort Moultrie in possession of the insurgents? |
38043 | Why ought not we to test our Government instead of leaving it to our children?" |
38043 | Why, sir, has that old instrument ceased to be of any value? |
38043 | Why, sir, let me ask, is it that the United States to- day has possession of Fort Sumter? |
38043 | Will it be said that Carolina would have attacked those forts, thus garrisoned? |
38043 | Will you, then, break up such a government as this, on the apprehension that we are all hypocrites and deceivers, and do not mean what we say? |
38043 | Would a mere act of Congress suffice? |
38043 | Would it not have been better for the seceding states to have done that? |
38043 | Would that course be no drawback upon us in the canvass? |
38043 | [ 113]"Who ever heard before of a man nominated Secretary of State merely as a compliment?" |
38043 | [ 16] What were Douglas''s reasons for repealing the Missouri Compromise? |
38043 | _ Are we to pray to the Almighty that they may violate their oaths?_ The motion to lay on the table prevailed. |
15872 | ''Why do you come to me?'' 15872 And will soon be present, I presume?" |
15872 | Are you not afraid thus to speak-- is there nothing too holy to be profanely assaulted? |
15872 | Are you really going to leave us, and so soon? 15872 By our grandfather, I suppose, Alice?" |
15872 | Can Mr. Randolph be in earnest? |
15872 | Did he tell you his Indian ghost story? |
15872 | Did you ever get it? |
15872 | Do you know you are on the graves of a great nation? |
15872 | Do you remember my promise made here? |
15872 | Do you remember our first meeting? |
15872 | Have I fulfilled it? 15872 I am sorry you tell me so; wo n''t you be sorry, Miss Alice?" |
15872 | I mus shake his hand; but what hab you done wid your beard, your hair, and your huntin- shirt? |
15872 | I shall be sure to come,said the young man,"and suppose I bring with me these ladies?" |
15872 | I shall not complain,replied the astonished young man;"but will you ride again to- morrow?" |
15872 | Is old papa Jack and Bellile living? |
15872 | Is this,thought he,"a delicate invitation to save my feelings, and is the latter clause meant as a hint that they do not want me? |
15872 | Kind sir, tell me, have you no superstitions? 15872 Landlord,"said the Judge,"will you give us your attention?" |
15872 | May I inquire, Colonel Dooly, what use you have for a gum in the matter we have met to settle? |
15872 | May I join you in your walk home, miss? |
15872 | Miss Alice, do you frequently visit Uncle Toney? |
15872 | Miss Alice--(will you allow me this familiarity?) |
15872 | So, my philosopher, you believe, whatever lifts the mind to worship God is the true faith? |
15872 | Thar ai n''t? 15872 The ladies have retired-- shall we imitate their example, sir? |
15872 | Uncle Toney, how old are you? |
15872 | Uncle Toney, who was that wicked old man? |
15872 | Well, by G--, sir, is my motion in order to- day? 15872 What are you laughing at, you whelp?" |
15872 | What did that d----d black- muzzled whelp say? |
15872 | What in the h--- does he mean by that? |
15872 | What is your will, Judge Dooly? |
15872 | What would become of the hospital? |
15872 | Where is he from? 15872 Who is Uncle Toney? |
15872 | Why do not her brothers- in- law inquire into this? 15872 Why, husband,"asked mother,"how did you get so wet?" |
15872 | Why, what do you mean? |
15872 | You ask me if I thought, or think, he ever deserted the Republican party in heart? 15872 You been mity sick, here, young massa, did n''t Miss Alice be good to you? |
15872 | You no find dis country good like yourn, young massa? |
15872 | ''Then, can I get a little butter- milk?'' |
15872 | ( or maybe you''ll want me to call it a parliament, sir?) |
15872 | Ai n''t that thar hell- fired letter to me, sir-- a senator, sir, representing three parishes, sir-- before this House? |
15872 | And is it so with all? |
15872 | Answer me; were not these the true men in that day? |
15872 | Are not these incompatible with the stern and towering traits essential to such a character as was Washington''s? |
15872 | Are these too bright, too pure for time? |
15872 | Are we not men, and manly? |
15872 | Are you a wizzard that you have so drawn me on? |
15872 | But what is to be done with the negro? |
15872 | But where is that gentle, sweet, affectionate mother? |
15872 | But who shall determine this lot? |
15872 | But why the fear? |
15872 | But you are not my father confessor-- then why do I talk to you as to one long known? |
15872 | But, what could they do? |
15872 | Can any one enumerate an instance where evil grew out of the early association of the sexes at school? |
15872 | Can it be that these historians only wrote romances? |
15872 | Can it be, simply to propagate his species, and perish? |
15872 | Come, Sue, ca n''t you give the gentleman some music? |
15872 | Could any but a god effect so much? |
15872 | Could children of Anglo- Norman blood be so restrained? |
15872 | Could you, in the presence of Almighty God-- He who knows the inmost thoughts-- justify your work of to- day? |
15872 | Cousin, does he not astonish you?" |
15872 | D--- it, do n''t you see it is a threat, sirs!--a threat to''sassinate me? |
15872 | Dare I speak? |
15872 | Death and corruption do their work, and life returns no more, and death is eternal, and the soul-- answer ye dumb graves-- did the soul come here? |
15872 | Did he give you any of his stories? |
15872 | Did the Great Spirit tell him to do this? |
15872 | Did your sun come to you with fire in her hand and kindle it in your heart? |
15872 | Disembodied, is she, as God, pervading all, and knowing all? |
15872 | Do not the gentler virtues of our nature ever ripen with time? |
15872 | Do the dead know? |
15872 | Do they stir the romance of your nature as that of my baby sister?" |
15872 | Do we feel as men? |
15872 | Do you defy it? |
15872 | Do you not see it in their action in this matter? |
15872 | Do you remember who were the brave and generous, kind and truthful among them? |
15872 | Do you suppose I can afford to risk my leg of flesh and bone against Tate''s wooden one? |
15872 | Do you think of this? |
15872 | Do you understand me? |
15872 | Do you wonder, sir, that I seem eccentric? |
15872 | Does any man suppose, if Mr. Calhoun had succeeded to the Presidency, that he would have commenced or continued this agitation? |
15872 | Does she, with that devotion of heart which was so much hers in time, still love and protect me? |
15872 | Grymes?" |
15872 | Has it not been realized in the years of the recent intestine war? |
15872 | Has nothing ever occurred to you, your reason could not account for? |
15872 | Has that brief interview left an impression upon those two young hearts to endure beyond a day? |
15872 | Hast thou gone with me through my long pilgrimage of time? |
15872 | Have I done mine?" |
15872 | Have no predictions, to be revealed in the coming future, come to you as foretold?" |
15872 | Have you bought the home of our fathers from these red men? |
15872 | Have you to- day done unto this man as you would he should do unto you? |
15872 | Have you, as had the Natchez, a holy fire which is never extinguished in your heart? |
15872 | He gave him His word in a book: do you find it there? |
15872 | He inquires of the Indian inhabitant he is expelling from the country, Who was the architect of these, and what their signification? |
15872 | He knew she was more than anxious for a home where she was mistress, and he must prepare it-- but how, or where? |
15872 | He, their gallant, was respectfully silent, when Alice said, without lifting her eyes:"I wonder if La Salle ever stood here? |
15872 | How could your words be so soft and gentle in the wild costume of the murderous savage? |
15872 | How do we know that their spirits are not here by us now? |
15872 | How many brilliant examples of this fatal fact does memory call up from the untimely grave? |
15872 | How often that word is thoughtlessly spoken? |
15872 | How quiet is the grave? |
15872 | How will it be with you? |
15872 | I have been here before, sir; and did n''t I move its adoption yesterday, sir? |
15872 | I hear dat from ebery one ob my young misses, and where is dey now? |
15872 | I hope you do not find your stay disagreeable in this house?" |
15872 | I know my cousin has whispered something to you of me; my situation, my nature-- is it not so?" |
15872 | I learned you at the plucking of that arrow from the cotton bale-- in your strange, wild garb; but never mind-- what were you going to say?" |
15872 | I promised; when he extended his hand, and, grasping mine, asked:''Is this our last parting, or shall I see you to- morrow?'' |
15872 | I want to know, by the eternal gods, if a senator in this house-- this here body-- is to be threatened in this here way? |
15872 | I wonder how many''s history I am writing now? |
15872 | If I have kept thy counsels, and walked by their wisdom, hast thou approved, my mother? |
15872 | If for him there is not a future, why were the instincts of his nature given? |
15872 | If in sincerity we invoke God''s mercy, can the means that prompt the heart''s devotion, reliance, and love, be wrong? |
15872 | If these results have followed the institution of African slavery, can it be inhuman and sinful? |
15872 | If they worship God in sincerity, you say that is all?" |
15872 | If this is all he is ever to know, does this complete a destiny for use? |
15872 | If you have not, will they not hunt us away again, as you have? |
15872 | In what battle were they ever defeated? |
15872 | Is it instinctive? |
15872 | Is it maidenly that I should? |
15872 | Is it not all a mystery-- strange, strange, incomprehensible, and unnatural? |
15872 | Is it not as reasonable to believe we lived before our birth into this, as to hope we shall live after death in another world? |
15872 | Is it not rather an evidence that the Creator so designed? |
15872 | Is it not strange that woman will confide to the strange man, what she will not to the kindred woman? |
15872 | Is it that youth has no apprehensions, and we enjoy its anticipations and its present without alloy? |
15872 | Is it the alchemist who always turns the sweets of youth to the sours of age? |
15872 | Is it the blood, the rearing, or the religion of these people which makes them what they are? |
15872 | Is it the leaves and trees, or sheaves Of yellow, ripened grain, Which wake to me, in memory, My boyhood''s days again? |
15872 | Is it the mind which remembers, and is the mind the soul? |
15872 | Is it this which makes such models of children and Christians in the educated Creole population of Louisiana? |
15872 | Is not his measure full? |
15872 | Is not this an attribute of greatness-- to be natural? |
15872 | Is not this an honest confession? |
15872 | Is she permitted, in her new being, to come at will, and breathe to my mind holy thoughts and holy feelings? |
15872 | Is she up among these gems of heaven? |
15872 | Is she yonder in the mighty Jupiter, looking down, and smiling at me? |
15872 | Is the belief alone the Indian''s? |
15872 | Is the flame first kindled burning still? |
15872 | Is there one, whose years have brought increase of happiness, and who has lived on without a sorrow? |
15872 | Is this cruel and sinful-- or the silent, mysterious operation of the laws of nature? |
15872 | Is this hope the instinct of the coming, or does it grow from the baser instinct of love for the miserable life we have? |
15872 | Is this natural? |
15872 | Is this natural? |
15872 | It is easy to ask, but who shall answer? |
15872 | It said:"What did you leave me for? |
15872 | Jefferson?" |
15872 | Lamar, and his brother Mirabeau B. Lamar, Eugenius Nesbit, Walter T. Colquitt, and Eli S. Shorter? |
15872 | Mathews, turning upon his back, asked,"To whom do I owe my life?" |
15872 | May be you bring de ole man more dan one dar?" |
15872 | Mr. Grymes, vat am I to do?" |
15872 | Must the surviving spirit have Its memories of time and grief? |
15872 | My wonder was, whence come all these people? |
15872 | Now, wa''n''t that great?" |
15872 | Order, sir; is my motion in order, sir?" |
15872 | Senators? |
15872 | Shall I, when purified by death, go to her? |
15872 | Shall it forget the all of time, When time''s with all her uses gone, And be a babe in that new clime? |
15872 | Shall we have your company? |
15872 | Shall we return? |
15872 | She gazed intently; could it be? |
15872 | Sheriff?" |
15872 | Should he, like this man, come to love the solitude and silence of the wilderness, and find companionship only with his traps and guns? |
15872 | The ladies were in their night- clothes; but what will not woman do to aid the distressed, especially in the hour of peril? |
15872 | The work was begun and was rapidly progressing; but now, when and by whom will this great, glorious garden be made? |
15872 | Then the father of bride stepped up to the side of his daughter, when the groom said to the bride:"Wilt thou have me for thy husband?" |
15872 | Then what is due from me to you? |
15872 | Then what is life to age? |
15872 | Then why fear? |
15872 | Then why should he fear? |
15872 | Then, is time his all? |
15872 | There, now I am done-- don''t you think me very foolish?" |
15872 | These means were to be devised, by whom? |
15872 | They are but earth now-- and why am I here? |
15872 | This is her last day; and to how many countless thousands is it the last day of life? |
15872 | To him death is nothing: the brave defy death-- the good fear it not; then why should he fear? |
15872 | To trace in the planetary system divine wisdom, and divine power; to see and know the same in the mite which floats in the sunbeam? |
15872 | Was he as happy? |
15872 | Was it not natural? |
15872 | Was not this worship pure? |
15872 | Was that what General Jackson fit the battle of New Orleans for, down yonder in old Chemut''s field? |
15872 | Was the element of fire and the material for clothing given for any but man''s use? |
15872 | We sat together long hours, and talked of the past-- alternately, as their memories floated up, asking each other,"Where is this one? |
15872 | Well, sir, what order shall I take? |
15872 | Were you not surprised to see that I could write?" |
15872 | What are they? |
15872 | What are we to do with missions? |
15872 | What chase was ever unsuccessful over which they presided? |
15872 | What do you do with this case, gentlemen?" |
15872 | What has Burr left? |
15872 | What has he not seen? |
15872 | What is it to- day? |
15872 | What is to be the consequence? |
15872 | What is your faith?" |
15872 | What was his design as manifested in his nature? |
15872 | When did a father rob his children of their homes? |
15872 | When did a father wash his hands in his children''s blood? |
15872 | When they had approached within ten paces, Brashear stopped and said,"Are you ready?" |
15872 | When were they known to be worn out with fatigue-- with hardship, hunger or thirst, heat or cold, either on land or water? |
15872 | Where is he going?" |
15872 | Where is the provision for him in the Bible? |
15872 | Who can count the number of scalps which they brought from distant expeditions? |
15872 | Who can resist him then? |
15872 | Who can say it is not the true faith?" |
15872 | Who can tell what to- morrow may bring forth? |
15872 | Who deserves it more? |
15872 | Who ever could stem as they the rushing current of the Father of rivers? |
15872 | Who has a friend on whom he can rely, and who will not, to gratify his own ambition, sacrifice him? |
15872 | Who knows, except the dead? |
15872 | Who says it is mean to love the land, to keep in our hearts these graves, as we keep the Great Spirit? |
15872 | Who that has lived seventy years will not attest this from his own life''s experience? |
15872 | Why did he leave his own and come to take the red man''s? |
15872 | Why have you cut your hair and beard? |
15872 | Why is it deemed that there shall be no communication between the living and the dead? |
15872 | Why is my summons delayed so long? |
15872 | Why is this so? |
15872 | Why she not come wid you? |
15872 | Why the power to learn so much? |
15872 | Why this indiscretion?" |
15872 | Why this question, which implies a doubt of the goodness of God? |
15872 | Why? |
15872 | Will a century hence find one of the red race upon this continent? |
15872 | Will he ever forget the speaking of the beaming features of that beautiful creature, when she lifted her head and looked into his face? |
15872 | Will her heart ask:"Shall I ever meet him again?" |
15872 | Will she dream of the dark beard, curled and flowing-- of the darker eye which looked and spoke? |
15872 | Would the wild energies of these bow to such control, or yield such obedience from restraint or love? |
15872 | You are gentle and kind, are you not? |
15872 | You are not yet strong, and your weakness I have made weaker, because I have disturbed the fountain of your heart and brought up painful memories?" |
15872 | You not want somebody to turn de squirrel for you? |
15872 | You see it so with the white man; shall we not learn from him, and be like him?" |
15872 | You tell me the traditions of the people who worshipped here say that this was a cardinal law unto them?" |
15872 | and did it stretch on to contemplate the ruin and desolation which overspreads it now? |
15872 | and do the memories of time die with time? |
15872 | and do you recall their after lives? |
15872 | and is not this insult to manliness, and a vile mockery to the feelings of men? |
15872 | and shall this hope become a reality, and endure forever? |
15872 | and this?" |
15872 | and was all this grand creation of the earth, and all things therein, made to subserve him for so mean a purpose? |
15872 | and was n''t I laughed out of the house, sir? |
15872 | and will the wild story of the western wilderness come in the silent darkness of her chamber, and make her nestle closer to her pillow? |
15872 | asked her eyes; and he looked:"Who are you; and where is your home, beautiful being, so strangely and so unexpectedly met?" |
15872 | how will it be with you? |
15872 | if so, for what? |
15872 | is this reality, or am I dreaming?" |
15872 | or an acquired faculty? |
15872 | or does its_ all_ belong to love and joy when life and the world is new? |
15872 | or have you taken it? |
15872 | or is here the end of all; here, this little tenement? |
15872 | or is it the instinct of race, the consequence of a purer and more sublimated nature from the blue blood of the exalted upon earth? |
15872 | or is the soul independent of the mind, surviving the mind''s extinction? |
15872 | or went it with life to the great first cause? |
15872 | or, Do these pursue beyond the grave? |
15872 | or, shall this accursed rabidness be purged away with death, and he become a tone in accord with inanimate things? |
15872 | sa._?" |
15872 | said I,''are you sure-- very sure?'' |
15872 | said he,"Alick, not gone yet? |
15872 | said he,"you have found this old hermit, have you? |
15872 | see you into my heart, here by your gravestone, to- night? |
15872 | shall the heathen go to heaven? |
15872 | that is it, is it? |
15872 | that you bid us take it from you, and go back, and make a new home where the fathers of our fathers sleep in death? |
15872 | the grave, the secrets of the grave, are they hidden there for ages, or shall they survive as treasures for eternity? |
15872 | the heart, the heart-- what are all its joys of youth, and all its griefs of age? |
15872 | what of this? |
15872 | what would I not give to see him again?''" |
15872 | why doffed the prairie chieftain''s robes of state and come forth a plain man? |
45763 | _ Your Fathers where are they?_I was admitted by the very learned and pious Mr. Charles Chauncey, who gave me my first Degree in the year 1671. |
45763 | 10,| Egginton,( 16) 1637"? |
45763 | And now what shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits? |
45763 | Are not you a Daughter of Abraham? |
45763 | Are you ready to say you have brought forth for the Grave? |
45763 | Are your Sons dead? |
45763 | Can you give up these to him at his call? |
45763 | Did you make them your Idols? |
45763 | Did you please yourself in what comforts you might have derived from them in maturer years? |
45763 | Doe yow Acknowledg Baptisme wth water to be an ordjnance of God? |
45763 | Doe yow Acknowledg one God subsisting in three persons-- father, sonne and holy Ghost? |
45763 | Doe yow Acknowledg ye light in every man''s Conscienc yt comes into ye world is xt and yt yt light would saue him if obeyd? |
45763 | Doe yow Acknowledg your self a sinner? |
45763 | Doe yow Acknowledg yt xt is God and man in one pson? |
45763 | H. Peaslee}||||| 59|Baruch Chase? |
45763 | Has God taken them from your Arms? |
45763 | Have you lost two lovely Children? |
45763 | How doe yow make it Appeare yt God called yow hither? |
45763 | Mary Prince Do yow oune the letter yow sent me? |
45763 | Shall I dwell upon childhood, or press on to youth, Or look only on manhood, or Death''s lessons ponder? |
45763 | Shall I mourn, or rejoice, or administer truth, Or most at man''s folly or GOD''S mercy wonder? |
45763 | Show then, Madam, the sincerity of your Heart in leaving of them in the Hand of God-- Do you say they are lost? |
45763 | This star our Fathers saw, and is it any wonder, that under its inspiration and guidance, they should come across the ocean? |
45763 | Were they desirable Blessings? |
45763 | Were they your All? |
45763 | Where, where shall I place me-- where point the fixed finger? |
45763 | Wherefore came yow into theise parts? |
45763 | Whether yow oune that the scriptures are the rule of knowing God and living to him? |
45763 | Whither you oune yor selves to be such as are commonly knowne or called by ye name of Quakers? |
45763 | [ RICHARD?] |
45763 | are you displeas''d that God calls for his own? |
45763 | but are your Mercies dead too? |
45763 | had you not devoted them to him in Baptism? |
45763 | had you not given them to God before? |
45763 | in the scenes on my fancy that burst, And on which with delight or with sadness I linger, Say, what shall arrest my attention the first? |
45763 | was not your heart sincere in the Resignation of them to him? |
45763 | ||| 113|Daniel French? |
45763 | ||| 73|Daniel French? |
39716 | And must the world wait longer yet? |
39716 | And what is this? |
39716 | And why not? 39716 And why?" |
39716 | And will you,said he to the carver,"permit this masterpiece to become the figure- head of a vessel? |
39716 | And you did dream of it? |
39716 | Are not those thoughts divine? |
39716 | Are we grown old again, so soon? |
39716 | Are you mad, old man? |
39716 | Aylmer, are you in earnest? |
39716 | But did Ponce de Leon ever find it? |
39716 | But why do we speak of dying? 39716 Can you give a traveller a night''s lodging?" |
39716 | Danger? 39716 Do you see it?--do you see it?" |
39716 | Father, what is that? |
39716 | Georgiana,said he,"has it never occurred to you that the mark upon your cheek might be removed?" |
39716 | Good evening, stranger,said the lime- burner;"whence come you, so late in the day?" |
39716 | How dare you stay the march of King James''s Governor? |
39716 | How otherwise should this carver feel himself entitled to transcend all rules, and make me ashamed of quoting them? |
39716 | If the question is a fair one,proceeded Bartram,"where might it be?" |
39716 | Is it with this lotion that you intend to bathe my cheek? |
39716 | Is the man thinking what he will do when he is a widower? |
39716 | My dear old friends,repeated Dr. Heidegger,"may I reckon on your aid in performing an exceedingly curious experiment?" |
39716 | O majestic friend,he murmured, addressing the Great Stone Face,"is not this man worthy to resemble thee?" |
39716 | Poor? 39716 See you not, he is some old round- headed dignitary, who hath lain asleep these thirty years, and knows nothing of the change of times? |
39716 | Shall I tell the secrets of yours? 39716 The man that went in search of the Unpardonable Sin?" |
39716 | The same? |
39716 | Then why did you take me from my mother''s side? 39716 Then you are going towards Vermont?" |
39716 | Was the fellow''s heart made of marble? |
39716 | What does this old fellow here? |
39716 | What has come over you? 39716 What is here? |
39716 | What is it, mother? |
39716 | What is the Unpardonable Sin? |
39716 | What more have I to seek? 39716 What prophecy do you mean, dear mother?" |
39716 | Whence did he come? 39716 Where am I? |
39716 | Wherefore are you sad? |
39716 | Who are you, my strangely gifted guest? |
39716 | Who do you mean? 39716 Who is this gray patriarch?" |
39716 | Who is this venerable brother? |
39716 | Why did you hesitate to tell me this? |
39716 | Why do you come hither? 39716 Why do you keep such a terrific drug?" |
39716 | Why, who are you? |
39716 | Why, you uncivil scoundrel,cried the fierce doctor,"is that the way you respond to the kindness of your best friends? |
39716 | Would you throw the blight of that fatal birthmark over my labors? 39716 And was there, indeed, such a resemblance as the crowd had testified? 39716 And what speak ye of James? 39716 And what was the Great Stone Face? 39716 And which of these designs do you prefer? 39716 And who was the Gray Champion? 39716 But I trust you do not mean to desecrate this exquisite creature with paint, like those staring kings and admirals yonder? |
39716 | But where was the Gray Champion? |
39716 | But where was the heart? |
39716 | But, how is he to attain his ends? |
39716 | Can it be that nobody caught sight of him? |
39716 | Can it have been my work? |
39716 | Can not you remove this little, little mark, which I cover with the tips of two small fingers? |
39716 | Did she send any word to her old father, or say when she was coming back?" |
39716 | Did you never hear of Ethan Brand?" |
39716 | Had the changes of a lifetime been crowded into so brief a space, and were they now four aged people, sitting with their old friend, Dr. Heidegger? |
39716 | Have you no trust in your husband?" |
39716 | How is it that, possessing the idea which you have now uttered, you should produce only such works as these?" |
39716 | Is not he the very picture of your Old Man of the Mountain?" |
39716 | Is not the kindred of a common fate a closer tie than that of birth? |
39716 | Is this beyond your power, for the sake of your own peace, and to save your poor wife from madness?" |
39716 | Not a soul would ask,''Who was he? |
39716 | Now what should an old woman wish for, when she can go but a step or two before she comes to her grave? |
39716 | Now, would you deem it possible that this rose of half a century could ever bloom again?" |
39716 | Or, if you prefer a female figure, what say you to Britannia with the trident?" |
39716 | Shall I put these feelings into words?" |
39716 | Was it an illusion? |
39716 | Was it delusion? |
39716 | Well, and so you have found the Unpardonable Sin?" |
39716 | What did the benign lips seem to say? |
39716 | What had he seen? |
39716 | What inspired hand is beckoning this wood to arise and live? |
39716 | What is his purpose? |
39716 | What sort of a man was Wakefield? |
39716 | Whither did the wanderer go?'' |
39716 | Who can this old man be?" |
39716 | Who has done this?" |
39716 | Who has not heard their name? |
39716 | Who knows but I may take a glimpse at myself, and see whether all''s right?" |
39716 | Whose was the agony of that death moment? |
39716 | Whose work is this?" |
39716 | Why, then, pure seeker of the good and true, shouldst thou hope to find me, in yonder image of the divine?" |
39716 | Will she die? |
39716 | Would you go to the sole home that is left you? |
39716 | said Colonel Killigrew, who believed not a word of the doctor''s story;"and what may be the effect of this fluid on the human frame?" |
39716 | sternly replied Ethan Brand,"what need have I of the Devil? |
39716 | then you are Ethan Brand himself?" |
39716 | what more to achieve?" |
39716 | whither are you going? |
39716 | who is it?" |
60145 | Who Were the Romans? |
60145 | One would ask, on hearing such a person mentioned,"Does he belong to the sects or to the church people?" |
60145 | Speranza, Gino,_ Race or Nation?_ Stanard, Mary Newton,_ The Story of Virginia''s First Century_. |
60145 | When General Braddock, whose army was nearly wiped out by the French and Indians in 1755, sighed,"Who would have thought it?" |
60145 | Why should outsiders be allowed to come in and take the jobs and lower the living standards of American labor? |
16960 | Are we rebels? |
16960 | Do you think it right,asked Grenville,"that America should be protected by this country and pay no part of the expenses?" |
16960 | Does Mr. Wiberd preach against oppression? |
16960 | Is not America already independent? |
16960 | Must I shoot a simple- minded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of the wily agitator who induces him to desert? |
16960 | Why not then declare it? |
16960 | ( 2) Shall the government be founded on states equal in power as under the Articles or on the broader and deeper foundation of population? |
16960 | ( 3) What direct share shall the people have in the election of national officers? |
16960 | ( 4) What shall be the qualifications for the suffrage? |
16960 | ( 5) How shall the conflicting interests of the commercial and the planting states be balanced so as to safeguard the essential rights of each? |
16960 | ( 6) What shall be the form of the new government? |
16960 | ( 7) What powers shall be conferred on it? |
16960 | ( 8) How shall the state legislatures be restrained from their attacks on property rights such as the issuance of paper money? |
16960 | ( 9) Shall the approval of all the states be necessary, as under the Articles, for the adoption and amendment of the Constitution? |
16960 | 5. Who were some of the leading men in the convention? |
16960 | 5. Who were the early settlers in the West? |
16960 | 8. Who were among the early friends of Western development? |
16960 | = How the War Was Won.=--Then how did the American army win the war? |
16960 | = Questions= 1. Who were some of the critics of abuses in American life? |
16960 | = Questions= 1. Who were the leaders in the first administration under the Constitution? |
16960 | A sarcastic writer, while sneering at the idea of an American union, once remarked of colonial trade:"What sort of dish will you make? |
16960 | Aided by funds from Northern friends, he gathered a small band of his followers around him, saying to them:"If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
16960 | Amid what circumstances was the Monroe Doctrine applied in Cleveland''s administration? |
16960 | Are any things owned and used in common in your community? |
16960 | Are the people in cities more or less independent than the farmers? |
16960 | Are they not to be violated but with His wrath? |
16960 | Attacked? |
16960 | By what body was it adopted? |
16960 | By what devices was democracy limited in the first days of our Republic? |
16960 | Can there be a policy of isolation for America? |
16960 | Can you give any illustrations of the way that war promotes nationalism? |
16960 | Could it succeed or was it destined to break down and be supplanted by a monarchy? |
16960 | Did the West rapidly become like the older sections of the country? |
16960 | Did the farmers need credit? |
16960 | Did the traffic slacken because the food shipped was not of the best quality? |
16960 | Did they compare in importance with British towns of the same period? |
16960 | Do politicians sow dissensions in the army and among civilians? |
16960 | Do you know of any other societies to compare with the Ku Klux Klan? |
16960 | Do you think the English legislation was beneficial or injurious to the colonies? |
16960 | Does Seward, the Secretary of State, propose harsh and caustic measures likely to draw England''s sword into the scale? |
16960 | Does a New York newspaper call him an ignorant Western boor? |
16960 | Has it changed in recent times? |
16960 | Have we not witnessed it on this floor, sir? |
16960 | How did Elihu Root define"invisible government"? |
16960 | How did Germany finally drive the United States into war? |
16960 | How did Mexico at first encourage American immigration? |
16960 | How did diversity of opinion work for toleration? |
16960 | How did he finally destroy it? |
16960 | How did industrial conditions increase unrest? |
16960 | How did it come into contact with the American Federation? |
16960 | How did it happen that the farmers led in regulating railway rates? |
16960 | How did reform movements draw women into public affairs and what were the chief results? |
16960 | How did the Dred Scott decision become a political issue? |
16960 | How did the West come to play a rôle in the Revolution? |
16960 | How did the World War affect the presidential campaign of 1916? |
16960 | How did the World War break out in Europe? |
16960 | How did the colonial assemblies help to create an independent American spirit, in spite of a restricted suffrage? |
16960 | How did the development of the West affect the East? |
16960 | How did the federal government aid in western agriculture? |
16960 | How did the powers conferred upon the federal government help cure the defects of the Articles of Confederation? |
16960 | How did the state of English finances affect English policy? |
16960 | How did the"Reign of Terror"change American opinion? |
16960 | How did they come? |
16960 | How did they travel? |
16960 | How do you account for the rise and growth of the trusts? |
16960 | How do you account for the triumph of Harrison in 1840? |
16960 | How does modern reform involve government action? |
16960 | How does money capital contribute to prosperity? |
16960 | How does organized labor become involved with outside forces? |
16960 | How far back in our history does the labor movement extend? |
16960 | How far had settlement been carried? |
16960 | How far had the western frontier advanced by 1776? |
16960 | How has it fared in recent years? |
16960 | How is the fluctuating state of public opinion reflected in the elections from 1880 to 1896? |
16960 | How may leisure be secured? |
16960 | How shall it be amended in the future? |
16960 | How shall the Constitution be ratified? |
16960 | How was interstate commerce mainly carried on? |
16960 | How was settlement promoted after 1865? |
16960 | How was the Confederacy financed? |
16960 | How was the Oregon boundary dispute finally settled? |
16960 | How was the Revolution financed? |
16960 | How was the Spanish War viewed in England? |
16960 | How were the terms of peace formulated? |
16960 | How were the"Force bills"overcome? |
16960 | How would you define"nationalism"? |
16960 | How, therefore, could the Confederacy hope to sustain itself against such a combination of men, money, and materials as the North could marshal? |
16960 | I ask whether as a people we can stand forth in the sight of God, in the sight of nations, and adopt this atrocious policy? |
16960 | I now ask whether as a people we are prepared to seize on a neighboring territory for the end of extending slavery? |
16960 | If I am not an American who ever was?... |
16960 | In the Caribbean? |
16960 | In the dark hour of the Revolution,"what held the patriot forces together?" |
16960 | In the four quarters of the globe who reads an American book? |
16960 | In what manner was the rest of the western region governed? |
16960 | In what respects were the planting and commercial states opposed? |
16960 | In what sections did industry flourish before the Civil War? |
16960 | In what way did the North derive advantages from slavery? |
16960 | In what way did the provisions for ratifying and amending the Constitution depart from the old system? |
16960 | In what way was the South economically dependent upon the North? |
16960 | In what ways did Southern agriculture tend to become like that of the North? |
16960 | Is a mother begging for the life of a son sentenced to be shot as a deserter? |
16960 | Is it a complaint from a citizen, deprived, as he believes, of his civil liberties unjustly or in violation of the Constitution? |
16960 | Is it a matter of compromise with the South, so often proposed by men on both sides sick of carnage? |
16960 | Is it a question of securing votes to ratify the thirteenth amendment abolishing slavery? |
16960 | Is it high strategy of war, a question of the general best fitted to win Gettysburg-- Hooker, Sedgwick, or Meade? |
16960 | Is it in the field of diplomacy? |
16960 | Is it or is it not a result of democracy? |
16960 | Is land in your community parceled out into small farms? |
16960 | On national union? |
16960 | On the Continent? |
16960 | On what foundations did Southern hopes rest? |
16960 | On what grounds did Calhoun defend slavery? |
16960 | On what grounds were the limitations defended? |
16960 | On what theory is it justified? |
16960 | Or goes to an American play? |
16960 | Or looks at an American picture or statue?" |
16960 | Ship building? |
16960 | Speaking of his native state, New York, he said:"What is the government of this state? |
16960 | The South? |
16960 | The government of the Constitution? |
16960 | The only remaining question of importance, to use the popular phrase,--"Does the Constitution follow the flag?" |
16960 | The outcome for the United States? |
16960 | These general principles left undetermined two important matters:"What is an effective blockade?" |
16960 | To national politics? |
16960 | To place the vicious vagrant, the wandering Arabs, the Tartar hordes of our large cities on the level with the virtuous and good man?" |
16960 | To the public? |
16960 | Toward labor? |
16960 | Was it not declared that governments derive their just power from the consent of the governed? |
16960 | Was it not said that all men are created equal? |
16960 | Was the output of food for his freight cars limited by bad drainage on the farms? |
16960 | Was there a unified American opinion on American expansion? |
16960 | Was this expansion a departure from our traditions? |
16960 | Were farmers hampered in hauling their goods to his trains by bad roads? |
16960 | Were the Jeffersonians able to apply their theories? |
16960 | What American rights were assailed in the submarine campaign? |
16960 | What action by President Polk precipitated war? |
16960 | What agencies made colonization possible? |
16960 | What are the elements of direct government? |
16960 | What are the striking features of the new economic age? |
16960 | What colonial industry was mainly developed by women? |
16960 | What compromises were reached? |
16960 | What courses were open to freedmen in 1865? |
16960 | What determines the topics that appear in written history? |
16960 | What did they mean? |
16960 | What economic peculiarities did it retain or develop? |
16960 | What events led to foreign intervention in China? |
16960 | What forces favored the heavy importation of slaves? |
16960 | What had been the career of Andrew Jackson before 1829? |
16960 | What had been their previous training? |
16960 | What has it been during the forty years of my acquaintance with it? |
16960 | What illustrations can you give showing the influence of war in American political campaigns? |
16960 | What international complications were involved in the Panama Canal problem? |
16960 | What is Cuba''s relation to the United States? |
16960 | What is history? |
16960 | What is meant by the question:"Does the Constitution follow the flag?" |
16960 | What is meant by the sea power? |
16960 | What is meant by the"joint occupation"of Oregon? |
16960 | What is meant by the"melting pot"? |
16960 | What is the explanation of the extraordinary industrial progress of America? |
16960 | What is the strategic importance of the Caribbean to the United States? |
16960 | What measures were taken to restrain criticism of the government? |
16960 | What nationalities were represented among the early colonists? |
16960 | What number of states shall be necessary to put it into effect? |
16960 | What part did Lincoln play in all phases of the war? |
16960 | What part did women play in the intellectual movement that preceded the American Revolution? |
16960 | What particular criticisms were advanced? |
16960 | What party had used the title before? |
16960 | What political and economic reforms did labor demand? |
16960 | What preparations were necessary to settlement? |
16960 | What principles do you think should govern the granting of amnesty? |
16960 | What problems arise in connection with the assimilation of the alien to American life? |
16960 | What produced the revolution in Texas? |
16960 | What proof have we that the political parties were not clearly divided over issues between 1865 and 1896? |
16960 | What relation did the opening of the great grain areas of the West bear to the growth of America''s commercial and financial power? |
16960 | What rights did Congress attempt to confer upon the former slaves? |
16960 | What routes did they take? |
16960 | What sections of the country have been industrialized? |
16960 | What signs pointed to a complete Democratic triumph in 1852? |
16960 | What solution did Burke offer? |
16960 | What special conditions favored a fall in silver between 1870 and 1896? |
16960 | What step was taken to appease the opposition? |
16960 | What steps were taken in colonial policies? |
16960 | What topics are considered under"military affairs"? |
16960 | What was Jefferson''s view? |
16960 | What was Roosevelt''s progressive program? |
16960 | What was Roosevelt''s theory of our Constitution? |
16960 | What was its immediate effect? |
16960 | What was the Burke- Paine controversy? |
16960 | What was the United States to do? |
16960 | What was the Wilson policy toward trusts? |
16960 | What was the condition of the planters as compared with that of the Northern manufacturers? |
16960 | What was the effect of abolition agitation? |
16960 | What was the effect of the Revolution on colonial governments? |
16960 | What was the leading feature of Jefferson''s political theory? |
16960 | What was the nature of the conflict over ratification? |
16960 | What was the nature of the opposition in England to the war? |
16960 | What was the non- importation agreement? |
16960 | What was the outcome as far as Cuba was concerned? |
16960 | What was the outcome of the Alien and Sedition Acts? |
16960 | What was the outcome of the final clash with the French? |
16960 | What was the outcome? |
16960 | What was the relation of the Federation to the extreme radicals? |
16960 | What was the situation before 1860? |
16960 | What was the theory of the relation of government to business in this period? |
16960 | What were American policies with regard to each of those countries? |
16960 | What were some of the early writings about women? |
16960 | What were some of the points brought out in the Lincoln- Douglas debates? |
16960 | What were the centers for iron working? |
16960 | What were the important results of the"peaceful"French Revolution( 1789- 92)? |
16960 | What were the leading measures adopted by the Republicans after their victory in 1896? |
16960 | What were the leading towns? |
16960 | What were the main planks in the Republican platform? |
16960 | What were the peculiar features of the Confederate constitution? |
16960 | What were the social results? |
16960 | What were the startling events between 1850 and 1860? |
16960 | What were the striking physical features of the West? |
16960 | Who ever knew the tariff men to divide on any question affecting their confederated interests?... |
16960 | Who led in it? |
16960 | Who were some of the European writers on American affairs? |
16960 | Why are labor and immigration closely related? |
16960 | Why did anti- slavery sentiment practically disappear in the South? |
16960 | Why did common tillage fail in colonial times? |
16960 | Why did efforts at conciliation fail? |
16960 | Why did efforts at reform by the Congress come to naught? |
16960 | Why did the East and the South seek closer ties with the West? |
16960 | Why did the United States become involved with England rather than with France? |
16960 | Why did they come? |
16960 | Why do n''t you vote a homestead for yourself? |
16960 | Why is a fall in prices a loss to farmers and a gain to holders of fixed investments? |
16960 | Why is a"free press"such an important thing to American democracy? |
16960 | Why is diplomacy important in war? |
16960 | Why is leisure necessary for the production of art and literature? |
16960 | Why is the Declaration of Independence an"immortal"document? |
16960 | Why is the public service of increasing importance? |
16960 | Why is the year 1848 an important year in the woman movement? |
16960 | Why was Europe especially interested in America at this period? |
16960 | Why was Jackson opposed to the bank? |
16960 | Why was admission to the union so eagerly sought? |
16960 | Why was it difficult, if not impossible, to keep gold and silver at a parity? |
16960 | Why was it impossible to establish and maintain a uniform policy in dealing with the Indians? |
16960 | Why was it impossible to keep the slavery issue out of national politics? |
16960 | Why was it rejected? |
16960 | Why was it revolutionary in character? |
16960 | Why was it very important both to the Americans and to the English? |
16960 | Why was there a struggle for educational opportunities? |
16960 | Why were capital and leadership so very important in early colonization? |
16960 | Why were conservative men disturbed in the early nineties? |
16960 | Why were individuals unable to go alone to America in the beginning? |
16960 | Why were the Republicans especially strong immediately after the Civil War? |
16960 | Why were women involved in the reform movements of the new century? |
16960 | Why? |
16960 | Why? |
16960 | With what measures did Great Britain retaliate? |
16960 | _ Americans in California._--Why stop at Santa Fé? |
16960 | and"What is contraband of war?" |
45909 | The cathedral,says the reader,"what of that?" |
45909 | The cathedral,--what of that? |
45909 | And how can pen or tongue adequately picture the great reredos, the strange monuments, and the countless mementoes of departed worth? |
45909 | And next are those in English:-- STAY, PASSENGER, WHY GOEST THOU SO FAST? |
45909 | At the risk of being dealt with as were some of old for making a similar remark, we are inclined to ask,"Why was this waste of ointment made?" |
45909 | But are not the great arch and pillar of nave influential now? |
45909 | But he is only one of many, for over each side range of the choir stalls are oak chests,--containing what? |
45909 | But what avails his conquests, now he lies Interred in earth, a prey to worms and flies? |
45909 | But what of the abbey itself? |
45909 | But what shall we say about the ruins of the castle itself,--there on our right, two hundred feet away? |
45909 | Do we comprehend the fact? |
45909 | Do we realize or comprehend the fact? |
45909 | Do we, as we are walking here on this fine summer day, comprehend the scheme? |
45909 | Does not the largeness even of the cathedral inspire us now to do large things? |
45909 | Here is the celebrated Warwick Vase; and who, claiming knowledge of art, has not heard of it? |
45909 | How inducive of thought are these old classic grounds, centuries in use? |
45909 | How unlike John Knox, of whom Carlyle says:"When he lay a- dying it was asked of him,''Hast thou hope?'' |
45909 | Is not the elegant decoration of cut stone refining to those of this day? |
45909 | Is there not now, as of old, a great cloud of witnesses? |
45909 | Jewels of deceased bishops, or their robes? |
45909 | Records of the church or important papers of State? |
45909 | Shall I report his former service done, In honor of his God and Christendom? |
45909 | She is reported at one time to have demanded of the reformer,"Think you that subjects, having the power, may resist their princes?" |
45909 | Stores and warehouses prevail, and the question often arises,"Where do the people live?" |
45909 | Then comes antique but sublime old Durham; how can we part companionship with that? |
45909 | This thought seems to have been present when he makes Hamlet ask:"Did these bones cost no more i''the breeding, but to play at loggats with them? |
45909 | Was ever town so rich in court and tower, To woo and win stray moonlight every hour? |
45909 | Were ever haunts so meet for summer breeze, Or pensive walk in evening''s golden air? |
45909 | What civilized community has not at some time used things from both places? |
45909 | What tongue or pen can adequately describe the emotions awakened? |
45909 | Where are now the kings, the queens? |
45909 | Where are they who here thought and labored a thousand years ago? |
45909 | Where can romance inhere, if not in conditions like these? |
45909 | Who that travels would risk his reputation as a person of taste, and not go to Chester? |
45909 | or Salisbury, with its commanding spire, 404 feet high, and its rich transept end? |
45909 | was crowned three hundred years ago; and who can walk and meditate here and not think of Richard III., Duke of Gloucester? |
45909 | were ever river- banks so fair, Gardens so fit for nightingales as these? |
13145 | A good man? 13145 Ah?" |
13145 | And do you really believe he saw such an animal? |
13145 | And have you got rid yet of the_ Airgiod- cearc_[12] Sheila? |
13145 | And is that all that you can spell? |
13145 | And it is a present for me? |
13145 | And so you have got rid of them? 13145 And what do the people dance to now?" |
13145 | And why not? 13145 And will you want to speak to me, Ailasa?" |
13145 | Are you sick? |
13145 | Are you the daughter of the miller Soubirons? |
13145 | But did she not say anything more? |
13145 | But that is not the sea at all,said Sheila:"that is the storms that will wreck the boats; and how can the sea help that? |
13145 | But what if the jury does convict me? 13145 But what is the necessity for your bothering yourself about such things? |
13145 | But what is your objection, Ingram? |
13145 | But why do you sing such Gaelic as that, John? |
13145 | Can you eat a cold dinner to- day, Jean? |
13145 | Catharine, my child, will you walk out with me? 13145 Did you catch it yourself, Ailasa?" |
13145 | Did you draw that? |
13145 | Did you not see it? |
13145 | Do n''t you ever dream of what it is like? 13145 Do n''t you think Alister must have been taking a little whisky, Miss Mackenzie?" |
13145 | Do n''t you think it is very warm here? |
13145 | Do you mean to tell me you do n''t know your own tongue? 13145 Do you think I can not read?" |
13145 | Going to the school, William? 13145 Have you seen nothing?" |
13145 | How do you like this country? |
13145 | How far is it to the general''s? |
13145 | However the matter may conclude,said Mrs. Guinness pleasantly,"why should you and I lose our self- control, Mr. Muller? |
13145 | I believe I have had a little nap, Jack, but I ca n''t find my gloves: will you look under the next seat, please? |
13145 | I have heard of those middlemen: they were dreadful tyrants and thieves, were n''t they? |
13145 | I suppose every woman must marry, father? |
13145 | I suppose,said Lavender,"you found it rather difficult to learn good English?" |
13145 | I? 13145 In the dark, father? |
13145 | Indeed? |
13145 | Is his hose ungartered, his beard neglected, his shoe untied? |
13145 | Is it, ta Welsh Kâllic? |
13145 | Is supper over? 13145 Is that you, Duncan? |
13145 | It is practical enough, I suppose,he said irritably,"to ask what Catharine herself thinks of marriage with me?" |
13145 | It would take me several months to pick it up, I suppose? |
13145 | Lover? 13145 Lover?" |
13145 | Lover? |
13145 | Maria? 13145 May I ask what they are?" |
13145 | My father? |
13145 | No: what is it? |
13145 | Now will you take the rod? |
13145 | Obey what? |
13145 | Pardon me, my sister,said the author to a beggar- woman at Barcelona:"does not your worship see that I am drawing?" |
13145 | Shall we go out? |
13145 | Shall we walk in the hall for a few minutes? |
13145 | So that there is no difference between the former tacksman and his serf except the relative size of their farms? |
13145 | That was your brother, then? |
13145 | The Welsh Gaelic? 13145 The descent of man, for instance?" |
13145 | The school? 13145 To make?" |
13145 | To- morrow? 13145 Was it the Virgin?" |
13145 | Well, Sheila? |
13145 | Well, general,dropping my voice to the Secesh conspirator level,"how do you like him?" |
13145 | Well, what''s the matter? |
13145 | Well? 13145 Well?" |
13145 | What did it do? 13145 What did she command you to do?" |
13145 | What do you mean to make of yourself, Miss Vogdes? |
13145 | What for will he be playing_ Cha till mi tuilich?_"It is out of mischief, papa,said Sheila--"that is all." |
13145 | What have aimless imagination and temporizing policy to do with the Advancement of Mankind? 13145 What have you seen, Bernadette?" |
13145 | What in all the world is she about at such an hour? |
13145 | What in ta name of Kott is tat sort of Kâllic? |
13145 | What is it you wish? |
13145 | What is that thing somebody said about the man of one book? |
13145 | What is the trouble, then? |
13145 | What is the_ Airgiod- cearc_ to you, that you will go over to Stornoway only to be laughed at and make a fool of yourself? |
13145 | What was this that ailed her? |
13145 | What, then, is the name of your vision? |
13145 | What? |
13145 | What? |
13145 | Where''s your father, Sheila? |
13145 | Why? |
13145 | Will it hurt us? |
13145 | Will ye hef the fesh, Miss Sheila? |
13145 | Will you have it yourself, my father? |
13145 | William,said I,"why will you Southside people continue to exhaust your land with tobacco?" |
13145 | Would you like to see my notes? |
13145 | Would you mind, Peggy,said John, deprecatingly,"if I left you for a few minutes? |
13145 | Yes, with thanks, Louise,he replied;"but where are Bernadette and Marie?" |
13145 | Yes,said Lavender:"what does that mean?" |
13145 | You are not from England, are you? |
13145 | You did n''t sail under that name, then, captain? |
13145 | You have no doubt, captain, of your ability to substantiate your entire innocence of these charges brought against you? |
13145 | You never tried to discover for yourself? |
13145 | [ 18] What would have been the course of this trial if expert testimony were established upon proper principles? 13145 ***** Is this present year, 1873, to be, like some famous ones in history, specially fatal to crowned heads, and to heads that have once been crowned? 13145 Ah? |
13145 | An old hall? |
13145 | And if a dream, why should it not go on for ever? |
13145 | And the tailor said to him,''What sort o''troosers iss it you will want?'' |
13145 | And what shall we say of her? |
13145 | And what was this moving object down there by the shore where the Maighdean- mhara lay at anchor? |
13145 | And what, may we ask, are sea- lawyers? |
13145 | And who was this who stood at the porch of the house in the clear sunshine? |
13145 | Anything else?" |
13145 | Are you the leader of this lawless throng, The chief of all that''s dissolute and wrong? |
13145 | As a mere matter of experience and education she ought to go to London; and had not her papa as good as intimated his intention of taking her? |
13145 | As for John the Piper, was he insulted at having been sent on a menial errand? |
13145 | But do please tell me, were you really so interested in what that little gorilla said as you seemed to be? |
13145 | But if people of genius will not do that, can you expect it of dyed gloves? |
13145 | But lover? |
13145 | But since Fanny Guinness was an amiable, pink- cheeked belle in the village choir, she had never turned her back on an enemy: why should she now? |
13145 | But was it really Duncan who was to teach the stranger? |
13145 | But what kind of love was this coming to Kitty? |
13145 | But where is that ambulance? |
13145 | But would black gloves do? |
13145 | CAN ADAMS AND CHOATE CLEAR HIM? |
13145 | Ca n''t I have a bill of exceptions? |
13145 | Ca n''t I sue out an injunction to stay proceedings? |
13145 | Ca n''t you put your veil down till we get out of this?" |
13145 | Can you forgive me for stealing your gloves? |
13145 | Can you furbish up your old ones till then, and thereby prove yourself sensible for once? |
13145 | Could God hold her, rigorous church- member, fond wife and mother as she was, guilty of this boy''s blood? |
13145 | Could it be that she was at soul tricky? |
13145 | Did it_ take_ much? |
13145 | Did no light wind bear my wild despair Far over the deep sea? |
13145 | Did the figure accuse him? |
13145 | Do n''t you know the classical Gaelic?" |
13145 | Do you think I would make a bad husband to the woman I married?" |
13145 | Do you think it fair to take advantage of this girl''s ignorance of the world?" |
13145 | Do_ I_ look like a medium or a Free- Lover? |
13145 | Had they not better try in the afternoon, when perhaps the breeze would freshen? |
13145 | He had had no opportunity, during their friendly talking, of revealing to her what he thought of herself; but might she not have guessed it? |
13145 | He is a staunch friend of yours, captain?" |
13145 | How could a fairy princess be so interested in some common animal showing its head out of the sea? |
13145 | How is my old friend, Colonel Livingstone? |
13145 | How much of it did he carry away? |
13145 | How the devil have you got over from Mevaig at this hour of the morning?" |
13145 | I ought n''t to-- to make love to Kitty, in short?" |
13145 | I should regard a wife only as a fellow- servant of the Lord? |
13145 | If not too bold, may I inquire about these stories of your burying treasure on Gardner''s Island?" |
13145 | If their mothers had not done so before them, where would they be? |
13145 | In a case of delicate eye- surgery who would value the opinion of a man whose attention had been devoted mainly to thoracic diseases? |
13145 | In order to do these fine things she would have to be married to somebody, and why not to himself? |
13145 | In the first place, would she listen to his prayer? |
13145 | Ingram?" |
13145 | Is not that enough? |
13145 | It could not be the coming dawn that revealed to him the outlines of the shore and the mountains and the loch? |
13145 | K._"Thank you, if the same to you?" |
13145 | LIVINGSTONE?" |
13145 | Lavender know of the legend connected with the air of_ Cha till, cha till mi tuille_? |
13145 | Lavender of the Black Horse of Loch Suainabhal?" |
13145 | Lavender the Bay of Uig and the Seven Hunters?" |
13145 | May I ask, captain, what particular falsehood has gained currency?" |
13145 | May I bring him and introduce him to you?" |
13145 | My lover?" |
13145 | Now what was there that was worth making a note of? |
13145 | Now, my dear Marjory, how often must I tell you that calling a fellow names is not arguing? |
13145 | Now, why should we? |
13145 | Raising his arms to the multitude, he asked,"Will you promise to serve and love your country as I mean?" |
13145 | Shall we take a glance at a historic mill? |
13145 | She had guessed their object then? |
13145 | She was opposed to it? |
13145 | Sheila would never know of the sacrifice, but what of that? |
13145 | Should he at once fly from temptation and return to London? |
13145 | So your worship draws? |
13145 | Suddenly it cleared:"Oysters? |
13145 | Surely somebody laughed? |
13145 | The murderers stopped, made her say it over again, and asked,"Do you mean it?" |
13145 | Then her father-- what action might not this determined old man take in the matter? |
13145 | Then the question was put,"Did you say so and so?" |
13145 | Then why did n''t he let me know by letter, as I asked him to do?" |
13145 | There was Captain Wright of the Quedah-- you remember him, I dare say: had command of that nigger crew-- what did he say when I went aboard his ship? |
13145 | There was the usual"Well, Sheila?" |
13145 | Was it not all a dream, that he should be sitting by the side of this sea- princess, who was attended only by her deerhound and the tall keeper? |
13145 | Was the sinister prophecy of John the Piper to be fulfilled? |
13145 | Was this a willful affectation? |
13145 | Was this, then, the capital of the small empire over which the princess ruled? |
13145 | Well, I hope?" |
13145 | Well, what of it all? |
13145 | What are such immense tracts good for now- a- days?" |
13145 | What are we coming to?" |
13145 | What did it matter that the written words of all authorities upon such subjects in every land were in absolute accord with Dr. Wormley? |
13145 | What did they let me walk the streets of Boston a whole week for, if I was such a criminal as some of''em pretend? |
13145 | What do you mean by this? |
13145 | What have you been about? |
13145 | What is he playing to himself now? |
13145 | What is that business? |
13145 | What kind of awakening would the plump"Will you marry me?" |
13145 | What possible interest could he have in combating this decision so anxiously, almost so imploringly? |
13145 | What shall I do with all this love When thou art gone away? |
13145 | What specialist of the latter character would even offer an opinion? |
13145 | What woke her? |
13145 | What would people say of the beautiful sea- princess with the proud air, the fearless eyes and the gentle and musical voice? |
13145 | When a victim issued from the flogging- room the questions from an eager throng were,"How many cuts, old fellow? |
13145 | When at length we reached the smooth stage- road I began to question him:"Are you the general''s son?" |
13145 | When shall I feel thy hand again Go kindly o''er my hair? |
13145 | Where was I? |
13145 | Where was he? |
13145 | Whither had gone the wild visions of the night, the feverish dread, the horrible forebodings? |
13145 | Who can determine with exactness the line that separates eccentricity from madness-- responsibility from irresponsibility? |
13145 | Who can say? |
13145 | Who could be so tender to her, so watchful over her, as himself? |
13145 | Who said we could not go? |
13145 | Why did I not cut the throat of this little Oppressor and fatten the soil of my native land with the blood of the small ruthless Yankee Invader? |
13145 | Why did you ask me in that way when you knew we could n''t go? |
13145 | Why not the crews of merchant- vessels, who might be of any nation? |
13145 | Will you?" |
13145 | Would his love for his daughter prompt him to consider her happiness alone? |
13145 | Would it not be heroic to leave this old man in possession of his only daughter? |
13145 | Would not all his artist friends be anxious to paint her? |
13145 | Would not every one listen to her singing of those Gaelic songs? |
13145 | Would not every one wish to know her? |
13145 | You are a reporter?" |
13145 | You do n''t mean to say you have tickets for it? |
13145 | _ Io triumphe!_"Suppose you show Miss Vogdes the institution, sister?" |
13145 | a Virginian in that hated uniform?" |
13145 | and where was I going to? |
13145 | as children should who have been nurtured from the breast of a cherishing mother?" |
13145 | me? |
13145 | of this fat little clergyman be? |
13145 | said Ingram when the last of their preparations had been made and they were about to start for the river,"Is n''t he up yet?" |
13145 | said Ingram, suddenly breaking in upon these dreams;"or does every owner of hens still pay his annual shilling to the Lord of Lewis?" |
13145 | said the young man, suddenly abandoning his defiant manner:"why should you object? |
13145 | what was my name? |
13145 | who was I? |
52414 | And then there would be no more Redeemer; for, from whom or what could that Redeemer redeem us? |
52414 | But then, who will look for logic in the dogmas of Christianity? |
52414 | But whence this unanimity? |
52414 | But why ask these questions? |
52414 | But yit I say, Mary whoos childe is this? |
52414 | Can any rational mind believe that these numerous, varied and even antagonistic petitions will be answered? |
52414 | For what could be the offer of the kingdoms of this world to him who made the world, and was already in possession of it?" |
52414 | His peasant blood rose to the surface and in his fear he cried,"Why hast thou forsaken me?" |
52414 | I pry the telle me, and that anon? |
52414 | If the prophecy referred to the Christ, how could it have any influence on Ahaz? |
52414 | Is it not absurd of the church to preach the immutable justice of God, and at the same time declare that sinners may escape punishment by prayer? |
52414 | Say me, Mary, this childys fadyr who is? |
52414 | Such phrases as"Why callest thou me good? |
52414 | Then whither did these adored beings ascend? |
52414 | Very good, but how can educated Catholics of today reconcile such truths with their actual scientific knowledge? |
52414 | xii, 9), and when at the time of the crucifixion, Jerusalem was in the hands of the Romans? |
52414 | xiii, 11)? |
52414 | xvii, 20; xxi, 21; Mark xi, 23; Luke xvii, 6)? |
34637 | Our fathers-- they were giants, were they? 34637 What do you tell of that for?" |
34637 | What has Pythagoras to do with the price of cotton? 34637 What of that?" |
34637 | ***** But now how can we change this, and get the idea of freedom into men''s minds? |
34637 | ***** But then comes the other question, What is the best use to be made of the day; the use most conducive to the highest interests of mankind? |
34637 | ***** Do men of the next world look in upon this? |
34637 | ***** How can we make the Sunday yet more valuable? |
34637 | ***** Shall we know our friends again? |
34637 | ***** Shall we remember the deeds of the former life; this man that he picked rags out of the mud in the streets, and another that he ruled nations? |
34637 | ***** What is this future life? |
34637 | And what does Massachusetts do? |
34637 | And would not all this extend the bounds of slavery? |
34637 | Are the present opinions respecting the origin, nature, and original design of that institution just and true? |
34637 | Are they present with us, conscious of our deeds or thoughts? |
34637 | Are you getting less in the qualities of a man? |
34637 | But if he adopted his old plan, what should we say of him? |
34637 | But is it likely that all the old tragedies will be enacted again? |
34637 | But is it only soldiers that we need? |
34637 | But the northern whigs have their leaders-- are they anti- slavery men? |
34637 | But what is it in 1848? |
34637 | But what is the South most noted for abroad? |
34637 | But what shall the free soil party do next? |
34637 | But what shall we say as the dust returns? |
34637 | But when the American Revolution begun, who, in England, had ever heard of John Hancock, President of the Congress? |
34637 | But where is the Adamitic man; the type and representative of his race, who makes actual its idea? |
34637 | But where is the soul all this time, between our death- day and our day of rising? |
34637 | But who shall speak it worthily? |
34637 | But you will ask, Why does not a minister demand piety in its natural form? |
34637 | But, continued the inquirer, is not this a good one-- To seek"The greatest good of the greatest number?" |
34637 | Can life in heaven do it? |
34637 | Can the Almighty deceive his children? |
34637 | Can the national faults be corrected? |
34637 | Can the practical saint and the practical hypocrite enter on the same course of being together? |
34637 | Did a decided people ever choose dough- faces?--a people that loved God and man, choose representatives that cared for neither truth nor justice? |
34637 | Did he ever forgive an enemy? |
34637 | Did obstinate men of the North send petitions relative to slavery, asking for its abolition in the District or elsewhere? |
34637 | Did slaves petition? |
34637 | Did the king of the French find it so? |
34637 | Did they find no warrant for that rigor in the New Testament? |
34637 | Did they love him-- love him as much? |
34637 | Did women petition? |
34637 | Do I err in estimating the number at one hundred and fifty? |
34637 | Do men tell you,"This is a degenerate age,"and"Religion is dying out?" |
34637 | Do the voters always know what they are about when they choose them? |
34637 | Do those men who control the politics of New England not like it? |
34637 | Do you ask the sects to engage in the work of extirpating concrete wrong? |
34637 | Do you get poor in your souls? |
34637 | Do you not reach out your arms for heaven, for immortality, and feel you can not die? |
34637 | Do you tell me that culprit''s mother loves her son more than God can love him? |
34637 | Does a mortal mother desert her son, wicked, corrupt and loathsome though he be? |
34637 | Does some one say,"Thou shalt,"or"Thou shalt not,"we ask,"Who are you?" |
34637 | Does your religion become poor and low? |
34637 | Even the worst man thinks God his Father; and is he not? |
34637 | For her three million slaves; and the North? |
34637 | Had he forgotten the famous words,"Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God?" |
34637 | Had he once been servile to the hands that wielded power? |
34637 | Has any man an unalienable right to live a savage in the midst of civilization? |
34637 | Her husband objects, saying,"Wherefore wilt thou go to him to- day? |
34637 | How did mankind come by this opinion? |
34637 | How long would intemperance continue, and pauperism, in Boston; how long slavery in this land? |
34637 | How long would men complain of a dead body of divinity and a dead church, and a ministry that was dead? |
34637 | How much more does the body hinder us from seeing? |
34637 | How shall we bring them to the task? |
34637 | I ask If you will? |
34637 | I would ask the worst of mothers, Did you forsake your child because he went astray, and mocked your word? |
34637 | If Light can thus deceive, wherefore not Life?" |
34637 | If my soul is to claim the body again, which shall it be, the body I was born into, or that I died out of? |
34637 | If there were a true, manly piety in this town, in due proportion to our numbers, wealth, and enterprise, how long would the vices of this city last? |
34637 | In 1830, when the French expelled the despotic king who encumbered their throne, what said Massachusetts, what said New England, in honor of the deed? |
34637 | In 1838, when England set free eight hundred thousand men in a day, what did Massachusetts say about that? |
34637 | In a word, who is it that in seventy years has made the nation great, rich, and famous for her ideas and their success all over the world? |
34637 | In your youth was the Sunday a welcome day; a genial day; or only wearisome and sour? |
34637 | Is God to be partial in granting the favors of another life? |
34637 | Is it Christian in us by statute to interdict them from their recreation? |
34637 | Is it always to be so? |
34637 | Is it too much to hope all this? |
34637 | Is that superiority of gift solely for the man''s own sake? |
34637 | Is the age wanting in piety, which makes such efforts as these? |
34637 | Is the man in arrears with virtue, having long practised wickedness and become insolvent? |
34637 | Is the present mode of observing it the most profitable that can be devised? |
34637 | Is this difference of any practical importance at the present moment? |
34637 | It is no merit to die; shall we tell lies about him because he is dead? |
34637 | Mr. President, is one of these anti- slavery? |
34637 | Must it not be so in the next? |
34637 | Must it not be so there, and we be with our real friends? |
34637 | Must it not be so there? |
34637 | No grain of dust gets lost from off this dusty globe; and shall God lose a man from off this sphere of souls? |
34637 | Now and then, for dust gets into the brightest eyes; but did they ever choose such men continually? |
34637 | Put one of the cold thin moons of Saturn into the centre of the solar system,--would the universe revolve about that little dot? |
34637 | Said the king,"Do you tell me I lie?" |
34637 | Samuel Adams, and John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson, and all the other men, what did the world know of them? |
34637 | See how every steamer brings us good tidings of good things; and do you believe America can keep her slaves? |
34637 | Shall I then have a handful of my former dust, and that alone? |
34637 | Shall not the prayers of all Christian hearts go up with them on that day, a great deep prayer for their success? |
34637 | Shall the American nation go on in this work, or pause, turn off, fall, and perish? |
34637 | Shall we conclude these are never to obtain development and do their work? |
34637 | Should a great man have known better? |
34637 | So at the last, which body shall claim my soul, for the ten had her? |
34637 | So the age asks of all institutions their right to be: What right has the government to existence? |
34637 | So the real and practical question between them is this: Shall there be a high tariff or a low one? |
34637 | Somebody once asked him, What are the recognized principles of politics? |
34637 | The Sunday is ended and over; the man is tired-- but has he been profited and made better thereby? |
34637 | The annexation of Texas, did they oppose that? |
34637 | The land is full of ministers, respectable men, educated men-- are they opposed to slavery? |
34637 | Was Bowditch one of the first mathematicians of his age? |
34637 | Was it even known to him? |
34637 | Was it safe to withstand the Revolution? |
34637 | Was its observance enforced by him? |
34637 | Was religion, dressed in her Sabbath dress, a welcome guest; was she lovely and to be desired? |
34637 | Was the mind of Newton gone when his frame, long over- tasked, refused its wonted work? |
34637 | Well, says the calculator, but who has the offices of the nation? |
34637 | What are such things to Ronge and Wessenberg? |
34637 | What did he aim at in that long period? |
34637 | What did they care for the freedom of thirty millions of men? |
34637 | What do the men who control our politics think thereof? |
34637 | What had New England to say? |
34637 | What had become of the"sovereignty of the people,"the"unalienable right of resistance to oppression?" |
34637 | What have the political leaders of Massachusetts, of New England, to say? |
34637 | What if Burns had been ashamed of his plough, and Franklin had lost his recollection of the candle- moulds and the composing stick? |
34637 | What is the idea of the abolitionists? |
34637 | What monarchy will dare fight republican France? |
34637 | What shall become of the minority, in that case? |
34637 | What shall they do? |
34637 | When death has dusted off this body from me, who will dream for me the new powers I shall possess? |
34637 | When power fled off from the Church--"Wilt thou also go away?" |
34637 | Whence did he gain such power to stand erect where others so often cringed and crouched low to the ground? |
34637 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
34637 | Who can not trust him to do right and best for all? |
34637 | Who can say aye or no? |
34637 | Who can tell; nay, who need care to ask? |
34637 | Who could have thought such darkness lay concealed Within thy beams, O Sun? |
34637 | Who ever heard of an anti- slavery Governor of Massachusetts in this century? |
34637 | Who ever missed it? |
34637 | Who fought the Revolution? |
34637 | Who gave the majority a right to control the minority, to restrict trade, levy taxes, make laws, and all that? |
34637 | Who has filled the Presidential chair forty- eight years out of sixty? |
34637 | Who has held the chief posts of honor? |
34637 | Who increases the cost of the post- office and pays so little of its expense? |
34637 | Who is most blustering and disposed to quarrel? |
34637 | Who knows but men born to heaven are waiting for your birth to come-- have gone to prepare a place for us? |
34637 | Who knows out of how deep a fulness of indignation such torrents gush? |
34637 | Who knows? |
34637 | Who made the Mexican war? |
34637 | Who occupy the chief offices in the army and navy? |
34637 | Who owns the greater part of the property, the mills, the shops, the ships? |
34637 | Who pays the national taxes? |
34637 | Who sends their children to school and college? |
34637 | Who sets at nought the Constitution? |
34637 | Who was fit to preside in such a case? |
34637 | Who would bring the greatest peril in case of war with a strong enemy? |
34637 | Who writes the books-- the histories, poems, philosophies, works of science, even the sermons and commentaries on the Bible? |
34637 | Why do we then shun Death with anxious strife? |
34637 | Why does God sometimes endow a man with great intellectual power, making, now and then, a million- minded man? |
34637 | Why is it that all great movements, from the American Revolution down to anti- slavery, have begun here? |
34637 | Why is it that education societies, missionary societies, Bible societies, and all the movements for the advance of mankind, begin here? |
34637 | Why not have the"further information"laid before the Senate? |
34637 | Why pretend to drag a weighty crutch about because it helped your father once, wandering alone and in the dark, sounding on his dim and perilous way? |
34637 | Why was the Sunday chosen as the regular day for religious meeting? |
34637 | Will it be most profitable to"give up the Sunday,"to use it as the Catholics do, as the Puritans did, or to adopt some other method? |
34637 | Will you say the outward life never completely comes up to that? |
34637 | Would it not be better to take one step more, adopt them before they offended, and allow no child to grow up in the barbarism of ignorance? |
34637 | You will ask, What was the secret of his strength? |
34637 | Your old men? |
34637 | Your young men? |
34637 | [ 3] Was the Sabbath observed as a day of rest before Moses? |
34637 | or who could find, Whilst fly and leaf and insect stood revealed, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind? |
34637 | said she;"Lord,"said Piety,"to whom shall we go? |
34637 | what can we know of it besides its existence? |
11103 | ''Spect I''d better rub her down, now I''se here, an''wait''ll it holds up a bit, Mass''Roger? |
11103 | A''n''t you borrowin''trouble a little bit, Miss Hitty? 11103 Ah? |
11103 | Alphabetical or epistolary? |
11103 | And are you always going to stay and take care of Master Roger? |
11103 | And how do_ you_ do, Capua? |
11103 | And how old is Rite? |
11103 | And how was that? |
11103 | And is n''t it charming? |
11103 | And still unread? |
11103 | And still unread? |
11103 | And what brings you here at dead of dark? |
11103 | And what must I do? |
11103 | And where is Rite going now? |
11103 | And you will present her on the first Sabbath in May? |
11103 | Are the cheese- cakes a success, Mrs. McLean? 11103 Are these,"I asked,"the polite Frenchmen one reads about?" |
11103 | At half- past three in the night? |
11103 | Bedlam let loose,thought the intruder,"or all the Naiads up for a frolic?" |
11103 | But what is it? |
11103 | But what_ is_ it that you do with yourself? |
11103 | But why this indignation? |
11103 | Did Saint Sebastian die of his wounds? |
11103 | Did he say it in Latin? |
11103 | Do not even the publicans the same? |
11103 | Do you mean to say that every man is not absolutely free to choose his beliefs? |
11103 | Do you mean----"Miss Heath, I mean, will you marry me?" |
11103 | Doctor,the physician began, as from a sudden suggestion,"you wo n''t quarrel with me, if I tell you some of my real thoughts, will you?" |
11103 | For five hours? |
11103 | Forgotten me, Capua? |
11103 | Friends and relatives invited to attend? 11103 Has he come yet, Miss Hitty?" |
11103 | How are all my uncles and aunts, Miss? |
11103 | How can you defend this item, Mr. Curran,said Lord Chancellor Clare,--"''To writing innumerable letters, £ 100''?" |
11103 | How did you come? |
11103 | How did you know my tastes so well? |
11103 | How did you know what was in Mrs. McLean''s letter, Sir? |
11103 | How do you find me, Sir? |
11103 | How long would you know your Cousin Kate to be here, and refuse to spare her an hour? |
11103 | I''ve been exploring a mantel- shelf; here''s a candle, but how to light it? 11103 Is he? |
11103 | Is n''t who exquisite? 11103 Is that all you''ve caught?" |
11103 | Is that all? |
11103 | Is that all? |
11103 | Is that your trouble? 11103 Is there a Mr. Laudersdale? |
11103 | Is this a savage district? 11103 Like a gallant highwayman?" |
11103 | Mrs. Laudersdale drinks cocoa, then? |
11103 | Mrs. Laudersdale has a sweet tooth, then? |
11103 | Mrs. Laudersdale is your housekeeper? |
11103 | Mrs. Laudersdale? 11103 My wife? |
11103 | No more? |
11103 | Not even in Mrs. Laudersdale''s instance? |
11103 | Now are you coming? |
11103 | Now, John, you''re not making mischief? |
11103 | Oh, do n''t you know? 11103 Oh, it was not Helen''s, then?" |
11103 | Pray, Sir,said the judge,"how do you know he said Mass?" |
11103 | Shall I tell you some news? |
11103 | Sunshine, then, was the vivifying stroke? |
11103 | Take a seat, Fizzle? |
11103 | Tea, Roger? |
11103 | That is Mrs. Laudersdale''s little maid? |
11103 | That is the Lord''s Prayer, is it not? |
11103 | Then you understand Latin? |
11103 | Then you were awake when I stayed to look at you? |
11103 | Then you''re not aware that I''ve changed my estate? 11103 Then you_ did_ stay and look at me? |
11103 | Turning tea- cups, Gypsy Helen, and telling fates, all to no audience, and with no cross on your palm? |
11103 | We? 11103 Well, Capua?" |
11103 | Well, Roger, what does this mean? |
11103 | Well, what brings you? |
11103 | Well, when will you take us? 11103 What are you doing, dear?" |
11103 | What care have we, though life there be? 11103 What do you say, Uncle?" |
11103 | What is an acquisition? |
11103 | What is it? |
11103 | What is the little lady''s name? |
11103 | What letter? |
11103 | What made you come, then? |
11103 | What question? |
11103 | What words did you hear him say? |
11103 | What''s that? 11103 What?" |
11103 | When was Rite four? |
11103 | When you forgot my orders? 11103 Where are you going, Kate?" |
11103 | Where is the necessity of our parting? 11103 Where''s my Cousin Kate?" |
11103 | Which one, Capua? |
11103 | Whither now, Wandering Willie? |
11103 | Who? |
11103 | Why must we part? |
11103 | Why not? 11103 Why, Aunty?" |
11103 | Why, what for?--what can you be writing to him for? |
11103 | Why? |
11103 | Will it entertain you? |
11103 | Will you come and see? |
11103 | Will you come in away from the lake to the brooks, and hang among the alders and angle, dreaming, all day long? 11103 Would you? |
11103 | Yes,--don''t scold!--and if you are going to propose, I really think you ought to, or else----"You think I ought to marry Miss Heath?" |
11103 | Yes,--would you ever suspect it? |
11103 | Yes; but you surely would not consider it inspiration of the same kind as that of the writers of the Old Testament? |
11103 | You will not force me to confess such delinquency? |
11103 | _ What_ is his name? |
11103 | ''Tenty, wo n''t you fix it?" |
11103 | A newspaper? |
11103 | A''n''t you lonesome? |
11103 | An Englishman near me said to his neighbor,--"Brief?" |
11103 | And anything else?" |
11103 | And how''s your wife?" |
11103 | And is Mr. Raleigh a gentleman?" |
11103 | And she, bending there,--was it Diana and Endymion over again, Psyche and Eros? |
11103 | And this is a conventicle of young matrimonial victims to practise cookery in seclusion, upon which I have blundered?" |
11103 | And what becomes of your Uncle Reuben?" |
11103 | And what was her husband to him? |
11103 | And what was there there?" |
11103 | And whom do you expect to find?" |
11103 | Are n''t you sorry we must part?" |
11103 | Are n''t you the Co. there? |
11103 | Are the lilies in bloom? |
11103 | As I said before, who knows? |
11103 | As we were provided with neither, our plight was becoming serious, when a common cad ran up to me, and said,--''Shall I get you a cab, Mr. Moore? |
11103 | Bathed in soft, voluptuous tints, hazed and mellowed, into what weird, strange country were they hastening? |
11103 | But how long is this to last? |
11103 | But is n''t it the queerest thing in the world, up here in this savage district, to light upon a gentleman?" |
11103 | But is n''t there some truth in it, Doctor? |
11103 | But is that the way to serve a lady''s communications? |
11103 | But not by any means a person of consequence, you assume? |
11103 | But shall there be no more cakes and ale? |
11103 | But what had a child to do in this paradise, thought he, and from whence did it come? |
11103 | But who has fear to read most openly anything that Hood ever wrote? |
11103 | Do n''t you read any of your letters?" |
11103 | Do n''t you think the''inspiration of the Almighty''gave Newton and Cuvier''understanding''?" |
11103 | Do you suppose it was because her husband was away?" |
11103 | Do you understand?" |
11103 | Does marmalade, to spread your muffins, present any attractions? |
11103 | Does n''t Elsie look savage? |
11103 | Does n''t he look handsome, though?" |
11103 | Does n''t that look handsomely, Helen?" |
11103 | For did not she know better? |
11103 | For the day?" |
11103 | Had he now no claim to the truth from her? |
11103 | Had she more authority over it than over any other letter that might be in the room? |
11103 | Had she seen him? |
11103 | Have n''t you any sympathy for a sweet tooth?" |
11103 | He''ll be over here every day now; and do you suppose I''m going to flirt with any one, when I do n''t know his antecedents? |
11103 | Here''s a billet on the floor; the seal''s broken; Mr. Raleigh do n''t read his letters, you know; shall I take it?" |
11103 | Hoped his uncle was well, and his charming cousin,--was she as original as ever? |
11103 | How could he ever come to fancy such, a quadroon- looking thing as that, she should like to know? |
11103 | How could there be any contrast, any determining hue, any darker or brighter side? |
11103 | How d''ye do, Miss Kate?" |
11103 | How did I look, Belphoebe?" |
11103 | How else was a ragged sempstress in a squalid garret made immortal, nay, made universal, made to stand for an entire sisterhood of wretchedness? |
11103 | I draw only Mrs. Laudersdale; and do you call that animated nature?" |
11103 | I should think you might do worse than to call the baby Content;--that was your own mother''s name, was n''t it? |
11103 | I suppose you do n''t care about going, Elsie?" |
11103 | If neither respect nor care for the works of departed talent be bestowed, what future has the living talent itself to look forward to? |
11103 | If the waters of the earth were all at the same altitude, how could there be any motion among the parts? |
11103 | Irving?" |
11103 | Is n''t she exquisite?" |
11103 | Is that worsted or cotton you''re at now?" |
11103 | Laudersdale?" |
11103 | Laudersdale?" |
11103 | Laudersdale?" |
11103 | McLean?" |
11103 | Me? |
11103 | Now what do you suppose he is doing with needle and thread? |
11103 | Oh, the little maid? |
11103 | Our housekeeper? |
11103 | Pausing deliberately and sipping the pungent tonic, he at last looked up, and said,--"Well, you are offended?" |
11103 | Prettily colored, is it not?" |
11103 | Raleigh?" |
11103 | Raleigh?" |
11103 | Rite what?" |
11103 | Shall I go home and read it?" |
11103 | Shall we go to- morrow morning?" |
11103 | Should she ignobly refuse him his right? |
11103 | So she stayed at home, sewing all day and crying all night, and looking generally miserable, though she said nothing; for whom could she speak to? |
11103 | So she took her conjugal appurtenance with her?" |
11103 | Some fallen statue among rank Roman growth, some marble semblance of a young god, overlaced with a vine and plunged in tall ferns and beaded grasses? |
11103 | Speakin''of her boy Ned makes me think;--have you heared the news,''Tenty?" |
11103 | Sure, a''n''t I the man that patronizes your Melodies?'' |
11103 | That portrait leaning half- startled from the frame, was it his mother? |
11103 | The Widow knew everybody, of course: who was there in Rockland she did not know? |
11103 | The condition of motion is that there be something at rest; else how could there be any motion? |
11103 | The drive of two miles from Tarrytown to that delicious lane which leads to the Roost,--who does not know all that, and how charming it is? |
11103 | Then I asked myself,"What if the woman were black?" |
11103 | Then why not keep it always? |
11103 | There, is n''t that a pretty little_ conte?_""Very,"said Mrs. Laudersdale, having listened with increasing interest. |
11103 | These are your New Hampshire customs?" |
11103 | These books, were they the very ones that had fed his youth? |
11103 | Though written and sealed by her hand, had she any longer possession therein? |
11103 | Want to come?" |
11103 | Was it hers? |
11103 | Was there no justice due to him? |
11103 | Waste such sweetness on sleep? |
11103 | What calumniator has thus outraged them and_ me_? |
11103 | What could we do with unmixed power? |
11103 | What depth of tenderness is there from which the"Adelaide"does not sound? |
11103 | What if she should faint, or die, or have a stroke of palsy, and they should break into the room and find that name written? |
11103 | What is this? |
11103 | What lover ever accounted for his mistress''s caprices? |
11103 | What made the fire go out?" |
11103 | What makes me always put love into a story, Aunt Grundy? |
11103 | What secret of tragedy, too? |
11103 | What shall I bring you?" |
11103 | What shall I get for you? |
11103 | What then? |
11103 | What''s the use in_ our_ caring about hard words after this,--''atheists,''heretics, infidels, and the like? |
11103 | What_ did_ it mean? |
11103 | When you saw Mrs. Laudersdale for the first time, at a period thirteen years later, would you have imagined her possessed of this little drama? |
11103 | Whence had she come, and who was she? |
11103 | Where is he?" |
11103 | Where is he?" |
11103 | Who can ever forget"The Lost Heir,"or remember it but to laugh at its rich breadth of natural, yet farcical, absurdity? |
11103 | Who knows? |
11103 | Who told you this? |
11103 | Why did she cry? |
11103 | Why do n''t you ask how all your uncles and aunts are, Sir?" |
11103 | Why has n''t she been here all summer?" |
11103 | Why should a modern be jealous of a mediaeval artist? |
11103 | Why should he who makes so many joyous not have the largest mess of gladness to his share? |
11103 | Why wo n''t you stay forever, Helen?" |
11103 | Why? |
11103 | Will it pay?" |
11103 | Will you have the morning paper?" |
11103 | Would Mrs. Laudersdale dip her hands in murder? |
11103 | Would he not call at Hyacinth Cottage, and let her thank him again there? |
11103 | You are clear, I suppose, that the Omniscient spoke through Solomon, but that Shakspeare wrote without his help?" |
11103 | You are going? |
11103 | You do n''t know my name now, do you? |
11103 | You fancy now that in this flash all the wealth of her soul burned out and left her a mere volition and motive power? |
11103 | You, Helen? |
11103 | _ Al fresco?_"said the pleasantest voice in the world. |
11103 | _ Who_ dared to say it?" |
11103 | _"I?--I?--I? |
11103 | a thorough gentleman?" |
11103 | and round the lake, too, I''ll warrant?" |
11103 | and what becomes of my note sealed with sky- blue wax and despatched to you ten days ago?" |
11103 | are you there? |
11103 | cried Mr. Raleigh, removing the stem from his lips;"how came you here?" |
11103 | do n''t you find him so? |
11103 | he continued,--"tea or cocoa?" |
11103 | is n''t this the article? |
11103 | or shall I beg for rusks? |
11103 | or what do you say to doughnuts? |
11103 | or who has a memory of wounded modesty for anything that he ever read secretly of Hood''s? |
11103 | said Mr. Roger Raleigh;"what have we here?" |
11103 | that you''ve taken Nan out on such a day? |
11103 | what had wakened her? |
11103 | what late flowers bore such pungent balm? |
11103 | when shall we go trouting?" |
48136 | But what are we to think of a governor who could play so scurvy a trick, and thus grossly deceive a poor young lad, wholly destitute of experience? |
48136 | But who would have supposed, said he, Franklin to be capable of such a composition? |
48136 | But, if the electrical fluid so easily pervades glass, how does the phial become_ charged_( as we term it) when we hold it in our hands? |
48136 | Can this be ascribed to the attraction of any surrounding body or matter drawing them asunder, or drawing the one away from the other? |
48136 | For if it was fine enough to come with the electric fluid through the body of one person, why should it stop on the skin of another? |
48136 | I have asked her, said my landlady, how, living as she did, she could find so much employment for a confessor? |
48136 | If it be asked, what thickness of a metalline rod may be supposed sufficient? |
48136 | If not, and repulsion exists in nature, and in magnetism, why may it not exist in electricity? |
48136 | May it not constitute a part, and even a principal part, of the solid substance of bodies? |
48136 | May not different degrees of the vibration of the above- mentioned universal medium, occasion the appearances of different colours? |
48136 | Must not the smallest particle conceivable have, with such a motion, a force exceeding that of a twenty- four pounder, discharged from a cannon? |
48136 | Nay, suppose I have drawn the electric matter from both of them, what becomes of it? |
48136 | Now want of sense, when a man has the misfortune to be so circumstanced, is it not a kind of excuse for want of modesty? |
48136 | The Abbé owns,_ p._ 94, that he had heard this remarked, but says, Why is not a conductor of electricity an electric subject? |
48136 | To which the Abbé thus objects;"Tell me( says he), I pray you, how much time is necessary for this pretended discharge? |
48136 | Were they all equally dry? |
48136 | Whether in a river, lake, or sea, the electric fire will not dissipate and not return to the bottle? |
48136 | Why will he have the phial, into which the, water is to be decanted from a charged phial, held in a man''s hand? |
48136 | Will not cork balls, electrised negatively, separate as far as when electrised positively? |
48136 | Would not the bottle in that case be left just as we found it, uncharged, as we know a metal bottle so attempted to be charged would be? |
48136 | Would not the fire, thrown in by the wire, pass through to our hands, and so escape into the floor? |
48136 | Would not this experiment convince the Abbé Nollet of his egregious mistake? |
48136 | _ Query_, What are the effects of air in electrical experiments? |
48136 | or, will it proceed in strait lines through the water the shortest courses possible back to the bottle? |
41766 | Are there any abuses in the Order? |
41766 | Are you married? |
41766 | Are you waiting for someone else? |
41766 | Do you pray to the Blessed Virgin? |
41766 | Do you take the discipline? |
41766 | For what is that peace which is incompatible with this Society? 41766 Have you a Pope?" |
41766 | Have you made any changes in the government of the Order? |
41766 | How could we be conspirators? |
41766 | O man of little faith, why did you doubt? |
41766 | They were to have come last year,continues the writer;"Will they come this year? |
41766 | What authority would you have if, instead of abolishing the Society, the Pope had done something else? |
41766 | What do you mean by a Jesuit? |
41766 | What does this mean? |
41766 | What is that for? |
41766 | What party or group or club or lodge,says a sometime unfriendly paper, the"Italia,""can claim a similar distinction?" |
41766 | What shall I say, Brethren,he asks,"to let you know what I think of the religious society which is now so fiercely assailed? |
41766 | Where are you going? |
41766 | Where are your moneys? |
41766 | Who are you, and what do you come here for? |
41766 | Who are you? |
41766 | Who is their superior? |
41766 | Why did God permit me to meet you,said one of them,"if I am going to suffer both here and hereafter?" |
41766 | After reciting these facts, Boero asks why the ex- General was kept in such a long and severe confinement? |
41766 | But what do I hear? |
41766 | But what progress has it made? |
41766 | But, even if it were true, Sire, why not punish the guilty without making the innocent suffer? |
41766 | Can I do so, even if a number of innocent persons are killed?" |
41766 | Choiseul''s varnish of courtesy had been all rubbed off by the incident, and he wanted to know"who were going to win in the fight? |
41766 | Do you not think he ought to have allowed the Jesuits to justify themselves, especially as every one is sure they could not? |
41766 | Father Faure inquired of one of his judges:"For what crime am I in jail?" |
41766 | Finally, does it not seem to you that he could act with more common sense in carrying out what after all, is a reasonable measure?" |
41766 | Finally, let all endeavor to acquire that true wisdom of which St. James speaks( iii, 13):''Who is a wise man and indued with knowledge among you? |
41766 | For what have we taught, however you may qualify it with the odious name of treason, that they did not uniformly teach? |
41766 | For, was it not a justification of all the hatred they had invariably heaped on the Society wherever it happened to be? |
41766 | Go to the Flathead Reservation in Montana, and look at the work of the Jesuits and what do you find? |
41766 | Had he perhaps received some divine intimation of what Borgia was yet to be? |
41766 | He saw there an immense building on whose façade were cut the letters I. H. S."What is that?" |
41766 | Hence he is told to ask himself:"Who is Christ? |
41766 | His name was O''Reilly, but what could he do with 14,000 people? |
41766 | How could he have been otherwise? |
41766 | How could the enormous success of their performances be otherwise explained? |
41766 | How does the Society survive all these disasters? |
41766 | How long were they there? |
41766 | How were the rest to be reached? |
41766 | I ask then, which is true morality and which of the two books is more useful to mankind? |
41766 | If none of the kings and diplomats had blamed Clement for acting as he did, why should they blame Pius VI for using his own right in the premises? |
41766 | If they were condemned, how would the decision affect de Britto''s canonization? |
41766 | In the disturbances of 1847, he was on his way to Switzerland when he was halted by a squad of furious soldiers who asked him"Are you a Jesuit?" |
41766 | Indeed, is it likely that Pope Clement XIV would have omitted to note the defection in his Brief of Suppression, if they had been guilty? |
41766 | It meant the loss of his position, perhaps, but what did he care? |
41766 | It might be asked, however, why did they not foresee the possible failure of their request and provide otherwise for priests? |
41766 | It was on this occasion that Campion answered the question:"Do you believe Elizabeth to be the lawful queen?" |
41766 | Might they not then have thought that, in view of what the bishop had already done both in civil and ecclesiastical matters, he was mentally deranged? |
41766 | Should he disband his communities which were performing very effective work in France or wait for developments? |
41766 | Should you not have pity on our lot and grant us a pension? |
41766 | Should you not rather ask, Sire, what will God say? |
41766 | The prospects seemed fair for the moment, for had not the French and Turks been companions in arms in the Crimea? |
41766 | This angered the Pope, and he asked Laínez, who put the case before him:"Do you want to join the schism of that heretic Philip?" |
41766 | This was a most amazing mask; for Palgrave would have escaped notice, whereas everyone would immediately ask, who is this Jesuit Jew? |
41766 | Thus for instance, he was asked,"Do you think you have any authority since the suppression of the Society?" |
41766 | Thus, on May 4, 1767, D''Alembert wrote to Voltaire:"What do you think of the edict of Charles III, who expels the Jesuits so abruptly? |
41766 | Was it legitimate? |
41766 | What became of the scattered Jesuits? |
41766 | What do His commands and example suppose or suggest?" |
41766 | What had the Jesuits to do with all this? |
41766 | What happened to the Jesuits in France in the meantime? |
41766 | What is to come who knows? |
41766 | What kind of people was he pursuing? |
41766 | What the future has in store, who can tell? |
41766 | What was he to do? |
41766 | What will become of our flourishing congregations with you and those cultivated by the German Fathers? |
41766 | When the conventional answer was given, he angrily demanded"Do you take me for a scoundrel?" |
41766 | Where is there anything heroic in being merely the messenger between the General and the Pope? |
41766 | Where was Kino all this time? |
41766 | Who shall say that the faith of the cultivated individual is firmer than the faith of the common people? |
41766 | Who shall say that the many are fickle; that the chief is firm? |
41766 | Who slew Henry III? |
41766 | Who was Ricci? |
41766 | Why does He avoid that? |
41766 | Why does He do this? |
41766 | Why should he be sent to France where he had no friends? |
41766 | Why should such a man be cited as the representative of a body from which he was ordered to be expelled and which he had attempted to destroy? |
41766 | Why then should we object to Company of Jesus?" |
41766 | Why was he not compelled to study philosophy first like everyone else? |
41766 | You may tell me that it is now an accomplished fact; that the royal edict has been promulgated and you may ask what will the world say if I retract? |
41766 | the kings or the Jesuits? |
3650 | But where are the clowns and puppets, And imps with horns and tail? 3650 Famed, as we are, for faith and prayer, We merit sure peculiar care; But can we think great good was meant us, When logs for Governors were sent us? |
3650 | Hark There, heard you not the alp- hound''s bark? 3650 Here''s a priest and there is a Quaker, Do the cat and the dog agree? |
3650 | My wut? |
3650 | Wal... no... I come dasignin''--"To see my Ma? |
3650 | What is it I see? |
3650 | Why should folk be glum,said Keezar,"When Nature herself is glad, And the painted woods are laughing At the faces so sour and sad?" |
3650 | Would the old folk know their children? 3650 Wouldst know him now? |
3650 | you want to see my Pa, I s''pose? |
3650 | ( Selection) Come, my tan- faced children, Follow well in order, get your weapons ready; Have you your pistols? |
3650 | And is this all? |
3650 | And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more nobly to repay? |
3650 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
3650 | And where are the Rhenish flagons? |
3650 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
3650 | And where is the foaming ale? |
3650 | And, as his strength Failed him at length, He met a pilgrim shadow--"Shadow,"said he,"Where can it be-- This land of Eldorado?" |
3650 | Are his points definite? |
3650 | Are there many figures of speech here? |
3650 | Are they alike in purpose? |
3650 | Are they alike? |
3650 | Around these few names does all the fragrance of American poetry hover? |
3650 | Art thou afraid?" |
3650 | At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse? |
3650 | But who his human heart has laid To Nature''s bosom nearer? |
3650 | By this test where would you place Bryant himself? |
3650 | Can love for you in him take root, Who''s Catholic, and absolute? |
3650 | Can you account in the same way for the divisions at lines 68 and 89? |
3650 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
3650 | Connected? |
3650 | Deep distress and hesitation Mingled with his adoration; Should he go or should he stay? |
3650 | Did he do what he here advises? |
3650 | Did storms harass or foes perplex, Did wasps or king- birds bring dismay-- Did wars distress, or labors vex, Or did you miss your way? |
3650 | Do I look on Frankfort fair? |
3650 | Do not the bright June roses blow, To meet thy kiss at morning hours? |
3650 | Do the corpulent sleepers sleep? |
3650 | Do the feasters gluttonous feast? |
3650 | Do they affect you in the same way? |
3650 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas? |
3650 | Do you find any other adjectives in this poem which are poetic words? |
3650 | Do you find such a comparison of nature and human nature in any other poems by Bryant? |
3650 | Do you find this same idea in other poets? |
3650 | Do you not know me? |
3650 | Does Bacchus tempting seem,-- Did he for you this glass prepare? |
3650 | Does he define it? |
3650 | Does the punctuation help to indicate the speaker? |
3650 | Does this rhyme scheme help to produce the effect of the poem? |
3650 | FORBEARANCE Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? |
3650 | From these details can you form a picture of this temple in its exterior and interior? |
3650 | Go''st thou to build an early name, Or early in the task to die? |
3650 | Has color any part in it? |
3650 | Has the night descended? |
3650 | Have they burned the stocks for oven- wood? |
3650 | Have they cut down the gallows- tree? |
3650 | Have you noticed a similar use of"more"in any other poem? |
3650 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
3650 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell? |
3650 | How do they agree? |
3650 | How does Longfellow differ with him? |
3650 | How does it apply to the bee? |
3650 | How much actual information did Bryant have about the bird? |
3650 | How should I fight? |
3650 | How would such a position compare with filling the governor''s chair of any state? |
3650 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
3650 | I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?" |
3650 | I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?" |
3650 | I see a gleaming light, O say, what may it be?" |
3650 | In the hurry, prosperity, and luxury of modern life is the care if the flower of poetry lost? |
3650 | In vain do they to Mountains say, fall on us and us hide From Judges ire, more hot than fire, for who may it abide? |
3650 | In what poems do you see evidences of such a method? |
3650 | In what ways does he secure the merriment? |
3650 | Irving? |
3650 | Is earth too poor to give us Something to live for here that shall outlive us? |
3650 | Is it a fete at Bingen? |
3650 | Is it effective? |
3650 | Is it like a modern church? |
3650 | Is not thy home among the flowers? |
3650 | Is the thought divided? |
3650 | Know''st thou what wove yon woodbird''s nest Of leaves, and feathers from her breast? |
3650 | Lord, he thought, in heaven that reignest, Who am I, that thus thou deignest To reveal thyself to me? |
3650 | Loved the wood- rose, and left it on its stalk? |
3650 | Now in a fright, he starts upright, Awaked by such a clatter; He rubs both eyes, and boldly cries,"For God''s sake, what''s the matter?" |
3650 | Now, heard you not the storm- bell ring? |
3650 | O pioneers Have the elder races halted? |
3650 | Or how the fish outbuilt her shell, Painting with morn each annual cell? |
3650 | Or how the sacred pine- tree adds To her old leaves new myriads? |
3650 | Our slender life runs rippling by, and glides Into the silent hollow of the past; What is there that abides To make the next age better for the last? |
3650 | Said I not well that Bayards And Sidneys still are here? |
3650 | Say, Yankees, do n''t you feel compunction, At your unnatural rash conjunction? |
3650 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean- side? |
3650 | Seek''st thou, in living lays, To limn the beauty of the earth and sky? |
3650 | Shall creatures abject thus their voices raise? |
3650 | Should he leave the poor to wait Hungry at the convent gate, Till the Vision passed away? |
3650 | Should he slight his radiant guest, Slight this visitant celestial, For a crowd of ragged, bestial Beggars at the convent gate? |
3650 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
3650 | So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
3650 | Some more substantial boon Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune''s fickle moon? |
3650 | THE RHODORA ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THE FLOWER? |
3650 | TO A HONEY BEE Thou, born to sip the lake or spring, Or quaff the waters of the stream, Why hither come on vagrant wing? |
3650 | The secret wouldst thou know To touch the heart or fire the blood at will? |
3650 | Then on a stately oak I cast mine eye, Whose ruffling top the clouds seem''d to aspire; How long since thou wast in thine infancy? |
3650 | Then up spake a Scottish maiden, With her ear unto the ground"Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it? |
3650 | Think ve I made this ball A field of havoc and war, Where tyrants great and tyrants small Might harry the weak and poor? |
3650 | Think ye that Raphael''s angel throng Has vanished from his side? |
3650 | Think ye the notes of holy song On Milton''s tuneful ear have died? |
3650 | Thy golden fortunes, tower they now, Or melt the glittering spires in air? |
3650 | Thy strength, and stature, more thy years admire; Hath hundred winters past since thou wast born, Or thousand since thou breakest thy shell of horn? |
3650 | Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food? |
3650 | Unarmed, faced danger with a heart of trust? |
3650 | Was it the lifting of that eye, The waving of that pictured hand? |
3650 | Was the road of late so toilsome? |
3650 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round,( do n''t you?) |
3650 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn Nor ape the glittering upstart fool; Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But all must be of buhl? |
3650 | What American poets express a similar need of nearness to nature? |
3650 | What archer of his arrows is so choice, Or hits the white so surely? |
3650 | What characteristics of the bumblebee make animated torrid- zone applicable? |
3650 | What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
3650 | What does Lowell mean by Earth? |
3650 | What effect does this poem have upon you? |
3650 | What fire burns in that little chest So frolic, stout and self- possest? |
3650 | What is the shame that clothes the skin To the nameless horror that lives within? |
3650 | What land did Columbus see first? |
3650 | What objection may be made to this word? |
3650 | What others can you name? |
3650 | What wonder if Sir Launfal now Remembered the keeping of his vow? |
3650 | What would be the advantage to us if we knew when we climbed a Mount Sinai? |
3650 | What''s this? |
3650 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood? |
3650 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
3650 | Where did he from? |
3650 | Which does he love better? |
3650 | Which interests you more? |
3650 | Which is more poetic? |
3650 | Which seems most real to you? |
3650 | Whither leads the path To ampler fates that leads? |
3650 | Who am I, that from the centre Of thy glory thou shouldst enter This poor cell, my guest to be? |
3650 | Who calls thy glorious service hard? |
3650 | Who deems it not its own reward? |
3650 | Who fathoms the Eternal Thought? |
3650 | Who is it that can make such shafts as Fate? |
3650 | Who is suggested in this line as white? |
3650 | Who is the owner? |
3650 | Who of this crowd to- night shall tread The dance till daylight gleam again? |
3650 | Who sorrow o''er the untimely dead? |
3650 | Who sweetened toil like him, or paid To love a tribute dearer? |
3650 | Who talks of scheme and plan? |
3650 | Who writhe in throes of mortal pain? |
3650 | Who, for its trials, counts it less A cause of praise and thankfulness? |
3650 | Why are not diamonds black and gray, To ape thy dare- devil array? |
3650 | Why did Moses climb Mount Sinai? |
3650 | Why does Bryant suggest"the wings of the morning"to begin such a survey of the world? |
3650 | Why does Poe use this peculiar word? |
3650 | Why does n''t he need to seek a milder climate in Porto Rico? |
3650 | Why does the coming of the raven suggest this realm to the poet? |
3650 | Why dream of lands of gold and pearl, Of loving knight and lady, When farmer boy and barefoot girl Were wandering there already? |
3650 | Why is the poem divided here? |
3650 | Why is the river pictured as dumb and blind? |
3650 | Why is this mentioned as our motto? |
3650 | Why is"Excelsior"the more familiar? |
3650 | Why should a man so endowed be compared to Shakespeare? |
3650 | Why should the vest on him allure, Which I could not on me endure? |
3650 | Why then is he called a Genoese? |
3650 | Will I admit you to a share? |
3650 | With what other poems in this book may"Hakon''s Lay"be compared? |
3650 | Would he choose the Oregon now? |
3650 | Would he then have knelt adoring, Or have listened with derision, And have turned away with loathing? |
3650 | Would the Vision come again? |
3650 | Would the Vision there remain? |
3650 | Would they own the graceless town, With never a ranter to worry And never a witch to drown?" |
3650 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
3650 | Wut shall we du? |
3650 | ai nt it terrible? |
3650 | and what for? |
3650 | and why com''st thou here?" |
3650 | are they not in his Wonder- Book? |
3650 | at last he cried,"-- What to me is this noisy ride? |
3650 | did we stop discouraged nodding on our way? |
3650 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
3650 | have they lock''d and bolted doors? |
3650 | have you your sharp- edged axes? |
3650 | how could I forget Its causes were around me yet? |
3650 | said Keezar:"Am I here or am I there? |
3650 | these gray stones-- are they all-- All of the famed, and the colossal left By the corrosive Hours to Fate and me? |
3650 | what dost here? |
3650 | why should we?" |
3650 | why that sound of woe? |
6603 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
6603 | And the said John Solas is bound to the said Thomas Profyt in 100 pounds by a bond to make defence of the said lands and tenements by the bribery(?) |
6603 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
6603 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
6603 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
6603 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
6603 | What am I? |
6603 | What am I? |
6603 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
10695 | Ah, William,I asked, with a moment''s sorrowful doubt,"are you sure of that? |
10695 | And do you not so receive them? |
10695 | And in what sense,he asked,"do such words apply to me?" |
10695 | And what am I to do while you are thus winning gold and glory? |
10695 | And what should he want to see you alone for? |
10695 | And you have never seen the new theatre, nor the Music Hall? |
10695 | And you would like to see him well married, would you not? |
10695 | And you would n''t go to church, if it were more than a stone''s throw away? |
10695 | And your idea of revenge is-- what? 10695 And your uncle''s family,"he inquired,--"shall we explain all to them?" |
10695 | Are there signs of a panic? |
10695 | But what is it_ for_? |
10695 | But, mother, does not God use the love we have to each other as a means of doing us good? 10695 Can you not forgive me, William? |
10695 | Charles, you will go to Nahant for a week,--won''t you? |
10695 | Child, what_ have_ you been doing? |
10695 | Child,--what do you mean? |
10695 | Could n''t he read any Bible but yours? |
10695 | Did I? 10695 Do you remember how you artfully persuaded me into this intimacy? |
10695 | Do you think Lydia is_ beautiful_? |
10695 | Do you think so? |
10695 | Do you think the Deacon will be along soon? |
10695 | Fastidious man, what next? 10695 Ferocious hunter, who supposed there were so many wiles in your simple heart?" |
10695 | Firstly,--if underived virtue be peculiar to the Deity, can it be the duty of a creature to have it? |
10695 | Here?--when? 10695 How about politics?" |
10695 | How are you, Sandford? 10695 How could you so care for me, and waste on one so unworthy of you such love? |
10695 | How deep shall I go in? |
10695 | How do you come on with the picture? |
10695 | How has he invested it? 10695 How long since you have been down Washington Street?" |
10695 | How long since you were in a carriage? |
10695 | How many shares do you own, Sandford? |
10695 | How_ dare_ you say such a thing? |
10695 | I hope your rustic_ fiancée_ is not clairvoyant? |
10695 | I''m very happy, Walter, and it''s a very pleasant spot; why should I wish to go? |
10695 | If Cousin Augustus should be worse,--should die, what will become of the poor motherless child? |
10695 | If you please, Sir,said Mary, standing in his way,"would you not like to put on your coat and wig?" |
10695 | Insatiate trifler, could not one suffice? |
10695 | Is that all? 10695 Is that all? |
10695 | Is that indeed so? |
10695 | Is this a nice little scheme of yours to run them off at par? 10695 Juanita,"he said, in a tone so soft, so thrillingly musical, that I shall never forget it,"what has come between us? |
10695 | Me? 10695 Nor any of the new warehouses?" |
10695 | Now I must return to the house,I said, rising;"will you not come with me? |
10695 | Oh, John,she exclaimed,"what is this awful secret? |
10695 | Oh, Juanita,he cried, passionately,"will you always be so vindictive? |
10695 | Oh, William, can you imagine that such words apply to me? 10695 Oh, you are n''t? |
10695 | The Doctor has told you? |
10695 | The business in hand? 10695 They say so, do they?" |
10695 | This will not make any coldness between us, I hope? |
10695 | We will be friends still, dear Juanita? |
10695 | Well, what do you propose doing? |
10695 | Well, what is it? |
10695 | Well, what is to become of a lady like this,--a creature you think too bright, if not too good, for human nature''s daily food? |
10695 | What are you doing there, Mary? |
10695 | What do you think of the beauty, now? |
10695 | What has a woman,I thought,"to do with solid learning? |
10695 | What has frightened you? 10695 What have you got, John?" |
10695 | What have you there, Juanita? 10695 What is it you are reading?" |
10695 | What is it, John? 10695 What say you to this, Juanita? |
10695 | What''s this? 10695 When the English fellows ask,''What for?'' |
10695 | Who the deuse was he? |
10695 | William,I asked, laying my hand on his arm, and speaking in a tender, reproachful tone,"why do you treat me so?" |
10695 | Yes,--and what is this world which I so soon must enter? 10695 You are not afraid of her?" |
10695 | You do, eh? 10695 You have told him?" |
10695 | You''ll have no trouble in meeting the larger note due, Bullion, on which I am indorser? |
10695 | Young man,said Bullion, pointing his wisp of an eyebrow at him,"do you want a job? |
10695 | Your father often spoke of Cousin Augustus and his lovely wife; I wonder if the daughter has her mother''s beauty? |
10695 | Your love is dead, then, I suppose? |
10695 | ''If folks know they ought to come up to anything, why_ do n''t_ they?'' |
10695 | ----Bonfire?--shrieked the little man.--The bonfire when Robert Calef''s book was burned? |
10695 | ----You do n''t know what I mean, indignant and not unintelligent country- practitioner? |
10695 | ----You do n''t know what plague has fallen on the practitioners of theology? |
10695 | Alumin.(?) |
10695 | And says he to me, says he,''That''s jest the way we sarves the Lord, Polly; and what if He should n''t hear us when we call on Him in our troubles?'' |
10695 | And was I to be defrauded thus of my just revenge? |
10695 | And what did the son of Lysimachus make by being recalled from banishment? |
10695 | Anything doing? |
10695 | Are loaves and fishes intrinsically wicked? |
10695 | Are they nothing more? |
10695 | Are we to keep any terms with the thin- visaged jade, Poverty, after she has broken down a great soul like John Dryden''s? |
10695 | Are you certain that it is not fame you look forward so eagerly to possess, instead of me?" |
10695 | Are you no longer my friend?" |
10695 | Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal? |
10695 | But Joseph, the pet and pride of the household,--what becomes of him? |
10695 | But how do you know that Virgil was just? |
10695 | But now where is the sea''s secret? |
10695 | But what hast thou done with my glove?" |
10695 | But what is it that draws from the remote inland the predestinate children of the deep? |
10695 | But what is the real truth of the case? |
10695 | But who shall tune the pitch- pipe? |
10695 | But why should that destroy our happiness?" |
10695 | Ca n''t Arminians have anything right about them? |
10695 | Can I help you?" |
10695 | Can you breakfast upon the simple fact that riches have wings and use them? |
10695 | Can you lunch upon_ vanitas vanitatum_? |
10695 | Can you trust yourself to stop this side of insensibility, when you take ether? |
10695 | Could that brilliant face, with its bands of shining hair, that smile of easy self- confidence, belong to me? |
10695 | Cuprum,(?) |
10695 | Did I not?--and was it not generous of him to remind me then? |
10695 | Did ever any fond fool so dote upon her Ideal as I on mine? |
10695 | Did he love me all this time? |
10695 | Did you not say that it was by your love to father that you first were led to think seriously?" |
10695 | Do n''t you know that it has been an expensive work to persuade the Khonds of Goomsoor to give up roasting each other in the name of Heaven? |
10695 | Do n''t you remember all your eloquent picturings of the life we should be obliged to lead? |
10695 | Do you know what his name is? |
10695 | Do you not suppose that very responsible folk were pilloried in the"Dunciad"? |
10695 | Do you think Milton would have written less sublimely, if he had been more prosperous? |
10695 | Do you think Otway choking, or Hudibras Butler dying by inches of slow starvation, pleasant to look upon? |
10695 | Do you think it has cost nothing to demonstrate to the widows of Scindiah the folly of_ suttee_? |
10695 | For what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
10695 | Give up my revenge at the very moment that it was within my grasp,--the revenge I had lived for through so many years? |
10695 | Has he anything to do with Foggarty, Danforth, and Dot?" |
10695 | Has he hopes of advancement? |
10695 | Has he knowledge of a seaman''s duty? |
10695 | Has she more hairs on one eyebrow than the other? |
10695 | Have you been crying? |
10695 | Have you got the securities?" |
10695 | He did not guess my meaning; how should he, amused, flattered, kept along as he had been? |
10695 | He himself says, in one of his sonnets,--"Why is my verse so barren of new pride, So far from alteration and quick change? |
10695 | How do you know anything about me, or what I am going to do? |
10695 | How is the Doctor? |
10695 | How many of those who laugh at Dennis and Shadwell know anything of either? |
10695 | How much would it have helped poor Belisarius, in his sore estate, if he had kept a record of his household expenses, as my friend Minimus does? |
10695 | How should you like to have a grinding economy continually pressing upon you, in every arrangement of your household, every detail of your daily life? |
10695 | How to begin? |
10695 | How was it to be done? |
10695 | I found there were other things to be enjoyed than dreams of you, and even-- shall I confess it? |
10695 | I longed for a fuller draught; but might it not be denied to my fevered lips? |
10695 | I said, pretending to repress a smile,"are you getting alarmed about yourself, William? |
10695 | I said,''Juanita, are you no longer my friend?'' |
10695 | I say,''Do n''t he_ prove_ it? |
10695 | I was unhappy, harassed, distracted between"----"Between what?" |
10695 | If Walter built air- castles, was he to blame? |
10695 | Is it a waste? |
10695 | Is it as a brother I have loved you all these long and weary years?" |
10695 | Is it because the subject with which his pen is busied is too unimportant to call forth any emotion in the writer? |
10695 | Is it over- fanciful to think that in the master Prospero we have the type of Imagination? |
10695 | Is it possible that we throw all this away, year after year, in idle stimulation or sedation? |
10695 | Is n''t that high enough? |
10695 | Is that true to your experience?" |
10695 | Is the list full? |
10695 | It is an honorable term,--I replied.--But why Little_ Boston_, in a place where most are Bostonians? |
10695 | It is,--said I.--But would you have the kindness to tell me if you know anything about this deformed person? |
10695 | It was false, but what did I care? |
10695 | Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations? |
10695 | May not one discover in this old cosmogonic myth a dim hint of the nebular hypothesis of creation, as it is called? |
10695 | More is done for the sailor now by fifty times than was done fifty years ago; yet who will compare the crews of 1858 with those of 1808? |
10695 | New England has been called the land of equality; but what land upon earth is wholly so? |
10695 | Now why does the world laugh? |
10695 | Of what use were landscape- painting, if it did not teach us how to look for beauty in the real landscape? |
10695 | Oh, was not this a revenge worthy of the name? |
10695 | Oh, why did I not believe more before it was too late?" |
10695 | Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the_ acarus_ bred in Crosse''s flint- solution? |
10695 | Or did you see a freckle of the size of a fly''s foot?" |
10695 | Or is Saul really going to be found among the prophets, after all?" |
10695 | Or is he a_ mythus_,--ancient word for"humbug,"-- Such as Livy told about the wolf that wetnursed Romulus and Remus? |
10695 | Pray, how do you know that they were? |
10695 | Professor,--said he, one day,--don''t you think your brain will run dry before a year''s out, if you do n''t get the pump to help the cow? |
10695 | Shall there be no more dew on those leaves thereafter? |
10695 | Shall we not be friends again?" |
10695 | She looked along the old, familiar, beaten path by which he came, by which he went, and thought,"What if he never should come back?" |
10695 | Should he confide in Danforth? |
10695 | Show such a weak, such a_ womanish_ spirit? |
10695 | Some soft, pulpy thing that thrives all the better for abuse? |
10695 | Sulphur, Mang.(?) |
10695 | That do? |
10695 | The cars? |
10695 | The genius of the poet will tell him what word to use( else what use in his being poet at all? |
10695 | The question is, Can we let them go?--can they be dispensed with among the elements of national greatness? |
10695 | The youthful poet may exclaim with Schiller,--"Art thou, fair world, no more? |
10695 | There''s no harm in that, is there? |
10695 | They were stupid and malevolent, were they? |
10695 | This is all I know of Baston; but is not this enough to melt the toughest heart? |
10695 | To stab him with your own white hand?" |
10695 | To what use was it that she was rich and owned servants, when this Mordecai in her gate utterly despised her prosperity? |
10695 | Very fine is Epictetus,--but wilt he be your bail? |
10695 | Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty? |
10695 | Was my influence gone? |
10695 | Was this proud, worldly- minded man going to humble himself, and repent, and be forgiven? |
10695 | Weene you( blind hodipecks) the Greekish nauie returned, Or that their presents want craft? |
10695 | What did this mean? |
10695 | What do you care for O''m? |
10695 | What does the world know of either? |
10695 | What faults or defects have you seen?" |
10695 | What hope was there, then, for this timid, crouching man, as long as the hand of his haughty master was outstretched in command? |
10695 | What if he should perish there, and we should never meet again? |
10695 | What if one shall go round and dry up with soft napkins all the dew that falls of a June evening on the leaves of his garden? |
10695 | What is saved by limiting perspiration? |
10695 | What must he have been when it would not have been safe for him to leave his wife alone with the best and highest of his gods? |
10695 | What should we do together? |
10695 | What wonder that Thor was brought to his knees? |
10695 | What wonder, then, at the presence of sodden boar''s flesh in his ancient Elysium, and of a celestial goat whose teats yielded a strong beverage? |
10695 | What''s the matter?" |
10695 | What''s the use in being a bull in times like these, to be skinned and sold for your hide and tallow?" |
10695 | What''s this?" |
10695 | What, had become of the pale, spiritless girl? |
10695 | Where are the old dangers of the sea? |
10695 | Where was William? |
10695 | Who knows that the Mills wo n''t tumble, too, and Bullion after them? |
10695 | Who would n''t rather go with the Arminians when they are_ right_, than with the Calvinists when they are wrong?" |
10695 | Why ask for any other?" |
10695 | Why do you have anything to do with anybody that treats you so? |
10695 | Why has this silly world still persisted in putting long ears upon Midas? |
10695 | Why is it that ships, dismasted, indeed, but light and staunch, are so often found rolling abandoned on the seas? |
10695 | Why is it, but from a difference in blood and soul, that the sea gets its own so surely? |
10695 | Why must he be born with webbed toes, and run at once to the wash- tub, there to make nautical experiments with walnut- shells? |
10695 | Why must the shore make such diabolical haste and try such fiendish ingenuity to undo them? |
10695 | Why should I care? |
10695 | Why write I still all one, ever the same, And keep invention in a noted weed That every word doth almost tell my name?" |
10695 | Why, with the time, do I not glance aside To new- found methods and to compounds strange? |
10695 | Will Diogenes bring home legs of mutton? |
10695 | Will you forever remind me of that piece of insane folly? |
10695 | Will you go in and see them? |
10695 | Will you not pardon me? |
10695 | Wo n''t you go, too?" |
10695 | Would I not pardon his former ingratitude, and return his love? |
10695 | Would he be wise to try and imitate it? |
10695 | Would not you and Mr. Easelmann like some company? |
10695 | Yes or no?" |
10695 | You never heard of Mr. Horden, of Charles Knipe, of Thomas Lupon, of Edward Revet? |
10695 | You remember?" |
10695 | You smile,--I said.--Perhaps life seems to you a little bundle of great things? |
10695 | You will see to this? |
10695 | _ Had_ she done anything wrong? |
10695 | a spaniel that loves you more, the more you beat it? |
10695 | a worm that grows and grows in new rings as often as you cut it asunder? |
10695 | and how are you going to answer him?'' |
10695 | and how? |
10695 | and must the men of the sea pass away forever? |
10695 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
10695 | and what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
10695 | could it be possible that he loved me at last? |
10695 | did he think of me? |
10695 | has Valhalla no niche more for them? |
10695 | in Ariel, of the wonder- working and winged Fantasy? |
10695 | in Caliban, of the half- animal but serviceable Understanding, tormented by Fancy and the unwilling slave of Imagination? |
10695 | is subtil Vlissis So soone forgotten? |
10695 | now?" |
10695 | or be sure you wo n''t get drunk, if you commence the evening with a party of dissipated fellows?" |
10695 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?''" |
10695 | put him out of the world at once? |
10695 | said Mrs. Scudder, with a sort of groan,--"has it gone with you so far as this? |
10695 | what was he doing? |
10695 | why could he not go"peeping"at the heels of the maternal parent with his brother and sister biddies? |
41368 | But why should n''t I let her know it, if I_ am_ mortified? |
41368 | Am I a funny old man? |
41368 | And dost thou remember what is to happen within those ten days? |
41368 | And how art thou, belovedest? |
41368 | And how does our belovedest little Una? |
41368 | And how is that cough of thine, my belovedest? |
41368 | And if thou art sick, why did she come at all? |
41368 | And is not thy husband perfectly safe? |
41368 | And what adequate motive can there be for exposing thyself to all this misconception? |
41368 | And what delusion can be more lamentable and mischievous, than to mistake the physical and material for the spiritual? |
41368 | And will it be necessary to wait so long? |
41368 | Art thou ill at ease in any mode whatever? |
41368 | Art thou likewise well? |
41368 | Art thou magnificent? |
41368 | Art thou magnificently well? |
41368 | Art thou quite well now? |
41368 | Art thou quite well? |
41368 | Art thou sure that He made thee for me? |
41368 | Art thou well to- day very dearest? |
41368 | Belovedest, didst thou sleep well, last night? |
41368 | Belovedest, when dost thou mean to come home? |
41368 | But how are we to get home? |
41368 | But how is he to accomplish it? |
41368 | Can it be that little redheaded personage? |
41368 | Can this be so? |
41368 | Canst thou devote so much of thy precious day to my unworthiness? |
41368 | Canst thou not use warm water? |
41368 | Canst thou paint the tolling of the old South bell? |
41368 | Canst thou say as much? |
41368 | Canst thou tell me whether the"Miss Peabody"here mentioned, is Miss Mary or Miss Elizabeth Peabody? |
41368 | Couldst thou send me ten dollars?) |
41368 | Dear little wife, didst thou ever behold such an awful scribble as thy husband writes, since he became a farmer? |
41368 | Dearest, I do not express myself clearly on this matter; but what need?--wilt not thou know better what I mean than words could tell thee? |
41368 | Dearest, dost thou know that there are but ten days more in this blessed month of June? |
41368 | Dearest, is thy absence so nearly over that we can now see light glimmering at the end of it? |
41368 | Did Julian have a tooth?--or what was the matter? |
41368 | Did Una remember me, when she waked up?--and has little Bundlebreech wanted me?--and dost thou thyself think of me with moderate kindness? |
41368 | Did we not entirely agree in thinking"John"an undue and undesirable familiarity? |
41368 | Did you pay a bill( of between one or two pounds) of Frisbie, Dyke& Co.? |
41368 | Didst thou ever read any of her books? |
41368 | Didst thou weary thy poor little self to death, yesterday? |
41368 | Do not people offer to take thee to ride? |
41368 | Does Bundlebreech walk yet? |
41368 | Does Rosebud still remember me? |
41368 | Does thy heart thrill at the thought? |
41368 | Dost thou even think of me? |
41368 | Dost thou ever feel, at one and the same moment, the impossibility of doing without me, and also the impossibility of having me? |
41368 | Dost thou know that we are going to have a war? |
41368 | Dost thou like this prospect? |
41368 | Dost thou love me after all? |
41368 | Dost thou love me at all? |
41368 | Dost thou love me at all? |
41368 | Dost thou love me at all? |
41368 | Dost thou love me? |
41368 | Dost thou love me? |
41368 | Dost thou love me? |
41368 | Dost thou love me? |
41368 | Dost thou not believe me? |
41368 | Dost thou not think it really the most hateful place in all the world? |
41368 | Dost thou perceive how love widens my heart? |
41368 | Dost thou rejoice that thou hast saved me from such a fate? |
41368 | Dost thou remember that, the day after tomorrow, thou art to meet thy husband? |
41368 | Dost thou think it a praiseworthy matter, that I have spent five golden months in providing food for cows and horses? |
41368 | Hast thou made it of such immortal stuff as the robes of Bunyan''s Pilgrim were made of? |
41368 | Hast thou thought of me, in my perils and wanderings? |
41368 | How canst thou hope for any warmth of conception and execution, when thou art working with material as cold as ice? |
41368 | How couldst thou be so imprudent? |
41368 | How dost thou do? |
41368 | How is it possible to wait so long? |
41368 | How much must I reserve to pay Rebecca''s wages? |
41368 | How would I have borne it, if thy visit to Ida Russel were to commence before my return to thine arms? |
41368 | If he insists upon living by highway robbery, dost thou not think it would be well to make him share his booty with us? |
41368 | Is it half over? |
41368 | Is not this consummate discretion? |
41368 | Naughtiest wife, hast thou been unwell for two months? |
41368 | Now dost thou not blush to have formed so much lower an opinion of my business talents, than is entertained by other discerning people? |
41368 | Now that the days are so long, would it not do to leave Boston, on our return, at ½ past 4? |
41368 | Ownest, would there be anything amiss in exchanging that copy of Southey''s Poems for some other book? |
41368 | Shall I know little Una, dost thou think? |
41368 | Shall the whole sky be the dome of her cathedral?--or must she compress the Deity into a narrow space, for the purpose of getting at him more readily? |
41368 | Should not she be of the party? |
41368 | Shouldst thou not walk out, every day, round the common, at least, if not further? |
41368 | Sweetest, what became of that letter? |
41368 | TO MRS. HAWTHORNE_ Concord_, June 6th, 1844 Mine ownest, ownest love, dost thou not want to hear from thy husband? |
41368 | TO MRS. HAWTHORNE_ Salem_, March 12th( Saturday), 1843 Own wifie, how dost thou do? |
41368 | Then why does my Dove put herself into a fever? |
41368 | Thou hast our home and all our interests about thee, and away from thee there is only emptiness-- so what have I to write about? |
41368 | Was it a pleasant season likewise to thee? |
41368 | What carest thou for any other? |
41368 | What is the matter?--anything except her mouth? |
41368 | What shall I do? |
41368 | What shall I do? |
41368 | What so miserable as to lose the soul''s true, though hidden, knowledge and consciousness of heaven, in the mist of an earth- born vision? |
41368 | What wilt thou do in a rain- storm? |
41368 | When am I to see thee again? |
41368 | Where art thou? |
41368 | Where dost thou think I was on Saturday afternoon? |
41368 | Whom do I mean by this brilliant simile? |
41368 | Whose fault was it, that it was left behind? |
41368 | Why art thou not magnificent? |
41368 | Why could not she have put the letter on my table, so that I might have been greeted by it immediately on entering my room? |
41368 | Why did I ever leave thee, my own dearest wife? |
41368 | Why did all the children have fever- fits? |
41368 | Why dost thou-- being one and the same person with thy husband-- unjustly keep those delicate little instruments( thy fingers, to wit) all to thyself? |
41368 | Why has not Dr. Wesselhoeft cured thy thumb? |
41368 | Why was Horace jumped in a wet sheet? |
41368 | Why was this world created? |
41368 | Will not this satisfy thee? |
41368 | Will thy father have the goodness to leave the letter for Colonel Hall at the Post Office? |
41368 | Wilt thou consent? |
41368 | Wilt thou not? |
41368 | Wilt thou represent them as just landing on the wharf?--or as presenting themselves before Governor Shirley, seated in the great chair? |
41368 | Wilt thou think it best to go back to Lisbon? |
41368 | Wouldst thou like to have her follow Aunt Lou and Miss Rodgers into that musty old Church of England? |
41368 | Wouldst thou not like to stay just one little fortnight longer in Boston, where the sidewalks afford dry passage to thy little feet? |
41368 | Yet what can be done? |
43205 | Now,he declares,"you are guilty anyhow; why not enjoy the benefits?" |
43205 | Where, Lord? |
43205 | Why did you go there? |
43205 | Why would any sane person do such a thing? |
43205 | 32- 33._"O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things?" |
43205 | All who think are confronted with an ever- recurring question-- yea, exclamations: why do such things happen? |
43205 | Are there any combinations and hidden laws of which he is unacquainted? |
43205 | Are we to conclude that man''s free agency is responsible for this moral monstrosity? |
43205 | As God''s method of saving the world is by the foolishness of preaching, what better agency of opposition could be launched than_ preaching_? |
43205 | But are we not so commanded concerning the Sabbath day? |
43205 | But what was the crime of Iago? |
43205 | But why this book? |
43205 | By what method does he gain access? |
43205 | Do we ever cease to be free agents? |
43205 | Does the loving, compassionate Father send these calamities? |
43205 | Does this not indicate a gradual leavening of the"whole lump"? |
43205 | Does this not look as if a diabolical schemer was manipulating the affair some way? |
43205 | Enough stories have been written of the James Boys, Wild Bill, Buffalo Bill, and other border heroes(? |
43205 | From what source could we expect such a vile deliverance? |
43205 | How can he do this? |
43205 | How can we reconcile this base passion in human character, as slander has no other avenue of expression? |
43205 | How do we know we are religious? |
43205 | How is it done? |
43205 | How was it done? |
43205 | If such is true on this plane of literature, what can be said of the publishing houses which produce nothing but books utterly vile and immoral? |
43205 | If the pulpit is immune, why Paul''s exhortation? |
43205 | If the victim is pious, and many, many are the most devout in the church, do they forfeit their salvation by the_ felo de se_? |
43205 | Is he not superior and supernatural, possessed with unearthly powers? |
43205 | Is it unreasonable? |
43205 | Is the Devil a Myth? |
43205 | Must we conclude that all these lapses, coming in direct conflict with human weal and happiness, are just"happen- sos"? |
43205 | Now the question arises: what about the freedom of the will? |
43205 | Now what are we reading? |
43205 | Now, can there be found a rationale for this dreadful twist in human affairs-- this seeming unfathomable conundrum? |
43205 | Reading between the lines, we can imagine a conversation like this:"You here? |
43205 | Shall we deny the oft told story that Luther threw his inkstand at them( demons) when they actually appeared unto him in person? |
43205 | Then what may be said of self- murder: suicide? |
43205 | Then wherein is the"victory that overcometh the world"? |
43205 | There was not a hitch in the scheme; the new friend(?) |
43205 | These become easy victims to the charms(?) |
43205 | Think of the insane, unreasonable, illogical risk in all manner of sin-- for what? |
43205 | This world is full of beauty; and why should we not forever keep the ugly and distorted in the background? |
43205 | We might ask with just as much reason:"Why does n''t God kill the Devil?" |
43205 | What are evil days? |
43205 | What are they? |
43205 | What can check the materialistic trend of the times? |
43205 | What can save the Church from reflex influences of modern materialism? |
43205 | What connection do we find between Devil worship and modern Spiritualism? |
43205 | What do you think of My servant Job? |
43205 | What does it mean? |
43205 | What does this mean? |
43205 | What had happened? |
43205 | What have you to say about him?" |
43205 | What is the essence of this new righteousness? |
43205 | What is the result? |
43205 | What is the situation? |
43205 | What meaneth these barbarities, ravages, cruelties? |
43205 | What then may we conclude from the most mysterious tragedy on earth? |
43205 | What was the condition named? |
43205 | What will be done with his millions of cohorts? |
43205 | What will be the inevitable fate of you and me, dear reader, whenever he selects us as his victims? |
43205 | Whence came they? |
43205 | Whence comes all this audacious, undermining insult to the whole sweep of God''s plan for saving the world? |
43205 | Whence comes all this preaching about righteousness which places the crown on man, and robs the Cross of its glory? |
43205 | Where is the Holy Ghost all this time? |
43205 | Where is the author, the editor-- even religious editors-- who stand four- square for the Bible of our fathers and mothers? |
43205 | Where, then, is the motive and victory of Satan? |
43205 | Who but a chronic faultfinder could object to this upward move, so obvious now in all directions? |
43205 | Who can be equal for such a mighty Prince? |
43205 | Who has not met these insidious pulls on the conscience? |
43205 | Who is equal to such an enemy? |
43205 | Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus Christ is the Son of God?" |
43205 | Who knows but that the drama enacted in the land of Uz has been repeated many, many times since Job sat on his ash pile? |
43205 | Who would say that Judas was excluded from the Saviour''s dying prayer:"Father forgive them"? |
43205 | Why and how are sane men and women overcome? |
43205 | Why are the fighters failing and falling all around us? |
43205 | Why could not our Civil War have been averted? |
43205 | Why did God reject the one and accept the other? |
43205 | Why did Judas sell his Lord?--He who had been so highly honoured: chosen, ordained, sent out? |
43205 | Why did the Prodigal Son do such an insane, sinful act? |
43205 | Why do men and women hurl themselves over the precipice of vice and deadly indulgences-- when even a novice might easily see the inevitable? |
43205 | Why does God allow or permit his ravages? |
43205 | Why does He keep back such privileges from you?" |
43205 | Why does He not protect His identity? |
43205 | Why have ten thousand prodigals since that day been guilty of the same insane conduct? |
43205 | Why is it so? |
43205 | Why is it the unchurched masses are continually drifting farther and farther from the Church and what it stands for? |
43205 | Why is not the wrath of God poured out on the children of the Devil who have assumed place and power in His Church? |
43205 | Why is there such an incessant effort to divert the minds of the best people from personal relationship of Jesus through faith in His blood? |
43205 | Why is this the status of our book makers? |
43205 | Why is true righteousness at such a discount? |
43205 | Why so much domestic discord, ending in ruin-- so many suicides? |
43205 | Why? |
43205 | Would it not be a terrible indictment? |
43205 | XII THE DOUBLE ACCUSER"Hast not thou made an hedge about him, and about his house, and about all that he hath on every side? |
43205 | XIII SATAN A SPY"And the Lord said unto Satan, Whence comest thou? |
43205 | or,"Why did you do it?" |
43205 | what does it do? |
52072 | ''Brothers, observe well!--What is it we have asked of you? 52072 And all these have come on a friendly visit, too?" |
52072 | Are you thus engaged,inquired the chief,"while all your neighbors are murdered around you?" |
52072 | Do yon know,inquired the younger Wheelock,"what a gentleman is?" |
52072 | ''Is this your minister?'' |
52072 | ( Here turning to Colonel Butler, he said,"That, I think, was the expression they made use of, was it not?" |
52072 | Are you willing to go with them, and suffer them to make horses and oxen of you, to put you to the wheelbarrows, and to bring us all into slavery?" |
52072 | Captain Brant?" |
52072 | Did not they tell you, when they invited you, the road of friendship was clear, and every obstacle removed that was in before? |
52072 | Do you not know me?" |
52072 | Do you think your minister minds your souls? |
52072 | Else why have they not left our Indian brethren in peace, as they first promised and we wished to have done? |
52072 | Having been defeated, as he had anticipated, he demanded of the council,"_ What shall we do now? |
52072 | His salutation was--"So, it is you, is it?" |
52072 | If they burn our houses and ravage our lands, could yours be secure? |
52072 | If they would not spare their own brothers of the same flesh and blood, would they spare you? |
52072 | Is this a clear road of peace and friendship? |
52072 | Is this your minister? |
52072 | That poor General said to the surgeon,"tell me the truth; is there no hope?" |
52072 | The lad gave him the proper direction, and inquired of the Indian whether he knew Mr. Foster? |
52072 | The quick- witted messenger inquired if all those men wished to talk to his chief too? |
52072 | To what quarter, then, are we to look for the magic by which we may make the dry bones live again? |
52072 | We have asked why they treat us thus? |
52072 | What are the people who belong to the other side of the great waters to either of us? |
52072 | What has become of our repeated addresses and supplications to them? |
52072 | What has become of the spirit, the wisdom, and the justice of your nations? |
52072 | What has been gained by this unprovoked treachery? |
52072 | White looked out from the second story window, and probably recognizing the leader of the crowd, inquired--"Is that you, Sammons?" |
52072 | Who hath shut the ears of the King to the cries of his children in America? |
52072 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
52072 | Why have you listened to the voice of our enemies? |
52072 | Why have you suffered Sir John Johnson and Butler to mislead you? |
52072 | Why have you suffered so many of your nations to join them in their cruel purpose? |
52072 | Would not you be obliged to wade all the way in the blood of the poor innocent men, women, and children who were murdered after being taken? |
52072 | Would you leave your wives and children in such a situation? |
52072 | he exclaimed--"Colonel Harper!--Why did I not know you yesterday?" |
52072 | says he;''do you think your minister minds your souls? |
52072 | will drop a tear to the memory of Lonan?" |
32105 | ''Are you ready?'' 32105 ''Pardon me once more, my dear young friend,''he said,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' |
32105 | ''Pardon me, gentlemen,''he again said, addressing himself to me in a louder tone,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' 32105 ''Pardon me, sare,''remarked the old gentleman at our table, addressing himself to me,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' |
32105 | ''Sare, what you mean? 32105 ''Sare? |
32105 | ''Taint likely the road agents has stopped her, is it? |
32105 | Ai n''t yer tired, Benner? |
32105 | And Lizzi was well then? |
32105 | And concerns me? |
32105 | And my Gertrude,asked Mr. Plowden, anxiously,"how was she enjoying herself?" |
32105 | And poor father,Lizzi continued,"away out in the cabin alone, his wife dead and his daughter disgraced-- how will I tell him that mother is dead?" |
32105 | And pray why do you take me for a Democrat? |
32105 | And what about my affair? |
32105 | And what became of little Anna? |
32105 | And what if he should,retorted Miss Fithian;"who would believe the word of a bigamist?" |
32105 | And you''ll keep my secret, boys? 32105 Are we going to bed?" |
32105 | Are you Mrs. Robert Plowden? |
32105 | Are you awake, boy? |
32105 | Are you sure she died? |
32105 | Are your eyes open in heaven, mother? 32105 But how are you and Hunch goin''to keep up with the big McAnays? |
32105 | But what will my wife say-- she who never suspected that I had a wife before her, much less a child? |
32105 | But, Marthy, how''s it to be managed? |
32105 | By the proper authorities? |
32105 | Ca n''t you help me, Lizzi? |
32105 | Ca- ant yer see I lo- ve you better nor Dick and all the rest o''the fellers put together? |
32105 | Can you prove it? |
32105 | Did I hurt your feelin''s when I asked ef you had noos from home? 32105 Did Mrs.''Oney stay?" |
32105 | Did they call him Gill here? |
32105 | Do n''t you see, Lizzi? 32105 Do you know, Jim, that Squire Parsons is going to be hard to beat?" |
32105 | Do you mean that my husband is a bigamist? |
32105 | Do you, dear? 32105 Five years? |
32105 | Has he been here long? |
32105 | Have any of our guests disappointed us? |
32105 | Have any of you decided upon a course of action? |
32105 | Have you any money? |
32105 | Have you that letter? |
32105 | He did n''t? 32105 He is n''t wuss, is he?" |
32105 | His mother- in- law? 32105 How can you help find him?" |
32105 | How do you know that she is dead? |
32105 | How long ago was that? |
32105 | How should I know? |
32105 | How? |
32105 | How? |
32105 | I say, Joe, what ails you? |
32105 | I say, Parkenson, wot''s''appened to''er? |
32105 | I think so, too,Gill remarked, and then asked, as if the idea had just struck him:"Why not be married by the Squire?" |
32105 | I''m not much of a story- teller, boys,said Dan;"can anybody suggest a subject?" |
32105 | Is he employed here? |
32105 | Is it anything serious? |
32105 | Is there any person here present who knows any good reason why these two parties shall not be united in marriage? 32105 Jist find it out?" |
32105 | John, did you know it? |
32105 | John, would you marry me and give up the money-- marry me before people and send your mother word? |
32105 | Keep a secret? 32105 Kind of small potatoes beside of Levi''s pile,"Cassi replied;"but if Levi will write us an order, we''ll sign it, hey, Matthi?" |
32105 | Lizzi, what has happened to my fiddle? |
32105 | Lizzi,said Gill,"will you be my wife?" |
32105 | Nor mine either, I suppose you think? |
32105 | Parson,Hunch said, meeting the reverend gentleman at the church door,"what der yer think crazy Bill Kellar''s got inter his head now?" |
32105 | Pray why did you take me for a minister? |
32105 | Robbed me? |
32105 | Say, Benner, what''d yer call me a liar fer? |
32105 | Say, Benner, when did you leave the Sisters? |
32105 | Say, Bill,inquired the dwarf,"what''er yellin''at, the sky?" |
32105 | She talks mighty pretty, do n''t she, Hunch? |
32105 | Squire, can you keep a secret? |
32105 | Surely yer would n''t go back East to set the folks there to makin''fun of us, would yer, arter what they said agin our comin''so far away? |
32105 | That''s strange, is n''t it? |
32105 | That''s why you left Three- Sisters and joined the circus? |
32105 | The father of the wife he had here? |
32105 | The girl? |
32105 | Then who wrote this? |
32105 | Then why do n''t yer take a holt and do somethin''for Joe? |
32105 | Think so? |
32105 | Up? 32105 Well, ef Joe''s a woman, who is she, anyhow?" |
32105 | Well, yer would n''t think I''d objec'', would yer? |
32105 | Well? |
32105 | What am I for if you ca n''t tell me your troubles? |
32105 | What are you doing? |
32105 | What did he want to do that for? |
32105 | What did you tell your mother? |
32105 | What do you all think? |
32105 | What do you say to a quiet game of''draw''? |
32105 | What does it all mean? |
32105 | What fer? |
32105 | What if it had been some other man going through the grove? |
32105 | What then_ shall_ we do to preserve our dignity and get them back? |
32105 | What''ll it be? |
32105 | What''s the matter? |
32105 | What''s this? |
32105 | What, Lizzi, not scared by the dark? |
32105 | Where are you all going? |
32105 | Where is he? |
32105 | Where yer from? |
32105 | Where''s the woman who brought that card, Sam? |
32105 | Who are you? |
32105 | Who cares if you do? |
32105 | Who is it? 32105 Who is she?" |
32105 | Who is that youth? |
32105 | Who spoke of East or West or any other p''ints of the cumpis, I should like to know? |
32105 | Who told yer''bout thet? |
32105 | Why are you running so? |
32105 | Why are_ you_''ere, mother? |
32105 | Why did yer want ter burn the books? |
32105 | Why did you not tell her the truth before marriage? |
32105 | Why do n''t yer set a trap fer it? |
32105 | Why do n''t_ you_ make a clean breast of it at once? 32105 Why have you got such a long face, John? |
32105 | Will the doctor never come? |
32105 | Will you baptize my boy? |
32105 | Wot''s up? 32105 Would n''t you do it for Dick?" |
32105 | Would you like me to wear that dress? |
32105 | Yes? |
32105 | Yes? |
32105 | You have n''t got a mother, have you? |
32105 | You''re a doctor, ai n''t yer? |
32105 | ''A slight misunderstanding,''eh? |
32105 | ''What can we do?'' |
32105 | ''ow could you? |
32105 | After the dancers were seated when this quadrille was finished, Bill took Hunch aside and asked:"Hunch, are you afraid of the devil?" |
32105 | Ai n''t you glad to see me?" |
32105 | Although so long settled in Virginia, you are an Englishman?" |
32105 | An insult?'' |
32105 | And what the words my weary brain Discovers in your vague refrain? |
32105 | And yet, where are we? |
32105 | And, Hunch Blair, how dare you?" |
32105 | At last Blind Benner said:"Hunch, do yer mind the time Lizzi told me what she looked like?" |
32105 | Because I loved you? |
32105 | But are we going to stay here all Christmas, while they are having a good time by themselves?" |
32105 | But did n''t you hear anything of Gill?" |
32105 | But how came you to know all this?" |
32105 | But what is my position? |
32105 | But who comes now? |
32105 | Could it be after all that she was dishonest? |
32105 | Could it be that her mother had read her aright? |
32105 | Could it be that she had cruelly encouraged his faith in her, knowing the certainty of his discovery of the truth at last? |
32105 | Could you take me in?" |
32105 | Darting into the dining- room, she surprised Sam( was the artful Sam surprised?) |
32105 | Did any one of my readers ever read that neither the eagle nor the lion would eat anything they had not themselves slain? |
32105 | Did not William say he left me forever?" |
32105 | Did you observe how sweetly she bore the horrible revelation? |
32105 | Did you think I could n''t guess who left the cake there yesterday?" |
32105 | Do yer mind thet, Benner-- hot and scorchin'', not soft an''warm? |
32105 | Do you know what I thought? |
32105 | Does sorrow never lead to peace? |
32105 | E. S._ THE BELLS OF CHRISTMAS._ O bells that madly toll to- night, What is the meaning of your note? |
32105 | F. H._, 641 DOCTOR MERIVALE: A Story,_ Charles P. Shermon_, 811 DOES THE HIGH TARIFF AFFECT OUR EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM? |
32105 | For the pudding? |
32105 | Guess it was all a lie, eh?" |
32105 | Had you, ducky?" |
32105 | Has he a wife?" |
32105 | Have you made it all right with her?" |
32105 | He dodged, and said:"Ca n''t yer keep quiet? |
32105 | Here he caught Levi''s arm and asked in a whisper:"Did yer hear anything of him?" |
32105 | How can I ever repay you, Mr. Plowden, for your noble frankness?" |
32105 | How did I know? |
32105 | How then is it possible that a yearly excess of £ 70,000,000 could be paid in specie? |
32105 | However, he made an effort to prepare Bill for disappointment by asking:"Would n''t cotton in yer ears do as well as the hair in the box?" |
32105 | Hunch shouted familiarly:"Say, Bill, do n''t yer know yer old frien''s?" |
32105 | I ai n''t easy skeered, yer know, an''I set up ter git a better look, an''what do you think it wuz? |
32105 | I am dying even while I speak; but I shall die perfectly happy if you will tell me whether_ zat was your breakfast or your dinnaire_?''" |
32105 | I married you because-- what do you suppose, now? |
32105 | If Mr. Plowden left a legitimate wife in England, then what is my position? |
32105 | Into Nowhere? |
32105 | Is disappointment or delight The burden of each brazen throat? |
32105 | Is it surprising that after these manifold exertions his exhausted nature demands repose? |
32105 | Is n''t it just a little extraordinary to invite strangers?" |
32105 | Is there anything on earth that I can do for you or yours? |
32105 | Mrs. Rutherford sprang to her feet, instantly armed_ cap- à- pie_ with her never- failing jealousy:"What do you mean?" |
32105 | My dear sare, ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' |
32105 | No gentleman? |
32105 | Now, do you see?" |
32105 | Oh, how shall I ever forgive myself for wronging my own dear, innocent, faithful, self- sacrificing love by my cruel suspicions and hateful jealousy?" |
32105 | On his way home Bill muttered:"What infernal business had Old Nick at Lizzi''s party?" |
32105 | Pallid and quivering with wrath, she muttered half audibly:"So I''m''a mischief- making old cat,''am I? |
32105 | Perhaps not; but how much has this wonderful system done to arrest those evils? |
32105 | Plowden?" |
32105 | Rutherford?" |
32105 | She had a letter of introduction from Lydia Wildfen; and what do you think her business was?" |
32105 | She looked like a drooping lily, did n''t she, Wildfen?" |
32105 | So he opened a volume of legal forms and asked the question,"Are both parties of contracting age?" |
32105 | So you see, Plowden, that if you_ can_ stave off my wife''s suspicions until after Christmas, I will--""What?" |
32105 | So, you will keep my secret, my dear madam, will you not?" |
32105 | The silence was soon broken, however, by Wildfen saying to his wife:"A pretty row you''ve made all around, have n''t you?" |
32105 | Then the dreadful question presents itself, how is it to be cooked? |
32105 | Well, lads,"he continued, as he filled his pipe,"you want to know how I got the name of''Dead- Shot Dan''?" |
32105 | Well?" |
32105 | What am I?" |
32105 | What are you fighting about?" |
32105 | What can I say to your wife?" |
32105 | What do they mean?'' |
32105 | What have I done that you must select me for your soloist on the violin?" |
32105 | When I give you the nod, just take your cornet, sneak up on the roof and blow a hole through him, will you?" |
32105 | Where are you going with that basket of food?" |
32105 | Who is it?" |
32105 | Who''s that?" |
32105 | Why can not our gifted authors, such as Miss Mathews, for example, turn to these and give us a fiction worthy the name? |
32105 | Why do you ask me all these questions?" |
32105 | Why do you follow me?" |
32105 | Why is n''t it legal?" |
32105 | Wo n''t Lizzi be glad ter know it was Blind Benner what found him?" |
32105 | Would a country be richer for such a state of things? |
32105 | You are a surgeon; can you do anything for him?'' |
32105 | and I''m''deaf as a post and an adder,''am I? |
32105 | bad noos from the States?" |
32105 | do I? |
32105 | do yer take me fer a woman?" |
32105 | groaned Plowden,"could there have been any mistake about her death?" |
32105 | how could you, and in your mother''s name, too?" |
32105 | is he too a villain?" |
32105 | she demanded,"what does this mean?" |
32105 | what is that?" |
32105 | what''s the matter?" |
32105 | when will those discords cease? |
63254 | (?) |
63254 | Did not those people, under such circumstances, have the right individually to resist so flagrant an outrage upon their rights and liberties? |
63254 | Did not"those who rushed upon carnage to defy and defeat""a judgment thus rendered, a separation so backed,""place themselves clearly in the wrong?" |
63254 | Did that government have the right to invade the state it was bound to protect? |
63254 | Had the conduct of the Northern States been that of the members of"a firm league and friendship?" |
63254 | If African slavery was a crime, who was responsible for it? |
63254 | More perfect how? |
63254 | They have not done so, and what right had Mr. Greeley and his party to become their champions against their wishes? |
63254 | To the subversion of the liberties and sovereignty of the states? |
63254 | Treating it as national or individual sin, where does the guilt lie? |
63254 | Was it authorized to create that domestic violence? |
63254 | Was it the Prussian, the Austrian, the Dane, the Swede, or the Italian? |
63254 | Was it to be expected that American statesmen should be better, wiser and more philanthropic than English statesmen? |
63254 | Who had then a right to make this criticism? |
63254 | Who was to judge of whether there was a necessity for severing the connection, the oppressor or the oppressed? |
33494 | Cups that cheer but not inebriate? |
33494 | Education,exclaims Page 336 But is it worth while to consider a unversity without a library? |
33494 | If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing? |
33494 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it,''Why hast thou made me thus?'' |
33494 | ''But are we not man and man,''says_ B_,''and have not I the same right to spend my earnings in my own way as you have to spend yours in your way? |
33494 | ALTERNATIVES TO TAX SUPPORT 251 If Not a Tax- Supported Library-- What? |
33494 | After a day of hard work, what are the homes to which many of these young men return? |
33494 | Again I ask, What are we doing for these children, the future pride or dishonor of our communities? |
33494 | Am I wrong in using the word_ realities_?--wrong in insisting on the distinction between the real and the actual? |
33494 | And in the end-- what? |
33494 | And the first effect of that touch was what? |
33494 | And what kind of books were they? |
33494 | Are not the failures in our work due to the lack of the best organization and the true human touch? |
33494 | Book- readers, who are? |
33494 | But does this provision alone insure sufficient change to prevent stagnation? |
33494 | But have you ever rightly considered what the mere ability to read means? |
33494 | But how dare I thus speak about Zosimus? |
33494 | But is it in place in Quincy? |
33494 | But is it worth while to consider a university without a library? |
33494 | But is it worth while to consider a university without a library? |
33494 | But men-- why do they not use the library, say the critics, and what shall the library do to increase its use by men? |
33494 | But will it not then be"dictating"to its readers? |
33494 | But, in the second place, in that year 1731, who was Franklin who did all that, and who were the persons who helped to do it? |
33494 | By what agency can we most effectively elevate our national ideals? |
33494 | By what right does the state tax the man of wealth to put miscellaneous books into the hands of the man who pays no tax? |
33494 | Can men be induced to visit the library for general purposes, to use it in ways similar to those for which women come to it? |
33494 | Can the State afford to make other things free, and not make free true and useful knowledge as preserved in books? |
33494 | Can the State recognize the necessity for free schools, and fail to provide free access to the best reading in all realms of knowledge? |
33494 | Can there be such an institution? |
33494 | Censorship has to us an ugly sound; but does the library act as censor when it declares a book beyond its province? |
33494 | Censorship, do libraries exercise it? |
33494 | Did a single speaker at that Convention take the ground that"oftener than otherwise"the benefactors of public libraries were chilled and discouraged? |
33494 | Did it receive Americans? |
33494 | Did they not originate the librarian? |
33494 | Did you ever know a boy who could n''t find time to play? |
33494 | Do n''t you see that you are claiming more for yourself than you are allowing to me, and are supplementing your own liberty by robbing me of mine? |
33494 | Do not serious and earnest men discuss Hamlet as they would Cromwell or Lincoln? |
33494 | Do we believe, then, that God gave us in mockery this splendid faculty of sympathy with things that are a joy forever? |
33494 | Do we know as much of any authentic Danish prince as of Hamlet? |
33494 | Do you hunger and thirst to read Homer and Shakespeare, and Emerson and Arnold, and good histories and literature? |
33494 | Do you, when you are tired after a day''s work, take home a scientific work or a treatise on civics? |
33494 | Does any one say that this is a result impossible of attainment by any people? |
33494 | Does anybody in town own them? |
33494 | Does it dictate what the people shall read when it says,"We decline to buy this book for you with public funds"? |
33494 | Does our responsibility rest here? |
33494 | Emerson and Shakespeare and Wordsworth and Whitman-- do men love such as these and remain little men? |
33494 | Franklin not a book- man? |
33494 | From what other source except from the library movement with a greater development of its possibilities is help for those towns to come? |
33494 | Has he merely learned certain truths from books or are books open to him? |
33494 | Have we forgotten the evils that resulted from the application of this principle under the old poor law? |
33494 | Have you found it so? |
33494 | How are the people under this theory to be educated? |
33494 | How can the wage- earners and handicraftsmen be induced to visit the library and use its books for their practical advantage? |
33494 | How is each individual to be brought into contact with the particular book that he wants? |
33494 | How is it possible for me to know whether his history can, or can not, be discovered, either on the Pacific shore, or in the Mississippi valley? |
33494 | How is the public health to be maintained? |
33494 | How many can"browse about"in a library and enjoy doing so? |
33494 | How many women-- reading women, I mean-- can put away an unfinished book without a sense of guilt? |
33494 | How much more difficult must it be when the change affects the every- day life of every individual? |
33494 | How shall we elevate our national ideals? |
33494 | How shall we most speedily bring about this desired consummation? |
33494 | I do n''t compel you to pay for my church, my theatre, or my club; why should you compel me to pay for your library? |
33494 | IF NOT A TAX- SUPPORTED LIBRARY, WHAT? |
33494 | If Not a Tax- Supported Library, What? |
33494 | If a library needs weeding, as many undoubtedly do, will it be weeded out wisely? |
33494 | If it is an institution to help old women, or save poor children, or find situations for the idle, does it really do it? |
33494 | If it is in the school that they get their start, then where do they get their education? |
33494 | If not, can they be had from a library in a neighboring town? |
33494 | If one man may have his hobby paid for by his neighbours, why not all? |
33494 | If we allow knowledge to come only to a chosen few of each generation, how can we know that we have chosen the right ones to receive it? |
33494 | In fact, do not trustees incline, as a rule, to throw too much of the burden of library administration upon the librarian? |
33494 | In the first place, that device of Franklin''s, started in 1731--what does it really signify in our history? |
33494 | Is biography true? |
33494 | Is it Bancroft''s? |
33494 | Is it Hume''s, Turner''s, Lingard''s, or Froude''s? |
33494 | Is it accomplishing its work? |
33494 | Is it doing its utmost to promote the virtue, refinement, and intelligence of the community? |
33494 | Is it history? |
33494 | Is it making life any ampler, is it making men any manlier, is it making the world any better? |
33494 | Is it transforming the community into intellectual, thoughtful, better equipped, more roundly developed citizens? |
33494 | Is n''t it something that you have read in a book, a magazine, or a paper? |
33494 | Is science true? |
33494 | Is theology true? |
33494 | Is there anything which we can do to satisfy these natural desires and to enter more vitally into the lives of the people? |
33494 | Is this the way you promote the public good? |
33494 | Is this your boasted free library? |
33494 | Just where is the library going to stand in this matter? |
33494 | Let us first consider the general question: Can we reach the men? |
33494 | May I be excused if I commend to our millionaire newspaper proprietors the example of their colleague in the capital of Saxony? |
33494 | Moreover, the principle of exclusion accepted, who is to apply it? |
33494 | Must we, in view of such a significant meeting as this, add a fourth factor-- the library? |
33494 | Nobody now asks concerning Paradise Lost,"What does it prove?" |
33494 | Now what do these facts mean? |
33494 | Now, how can libraries in towns of the size of North Brookfield become bureaus of information? |
33494 | On the other hand, if there is to be exclusion on such grounds, where is the line of exclusion to be drawn? |
33494 | One has only to keep his eyes open to see how suggestive as to methods is this other question:"Of what service may the library be?" |
33494 | Or is it so taken up with the mechanism of the concern, so absorbed and happy over methods and details, that it loses sight of the object? |
33494 | Perfectly true; but are people to be taxed to give facilities for this? |
33494 | Shall it be seconded? |
33494 | Shall the library determine? |
33494 | Shall we say at doctrines which, if carried into action, would be criminal under the law? |
33494 | Shall we say that in literature and science there is nothing true but fiction and the pure mathematics? |
33494 | Somewhere there should be accessible( and where better than in that library?) |
33494 | Tell me from your own experience, was it from the school that you got most of your ideas? |
33494 | That it enables us to see with the keenest eyes, hear with the finest ears, and listen to the sweetest voices of all time? |
33494 | The answer to the question, How or what shall I read? |
33494 | The question is, Can anything be done to help the young who throng our public libraries to read well and wisely? |
33494 | The question then arose, What should these do with their surplus wealth? |
33494 | The question,"What does the public want?" |
33494 | The test question to ask is: Is it grinding out a product of enlightened and symmetrical men and women? |
33494 | The thunder of its power who shall know? |
33494 | The value of these libraries-- who can doubt? |
33494 | Then why do we have free libraries and free schools? |
33494 | There was also a book of Defoe''s, called an_ Essay on Projects_, and another of Dr. Mather''s, called an_ Essay to do Good_, which"--did what, sir? |
33494 | This is not so in painting, in sculpture, in architecture; why should it be so in prose fiction, in poetry, in the drama? |
33494 | To what end? |
33494 | To what highest and most profitable use can I put my reading? |
33494 | WHAT OF THE FUTURE? |
33494 | Was every publication that issued from the press to be procured? |
33494 | We have the key put into our hands; shall we unlock the pantry or the oratory? |
33494 | What agency, then, is there, that will prepare the democracy of the present and the future for its tremendous responsibilities? |
33494 | What are the facts? |
33494 | What are we doing for them as public libraries, as educators? |
33494 | What can a librarian do to make his library an inspirational force? |
33494 | What department of literature is true? |
33494 | What does it matter if half of the pleasures, and all of the ills of our patrons be poured into our ears? |
33494 | What inducement has he to spend his evenings at home? |
33494 | What is a Library? |
33494 | What is the cause? |
33494 | What is the contribution of the library to modern civilization? |
33494 | What is the library for? |
33494 | What makes me reflect? |
33494 | What makes you reflect? |
33494 | What more pathetic than the isolation of one who is slow to perceive and to grasp? |
33494 | What of the Future? |
33494 | What of the Future? |
33494 | What then is the Free Library less than the key stone in our Republican arch? |
33494 | What then is the specific function of this new and powerful institution in modern life? |
33494 | What, after all, is the supreme end of education? |
33494 | When any imaginable or unimaginable question may be asked at any moment, from"May I use your pencil?" |
33494 | Where, then, is the royal road to learning? |
33494 | Where, then, will he go? |
33494 | Which of the score of lives of Mary Queen of Scots is the true biography? |
33494 | Who are the public? |
33494 | Who is to build bridges and sewers and lay out public parks? |
33494 | Who shall know it in all its compass and sound, measure the confines thereof or prophesy its far final coming? |
33494 | Who shall sound its depths or scale its heights? |
33494 | Who was to select the books? |
33494 | Whose history of the United States, for instance, is the true history? |
33494 | Whose is the true body of divinity? |
33494 | Whose judgment shall determine whether the particular book does or does not offend? |
33494 | Why do not people read the best books? |
33494 | Why should I be compelled to spend as you spend? |
33494 | Why then should any one wish to perpetuate the conditions which make this possible? |
33494 | Why then should the public libraries struggle to supply it in book form at the public expense? |
33494 | Why this lamentation over one specific form of fiction? |
33494 | Why was it necessary to rewrite all the science in the eighth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, for the ninth edition? |
33494 | Why will not our Centenary Women''s Club buy our Free Library a Zosimus? |
33494 | Will it be contended that State officers can know better than parents what is really needed for children? |
33494 | Will it not be unduly discriminating against a certain class of opinion when it has undertaken to represent impartially all shades of opinion? |
33494 | With Lincoln then, and with many a frontier and backwoods boy now, the question was and is, How shall I get a book? |
33494 | With a greater number to- day, however, the more important question is, Which book shall I choose? |
33494 | Would the public rest content with this? |
33494 | Yet this is not done; and why? |
33494 | Yet, with all this, we have not attained the full system of education that we ought to attain, and every thoughtful person is now asking,"What next?" |
33494 | You say, How can this be done without loss of books? |
33494 | _ Second_--The result of my own study of the question, What is the best gift which can be given to a community? |
33494 | and of Queen Elizabeth is the true one? |
33494 | of the circulation of the free public libraries still consists of fiction? |
33494 | or do we imagine that when an evil changes its outward appearance it changes its inner essence also? |
33494 | or was there to be a censorship introduced? |
33494 | what was its curriculum? |
33494 | what was the cost of attending its sessions? |
6697 | What do you want in return for your goods? |
6697 | What does it mean? |
6697 | By this time others, too, were awake; windows flew open and heads were pushed out, and everybody asked,"What is it? |
6697 | If the Indians were in truth offended, would not the French now encourage them to take their revenge? |
6697 | In a moment more they would overtake him; what should he do? |
6697 | The firmness and determination with which he spoke struck the gentleman, who, desisting, exclaimed,''Who can you be? |
6697 | Was it done on purpose, or did a door or a window fly open and a gust of the night wind put them out? |
6697 | Were any of them busy that night with Connecticut''s charter? |
6697 | What is it?" |
6697 | When Waiandance died, in 1658, Gardiner wrote,"My friend and brother is gone, who will now do the like?" |
6697 | Why is this vision sent us?" |
45353 | ''And why not?'' 45353 ''How can the choice of subject be absolutely unrestricted?'' |
45353 | Dorothy Qdevotes thirty- two lines to the quaint fancy"What would I be if one of my eight great, great grandmothers had married another man?" |
45353 | Suppose,said the doctor,"I had n''t found her a good woman, should I have told her to hold her tongue?" |
45353 | Waldo, why are you not here? |
45353 | Well, did n''t they listen to you, that time? |
45353 | *****"And after that?" |
45353 | And so he wrote: What, then, is the American, this new man? |
45353 | And the first reaction to such teaching is to ask with shocked disapproval,"What would happen to the world if all men followed his advice?" |
45353 | And were not_ they_ knit together by a higher logic than our mere senses could master? |
45353 | And will you cloud the muse? |
45353 | And will you scorn them all, to pour forth tame And heartless lays of feigned or fancied sighs? |
45353 | Are passages in which it suddenly appears the result of forethought or merely the result of whim? |
45353 | Are there any points in common? |
45353 | Are you?" |
45353 | BALTIMORE SATURDAY VISITER, 1833----(?). |
45353 | Because one half of humankind Lives here in hell, shall not the other half Do any more than just for conscience''sake Be miserable? |
45353 | But suppose she had missed it from the Creed As a child misses the unsaid Good- night, And falls asleep with heartache-- how should I feel? |
45353 | But why should you keep your head over your shoulder? |
45353 | Can you cite political events and characters and novels or plays on political life which belong to this period? |
45353 | DEMOCRATIC REVIEW, THE UNITED STATES, 1837- 1859(?). |
45353 | Do either or both throw light on the chief characters discussed in this chapter? |
45353 | Do his writings give evidence of patriotism in the usual sense of the word? |
45353 | Do the dates of the three poems suggest a progressive change? |
45353 | Do these throw any light on the history of his neighborhoods and his period or are they purely personal in their interest? |
45353 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied, over there beyond the seas? |
45353 | Do you find a distinction between Mark Twain''s attitude toward religion and his attitude toward religious people? |
45353 | Does Mark Twain''s consistent interest in history appear in his writing through the use of allusion and comparison? |
45353 | Does Stedman''s own verse confirm the theory of his criticisms of Whitman? |
45353 | Does the poem fulfill Lanier''s intentions? |
45353 | Does this list include any personal lyrics? |
45353 | Emerson visited him at the jail, where ensued the historic exchange of questions:"Henry, why are you here?" |
45353 | From 1844(?) |
45353 | Has any other educated person lived so many years and lost so many days?" |
45353 | How far does he rely upon the symbol in any one of his more effective shorter stories? |
45353 | If asked what was left? |
45353 | In 1819 Sidney Smith''s contemptuous and famous query,"Who reads an American book?" |
45353 | In 1902 he wrote: Shall we ever have an American literature? |
45353 | Is all this to be at end? |
45353 | Is it more like Emerson''s or Lowell''s, more like Whitman''s or Longfellow''s? |
45353 | Is it not well, therefore, that, sharing none of its pleasures and happiness, I should be free of its fatalities, its brevity? |
45353 | Is there a connecting unity in these passages? |
45353 | Is there a legitimate connection to be mentioned between Gilder''s poems on civic themes and the movement for better citizenship in the 1890''s? |
45353 | Is there any clear reason for this common dissent? |
45353 | Is there any real likeness between Thoreau and Whitman in these respects? |
45353 | Is there evidence that he was affected by Shakespeare''s poetic form? |
45353 | Is this golden band of kindred sympathies, so rare between nations, to be broken forever? |
45353 | Is this the way for us To lead these creatures up to find the light, Or the way to be drawn down to find the dark Again? |
45353 | It is nearly a century and a half since he tried to answer the question"What is an American?" |
45353 | NEW YORK REVIEW AND ATHENÆUM MAGAZINE, THE,(?)-1827. |
45353 | Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea? |
45353 | Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone? |
45353 | Read Zangwill''s play"The Melting Pot"in the light of this letter on"What is an American?" |
45353 | Read the letter entitled"What is an American?" |
45353 | Shall I raise the siege of this hen coop, and march baffled away to a pretended siege of Babylon?" |
45353 | Suppose you should contradict yourself; what then?... |
45353 | The next New Englander to give proof that the Puritans were not having an easy time in their"new English Canaan"was Nathaniel Ward( 1578- 1652? |
45353 | These can be supplemented by his own article in the_ Independent_ on"What is Poetry?" |
45353 | To what objects of satire does he most frequently revert? |
45353 | Were we enthusiasts? |
45353 | What can my anger do but cease? |
45353 | What company has that lonely lake, I pray?... |
45353 | What is the likeness in the general drift of the two and what are the essential differences in the treatments of the theme? |
45353 | What is wrong with the American drama? |
45353 | Whitman wrote fairly in a letter:"The book is therefore unprecedently sad( as these days are, are they not? |
45353 | Who can listen unmoved to the sweet love- tales of our robins, told from tree to tree, or to the shrill cat- birds? |
45353 | Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race? |
45353 | Who knows?" |
45353 | Whom shall I fight and who shall be my enemy When he is I and I am he? |
45353 | Why drag about this corpse of your memory, lest you contradict somewhat you have stated in this or that public place? |
45353 | Why should Tamenund stay? |
45353 | a newer page In the great record of the world is thine; Shall it be fairer? |
45353 | is it well To leave the gates unguarded? |
45353 | nor blush for shame To cast away renown, and hide your head from fame? |
45353 | or have they none? |
45353 | sings of America for the world, with its thrillingly prophetic fourth stanza, Have the elder races halted? |
45353 | what we carried home? |
36131 | ''Do you think so?'' 36131 ''Ha, ha!--and what can she do?'' |
36131 | ''Madame,''said I to the Duchess,''since you deign to remind us of your deathless talent, may I venture to ask you to sing once more?'' 36131 ''Or to saw boards?'' |
36131 | ''Or tools?'' 36131 ''That is to say, I suppose, you will force them to do so by law?'' |
36131 | ''Very likely; but what did she make my poor sister- in- law, the queen, suffer? 36131 Ah well, Alexis,"continued the Czar,"if these two manors are hardly worth thanks, why should I wait for you to consent to the proposed union?" |
36131 | Ah-- well, well; where the devil is Nero? |
36131 | And do you know to whom he granted the domain? |
36131 | And the rank, the condition of the parties? |
36131 | And what motive,he at last said,"induces you to reject this gift?" |
36131 | And when you return from your relations, you will call on me? 36131 And whither?" |
36131 | And who is this person? |
36131 | And why does your companion stand in the Rue Saint- Dominique? |
36131 | And why? |
36131 | But do you know how the Czar would regard such pleasantry? 36131 But if it is his own fault-- if he has been imprudent?" |
36131 | But the Count,said d''Harcourt,"is he forgotten?" |
36131 | But,said Taddeo,"what is the danger of which you spoke just now?" |
36131 | By G-- d, there''s a country for you,said he;"can property be safe for a moment in such a country? |
36131 | Can we have been overheard? |
36131 | Did I tell you, or did I not,said Dick,"that I would not have these horrid disreputable clubs of yours playing just before my lodge gates?" |
36131 | Digby, old fellow, can you lend me £ 100? |
36131 | Do you know her handwriting? |
36131 | Do you not wish me to go with you? |
36131 | Do you say so? |
36131 | Does the nation take a nap to- night? |
36131 | Handsome elevation-- classical, I take it-- eh? |
36131 | Hartley and Simpson you say? |
36131 | Her name? |
36131 | How so? |
36131 | Is it permitted me to take with me my daughter? |
36131 | Is there any one with him? |
36131 | It is he, is it not? |
36131 | Leave you? |
36131 | May I ask,he said, in a dry cold tone, after he had recovered himself a little,"May I ask what my daughter can have to do with this affair?" |
36131 | May not that proceed from an attempt to disguise her hand? |
36131 | Might I presume to inquire the name of Monsieur your grandfather? |
36131 | Might it not be better for you,asked Vernon,"to express your doubts in regard to this letter to Mr. Hastings himself? |
36131 | My friend,said he,"why are you so sad? |
36131 | Of what dowager do you speak? |
36131 | Oh, my dear father, what is this? |
36131 | Or from an attempt on the part of some other to imitate it,rejoined Marlow;"but this is very strange, Mr. Vernon; may I read this through?" |
36131 | Shall I follow your_ eccelenza_? |
36131 | She has been weeping,said Mr. Hastings to himself;"can I have been mistaken?" |
36131 | Something more painful than even fear, I believe,replied Mr. Vernon;"Mr. Hastings has a daughter, I believe?" |
36131 | The Prince said,''Do you know, Aminta, that the Count is the only person in Paris whom I have to beg to come to see you? 36131 The condition?" |
36131 | Then what could have induced her to report those words to the government? |
36131 | Then when will Mr. Hastings be set free? |
36131 | Then you know all? |
36131 | This brooch is yours? |
36131 | This is the hour of consultation, my dear Doctor,said the Viscount to Von Apsberg;"where are the patients?" |
36131 | Those men-- those fellows at Rugby-- where did you meet with them? |
36131 | To me? |
36131 | Were any other persons near? |
36131 | What are you waiting for? |
36131 | What danger? |
36131 | What do you want? |
36131 | What has happened to my son? |
36131 | What have slippers and hair- brushes to do with attics? |
36131 | What physician will cure so many diseases? |
36131 | What shall I have done with them? |
36131 | What would Henri say, and how could she excuse this strange visit? |
36131 | What, the Count of Anteroches, who commanded the French guards at the battle of Fontenoy? 36131 What, then, is the matter?" |
36131 | What? |
36131 | What_ is_ the meaning of this? |
36131 | Where could it have come from, Monsieur? |
36131 | Where was he? |
36131 | Where''s George? 36131 Who bade you watch me?" |
36131 | Who? 36131 Whom do you watch?" |
36131 | Why should I not go home? 36131 Why these marks of respect? |
36131 | Why, really, my dear Harley, this man was no great friend of yours-- eh? |
36131 | Why,exclaimed the boyard,"should I not tell a friend what probably he will learn to- day, if indeed he is ignorant of it now? |
36131 | Will not the Marquis be here to- night? |
36131 | Yes; you know my cousin, Sophy Clark? 36131 You appear to be not in a very good humor, to- day, boyard.... Would you fall into disfavor with the Czar?" |
36131 | You know me, then? |
36131 | You know us, then? |
36131 | You think so, eh, Michailowitz? 36131 [ 5]"You have heard him spoken of, then?" |
36131 | _ Carbonarism!_"Are you sure of this? |
36131 | 118,"Who''ll turn Grindstone?" |
36131 | A cruel idea, however, pursued me, what was the secret shut up in the paper he would not suffer me to read? |
36131 | And how did the gay Mrs. Harrison, knowing and perceiving herself to be thus loved, make use of her knowledge? |
36131 | And now, can you guess who I am?" |
36131 | And while, on the dullest of dull questions, Audley Egerton thus, not too lively himself, enforced attention, where was Harley L''Estrange? |
36131 | Answer me this, thou solemn right honorable-- Hast thou climbed to the heights of august contemplation? |
36131 | As the bold boyard has truly said, it is I who have brandished the sword, and I ask who is the Russian who dares cite me to his tribunal?" |
36131 | Because it pleases some robber to wait near my hotel, to rob me? |
36131 | Benjamin-- who?'' |
36131 | But is it the"Jolly Old Fellow,"or the"King of Terrors,"or the"easeful death"of which the poet was enamored? |
36131 | But surely I have heard-- my wife at least has-- that you and Richard Westlake were engaged? |
36131 | But the last took his hand, and said, in a voice at once tremulous and soothing,"Is it possible that I see once more an old brother in arms? |
36131 | But what can a descendant of Dante, for instance, ever know of the drolleries of Sam Weller? |
36131 | Ca n''t you think of a purse of a thousand louis?" |
36131 | Can any place be more pleasant than the bedchamber of a pretty woman?" |
36131 | Can it be that, though he did not dance, he is more fatigued than his wife?" |
36131 | Can it be, like d''Harcourt just now, that you have any doubt or scruple about our cause? |
36131 | Can nothing be done? |
36131 | Can you show it me? |
36131 | Come, what has happened to you?--on half pay?" |
36131 | Could I, in the moment of execution, place the instrument in the trembling hands of a charlatan? |
36131 | Could his cup be fuller? |
36131 | Could it not be made to grind coffee or pepper?'' |
36131 | David Strauss among the pilgrims to the tomb of the poets?" |
36131 | Do tell me if this is true?" |
36131 | Do you hesitate at the dangers?" |
36131 | Do you mean to say that? |
36131 | Do you think I can forget the abominable things she said, the falsehoods she told? |
36131 | Do you think you could thrust him into some small place in the colonies, or make him a King''s Messenger, or something of the sort?" |
36131 | Has not the only share I ever took in politics been to aid in placing King William upon the throne, and consistently to support his government since? |
36131 | Hast thou dreamed of a love known to the angels, or sought to seize in the Infinite the mystery of life?" |
36131 | Hast thou gazed on the stars with the rapt eye of song? |
36131 | Have you quite forgotten all the duties of gallantry in thus permitting the happy couple to wait at the door of the marriage- house? |
36131 | Have you seen a ghost?" |
36131 | He advanced towards me, and seizing my arm convulsively, said, Signora, who gave you a right to examine my papers? |
36131 | How does he occupy himself? |
36131 | I am wrong, am I not? |
36131 | I have begged without shame for myself; shall I be ashamed, then, to beg for her?" |
36131 | I suppose Monsieur has not yet seen_ Little Necker_?'' |
36131 | Indeed, I know nothing can be done: he has his half- pay?" |
36131 | Is it not worth while for the New- York merchants to set up in Union or Washington Square, the great statue of Memphis? |
36131 | It would have been cruel to ask for her hospitality, and how could we offer to pay our score? |
36131 | Look out of the window-- what do you see?" |
36131 | Mademoiselle Crepineau, the Argus of this house, saw only three men come in; what will she think when she sees four leaving? |
36131 | May I be permitted to look at that letter in your hand, to see how much was really told, how much suppressed?" |
36131 | May I calculate upon having the letter in two days?" |
36131 | My husband is not at all displeased at it; tell me, do you think he loves me still? |
36131 | Not_ pretty_ Mary Kingsford now, then?" |
36131 | Now, lean upon me; I see you should be at home-- which way?" |
36131 | Oh, Lord L''Estrange?" |
36131 | On her appearance he said,"I must go to Berlin_ incog._--will you go with me? |
36131 | Pray what else could we have done under the circumstances? |
36131 | Shall we go on? |
36131 | So lucky for me, is it not, since I_ must_ go to service? |
36131 | So you have a long journey before you?" |
36131 | Tell me, Count Monte- Leone-- you were there-- what was it?'' |
36131 | The battle- field inflicted shame upon our race-- is it with shame that our hearts throb in following these Arctic heroes? |
36131 | Then laying his hand lightly on his friend''s shoulder, he said,"Is it for you, Audley Egerton, to speak sneeringly of boyish memories? |
36131 | Upon Mary replying that she did not comprehend him, his look became absolutely ferocious, and he exclaimed;"Oh, that''s your game, is it? |
36131 | Was there no beauty in this? |
36131 | Waters and Emily quite well?" |
36131 | We wonder if a single British reviewer will introduce, with such a paragraph, his extracts from the Letters on America, by M. XAVIER MARMIER? |
36131 | Were they seven Esquimaux chiefs, or seven African mumbo- jumbos? |
36131 | What actor would be_ always_ on the stage? |
36131 | What alteration did it produce in her conduct and bearing towards her admirer? |
36131 | What are our parents always, and no doubt wisely repeating to us? |
36131 | What does the prosecutor say the brooch is worth?" |
36131 | What else draws your thoughts from blue- books and beer- bills, to waste them on a vagrant like me? |
36131 | What else is it that binds us together? |
36131 | What else warms my heart when I meet you? |
36131 | What need we more? |
36131 | What shall it be?" |
36131 | What were they, if human? |
36131 | What!--hesitate? |
36131 | What, then, is the cause of the fatality which has thus ever attended African colonization by Europeans? |
36131 | What, then, will be the fate of the French and English colonies in temperate Africa? |
36131 | Whence, then, this curious hearthstone? |
36131 | Whither does he go? |
36131 | Who gave you this information?" |
36131 | Who is he? |
36131 | Who would have suspected this from the author of"Lefevre"and"The Sentimental Journey?" |
36131 | Why did he stay? |
36131 | Why did he, usually so calm and cold, become so much enraged?" |
36131 | Why is this? |
36131 | Why should I know any thing about it?" |
36131 | Why should he hope always to please those who have only a vague susceptibility of natural observation for their standard of criticism? |
36131 | Why, dear mother, should I conceal from you, that the presence of the Count causes always an invincible distress? |
36131 | Why? |
36131 | Will any one tell me that Brutus was not justified in stabbing Cæsar? |
36131 | Will any one tell me that William Tell was not justified in all that he did against the tyrant of his country? |
36131 | Will you allow me to have this letter? |
36131 | Will you find him a place in the Stamp Office?" |
36131 | Would not the rabble of Paris do well to inquire a little before exclaiming so loudly against the privileges of the aristocracy? |
36131 | You do not forget my commission, with respect to the exile who has married into your brother''s family?" |
36131 | You have no objection to accompany me to the superintendent?" |
36131 | You know,"he continued with an affected calmness,"the domain of the crown adjacent to my lands in Tula?" |
36131 | You remember Dimitri Arsenieff?" |
36131 | You think me foolish and strange-- but what can I do? |
36131 | [ Illustration]"Who is there that did not love some stream in his youth? |
36131 | de Staël completely quarrel with me now?'' |
36131 | do you uncover to me?" |
36131 | he exclaimed,"what could be the cause of that? |
36131 | if Rome was as big as Wittenberg? |
36131 | if the Italian women were more beautiful than the German? |
36131 | la Baronne de Staël is then a supreme power?'' |
36131 | or because some bravo wishes,_ a la Venitienne_, to make a dagger- sheath of my heart? |
36131 | said he,--"abandon you, when the hour of danger has come?--desert the field of battle when the combat is about to begin? |
36131 | said the bitter fool;"does it mean that you are no longer emperor?" |
36131 | what could make you ask such a question? |
36131 | what is there so urgent that you trouble thus, my dear Pignana?" |
36131 | why did you not keep me with you? |
36131 | why does not he come to the door?" |
36131 | you exclaim in a mingled tone of surprise and incredulity,"Dr. Strauss in Weimar? |
33201 | Do They Affect Our More Serious Reading? |
33201 | The Growth of the Short Storyand"Which Magazine Seems on the Whole the One Best Worth Taking in a Family, and Why?" |
33201 | ( 3) Is the elimination of the servant possible? |
33201 | ( 4) How far is woman responsible for the state of things, and what can she do to reduce social expenditure? |
33201 | A concluding paper might inquire, What is it in these two themes which has always attracted the poets? |
33201 | A discussion may follow: Should the Philippines be made self- governing? |
33201 | A good topic here is, How shall we have variety without increasing the expense? |
33201 | And is buying in large quantities a good plan? |
33201 | Are advertisements painted on rocks or put up in fields? |
33201 | Are children paid too much attention? |
33201 | Are clubs for servants desirable? |
33201 | Are coffee rooms needed to supplant the saloon? |
33201 | Are materials more, or less, expensive? |
33201 | Are open- air schools needed? |
33201 | Are our children growing up thinking that money is the principal thing in the minds of their parents? |
33201 | Are rents, food, and clothing actually higher for the same things, or does life to- day demand that we add to what we then had? |
33201 | Are sufficient numbers of courses offered? |
33201 | Are the Courts of Domestic Relations of value in preventing them? |
33201 | Are the alleys clean? |
33201 | Are the boys educated? |
33201 | Are the playgrounds used in summer time? |
33201 | Are the problems of Anna the same as those which confront women in other lands to- day? |
33201 | Are the shows clean? |
33201 | Are their home lives well developed? |
33201 | Are their morals endangered? |
33201 | Are there any playgrounds for children? |
33201 | Are there cheap theaters in town? |
33201 | Are there saloons, and, if so, do they in any way evade the law? |
33201 | Are there short cuts in laundry work? |
33201 | Are there tenements? |
33201 | Are there vines, flowers and grass around the building? |
33201 | Are they enforced? |
33201 | Are they essential? |
33201 | Are they fitted for the career of the law? |
33201 | Are they in good order? |
33201 | Are they loafing places? |
33201 | Are they over- amused? |
33201 | Are they really as useful as they seem at first sight? |
33201 | Are they sanitary? |
33201 | Are they well cared for and attractive? |
33201 | As to the schools, can not manual and vocational training be secured? |
33201 | Assuming that prices have really gone up, and are to stay there, what can women do to adjust themselves to the fact? |
33201 | But the great question will surely arise: What shall we study? |
33201 | Can a Woman Work All Day and Still Bear Healthy Children and Bring Them Up Properly? |
33201 | Can a girl save for illness? |
33201 | Can employers combine to make relations between mistresses and maids better? |
33201 | Can not music and art be better taught? |
33201 | Close with a discussion on the point: How can a woman learn to be a good cook? |
33201 | Discuss the bargain each country made; what did she lose and what did she gain? |
33201 | Discuss the question: How shall we make our brains save our bodies? |
33201 | Discuss the relative values of the two; is there a tendency more and more toward having the State give the whole education? |
33201 | Discuss the topic: What did the Dutch settlers give to the American people? |
33201 | Discuss, Does it give an unbiased picture of the people? |
33201 | Discuss, How can the school obtain and hold the child? |
33201 | Discuss: Are athletics neglected or overdone? |
33201 | Discuss: How did it represent the spirit of the age? |
33201 | Discuss: Is it an extravagance or an economy to hire the hard work of the family? |
33201 | Discuss: Is it too comprehensive? |
33201 | Discuss: What can be done to give us better servants? |
33201 | Discuss: What did Rome give England of permanent value? |
33201 | Do Strikes Pay? |
33201 | Do boys go from them to college better prepared to meet the life there than from the high school? |
33201 | Do children patronize them? |
33201 | Do our growing girls receive the care they need in this regard? |
33201 | Do servants''unions help matters or make them worse? |
33201 | Do they send a yearly clique to college? |
33201 | Do we have too many clothes? |
33201 | Do writers and artists tend to become bohemians? |
33201 | Does Hawthorne answer the question? |
33201 | Does a college woman lose interest in her home? |
33201 | Does he have too much home work? |
33201 | Does he successfully combine the real and the grotesque, or lean too far toward the latter? |
33201 | Does her picture differ from that of Dickens in"David Copperfield"? |
33201 | Does it fit the child for business and home life? |
33201 | Does it pay to dye one''s gowns? |
33201 | Does separation take the place of divorce in most cases? |
33201 | Does she marry early, or does she drift into a career? |
33201 | Does the artist in him at times overpower his moral sense? |
33201 | Does the low wage drive girls to immorality? |
33201 | Does the town need a"clean- up"day? |
33201 | Especially make a point of the question: How much should the individual sacrifice for the good of society? |
33201 | Has the child a right to one father and one mother even though their attitude toward each other is strained? |
33201 | Have a paper on public laundries: Are they sanitary? |
33201 | Have papers or talks on these themes: Shall divorce be free where love has gone? |
33201 | Have some of these questions taken up: Should Women Enter Trade Unions, or Is Organization Unnecessary? |
33201 | Have they swings, parallel bars and the like? |
33201 | How can one do with less meat? |
33201 | How can one learn how to buy good and still cheap meats? |
33201 | How can we systematize the making of our wardrobes so that sewing shall occupy us only a small part of our time? |
33201 | How do our great endowed universities compare with those of England and Germany? |
33201 | How does it wear as compared to that made elsewhere? |
33201 | How does the standard of morals differ in our day from that in the time in which the book is placed? |
33201 | How is it made so cheaply? |
33201 | How is she educated and trained? |
33201 | How is the poorhouse managed? |
33201 | How many churches are there and in what financial condition? |
33201 | How much should a girl know of business? |
33201 | II-- DRAMATIC POETRY An early meeting should study the comparison of poetry and prose in plays, and the question, Is poetry acceptable on the stage? |
33201 | III-- ECONOMY IN FOOD By way of opening the meeting a brief paper may be read on What Is True Economy? |
33201 | If not, how far does Goethe give his own experiences? |
33201 | If so, on what? |
33201 | If so, what does it teach? |
33201 | If the playgrounds of the school are inadequate, can they be supplemented? |
33201 | In spite of the faults of construction, how does the book rank as literature? |
33201 | In what does the power of the book lie? |
33201 | Is Don Quixote a madman, or does the author intend to show under his extravagances some philosophy of life? |
33201 | Is Levin a mouthpiece for Tolstoy''s own views of life? |
33201 | Is Tolstoy really capable of humor? |
33201 | Is a high standard of purity held up always? |
33201 | Is a mere smattering given? |
33201 | Is benevolence compatible with a small income? |
33201 | Is education to be regarded as an investment? |
33201 | Is hygiene taught? |
33201 | Is immorality due to a low living wage? |
33201 | Is it a benefit to children in their later education to have it begun in the kindergarten? |
33201 | Is it a benefit to them? |
33201 | Is it a clean, well- kept place? |
33201 | Is it a fair one? |
33201 | Is it an economy to take lessons in dressmaking and millinery? |
33201 | Is it economical to have shirts done up there rather than at home? |
33201 | Is it extravagant to hire a day''s work when one could really do it one''s self? |
33201 | Is it fair to pay alike the competent and incompetent? |
33201 | Is it only because so many go into business life? |
33201 | Is it possible to establish a rest room for farmers''wives who come to town? |
33201 | Is it safe to send washing out to a home which may not be clean? |
33201 | Is it sufficiently practical? |
33201 | Is it up- to- date? |
33201 | Is it wise to develop the mind of a young child rapidly? |
33201 | Is making- over always cheap? |
33201 | Is the book a parable? |
33201 | Is the book a study in realism or does it deal with the unnatural? |
33201 | Is the book an autobiography? |
33201 | Is the building in which he studies clean, well- ventilated, and sanitary? |
33201 | Is the comedy character, Oblensky, satisfactory? |
33201 | Is the common drinking cup used? |
33201 | Is the cost in the making? |
33201 | Is the garbage well taken care of? |
33201 | Is the general course too cultural and not sufficiently practical for a boy who is going into business? |
33201 | Is the material of any ready- made garment really as good as it looks at first? |
33201 | Is the preparation for college adequate? |
33201 | Is the railroad station attractive? |
33201 | Is the sewerage system in good order? |
33201 | Is the theater building sanitary? |
33201 | Is the town jail sanitary? |
33201 | Is the town water pure? |
33201 | Is the training in athletics valuable? |
33201 | Is their health impaired? |
33201 | Is their home training at fault for the many mistakes of the average woman? |
33201 | Is there a doctor to supervise the children''s eyes, ears, throats, and general condition? |
33201 | Is there a fund for cheap food for the very poor children? |
33201 | Is there a hotel in town? |
33201 | Is there a lack of democracy about them? |
33201 | Is there a moral purpose, and are any problems settled? |
33201 | Is there a plot? |
33201 | Is there a supervisor? |
33201 | Is there a town library? |
33201 | Is there an oversight against contagion? |
33201 | Is there any one in charge of the waiting- room? |
33201 | Is there any place in town which affects good morals? |
33201 | Is there any town nuisance, such as soft coal smoke or malodorous factories? |
33201 | Is too much attention paid to social preparation? |
33201 | It will raise such questions as these: Are standards of character higher than in the public schools? |
33201 | Last of all, should not a club extend its membership to as many as possible, rather than have a waiting list? |
33201 | One meeting should raise the question, Upon what should marriage be based? |
33201 | Read the reports of exhibitions: Could the club have some sort of an exhibit? |
33201 | Should There Be Mothers''Pensions? |
33201 | Should Women Insist on Compensation for Injuries and Old- Age Pensions? |
33201 | Should divorce be given on other than statutory cause? |
33201 | Should every girl be able to earn a living? |
33201 | Should fathers see that their daughters understand something of banking, of keeping accounts, of investments, of managing an income? |
33201 | Should public opinion against child labor be aroused? |
33201 | Sing"Kennst du das Land?" |
33201 | Sing"The Erl- King,"written when he was only eighteen,"Hark, Hark, the Lark";"Death and the Maiden";"Who is Sylvia?" |
33201 | Speak of coeducational colleges and State Universities; have they advantages over the rest? |
33201 | Such questions as these may follow: Should professional women marry? |
33201 | The discussion may be on the point: How shall we reduce the size of the family wash? |
33201 | The discussion may take such lines as these: What sacrifices to economy are worth while? |
33201 | The first subject which will come up will be: What are the principal difficulties we have to meet in our homes, and how can we overcome them? |
33201 | The paper next to this would be on the finishing school for girls, and will raise the questions: Are the standards of education sufficiently high? |
33201 | Then have again a brief discussion: Is the Montessori system adapted to American children? |
33201 | There should be an excellent discussion on this subject, covering such things as: Home dressmaking; does it pay? |
33201 | Two lovely settings of old words are noticeable:"Ye Banks and Braes o''Bonnie Doon,"and"Kennst Du das Land?" |
33201 | Was George Eliot really a humorist? |
33201 | Was their influence good? |
33201 | What advantages has the finishing school? |
33201 | What are its limitations? |
33201 | What are the relations of men and women in the same profession? |
33201 | What can be done locally to better conditions in our shops? |
33201 | What can be done to rid the town of flies and mosquitoes in summer? |
33201 | What can be said of literature, art, music and science? |
33201 | What can be said of the morals of the Latin Americans? |
33201 | What can club women do by way of personal acquaintance and interest? |
33201 | What does the author satirize? |
33201 | What has been done along these lines, and what is still to be done? |
33201 | What has the author to say of education, religion and esthetics? |
33201 | What is her home efficiency? |
33201 | What is the effect in its later education? |
33201 | What is the effect of divorce on children in the home? |
33201 | What is the mainspring of Anna''s character? |
33201 | What is the moral effect on a child in the latter case? |
33201 | What is the percentage of those who can read and write, and why is it so low? |
33201 | What is the position of woman? |
33201 | What is the relation between church and state and what has the church done for education? |
33201 | What is their condition? |
33201 | What luxuries are necessities? |
33201 | What of Night Work for Women? |
33201 | What of her health and schooling? |
33201 | What of higher education? |
33201 | What of its pay? |
33201 | What of lack of recreation and social life? |
33201 | What of ordering by mail? |
33201 | What of short shopping hours and early Christmas shopping? |
33201 | What of the conditions under which garments are made? |
33201 | What of the effect of long hours of confinement? |
33201 | What of the ethics of the removal of the sculptures? |
33201 | What percentage of child criminals come from the laboring classes? |
33201 | What results were brought about later? |
33201 | What should be the attitude of the church toward divorce? |
33201 | What should be the proper attitude of the State toward divorce? |
33201 | Where does South America show her strength, and where her weakness? |
33201 | Where shall a housekeeper buy-- at a large market or a small one? |
33201 | Who can stop to write dull papers on Italian Art in this day of efficiency? |
33201 | Would Divorce Courts, dealing with this whole matter intelligently, be helpful? |
33201 | Would the addition of a civil ceremony to the religious make divorces less frequent? |
33201 | Would the attitude of society toward hasty marriages, should they be discountenanced, be helpful? |
33201 | X-- WHAT IS HOME FOR? |
33201 | XII-- LATIN AMERICA Among the many topics which will suggest themselves for discussion are these: What can be said of education in Latin America? |
33201 | _ Discussion_: Is it more economical to buy bread or make it, for a small family? |
33201 | _ Discussion_: Shall the Baby Sleep Out of Doors? |
33201 | _ Paper_: The chafing dish; is it practical? |
33201 | _ Paper_: The nurse, or the hospital? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: How shall we replenish the preserve closet in winter? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: Waste; what is it? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: Where shall we market? |
4551 | ''What''s that?'' 4551 A bit of all right-- eh, sir?" |
4551 | But why,I persisted,"why do this thing by a relay system? |
4551 | For instance, what occasions? |
4551 | Is it getting rough outside? |
4551 | Is that any reason,he inquired,"why a person should rush into a gentleman''s club and kick up such a deuced hullabaloo?" |
4551 | Ow''s that, sir? |
4551 | Well,he asked,"what would you do if you met a savage lion loose on the Strand?" |
4551 | What do you want with a pair of knee breeches? |
4551 | What''s the trouble? |
4551 | ..."Do you really think it is becoming? |
4551 | ..."Do you think so, really? |
4551 | ..."Oh, is that a shark out yonder? |
4551 | ..."Was n''t the Bay of Naples just perfectly swell-- the water, you know, and the land and the sky and everything, so beautiful and everything?" |
4551 | A rock with a jug on it would be a jugged rock, would n''t it-- eh? |
4551 | After all, America is a bit crude, is n''t it, now? |
4551 | Ah, breathes there the man with soul so dead who never to himself has said, this is my own, my native land? |
4551 | Ai n''t nature just wonderful?" |
4551 | And I''ve mislaid my diaphragm somewhere, have n''t I?" |
4551 | And how is Mrs. M. this morning?" |
4551 | And how is the family bearing up? |
4551 | And say, what is that hard lump between my shoulders?" |
4551 | And so the present Vice- President is named Elihu Underwood? |
4551 | And what has become of all the birds?" |
4551 | And what means that low, poignant, smothered gasp? |
4551 | And where would the proprietor keep his battery of thirty- two tubs when they were not in use? |
4551 | And why all this mystery and mummery over so simple and elemental a thing as a towel? |
4551 | Are you permitted to have it? |
4551 | At sight of him the Colonel uplifts his voice in hoarsely jovial salutation:"Rigsy, my boy,"he booms,"how are you? |
4551 | But then, what could you naturally expect from a population that thinks a fried cuttlefish is edible and a beefsteak is not? |
4551 | But what has the manservant done that he should be thus discriminated against? |
4551 | But"-- and he shrugged his eloquent Italian shoulders and outspread his hands fan- fashion--"but what is the use? |
4551 | Chapter XVIII Guyed or Guided? |
4551 | Classical quotations interspersed here and there are wonderful helps to a guide book, do n''t you think? |
4551 | Could anything on earth be fairer than that? |
4551 | Did he not dress in plain black, without any jewelry? |
4551 | Did he not have those long, slender, flexible fingers? |
4551 | Did you notice how much he looked like the pictures of Santa Claus? |
4551 | Do I hear any seconds to that motion? |
4551 | Do you get my drift?" |
4551 | Do you suppose by any chance he has brought any daily papers with him? |
4551 | Does my nose need powdering?" |
4551 | Does you gen''lemen know anybody in Bummin''ham?" |
4551 | For after all the main question is not"What did he kill?" |
4551 | For, no matter how patriotic one may be, one must concede-- mustn''t one?--that for true culture one must look to Europe? |
4551 | Has he not kicked over the traces and cut loose with intent to be oh, so naughty for one naughty night of his life? |
4551 | How can any sane person be excited over that American game? |
4551 | Languidly they inquire whether that quaint Iowa character, Uncle Champ Root, is still Speaker of the House? |
4551 | Monday afternoon? |
4551 | No doubt this thing of lying flat is all very well for some people-- but suppose a fellow has not that kind of a figure? |
4551 | Or is n''t he? |
4551 | Saturday night? |
4551 | Send them a postal card? |
4551 | Shall we not invite the chauffeur to join us?" |
4551 | Shall we stop for a glass together, eh?" |
4551 | She certainly does look well this afternoon, does n''t she? |
4551 | THE NEGRO-- Mistah, you means a jagged rock, do n''t you? |
4551 | THE NEGRO-- Whut''s dat you say? |
4551 | Tell me-- some one please-- how is it played?" |
4551 | Then from a flat- chested little spinster came this query in tired yet interested tones:"Was he-- was he married?" |
4551 | To begin with, is he not in Gay Paree?--as it is familiarly called in Rome Center and all points West? |
4551 | Touched- up hair is so artificial, do n''t you think?" |
4551 | Was he resigned when the dread moment came? |
4551 | Was not his eye a keen steely- blue eye that seemed to have the power of looking right through you? |
4551 | Was the victim brave at the last? |
4551 | Well, anyway, it''s a porpoise, and a porpoise is a kind of shark, is n''t it? |
4551 | Well, then, what better evidence is required? |
4551 | Well, then, what more could you ask? |
4551 | What was it somebody once called England-- Perfidious Alibi- in'', was n''t it? |
4551 | Where would any household muster the crews to man all those portable tin tubs? |
4551 | Who said so? |
4551 | Whut-- whut is a jugged rock? |
4551 | Why do n''t you sit down there and behave yourself and have a nice time watching for whales?" |
4551 | Why not put a third button in that bathroom labeled Manservant or Valet or Towel Boy, or something of that general nature? |
4551 | Why should he battle with the intricacies of a block- signal system when everybody else round the place has a separate bell? |
4551 | Why should he not have a bell of his own? |
4551 | Why, I ask you, should the English insist on pronouncing it Ferguson? |
4551 | Would I take cream in my coffee? |
4551 | Would I take sugar? |
4551 | Would he master it or would it master him? |
4551 | Would monsieur intrust the miserable addition to him for a moment, for one short moment? |
4551 | You must know that passage? |
4551 | You noticed two pushbuttons in your bathroom, did n''t you?" |
4551 | Youth will be served, but why, I ask you-- why must it so often be served raw? |
4551 | but"How does he look?" |
535 | ''And where,''said I,''is monsieur?'' |
535 | ''And,''added the man,''what the devil have you done to be still here?'' |
535 | ''Comment, monsieur?'' |
535 | ''Comment? |
535 | ''Connaissez- vous le Seigneur?'' |
535 | ''Et vous pretendez mourir dans cette espece de croyance?'' |
535 | ''Have you no remorse for your crimes?'' |
535 | ''I am an amateur of such wine, do you see?'' |
535 | ''Nothing?'' |
535 | ''Was it not you who passed in the meadow while it was still day?'' |
535 | ''Where are you going beyond Cheylard?'' |
535 | ''Why are you called Spirit?'' |
535 | ''Why?'' |
535 | ''Your domicile?'' |
535 | ''Your donkey,''says he,''is very old?'' |
535 | ''Your father and mother?'' |
535 | ''Your name?'' |
535 | A Scotsman? |
535 | Ah, an Irishman, then? |
535 | An Englishman? |
535 | And Clarisse? |
535 | And his soul was like a garden? |
535 | And what although now and then a drop of blood should appear on Modestine''s mouse- coloured wedge- like rump? |
535 | And when the present is so exacting, who can annoy himself about the future? |
535 | And yet had not he himself tried and proved the inefficacy of these carnal arguments among the Buddhists in China? |
535 | At what inaudible summons, at what gentle touch of Nature, are all these sleepers thus recalled in the same hour to life? |
535 | But where one was so good and simple, why should not all be alike? |
535 | Do the stars rain down an influence, or do we share some thrill of mother earth below our resting bodies? |
535 | Durst I address a person who was under a vow of silence? |
535 | Et d''ou venez- vous?'' |
535 | Gambetta moderate? |
535 | I knew well enough where the lantern was; but where were the candles? |
535 | Might he say that I was a geographer? |
535 | Now may some Languedocian Wordsworth turn the sonnet into patois:''Mountains and vales and floods, heard YE that whistle?'' |
535 | OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS''I behold The House, the Brotherhood austere-- And what am I, that I am here?'' |
535 | Of what shall a man be proud, if he is not proud of his friends? |
535 | Was I going to the monastery? |
535 | Was I to pay for my night''s lodging? |
535 | Was it Apollo, or Mercury, or Love with folded wings? |
535 | What could I have told her? |
535 | What shall I say of Clarisse? |
535 | What the devil was the good of a she- ass if she could not carry a sleeping- bag and a few necessaries? |
535 | What was left of all this bygone dust and heroism? |
535 | What went ye out for to see? |
535 | What were his reflections as this second martyrdom drew near? |
535 | Where was it gone? |
535 | Who hath loosed the bands of the wild ass? |
535 | Who shall say? |
535 | Who was I? |
535 | Will you dare to justify these words?'' |
535 | he cried,''what does this mean?'' |
13306 | Ah, what indeed? 13306 And is there pardon for so great a sinner?" |
13306 | And my old friends, the Harpers and the Wakefields? |
13306 | And the announcement has your sanction? |
13306 | Answer me this, How much does Mr Bellamy already know? |
13306 | Are you aware, sir, that he is married? |
13306 | Are you badly hurt, Bob? |
13306 | Are you mad, man? |
13306 | But his talents? |
13306 | But, how are you, Mr Allcraft? 13306 D---- yer eyes, ye starin''fools,"shouted he in a rough hoarse voice,"do n''t ye see them art''lerymen? |
13306 | Dearest Margaret, why should I distress you? 13306 Do what, sir?" |
13306 | Do you begin already? 13306 Do you know that you are liable to be punished for insubordination?" |
13306 | Had you not better leave the bank, Mr Allcraft, and go home? 13306 Have I done my duty? |
13306 | Have I not always promised to share my gains with you? |
13306 | Have I not in my time heard lions roar? 13306 Have I told the truth?" |
13306 | Have you finished, sir? |
13306 | Have you finished, sir? |
13306 | Have you heard any bad news to- day, sir? |
13306 | Is it possible, sir? |
13306 | Love? |
13306 | Mon cher Chevalier,said the old Marquis, with a laugh,"pray, after being in so many places with him, were you with him in the Bastile?" |
13306 | Not like Americans? 13306 Now, sir,"roared Allcraft in his fury--"What excuse-- what lie have you at your tongue''s end to palliate this? |
13306 | Oh, Mr Bellamy, you can not mean what you say? 13306 Pshaw--_your_ gains-- where are they?" |
13306 | Well, but surely, Mr Allcraft, you must regret the strong expression--"Which I uttered to your friend? |
13306 | Well,said Sir Robert Peel,"What do I find?" |
13306 | What do you mean, man, with your golden bridge? |
13306 | What do you mean, sir? |
13306 | What do you mean? |
13306 | What was to be done? |
13306 | Who calls Bob? |
13306 | Who goes there? |
13306 | Why do n''t ye take that''ere big gun? |
13306 | Why have I_ done_? |
13306 | Why so?--Would you drive me mad? 13306 Why, having done so, Michael, do you not love and trust me?" |
13306 | Why, oh why, my Margaret, did you link your fate with mine? |
13306 | With the sum thus realized, I say, you propose to make good the losses which the bank has suffered by your improvidence? |
13306 | You are sure of that? 13306 You have not seen her, then?" |
13306 | You have something to say? 13306 You will not leave us, then,"said the good vicar;"we have not tired you yet?" |
13306 | _ We_, sir? |
13306 | ''If they are fond of music,''said he,''why should not every man have his share?''" |
13306 | Accordingly, they began-- but where? |
13306 | After a minute or two,"How goes it with the fight?" |
13306 | After an interval of two years, do their calculations appear to have been well or ill founded? |
13306 | Again, what is to govern the_ amount_ at which it is to be fixed? |
13306 | Am I to be devoured, eaten away by anxiety and trouble? |
13306 | Am I to have no peace-- no rest? |
13306 | And do you really call this a"great triumph?" |
13306 | And had not the time arrived for the redemption of his word, and the payment of every farthing that was due from him? |
13306 | And he has been an_ espion_ of the Government in Portugal; what better training could he have for heading an army of traitors? |
13306 | And how comes it to pass that they have not long since kindled at least the manufacturing population into a blaze? |
13306 | And how long is this disgraceful pillage to go on? |
13306 | And how much the better was he for all that he had taken already? |
13306 | And how was even that majority secured? |
13306 | And that, perhaps, they will by and by succeed in rousing the"stubborn enthusiasm of the people"against themselves? |
13306 | And then, what was Michael''s next step? |
13306 | And was it not? |
13306 | And who can wonder? |
13306 | And why should it not be? |
13306 | And, if he knew it, was he very likely to profit by the information? |
13306 | Are the principles of its construction now no longer known or understood? |
13306 | Are the wheels of the state- machine no longer bright, polished, and fit for use as they once were? |
13306 | Are they not requisite solely because of the_ absence_ of any such movement? |
13306 | Are they, like those of the engines of the Syracusan philosopher, lost in the lapse of time? |
13306 | Are we prepared to meet them?" |
13306 | Are you as selfish as the rest?" |
13306 | Are you sane? |
13306 | Are you serious? |
13306 | But did they augment the number of their friends? |
13306 | But how shall we deal with a topic with which the public has been so utterly sickened by the people calling themselves"The Anti- corn- law League?" |
13306 | But if he could write, why could n''t he_ call_? |
13306 | But if the corn- laws were_ not_, what_ was_ the cause? |
13306 | But was not-- is not-- this a species of moral arson? |
13306 | But what did he behold? |
13306 | But what say you, enquires a timid friend, or a bitter opponent, to the Repeal agitation in Ireland, and the Anti- corn- law agitation in England? |
13306 | But would that visit have taken place, if Lord Palmerston, and not Lord Aberdeen, had presided over the foreign councils of this country? |
13306 | But,_ can_ you give me any tidings of Lafontaine? |
13306 | Can I give you any advice, my friend? |
13306 | Can any thing be more fallacious? |
13306 | Can it bring to you contentment and repose? |
13306 | Can it restore to me the smile which is my own? |
13306 | Can money buy away this present sorrow? |
13306 | Could I dream that nothing would satisfy your rapacity but my destruction? |
13306 | Could I suppose it? |
13306 | Could Michael suffer, and Margaret not sympathize? |
13306 | Could a man, not crazy, carry more care upon his brain? |
13306 | Could he be conscious of all this, and not excuse the unsteady youth-- accuse himself? |
13306 | Could he have a sorrow which she might chase away, and, having the power, lack the heart to do it? |
13306 | Could the government of the country be now carried on upon principles that were all- powerful twenty-- or even fewer-- years ago? |
13306 | Could this be the dashing Revolutionist? |
13306 | Cut off from us as they were, what could they do against the whole of the cavalry and two companies of infantry which were now approaching the island? |
13306 | Did I not promise?" |
13306 | Did it, or did it not, as tested by the result of the general election, completely satisfy the country? |
13306 | Did people smell a rat? |
13306 | Did they suspect that he was poor? |
13306 | Do the public funds exhibit the slightest symptoms of uneasiness or excitement? |
13306 | Do we attack?" |
13306 | Do you ask my soul as well as body? |
13306 | Do you throw it in my teeth so soon? |
13306 | Does the experience of the last ten years justify the country in placing confidence, on such a point, in a_ Whig_ Ministry? |
13306 | For how otherwise but by diminishing wages can they repay themselves for lost time, for trouble, and for expense? |
13306 | From this one source of misery, where was a promise or a chance of a final rescue? |
13306 | Glancing, however, from the West to the East-- what do we see? |
13306 | Had he not engaged to restore the money which he had borrowed; and had he not given his word of honour to pay in a large amount of capital? |
13306 | Has_ this_ great object, or has it not, been attained? |
13306 | Have I done amiss? |
13306 | Have I not given every thing-- have I not robbed another in order to prop up our house and keep its name from infamy?" |
13306 | Have I not heard great ordnance in the field, And heaven''s artillery thunder in the skies? |
13306 | Have I not heard the sea, puft up with wind, Rage like an angry boar chafed with sweat? |
13306 | Have I not in the pitched battle heard Loud''larums, neighing steeds, and trumpets clang?" |
13306 | Have I not laboured like a slave for the common good? |
13306 | Have I not toiled in order to avoid the evil hour that has come upon us? |
13306 | Have you no human blood-- no pity for me? |
13306 | He had never heard of that father''s generosity-- how should he know of it now? |
13306 | How am I to make good the deficiency of earlier years?" |
13306 | How am I to understand all this? |
13306 | How are all our friends? |
13306 | How could you do it?" |
13306 | How is it to be obtained? |
13306 | How old are you, Burrage?" |
13306 | How should he escape it? |
13306 | How were so many monasteries to be maintained which had subsisted on_ manuscriptum_? |
13306 | How were the poor copyists to get their living if their occupation was taken from them? |
13306 | I am asked what have the Government done? |
13306 | I could not suppress the question--"But when will the experiment be complete? |
13306 | I hope you are satisfied?" |
13306 | III., c. 79? |
13306 | If the above fail to open the eyes of the duped workmen of this country, what will succeed in doing so? |
13306 | If the fortified barrier of France can not resist, what will be done by troops as raw as peasants, and officers as raw as their troops? |
13306 | If the scoffer should ask, what the deuce brought you there? |
13306 | In what respect has the subsequent conduct of Sir Robert Peel been inconsistent with these declarations? |
13306 | Is Mr O''Connell ignorant of all this? |
13306 | Is it any fault of the aforesaid incendiaries? |
13306 | Is it my fortune? |
13306 | Is its boasted majesty, after all, nothing but the creation of a fond imagination, or a delusion of the past? |
13306 | Is the crown less efficiently served than private individuals? |
13306 | Is the law weak when it should be strong? |
13306 | Is the machinery then set in motion in truth defective-- is there some inherent vice in the construction of the state engine? |
13306 | Is there any thing else?" |
13306 | Is this, too, a victory? |
13306 | Laissez, laissez courir le temps; Que vous importe son ravage? |
13306 | Let him insure his life at present for twenty thousand pounds, and how much more would it be worth-- say that he lived for twenty years to come? |
13306 | May I hope to be forgiven?" |
13306 | Meanwhile, what had become of the twelve men whom we had left in the island? |
13306 | Must I add, that your good money paid this second loan-- and yet a third-- a fourth-- a fifth? |
13306 | Must it be the additional burden on land? |
13306 | Nay, are they not evidence that the public feeling and opinion are against them? |
13306 | Not more? |
13306 | Now, speak the truth, man-- is it not so?" |
13306 | Of what use is experience to one who, with sixty years of life in him, still feels and thinks, reasons and acts, like a child? |
13306 | Or, if not in the machine, does the fault, ask others of these bold critics, rest with the workmen who guide and superintend its action? |
13306 | Say so, and I will speedily repair the fault?" |
13306 | Say, does it tell-- yon clanging bell-- of mass or matin song? |
13306 | Such is a faint picture of the defensive operations on such occasions: how is this untiring, bitter energy met by those who represent the crown? |
13306 | Suppose they effected their avowed object of a total repeal of the Corn- laws-- is any one weak enough to imagine that they would_ then_ dissolve? |
13306 | Suppose, in the next session of parliament, Ministers were to offer a law- fixed duty on corn: would that concession dissolve the League? |
13306 | The words,"Why not?" |
13306 | True, but was not the money already sacrificed? |
13306 | Was he already the common talk and laugh of men? |
13306 | Was he ruined and disgraced? |
13306 | Was it he who yesterday brought us the news of the vicinity of the foe?" |
13306 | Was it so with Catholic Emancipation?--with the abolition of Negro Slavery?--with the Reform Bill? |
13306 | Was the thing exploded? |
13306 | Was this the abode of solitude and misfortune? |
13306 | Was this, or was it not, a frank and explicit declaration of his opinions? |
13306 | Were they on the watch? |
13306 | Were they still there, or had they fallen back upon the mission in dismay at the overwhelming force of the Mexicans? |
13306 | What can I do more? |
13306 | What can justify this? |
13306 | What can they do without a commissariat, what can they do without pay, and who is to pay them in a bankrupt nation? |
13306 | What can they do without officers?--ten thousand of whom had been noblesse, and were now emigrants? |
13306 | What can we do, sir?" |
13306 | What could be done now to repair the error? |
13306 | What could he do? |
13306 | What could he do? |
13306 | What could it be? |
13306 | What could they mean? |
13306 | What if he refused to cash his partner''s drafts? |
13306 | What if his father insisted upon his going to London, and doing any other dirty work which these fellows chose to put upon him? |
13306 | What is this new affliction? |
13306 | What is your object?" |
13306 | What more is necessary?" |
13306 | What reliance could repose upon a house, divided against itself-- not safe from the extravagance and pillage of its own members? |
13306 | What say you? |
13306 | What was the fair inference to draw from this result? |
13306 | What was the majority of Mr Pattison? |
13306 | What was the meaning of all this? |
13306 | What were invasions and armies-- what were kings and kingdoms-- to the slightest wish of the being who had written this billet? |
13306 | What will be said of your proceedings? |
13306 | What will become of us? |
13306 | What would my children do?" |
13306 | What, then, can Mr O''Connell be about? |
13306 | What_ data_ have we, in either case, on which to decide? |
13306 | When shall fond woman cease to give-- when shall mean and sordid man be satisfied with something less than all she has to grant? |
13306 | When will the tree, planted thus in storms, take hold of the soil? |
13306 | When will you cease to be a very young man? |
13306 | Where are the beautiful-- whose sunny glances Our fathers, with such potency, enslaved? |
13306 | Where are the valiant?--the resistless lances-- The brands that were as lightning when they waved? |
13306 | Where is he now?" |
13306 | Where is the bard, whose song no more entrances? |
13306 | While thus successfully active abroad, have Ministers been either idle or unsuccessful at home? |
13306 | Who but himself would be the loser by the game? |
13306 | Who had brought them there? |
13306 | Who has patience for the recapitulation of a string of names, when a group of faces may be placed simultaneously before him? |
13306 | Who shall say this man was not a true patriot? |
13306 | Who should say it was n''t his absolute duty to adopt it? |
13306 | Why clutch the bread from his starving grandchildren? |
13306 | Why did you rob his little ones? |
13306 | Why did you take his miserable earnings? |
13306 | Why do n''t ye knock''em on the head?" |
13306 | Why do you stare so, as if you could n''t guess their meaning?" |
13306 | Why drag your substance from you?--why prey upon you until you have parted with your all? |
13306 | Why should I call upon you for assistance? |
13306 | Why should he have compunction-- why think about it, when the hour of repayment was so near at hand? |
13306 | Why was that old man''s money taken?" |
13306 | Why, oh why, had he done all this? |
13306 | Why, where should we look for a new apothecary?" |
13306 | Why? |
13306 | Will these proverbially hard- hearted men put down their L.100, L.200, L.300, L.400, L.500, for nothing? |
13306 | Will you refuse to listen to the truth? |
13306 | Would he have returned to the estate upon the very eve of disposing of it, if he had not intended to deal well and honestly in the transaction? |
13306 | Would he have subjected himself to the just reproaches and upbraidings of his partner, when, by his absence, he might so easily have avoided them? |
13306 | Would he not have been ashamed to do it? |
13306 | Would it have been restored, had the luckless speculator himself remained? |
13306 | Would it not be more advisable to write to the London house itself, and explain the object of his coming up? |
13306 | Would you let the enemy escape, then, when we have him in our power?" |
13306 | Yes, but could you not have given him a look, one merciful look, to save his life, and my soul from everlasting ruin? |
13306 | Yon drum- roll-- calls it to parade the soldier''s armèd throng?" |
13306 | You can not help us-- with another loan, for instance?" |
13306 | You conceive me?" |
13306 | You forgive me for my anger-- do you not?" |
13306 | You hear me, Burrage?" |
13306 | You hear me?" |
13306 | _ Who_ cares to sit down and spell out accounts of travels which he can make at less cost than the cost of the narrative? |
13306 | _ Who_ has leisure to read? |
13306 | _ Who_ wants to peruse fictitious adventures, when railroads and steamboats woo him to adventures of his own? |
13306 | _ was_ he poor? |
13306 | and, if obtained, how is it to repair the inroads which, year after year, have been made upon the house, and how secure it from further spoliation? |
13306 | asked Bellamy, turning sharply upon his partner:"What do you mean? |
13306 | exclaimed his master, gazing at him spitefully,"have you no heart-- no feeling left within you? |
13306 | look forth into the night: Say, is yon gleam the morning- beam, yon broad and bloody light? |
13306 | or are they choked and clogged with the rust and dust of accumulated ages? |
13306 | shall one slight hair Touch thy delicious lip with care? |
13306 | was, is, and ever will be, the whining interrogative of stricken_ inability_;"Why am I about_ to do_?" |
13306 | what weight will such considerations have with the agitating manufacturers in the north of England? |
38873 | ''Must a name mean something?'' 38873 ''Pray, where is the Levant?'' |
38873 | ''Well, Rollo,''said Dorothy,''shall I tell you a true story, or one that is not true?'' 38873 Are you sure they are the same?" |
38873 | But are you aware that the Bonnie Dundee is the same man whom you have just been denouncing under the name of Graham of Claverhouse? |
38873 | But is it true? |
38873 | But what if there is n''t any king to speak of? |
38873 | But,says the Severe Moralist,"do n''t you frequently discover that these persons are vain?" |
38873 | Charles lied, and that made the people mad? |
38873 | Doth not Wisdom cry, And understanding put forth her voice? 38873 How did he get off?" |
38873 | I thought so too,--but what''s politics where the affections are enlisted? 38873 If what I have taken for granted be true,"says the chairman,"do not all the fine things I have been telling you about follow necessarily?" |
38873 | Is it honest in deed and word? 38873 What are your arguments?" |
38873 | What has Horace Walpole done except to give us a picture of his own disposition and incidentally of the world he lived in? 38873 What is behind it?" |
38873 | What is the meaning of this passage? |
38873 | What shall it be? |
38873 | What story? |
38873 | What, you here? |
38873 | Who ever heard of a historian allowing himself to sympathize? 38873 ''Who said that it should be probable?'' 38873 After it once had been generally accepted, what could Hercules do? 38873 Ah, why, indeed? 38873 And Mr. Great Heart said:Do you hear him? |
38873 | And as for the real Napoleon, what was the magic by which he was able to call such phantasms from the vasty deep? |
38873 | And find thyself again without a charm? |
38873 | And might we not expect a"dude"to fall into immoderate laughter at the sight of a"popinjay"? |
38873 | And what of Satan? |
38873 | And why glorious, my young friend?" |
38873 | And why, my young friend?" |
38873 | Are you a Roundhead or a Cavalier? |
38873 | Are you a beast of the field? |
38873 | Are you a fish of the river? |
38873 | Are your sympathies with the Whigs or the Tories?" |
38873 | As for giving up an author just because the judgment of the critic is against him, who ever heard of such a thing? |
38873 | Be Yarrow''s stream unseen, unknown, It must, or we shall rue it, We have a vision of our own, Ah, why should we undo it?" |
38873 | Because I have not crossed the Rubicon of the second chapter, will you say that the book has not influenced me? |
38873 | But are there no Christian virtues to be cultivated? |
38873 | But did you ever know Experience to teach anything to a person whose ideas had set up an independent government of their own? |
38873 | But does he expect to be taken at his word and to live miserably ever after? |
38873 | But have you considered the nature of the emulation belonging to those of tender years which you would come in competition with?" |
38873 | But may one not have a real interest in persons and things which is free from inquisitiveness? |
38873 | But the question which arouses my curiosity is, How did it occur to any one that there should be a history of fans? |
38873 | But was ever a conversion absolute? |
38873 | But what good is there in all this? |
38873 | But why not let bygones be bygones? |
38873 | But would a"swell"recognize a"spark"? |
38873 | But"will they know each other there"? |
38873 | By the way, where was it we left the sweet Sophy; and do you happen to know anything more about that scapegrace Jones?" |
38873 | By what other name was he known? |
38873 | Could the most laborious reading do more for me? |
38873 | Did any one in a few words give such a picture of mirth--"So buxom, blithe, and debonair?" |
38873 | Did he really believe that his helmet was now cutlass proof? |
38873 | Did history keep on repeating itself, or did literary men keep on repeating each other? |
38873 | Do I therefore inquire their names, and intrusively seek to know what books they have written, before I admire their scholarship? |
38873 | Do n''t you hear those wild war notes?" |
38873 | Do you think these dissertations a waste of time? |
38873 | Explain the myth of Orion? |
38873 | Fearing that came on a pilgrimage out of his parts? |
38873 | For what are you? |
38873 | Have not the Tower guns and all the parsons in London been ordered to pray for him?" |
38873 | How are you going to discover what an author thinks about himself if he hides behind a mask of impersonality? |
38873 | How can they be expected to know so much? |
38873 | How could it be otherwise? |
38873 | I take for granted-- as you appear to be a sensible man-- that you are a Whig?" |
38873 | I wonder when it will be bad enough to make folks think it so, without going on?" |
38873 | If any of the Quixotisms which are now in vogue should get themselves established, what then? |
38873 | If he is magnanimous, why not let him feel magnanimous? |
38873 | If it is not that, what is it? |
38873 | In Windsor Park Mrs. Ford whispers,"Where is Nan now and her troop of fairies, and that Welsh devil Sir Hugh?" |
38873 | In its ostensible plot"Paradise Lost"is a tragedy; but did Milton really feel it to be so? |
38873 | Is it a true thing?" |
38873 | Is it any wonder that, with such an introduction, I became interested? |
38873 | My memory goes back to the time when a disconsolate little boy sat on a bench in a Sunday- school and asked himself,"What is a Girgashite?" |
38873 | No wonder that the disciples of the older time cry:--"What hope for the fine- nerved humanities That made earth gracious once with gentler arts?" |
38873 | Not at all; if that were so,"what are we here for?" |
38873 | Nothing can be more disconcerting to his sensitive spirit; and besides, how can you know that he has not a very serious message to communicate? |
38873 | Now and then, indeed, Nature in a fit of prodigality endows one person with both gifts.--Was not Oliver Wendell Holmes a Professor of Anatomy? |
38873 | Or had it been that he had brought the wisdom from his own meditation and deposited it at this shrine? |
38873 | Or would''st thou in a moment laugh and weep? |
38873 | Perhaps not; but when the Napoleonic legend has been banished, what about the Napoleonic wars? |
38873 | Suppose these mill hammers had really been some perilous adventure, have I not given proof of the courage requisite to undertake and achieve it? |
38873 | That something is wrong is evident; but what is it? |
38873 | The Evolution of the Gentleman"What is your favorite character, Gentle Reader?" |
38873 | The Gentle Reader is familiar with his weaknesses; for has he not"sat under his preaching?" |
38873 | The men who have done valiant service are not all smooth- spoken gentlemen in black coats-- but what of it? |
38873 | The peasants who followed Wat Tyler sang,--"When Adam delved and Eve span Who was then the gentleman?" |
38873 | The poet is the enchanter, and we are the willing victims of his spells:--"Would''st thou see A man i''th''clouds and hear him speak to thee? |
38873 | Then the Gentle Reader turns to his old and much criticised friend Macaulay, and asks,--"What do you think about it?" |
38873 | There it stands in all its shameless actuality asking,"What do you make of me?" |
38873 | To whose sphere of influence does he belong? |
38873 | Was Don Quixote as completely mistaken as he seemed? |
38873 | Was ever poetical justice done with more placidity and completeness than in the prison scene? |
38873 | Was he not a Prime Minister''s son, and were not his first letters written from Downing Street? |
38873 | Was he quite sincere? |
38873 | Was not even Ruskin induced to write of the"Ethics of the Dust"? |
38873 | Was this the real Milton? |
38873 | What about humility, that pearl of great price? |
38873 | What about the second best, not to speak of the tenth rate? |
38873 | What are the"mists of time"but imperfect memories? |
38873 | What are we to do with all the sudden incongruities which mock at our wisdom and destroy the symmetry of our ideas? |
38873 | What are we to do with all the waifs and strays? |
38873 | What became of the gems? |
38873 | What became of those merchants of Bristol? |
38873 | What becomes of the gentleman in an age of democratic equality? |
38873 | What came of it all? |
38873 | What did Endymion do? |
38873 | What did he know about human nature if he thought anybody would read an auto- biography that was without vanity? |
38873 | What do you advise?" |
38873 | What do you think about it? |
38873 | What happened next? |
38873 | What if a bishop did act in an undignified manner or commit a blunder? |
38873 | What if the schoolmaster should turn around? |
38873 | What if they do have their faults? |
38873 | What is sedge? |
38873 | What is the character of its autumnal foliage? |
38873 | What matter where, if I be still the same?" |
38873 | What supports me, dost thou ask? |
38873 | What was the reason of his sudden dread of destructive criticism? |
38873 | What would Milton make of Adam in his sheltered Paradise? |
38873 | What, I suppose you have seen the pillars of Hercules and perhaps the walls of Carthage?... |
38873 | When Alice told her name to Humpty Dumpty, that intolerable pedant asked,--"''What does it mean?'' |
38873 | Where have you heard that line of argument, so satisfying to one who has already made up his mind? |
38873 | Where is Vallombrosa? |
38873 | Where is the Red Sea? |
38873 | Which is it that sees behind the scenes,--the writer or the present- day reader? |
38873 | Which side are you on? |
38873 | Who can tell? |
38873 | Who has not felt his courage ooze away at the sight of those melancholy volumes labeled Complete Poetical Works? |
38873 | Who has not heard this sudden question propounded in regard to the most transparent sentence from an author who is deemed worthy of study? |
38873 | Who was Busiris? |
38873 | Who were the Memphian Chivalry?" |
38873 | Why did they cut off the head of Charles I., and why did they drive out James II.? |
38873 | Why not try, remembering, of course, to continue the same breathings,"I am Andrew Carnegie?" |
38873 | Why not? |
38873 | Why should I destroy twenty exciting possibilities for the sake of a single discovery? |
38873 | Why should n''t he-- like the rest of us? |
38873 | Why should they spend valuable time in trying to unravel the meaning of lines which were invented to baffle them? |
38873 | Why should we be confounded with our coevals? |
38873 | Why should we be too curious in regard to such matters? |
38873 | Why should we toil on as if we were walking for a wager? |
38873 | Why was that? |
38873 | Why waste time on idle dreams? |
38873 | Would''st thou be in a dream and yet not sleep? |
38873 | Wouldest thou lose thyself and catch no harm? |
38873 | Yet is not Quixote himself more careful to avoid all appearance of extravagance? |
38873 | You may stand off and criticise William''s policy; but the question is, What policy do you propose? |
8163 | For who is better able to direct my hesitation, or to instruct my ignorance? |
8163 | What, let me ask, is a man in and of himself?" |
8163 | While on her way to make the proposal, she met him in the street, and said,"La Fontaine, will you come and live in my house?" |
47204 | Are you, indeed? 47204 Booth led boldly with his big bass drum,_ Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_ The saints smiled gravely as they said,''He''s come.'' |
47204 | Den whut_ am_ you skeered ob? |
47204 | Does your uncle travel much? |
47204 | Have you, indeed? 47204 My dearest Catherine, what have you been doing with yourself all the morning? |
47204 | Yes, pretty well; but are they all horrid? 47204 ( Suddenly) Jim, they wo n''t have brought me up against her, will they? |
47204 | And God said to the man,"Wherefore can I not send thee to Hell, and for what reason?" |
47204 | And God said to the man,"Wherefore can I not send thee unto Heaven, and for what reason?" |
47204 | And after all, what do the poor things get out of it? |
47204 | And as his_ La Horla_ strongly reflects FitzJames O''Brien''s_ What Was It? |
47204 | And what would a stage manager do with the rhythm of the universe, which enters into Dreiser''s play? |
47204 | And who can say that our dream life is altogether baseless and unreal? |
47204 | And why do they never wear out? |
47204 | Are men skeptical of the existence of any but a satiric or symbolic heaven, or merely doubtful of reaching there? |
47204 | Are you not wild to know?" |
47204 | Are you sure they are all horrid?" |
47204 | As Lord Dunsany says of it,"Who can say of insanity,--whether it be divine or of the Pit?" |
47204 | As the old uncle is almost breathing his last, he cries out,"What the devil brings you here?" |
47204 | But where did the second wife''s soul go, pray,--the"she o''the she"as Patience Worth would say? |
47204 | Cain asks the unhappy spirit,"But didst thou not find favor in the sight of the Lord thy God?" |
47204 | Does he drink the wrong elixir, or have all his calculations been wrong? |
47204 | Each man is asked by name,"How is it with you?" |
47204 | For psychologic subtlety, for haunting horror, what is a crashing helmet or a dismembered ghost compared with Brown''s Wieland? |
47204 | Have you gone on with_ Udolpho_?" |
47204 | He dies that night,--of what? |
47204 | How could one stage such action, for instance, as his citizens turning into witch- cats or his Giant Devil looming mightily in the heavens? |
47204 | How know you that you have not died elsewhere and that this is not the Heaven which there you dreamed? |
47204 | How know you that your Hell may not lie only in not recognizing this as Heaven?" |
47204 | I fell on my knees before her and kissed-- what? |
47204 | I have nothing to say to you?" |
47204 | If now we study a science where once men believed blindly in a Black Art, is the result really less mysterious? |
47204 | If one could point with absolute certainty to the source for every one of Shakespeare''s plots, would that explain his art? |
47204 | In fact, without the sense of the marvelous, the unreal, the wonderful, the magical, what would poetry mean to us? |
47204 | In tropic countries we have stories of supernatural snakes, who appear in various forms, as were- snakes, shall we say? |
47204 | J. M. Barrie in_ Peter Pan_ won the doubtful world over to a confessed faith in the fairy- folk, for did we not see the marvels before our eyes? |
47204 | Now, what was the status of those ghosts? |
47204 | Of poison, of fear, of supernatural suggestion, or in the natural course of events? |
47204 | Of what stuff are ghost- clothes made? |
47204 | One hears echoing through all literature Man Friday''s unanswerable question,"Why not God kill debbil?" |
47204 | Or we reflect that he may be a case of metempsychosis and treat him courteously, for who knows what we may be ourselves some day? |
47204 | Some of the Gothic ghosts have a strange vitality,--and, after all, where would be the phantoms of to- day but for their early services? |
47204 | The author of the drama admits getting his material from a French play, but where did Polidori get his? |
47204 | The writer queries,"If the soul exists, where had that soul been? |
47204 | The young man at last cries out in desperation,"What are you waiting for? |
47204 | Walpole says in a letter: Shall I even confess to you what was the origin of this romance? |
47204 | Was not this suggested by Rupert Brooke''s poem,_ Failure_? |
47204 | Was there a ghost if the person was n''t really dead? |
47204 | What are the rackings of monkish vindictiveness when set against the agonies of an unbalanced mind turned in upon itself? |
47204 | What are they all?" |
47204 | What can it be? |
47204 | What careth Yohu? |
47204 | What could be more beautiful than the incident in_ They_? |
47204 | What could he do? |
47204 | What regions did it relinquish at the command of the reviving body?" |
47204 | What''s the good of seeing it fall?" |
47204 | Who but Maupassant could make a story of ghastly hideousness out of a parrot that swears? |
47204 | Whut you skeered ob when dey ain''no ghosts?" |
47204 | [ 96]_ What Was It? |
43237 | Did not you say that there was somebody down stairs that would be glad to see me? |
43237 | Did you build the pyramids? |
43237 | Do you know how long the first was built before Christ? |
43237 | Do you mean that it was built before the flood? |
43237 | How long have you been there? |
43237 | How will he do for provisions? |
43237 | I demand of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, our once crucified God, whether you are mortal or immortal? |
43237 | Is it not remarkable,says he,"that no record of them appears till_ quite recently_?" |
43237 | Mother,said the child,"will the devil forgive me if I neglect my prayers?" |
43237 | The leech,they say,"can cure those disorders; but who is capable of curing the evil eye?" |
43237 | Well,she replied, with great pertness,"is not Mrs. Mather always glad to see you?" |
43237 | Were there kings of Egypt so soon after the creation? |
43237 | Were you drowned in the Red Sea? |
43237 | Were you king of Egypt when Moses was there? |
43237 | What latitude does he lie in chiefly? |
43237 | What shall we say,says the late Professor Stuart,"of the excessive use that has been made of the passages that speak of his influence and dominion? |
43237 | What was the principal object of them? |
43237 | Where did you dwell till then? |
43237 | Where do you dwell now? |
43237 | Why? |
43237 | Will he be home next summer? |
43237 | Will he find the passage? |
43237 | _ Some._"Were any built before your time? |
43237 | ''Can I do you any good?'' |
43237 | ''Does John Thompson live in Vermont?'' |
43237 | ''Does he live in Massachusetts?'' |
43237 | ''How?'' |
43237 | ''Is John Thompson dead?'' |
43237 | ''The sick man is bewitched: who has bewitched him? |
43237 | ''_ Put it to my mouth._''I asked,''Where is your mouth?'' |
43237 | And I have seen a copy or two of a certain''Journal,''ostensibly advocating the great truths(?) |
43237 | And how are we to account for the Millerites and others being so raised, as they believed? |
43237 | And how can we free ourselves from this thraldom? |
43237 | And how shall the other 30 years be found? |
43237 | And how shall this great object be accomplished? |
43237 | And what now shall be done? |
43237 | And why so? |
43237 | And yet, who were ever more influenced by a belief in signs, omens, spectres, and witches? |
43237 | Are not these cases to be relied upon as much as those related by Mr. Sunderland? |
43237 | Are they not as much to be credited as those who profess a belief in the miracles of the"harmonial philosophers"? |
43237 | But how does the dog obtain this foreknowledge? |
43237 | But what are the facts? |
43237 | But what are the facts? |
43237 | But, pray, what is the"medium,"in these manifestations, but_ a visible human operator_? |
43237 | Can a man be without the law, and yet, touching the law, be blameless? |
43237 | Could not_ four_ respectable ladies tell whether they were_ actually_ carried through the air on a pole or_ not_? |
43237 | Do facts go to show that more disasters occur on this day than on any other? |
43237 | Does God part with the reins of his government, and employ wicked spirits to torment his creatures on this day? |
43237 | Does he make this day more unpropitious to human affairs than others? |
43237 | For a long time, answers could be obtained by any_ two_( why_ two_?) |
43237 | For who were ever better educated than the ancient Greeks and Romans? |
43237 | Have spirits any navels? |
43237 | His death( if he chance to die) has been brought about by evil spirits: who has sent the spirits upon him?'' |
43237 | How can that be? |
43237 | How shall the 75 years be made up to bring the end of the world to 1843? |
43237 | I asked it,''Are you unhappy?'' |
43237 | I have honored my father and mother; I never stole; what need he to steal who has so good an estate? |
43237 | If you say the animal is sent by God, how will you explain the fact that the sign so often fails? |
43237 | Is the Virgin Mary the mother of God? |
43237 | It must be gotten somehow, for who will believe it as it now stands? |
43237 | Now, does this look as though the answer came from spirits? |
43237 | Now, who could prove that the thing alleged was not_ actually_ done? |
43237 | Now, who has ever been up in the moon to ascertain whether it is so or not? |
43237 | Or, in other words, how shall we best lend a helping hand to hasten the downfall of ignorance, error, and sin? |
43237 | Seeing the evils of popular superstitions, what course shall we adopt for their banishment? |
43237 | Shall we not gather from this, that in the spirit world they have their bands of music and companies of artillery, the same as in this world? |
43237 | She then said,"Will you tell the age of Cathy?" |
43237 | Some one in the company asked,''Is John Thompson alive?'' |
43237 | Some will ask the question,"If these things be true, why have we not heard of them before?" |
43237 | The following dialogue then ensued between Mrs. Cooper, her adopted sister, and the young lady:--"''Will you sit close to the table, miss?'' |
43237 | The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed to- day, Had he thy reason, would he skip and play? |
43237 | Then why should we account Friday to be an unlucky day? |
43237 | These sounds were so unusual, that Miss Margaretta Fox, who was present, became alarmed, and said,"What does all this mean?" |
43237 | Treatise after treatise was composed on such subjects as the following: How many angels can stand on the point of a needle? |
43237 | Well, what of that? |
43237 | Were such miracles ever wrought in favor of Millerism? |
43237 | What are his enemy''s fires and incantations to him? |
43237 | What gave that delusion so much success? |
43237 | Whence came such an opinion? |
43237 | Who can say it is not so? |
43237 | Who can wonder that they rise in the morning with wearied limbs, languid and listless, with a furred tongue, parched mouth, and headache? |
43237 | Who sends him on this solemn errand? |
43237 | Why did he not begin the reckoning from the date of the vision itself? |
43237 | Why not as well apply your plaster to a tree as to a pitchfork? |
43237 | Why not as well drink the heart of a lamb as a woman? |
43237 | Why not as well have the touch of a slave as a king? |
43237 | Why should not all mediums be alike? |
43237 | Why was it not then witnessed simultaneously in all parts of the earth? |
43237 | Why? |
43237 | _ Could_ they be deceived? |
43237 | _ Ques._"By whom were you murdered?" |
43237 | _ Ques._"What, then, are you?" |
43237 | _ Ques._"Where does your body lie?" |
43237 | and yet who will_ believe_ that it was? |
747 | ( excrescences) of flesh( skin) hanging on the head, there shall be ill- will, the house will perish;( 53) that has some formed fingers( horns?) |
747 | ), absence of penis and umbilicus( epispadias and exomphalos? |
747 | ), and if it is so with facts, what must be the effect upon reports based upon no fact whatsoever? |
747 | 32- 36), consisting of absence of the penis( epispadias? |
747 | Can anyone suggest the name, etc., of this helminth?" |
747 | How comes it that nowadays, by a reversal of things, the tender body of a little babe has limbs nearer akin to stone?" |
747 | In his''Roman Questions''Plutarch asks:''Why do the Latins abstain strictly from the flesh of the woodpecker?'' |
747 | May this not explain its therapeutic action in this disease? |
747 | Now, then, I was again happy; I took only a thousand drops of Laudanum per day, and what was that? |
747 | She said:"Do you take me for an old sow?" |
747 | The author asked if in this case we have to do with a latent leprosy which was evoked by the wound, or if it were a case of inoculation from the fish? |
747 | The interspace between the thoraces may, however, have simply been the addition of the first artist who portrayed the Maids( from imagination? |
8605 | Or do you prefer the Authority of Christ to that of the Genevan Reformer? |
8605 | We contend for mental freedom; shall we not denounce the system which fetters both mind and body? |
8605 | We have declared righteousness to be the essence of Christianity; shall we not oppose the system which is the sum of all wrong? |
8605 | [ 21] When will the Day come? |
40124 | Accept, dear Miss, this_ article_ of mine,( For what''s_ indefinite_, who can_ define_?) 40124 Are you anxious to bewitch? |
40124 | Ba, ba, mouton noir, Avez vous de laine? 40124 Geist und sinn mich beutzen über Vous zu dire das ich sie liebé? |
40124 | If life were never bitter, And love were always sweet, Then who would care to borrow A moral from to- morrow? 40124 Oh why now sprechen Sie Deutsch? |
40124 | To Urn, or not to Urn? 40124 Well, Tom, are you sick again?" |
40124 | Would you see a man that''s slow? 40124 You bid me sing-- can I forget The classic odes of days gone by-- How belle Fifine and jeune Lisette Exclaimed,''Anacreon[ Greek: gerôn ei]?'' |
40124 | ''Art not content,''the maiden said,''To solve the"Fifteen"-one instead?'' |
40124 | ''Etiam si,-- Eh bien?'' |
40124 | ''How do is there?'' |
40124 | ''Is it up?'' |
40124 | ''It come in one''s? |
40124 | ''M''ami,''says he,''I does these jobs In jocum-- get up from your knees, Would you offer outright to requite a knight? |
40124 | ''Man- man,''one galo talkee he;''What for you go topside look- see?'' |
40124 | ''Till at what o''clock its had play one?'' |
40124 | ''What matters it how far we go?'' |
40124 | ''Who have prevailed upon?'' |
40124 | --_Arym._"And must we really part for good, But meet again here where we''ve stood? |
40124 | Abdul Hamid is supposed to question it as to the intentions of the European powers and his own resources:"L''Angleterre? |
40124 | Against such_ atchievements_ what beauty could fence? |
40124 | Aha Mounsieurs, voulez voz intruder par joint tenant? |
40124 | All through a hundred years? |
40124 | And I said,''What is written, sweet sister, At the opposite end of the room?'' |
40124 | And what is Brutus but a croaking owl? |
40124 | And what is Rolla? |
40124 | Another string of play- day rhymes? |
40124 | Blow of the trumpets thine children once blew for thee Break from thine feet and thine bosom the bands? |
40124 | But wives will sometimes have their way, And cause, if possible, a fray; Then who so obstinate as they? |
40124 | Can I decline a nymph so divine? |
40124 | Der Müller may tragen ein Rock Eat schwartz Brod und dem Käsè, Die Gans may be hängen on hoch, But what can it matter to me, sir? |
40124 | Did none attempt, before he fell, To succour one they loved so well? |
40124 | Dost thou ask her crime? |
40124 | Es pro bagaschiis et strumpetis? |
40124 | Et Suleiman? |
40124 | Fayre Syr, how deemest thou of yt? |
40124 | For Beauté miserable was there ever Eques who would not do and die? |
40124 | For thy domum long''st thou nonne? |
40124 | Habes wife et filios bonny? |
40124 | Hand to shake and mouth to kiss, Both he offered ere he spoke; But she said,''What man is this Comes to play a sorry joke?'' |
40124 | Have you heard of the cause? |
40124 | How is it you are in bed yet?'' |
40124 | How many apples have you had?'' |
40124 | How shall I live through all the days? |
40124 | How shall he act? |
40124 | I certainly thought I was jilted; But come thou with me, to the parson we''ll go; Say, wilt thou, my dear?'' |
40124 | I have a saddel--''Say''st thou soe? |
40124 | I''d better turn nun, and coquet with a monk, For with whom can I flirt without aid from my trunk? |
40124 | In nomine Dei, ubi sunt clerici mei jam? |
40124 | In this way:"Is his honor sic? |
40124 | In"Alice in Wonderland,"[4] by the same gentleman, there is this new version of an old nursery ditty:"''Will you walk a little faster?'' |
40124 | Is not her bosom white as snow? |
40124 | Ite igitur ad mansorium nostrum cum baggis et rotulis.--Quid i d est? |
40124 | L''Autriche? |
40124 | La Prusse? |
40124 | Mes Pashas? |
40124 | Mes cuirasses? |
40124 | Mes principautés? |
40124 | My_ case_ is singular, my house is rural, Wilt thou, indeed, consent to make it_ plural_? |
40124 | Not encore? |
40124 | Now when her conduct I survey, And in the scale of justice weigh, Who blames me, if I do inveigh Against her to my dying day? |
40124 | Or till half- price, to save his shilling, wait, And gain his hat again at half- past eight? |
40124 | Pay at the gallery- door Two shillings for what cost, when new, but four? |
40124 | Polkam, jungere, Virgo vis? |
40124 | Quid tu dicis, Musæe? |
40124 | Quæ villa, quod burgum est Logica? |
40124 | Said I,''What is it makes you bad? |
40124 | Say, why these Babel strains from Babel tongues? |
40124 | Socios Afros magis ton- y? |
40124 | Tell me where est now the gloria, Where the honours of Victoria? |
40124 | The brothers Smith reproduced Byron in the familiar"Childe Harold"stanza, both in style and thought:"For what is Hamlet, but a hare in March? |
40124 | The darts or sling, Or strong bowstring, That should us wring, And under bring? |
40124 | The farther off from England the nearer is to France-- Then turn not pale, beloved snail, but come and join the dance? |
40124 | The piper he piped on the hill- top high(_ Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_); Till the cow said,''I die,''and the goose said,''Why?'' |
40124 | The vocabulary fills about fifty pages, and is followed by a series of"familiar phrases,"of which a few are here given:"Do which is that book? |
40124 | Their ancestors the pious praise, And like to imitate their ways How, then, does our first parent live, What lesson has his life to give? |
40124 | Then softly he whispered,''How could you do so? |
40124 | They are waiting on the shingle-- will you come and join the dance? |
40124 | This is followed by a description of the dissipation which led to these late hours--"singing, dancing, laughing, and playing"--"''What game?'' |
40124 | Ubi est Fledwit? |
40124 | Ubi est Pecus? |
40124 | We went where he dwells-- we entered the cell-- we begged the decree,--"''Where, whenever, when,''twere well Eve be wedded? |
40124 | What are they feared on? |
40124 | What for sing? |
40124 | What heart hath ever matched his flame? |
40124 | What is it ails me that I should sing of her? |
40124 | What is it now I should ask at thine hands? |
40124 | What is it, Queen, that now I should do for thee? |
40124 | What is this tale of straws and bricks? |
40124 | What pleasure say can Sie haben? |
40124 | What should I do? |
40124 | What then is left? |
40124 | What vessel bear the shock? |
40124 | Where shall we our great professor inter, That in peace may rest his bones? |
40124 | Who every way Thee vexe and pay And beare the sway By night and day, To thy dismay In battle array, And every fray? |
40124 | Why should we then forbear to sport? |
40124 | Why speak I thus? |
40124 | Why wilfully wage you this war, is All pity purged out of your breast? |
40124 | Why, heedless of the warning Which my tinkling sound doth give, Do forget, vain frame adorning, Man thou art not born to live?" |
40124 | Will you join in the polka, miss? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance?''" |
40124 | Would you gain of fame a niche? |
40124 | Wyth styrruppes, knyghte, to boote?'' |
40124 | Ye vales, ye streams, ye groves, adieu? |
40124 | You do not mean it? |
40124 | [ 3]"''What do you mean by the reference to Greeley?'' |
40124 | _ Air._--"If I had a donkey vot vouldn''t go, Do you think I''d wallop,"& c."Had I an ass averse to speed, Deem''st thou I''d strike him? |
40124 | _ Est- ce- que- vous pensez_ I will steal it? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Amori? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Inter octo et nina? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Liberalium? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Logica? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Quota est clocka nunc? |
40124 | _ Lover._ But come, thou saucy, pert romancer, Who is as fair as Phoebe? |
40124 | _ Lover._ Has Phoebe not a heavenly brow? |
40124 | _ Lover._ Say what will turn that frisking coney Into the toils of matrimony? |
40124 | _ Lover._ Tell me, fair nymph, if ere you saw So sweet a girl as Phoebe Shaw? |
40124 | _ Shep._ But deer have horns: how must I keep her under? |
40124 | _ Shep._ But if she bang again, still should I bang her? |
40124 | _ Shep._ But what can glad me when she''s laid on bier? |
40124 | _ Shep._ How shall I please her, who ne''er loved before? |
40124 | _ Shep._ If she be wind, what stills her when she blows? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Is there no way to moderate her anger? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Lord, what is she that can so turn and wind? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Say, what can keep her chaste whom I adore? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Then teach me, Echo, how shall I come by her? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What most moves women when we them address? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What must I do when women will be cross? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What must I do when women will be kind? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What must we do our passion to express? |
40124 | _ Shep._ When bought, no question I shall be her dear? |
40124 | _ Shepherd._ Echo, I ween, will in the woods reply, And quaintly answer questions: shall I try? |
40124 | dancez- vous?'' |
40124 | or whither turn? |
40124 | was ever such a pair? |
45954 | How do those people treat you now, since they have come to close quarters with you? 45954 They assailed Sumner because he said,''Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing?'' |
45954 | Who can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, Loyal and neutral, in a moment? 45954 Who is the HONEST MAN? |
45954 | _ Bru._ All this? 45954 ''Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing? 45954 ***** And first, what are our present duties here in Massachusetts? 45954 ***** Here two questions occur, absorbing all others:_ first_, what are our political duties here in Massachusetts at the present time? 45954 Am I not right in this parallel? 45954 Am I not right, then, in calling it the worst bill on which Congress ever acted? 45954 Am I not right, then, in calling this bill the best on which Congress ever acted? 45954 Am I right? 45954 And yet the honorable Senator asks,Did we ever bring this subject into Congress?" |
45954 | Ay, more: fret, till your proud heart break:_ Go, show your slaves how choleric you are, And make your bondmen tremble._ Must I budge? |
45954 | But what is the use of petition, or polished sentences and rounded periods, in a contest with the pirate honor of Slavery? |
45954 | Did not the honorable Senator from Ohio some time ago bring in such a bill? |
45954 | Do I understand the Senator to say without notice given? |
45954 | Do I understand the gentleman to say that the Rule of Three was applied to representation in the United States? |
45954 | Do you ask me if I would send back a slave? |
45954 | Does any Senator here dissent from this rule? |
45954 | Does any one question this? |
45954 | Does the Senator allude to my State? |
45954 | Does the Senator from South Carolina? |
45954 | Does the Senator from Virginia? |
45954 | Has the Senator a right to debate the question, or say anything on it, until leave be granted? |
45954 | Has the Senator done? |
45954 | He then asked if Massachusetts"would send fugitives back to us after trial by jury or any other mode?" |
45954 | Here the question was distinctly presented, whether any such property was recognized by the British Constitution? |
45954 | How often must I say this? |
45954 | I put the question in general language: Does he recognize the obligation to return a fugitive slave?" |
45954 | I wish to inquire of the Senator from New Hampshire whether he has withdrawn his motion? |
45954 | I wish to know, before voting, what will be the effect of a vote given in the affirmative on this motion? |
45954 | I would inquire whether there is not a bill already pending for the repeal of the Fugitive Slave Law? |
45954 | I would inquire whether there is not such a bill pending? |
45954 | I would respectfully ask the Chair what has become of the motion submitted by the Senator from New Hampshire? |
45954 | If the Constitution and laws appoint officers, and require them to discharge duties, will he abandon them to the mob? |
45954 | In what school of blackguardism was Clay of Alabama graduated? |
45954 | Is that in order? |
45954 | Is that motion in order? |
45954 | It was entitled,"Shall Slavery be permitted in Nebraska?" |
45954 | Mr. Butler rose to reply, when Mr. Badger asked his"friend from South Carolina, whether it would not be better for him to allow us now to adjourn?" |
45954 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
45954 | Must I observe you? |
45954 | Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humor? |
45954 | Now, Sir, upon what ground do gentlemen make any discrimination in the case of the power over the National Militia? |
45954 | Oh, when will the North be aroused? |
45954 | On what motion have the yeas and nays been ordered? |
45954 | Our slaves being our property, why should they be taxed more than the land, sheep, cattle, horses,& c.?" |
45954 | Pray, why incumbent on him? |
45954 | Sir, can you wonder that our people are moved? |
45954 | Sir, who has pretended that all men are born equal in physical strength or in mental capacities, in beauty of form or health of body? |
45954 | Suppose some of us object to it? |
45954 | The question arose, whether leave should be granted to the Senator from Massachusetts to introduce the bill? |
45954 | The question for the Chair to put is, Shall the Senator have leave? |
45954 | The question is, whether, on the motion for leave to introduce the bill, there shall be debate? |
45954 | The question was then raised, whether it could be received, if there was objection? |
45954 | Then he exclaimed:"Why, Sir, am I speaking of a fanatic, one whose reason is dethroned? |
45954 | Then how can we ever reach the question of leave, when objection is made? |
45954 | Then, turning to Mr. Sumner, he demanded, with much impetuosity of manner,"Will this honorable Senator tell me that he will do it?" |
45954 | To which Mr. Sumner promptly replied,"Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing?" |
45954 | WHEN WILL THE NORTH BE AROUSED? |
45954 | What and how? |
45954 | What higher praise could I offer? |
45954 | What is the date of that statute? |
45954 | Who can doubt the result? |
45954 | Who can fail to see the difference between the two cases, and how far the tyranny of the Slave Act is beyond the tyranny of the Stamp Act? |
45954 | Why not? |
45954 | Will it carry the bill and the whole subject on the table? |
45954 | Will the Chair allow me to make a single statement? |
45954 | Will the Senator allow me? |
45954 | Will the Senator from Massachusetts give leave to the Chair to explain? |
45954 | Will the Senator refer to his own speech? |
45954 | Will the gentleman for Marshfield allow me to make one more inquiry? |
45954 | Will the gentleman state who was the author of that Essex paper? |
45954 | Will the honorable Senator allow me to interrupt him? |
45954 | [_ Applause and laughter._] What may we expect from the Whig party? |
45954 | _ Sic itur ad astra._ Mais que dis- je? |
45954 | and,_ secondly_, how, and by what agency, shall they be performed? |
45954 | in reply to the question, whether he would assist in the capture of a fugitive slave? |
45954 | must I endure all this? |
45954 | which way shall I fly? |
58859 | You mean,said his neighbour,"is he not_ sometimes_ sober?" |
58859 | And may not this be the reason why so few inconveniences are felt from the mixture of a variety of vegetables in the stomach? |
58859 | Are her strength, wisdom, or benignity, equal to the increase of those dangers which threaten her dissolution among civilized nations? |
58859 | Are they inhabitants of cities? |
58859 | Are they inhabitants of country places? |
58859 | But are there no conditions of the human body in which ardent spirits may be given? |
58859 | But further, what is the practice of our modern surgeons in these cases? |
58859 | But it may be said, if we reject spirits from being a part of our drinks, what liquors shall we substitute in their room? |
58859 | But may not the same heat, moisture, and diet which produced the diseases, have produced the worms? |
58859 | But may not_ most_ of the diseases of armies be produced by the different manner in which wars are carried on by the modern nations? |
58859 | But what are we to say to a compound of two medicines which give exactly the same impression to the system? |
58859 | By what arts shall we persuade them to discover their remedies? |
58859 | Do the blessings of civilization compensate for the sacrifice we make of natural health, as well as of natural liberty? |
58859 | Does it suspend pain, and raise the body above feeling the pangs of Indian tortures? |
58859 | Does the will beget insensibility to cold, heat, hunger, and danger? |
58859 | How shall we distinguish between the original diseases of the Indians and those contracted from their intercourse with the Europeans? |
58859 | In speaking of him to one of his neighbours, I said,"Does he not_ sometimes_ get drunk?" |
58859 | Is he a husband? |
58859 | Is he a magistrate? |
58859 | Is he a minister of the gospel? |
58859 | Is he the father, or is she the mother of a family of children? |
58859 | Is it not to lay aside plasters and ointments, and trust the whole to nature? |
58859 | Is it proper to refer these complaints to the same cause which produces the scarlatina anginosa? |
58859 | Is she a wife? |
58859 | Is there any such disease as an idiopathic WORM- FEVER? |
58859 | Is this occasioned by the vigour of constitution peculiar to the inhabitants of those northern countries? |
58859 | Should they continue to exert this deadly influence upon our population, where will their evils terminate? |
58859 | What would be the effect of exciting a strong counter- action in the stomach and bowels in this disease? |
58859 | What would be the effect of_ extreme_ cold in this disease? |
58859 | What would be the effects of_ copious_ blood- letting in this disease? |
58859 | Who knows but that, at the foot of the Allegany mountain, there blooms a flower that is an infallible cure for the epilepsy? |
58859 | Why is not the same zeal manifested in protecting our citizens from the more general and consuming ravages of distilled spirits? |
58859 | [ 22]"Aurengezebe, emperor of Persia, being asked, Why he did not build hospitals? |
58859 | or has he been chosen to fill a high and respectable station in the councils of his country? |
4901 | Ah, old man, do you serve me so? |
4901 | And how do you do again? |
4901 | And vex his own baby will he? |
4901 | And why may not I love Johnny, And why may not Johnny love me? |
4901 | And why may not I love Johnny, As well as another body? |
4901 | And why may not I love Johnny? |
4901 | And why,& c.& c. Who comes here? |
4901 | Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool? |
4901 | Bow, wow, wow, whose dog art thou? |
4901 | But there were other designs made by some artist of genius; and who was he? |
4901 | Can I get there by candle- light? |
4901 | Can he set a shoe? |
4901 | Can you spell that with four letters? |
4901 | Cock, cock, cock, cock, I''ve laid an egg, Am I to gang ba- are- foot? |
4901 | Could you without you could, could ye? |
4901 | Dance over my Lady Lee, How shall we build it up again? |
4901 | Did his papa torment it? |
4901 | Ding-- dong-- bell, the cat''s in the well, Who put her in? |
4901 | Goosey, goosey, gander, where dost thou wander? |
4901 | Harry cum Parry, when will you marry? |
4901 | He began to compliment, and I began to grin, How do you do, and how do you do? |
4901 | Heigh ding a ding, what shall I sing? |
4901 | Hey rub- a- dub, ho rub- a- dub, three maids in a tub, And who do you think was there? |
4901 | How get her home? |
4901 | How many days has my baby to play? |
4901 | How many holes in a skimmer? |
4901 | How many miles to Babylon? |
4901 | How shall I cut it Without any knife? |
4901 | How shall I marry Without any wife? |
4901 | How shall we build it up again? |
4901 | How shall we dress her? |
4901 | I could n''t without I could, could I? |
4901 | I would, if I could; if I could n''t, how could I? |
4901 | Little Robin chirped and sung, and what did pussy say? |
4901 | Little Tommy Tucker, Sing for your supper: What shall I sing? |
4901 | Little lad, little lad, Where were you born? |
4901 | Milk- man, milk- man, where have you been? |
4901 | Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
4901 | Nose, Nose, jolly red Nose, And what gave you that jolly red Nose? |
4901 | Old woman, old woman, old woman, said I, O whither, O whither, O whither so high? |
4901 | Once in my life I married a wife, And where do you think I found her? |
4901 | Pretty John Watts, We are troubled with rats, Will you drive them out of the house? |
4901 | Pussy cat, pussy cat, what did you there? |
4901 | Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been? |
4901 | Pussy sits behind the log, How can she be fair? |
4901 | Robert Barns, fellow fine, Can you shoe this horse of mine, So that I may cut a shine? |
4901 | Says I,"So you have lost mamma?" |
4901 | See saw, sacradown, sacradown, Which is the way to Boston town? |
4901 | Shake a leg, wag a leg, when will you gang? |
4901 | Sing, Sing!--What shall I sing? |
4901 | So, so, dear mistress Pussy, Pray tell me how you do? |
4901 | The North wind doth blow, And we shall have snow, And what will poor robin do then? |
4901 | The air is cold, the worms are hid, For Robin here what can be done? |
4901 | The man in the wilderness, Asked me, How many strawberries Grew in the sea? |
4901 | Then comes in the little dog, Pussy, are you there? |
4901 | There was an old woman, and what do you think? |
4901 | WHO WAS MOTHER GOOSE? |
4901 | Was n''t Jimmy Jed a staring fool, Born in the woods to be scar''d by an owl? |
4901 | Was not she a dirty slut, To sell her bed and lay in the dirt? |
4901 | We have mice too in plenty, That feast in the pantry, But let them stay and nibble away, What harm in a little brown mouse? |
4901 | What care I how black he be? |
4901 | What do you want? |
4901 | What to do there? |
4901 | What''s the news of the day, Good neighbor, I pray? |
4901 | When will that be? |
4901 | When will you pay me? |
4901 | When will you pay me? |
4901 | Where was a jewel and pretty, Where was a sugar and spicey? |
4901 | Where''s your money? |
4901 | Who pulled her out? |
4901 | Will you be mine? |
4901 | Willie boy, Willie boy, Where are you going? |
4901 | Yet did n''t you see, yet did n''t you see, What naughty tricks they put upon me? |
4901 | You could n''t without you could, could ye? |
4901 | and WHEN were her melodies first given to the world? |
4901 | could ye? |
4901 | could ye? |
4901 | is this the way you mind your sheep, Under the haycock fast asleep? |
4901 | said the gridiron, Ca n''t you agree? |
4901 | says John all alone, How get her home? |
4901 | says John all alone, How shall we dress her? |
4901 | says John all alone, What to do there? |
4901 | says Richard to Robin, How get her home? |
4901 | says Richard to Robin, How shall we dress her? |
4901 | says Richard to Robin, What to do there? |
4901 | says Robin to Bobin, How get her home? |
4901 | says Robin to Bobin, How shall we dress her? |
4901 | says Robin to Bobin, What to do there? |
3646 | A lady-- eh-- what? |
3646 | About Mr. Ditmar? 3646 Ah, what''s eatin''you?" |
3646 | Ai n''t you never read Darwin? |
3646 | All alone to- night, Colonel? |
3646 | And how old is the tree? |
3646 | And what''s Mr. Ditmar''s goodness got to do with it? 3646 And where then? |
3646 | And why would n''t you? |
3646 | Anything happened-- what do you mean? 3646 Are the holes very deep?" |
3646 | Are there any stores near here? |
3646 | Are things any worse than in any other manufacturing city? |
3646 | Are you a painter, too? |
3646 | But how in thunder did you get rid of him? |
3646 | But look at me, was n''t I born in Meriden, Connecticut? 3646 But what does it prove? |
3646 | But what of it? 3646 But when you get to a point where private affairs become a public menace?" |
3646 | But why? |
3646 | But you-- aren''t you working? |
3646 | Ca n''t you say it to- morrow? |
3646 | D''you want to wake''em up? 3646 Did n''t I tell you I was sick of him? |
3646 | Did you wish anything more this evening? |
3646 | Do n''t you intend to answer your letters? |
3646 | Do you like your work here? |
3646 | Do you think I want anybody to take care of me? 3646 Do you think I want them from you?" |
3646 | Everything going all right up at the mills, Colonel? |
3646 | For God''s sake, why ca n''t you trust me? |
3646 | For God''s sake, why? |
3646 | Funny? 3646 Had n''t you better go after her?" |
3646 | Have I done something to offend you? |
3646 | He is great, I grant you,Chris would admit,"but vat is he if the vimmen leave him alone? |
3646 | Horrible? |
3646 | How are you this morning? |
3646 | How could I help you? |
3646 | How dare you say that? |
3646 | How did you know? |
3646 | How do you know? |
3646 | How do you mean-- you understand? |
3646 | How many generations? |
3646 | How would you know? 3646 How''s Mr. Bumpus this evening?" |
3646 | How''s everything else going? |
3646 | How? |
3646 | I do n''t blame you-- why should n''t you? |
3646 | I handed him the mit-- do you get me? |
3646 | I wonder whether you''d mind if I put on my old suit again, and carried this? |
3646 | If it is possible for the workingman to rise under a capitalistic system, why do you not rise, then? 3646 If there was a God, a nice, kind, all- powerful God, would he permit what happened in one of the loom- rooms last week? |
3646 | If you were-- if you could really understand those who are driven to work in order to keep alive? |
3646 | Is Frear wanted? |
3646 | Is it Anthony, the conqueror of Egypt and the East? 3646 Is n''t he working as hard as he can to send you to school, and give you a chance?" |
3646 | Is n''t it because these people want to live that way? |
3646 | Is n''t that pretty? 3646 Janet, do you calculate he means anything wrong?" |
3646 | Leave me alone-- can''t you? |
3646 | Lise, has anything happened to you? |
3646 | Lise, why do n''t you say something to your sister? 3646 No, no,"he stammered,"I did n''t mean--""What did you mean?" |
3646 | Now, what can I do for you? |
3646 | Oh Eda,she cried,"do you remember, we saw them being picked-- in the movies? |
3646 | Oh, is that why? |
3646 | Oh, she went through, did she? |
3646 | Or is it because you do n''t like me? |
3646 | Orcutt, what''s the matter with the opener in Cooney''s room? |
3646 | Push me into the gutter? |
3646 | Say, did I wake you? |
3646 | Say- isn''t he? |
3646 | She did n''t happen to mention where she was going, did she, Janet? |
3646 | Siddons? |
3646 | The cotton cards--? |
3646 | Then why do you do it? |
3646 | There ai n''t anything troubling you-- is there, Janet? |
3646 | This woman sued a man named Ferris-- is that it? |
3646 | Through with him? |
3646 | Vat you do? |
3646 | Vill you mention one great man-- yoost one-- who is not greater if the vimmen leave him alone? |
3646 | Well, if I am who''s going to blame me? |
3646 | Well, suppose something has happened? |
3646 | Well, what am I to do about it? |
3646 | Well, what do you think of the nerve of a man like that? |
3646 | Well, what if it was? |
3646 | Well, whose fault is it?.... |
3646 | Well, you''ve got one hundred and twenty- seven other ancestors of Ebenezer''s time, have n''t you? |
3646 | Well, young ladies,said a voice,"come to pay a call on your relations-- have ye?" |
3646 | Well-- what''s the trouble with it? 3646 Were you thinking of going shopping?" |
3646 | Were you-- were you coming to the office? |
3646 | What are you giving us? |
3646 | What are you trying to do? |
3646 | What can you do? |
3646 | What chance have I got, against him? |
3646 | What difference does that make? |
3646 | What do you mean? |
3646 | What do you want to say? |
3646 | What else can you do? |
3646 | What have you got there, angel face? |
3646 | What in the world happened to you, Janet? |
3646 | What kind of work would you like to do? |
3646 | What strikes you to- day? |
3646 | What''s he wanted for? |
3646 | What''s it to you? 3646 What''s the difference? |
3646 | What''s the matter? |
3646 | What''s the matter? |
3646 | What''s this I hear about giving the girls the vote, Chris? |
3646 | What, then? |
3646 | What? |
3646 | What? |
3646 | What? |
3646 | Where are you going? |
3646 | Where are you going? |
3646 | Where do you live? |
3646 | Which way were you going? |
3646 | Who is playing with them? |
3646 | Who is she? |
3646 | Who was that? |
3646 | Who''s Siddons? |
3646 | Why are you so proud of Ebenezer? |
3646 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
3646 | Why did you let the holes get so deep? |
3646 | Why did you run away from me last night? |
3646 | Why do n''t you go to bed? |
3646 | Why do you think it''s interesting? |
3646 | Why hurry back to Hampton? |
3646 | Why is it you never ask me? |
3646 | Why not? |
3646 | Why not? |
3646 | Why should I? |
3646 | Why should n''t they, if they want to? |
3646 | Why should you get me talked about? |
3646 | Why should you want me? 3646 Why would I be going out there?" |
3646 | Why? 3646 Why? |
3646 | Why? |
3646 | Working? |
3646 | Would n''t you like to see the letter? |
3646 | Would you mind staying a little while longer this evening, Miss Bumpus? |
3646 | Yes, there are stores, in the village,he went on,"but is n''t it a holiday, or Sunday-- perhaps-- or something of the kind?" |
3646 | Yes,retorted Ditmar,"and what then? |
3646 | You and me? 3646 You do n''t mean to say you agree with that kind of talk?" |
3646 | You do n''t tell me-- where''d you get it? 3646 You lika the olives?" |
3646 | You want beautiful things, do you? 3646 You wanted me for a friend?" |
3646 | You''ve never been through? |
3646 | A feeling of helplessness, of utter desolation crept over Janet; powerless to comfort herself, how could she comfort her sister? |
3646 | Ai n''t that Yankee enough for you?" |
3646 | Ai n''t you glad she''s got the place?" |
3646 | All those old trees on the side of a hill?" |
3646 | And Chris would as invariably reply:--"You have the dandruffs-- yes? |
3646 | And are n''t these conditions a disgrace to Hampton and America?" |
3646 | And how could she explain the motives that led to it? |
3646 | And suddenly the suggestion flashed into her mind, why should n''t she buy it? |
3646 | And what do you expect us to do? |
3646 | And what would become of her, Janet?... |
3646 | And why should you want to know me and see me outside of the office? |
3646 | And"gentlemen"? |
3646 | Anything happened?" |
3646 | Are n''t we descended from him?" |
3646 | Before one of these she paused, retaining Janet by the arm, exclaiming wistfully:"Would n''t you like to live there? |
3646 | But it''s common sense to make''em as comfortable and happy as possible-- isn''t it? |
3646 | But the point is"and here he cocked his nose--"the point is, where is he? |
3646 | But they?... |
3646 | But what did it mean? |
3646 | But why had the departure of the Irish, the coming of the Syrians made Dey Street dark, narrow, mysterious, oriental? |
3646 | Buy land and build flats for them? |
3646 | Caldwell?" |
3646 | Desire for what? |
3646 | Ditmar?" |
3646 | Ditmar?" |
3646 | Ditmar?" |
3646 | Do you see?" |
3646 | Do you?" |
3646 | Have you got another raise out of Ditmar?" |
3646 | He kept her waiting a moment, and then said, with apparent casualness:--"Is that you, Miss Bumpus? |
3646 | How had it happened to an honest and virtuous man, the days of whose forebears had been long in the land which the Lord their God had given them? |
3646 | How was I to know the highball was stiff? |
3646 | How?" |
3646 | I read an article in the newspaper about you today-- Mr. Caldwell gave it to me--""Did you like it?" |
3646 | I was sick of him-- ain''t that enough? |
3646 | If anything''s happened, it''s happened to me-- hasn''t it?" |
3646 | In obeying it, would she not lose all life had to give? |
3646 | In whose company had she become drunk? |
3646 | Is n''t it in the hope of freeing themselves ultimately from these very conditions? |
3646 | Is that your game?" |
3646 | It is n''t as hard as it would be in some other places, is it?" |
3646 | It''s good looking, is n''t it?" |
3646 | Lise, aroused from her visions, demanded vehemently"Ai n''t he a millionaire?" |
3646 | Longing for what? |
3646 | Me kiddin''you? |
3646 | Mr. Tiernan suddenly looked very solemn:"Kidding, is it? |
3646 | Now-- what colour would you paint it?" |
3646 | Occasionally, somewhat to Edward''s alarm, Hannah demanded:"Where are you taking Lise this evening?" |
3646 | Presently she inquired curiously:"Are n''t you sorry?" |
3646 | Standing on your feet all day till you''re wore out for six dollars a week-- what''s there in it?" |
3646 | The fog of Edward''s bewilderment never cleared, and the unformed question was ever clamouring for an answer-- how had it happened? |
3646 | Und vat vill you say of Goethe?" |
3646 | Was it not by grace of her association with him she was there, a spectator of the toil beneath? |
3646 | Was it not he who had lifted her farther above all this? |
3646 | Was it the coffee- houses? |
3646 | Was it the glance cast in her direction that had caused him to delay his departure? |
3646 | Was she in love with him? |
3646 | Was the woman''s admiration cleverly feigned? |
3646 | Were all the inhabitants of Silliston like him? |
3646 | Were not the strange peoples of the earth flocking to Hampton? |
3646 | What do you say?" |
3646 | What do you think of the car? |
3646 | What kind of gentlemen had taken her sister to Gruber''s? |
3646 | What right has a man to make you and me work for him just because he has capital?" |
3646 | What the devil was it in her that made him so uncomfortable? |
3646 | What was it about her that had attracted Ditmar? |
3646 | What would become of Lise? |
3646 | What you reformers are actually driving at is that we should raise wages-- isn''t it? |
3646 | What''s the difference? |
3646 | Where do you get such ideas? |
3646 | Where had Lise been? |
3646 | Where have you been keeping yourself lately? |
3646 | Where will he be tonight?" |
3646 | Where will you be, now?" |
3646 | Where would it lead? |
3646 | Where, she wondered, would it all end? |
3646 | Why do I not rise? |
3646 | Why had he never noticed her before? |
3646 | Why had she taken her money with her that evening, if not with some deliberate though undefined purpose? |
3646 | Why is it you''ll never give me a dance?" |
3646 | Why not?" |
3646 | Why should n''t she go away? |
3646 | Why should she feel her body hot with shame, her cheeks afire? |
3646 | Why should she not live by herself amidst clean and tidy surroundings? |
3646 | Why was it that doing wrong agreed with her, energized her, made her more alert, cleverer, keying up her faculties? |
3646 | Why?" |
3646 | Will you wear it?" |
3646 | Would Ditmar do that sort of thing if he had a chance? |
3646 | Would the sound never end?... |
3646 | Would you mind closing the door?" |
3646 | You could n''t come there-- don''t you see how impossible it is? |
3646 | You''ve got a right to look at his house, have n''t you?" |
3646 | an element refusing to be classified under the head of property, since it involved something he desired and could not buy? |
3646 | and if not beautiful-- alluring? |
3646 | at the Paris?" |
3646 | changed the very aspect of its architecture? |
3646 | or did she really look different, distinguished? |
3646 | this image she beheld an illusion? |
3646 | turned life from a dull affair into a momentous one? |
9252 | Perhaps you will inquire,"What are Time''s literary tastes?" |
9322 | We are one nation to- day,said Washington,"and thirteen to- morrow; who will treat with us on these terms?" |
9322 | In the same way the old familiar question,"Who discovered America?" |
9322 | Sydney Smith, were he now living, would find his question,"Who reads an American book?" |
9322 | Where are they and their works? |
8089 | Did you hit it? |
8089 | Is that a burden of sunshine on Apollo''s back? |
8089 | What did you fire at? |
8089 | Where''s the man- mountain of these Liliputs? |
8089 | And what becomes of the birds in such a soaking rain as this? |
8089 | And what delusion can be more lamentable and mischievous, than to mistake the physical and material for the spiritual? |
8089 | And what is there to write about? |
8089 | But how is he to accomplish it? |
8089 | By the by, was there ever any rain in Paradise? |
8089 | Can the tolling of the Old South bell be painted? |
8089 | Did you ever behold such a vile scribble as I write since I became a farmer? |
8089 | Did you know what treasures of wild grapes there are in this land? |
8089 | How came these little birds out of their nests at night? |
8089 | I am not quite so strict as I should be in keeping him out of the house; but I commiserate him and myself, for are we not both of us bereaved? |
8089 | Is hope and an instinctive faith so mixed up with their nature that they can be cheered by the thought that the sunshine will return? |
8089 | Is it a praiseworthy matter that I have spent five golden months in providing food for cows and horses? |
8089 | Is not this consummate discretion? |
8089 | Is truth a fantasy which we are to pursue forever and never grasp? |
8089 | What could the little bird mean by pouring it forth at midnight? |
8089 | What had I done, that it should bemaul me so? |
8089 | What is the price of a day''s labor in Lapland, where the sun never sets for six months? |
8089 | What should we do without fire and death? |
8089 | When shall we be able to walk again to the far hills, and plunge into the deep woods, and gather more cardinals along the river''s margin? |
8089 | Why should they meet destruction from the radiance that proves the salvation of other beings? |
8089 | and am I not perfectly safe? |
8089 | or do they think, as I almost do, that there is to be no sunshine any more? |
8089 | what so miserable as to lose the soul''s true, though hidden knowledge and consciousness of heaven in the mist of an earth- born vision? |
42429 | About the witches? |
42429 | And I may ride with you and General Bacon, father? |
42429 | And did n''t he say anything more? |
42429 | And did this make you believe in witches and the Evil Eye? |
42429 | And is it clear to the top? |
42429 | And what are you going to do with them? |
42429 | And what can they say against him? |
42429 | And what did they say there? |
42429 | And why might some be afraid? |
42429 | And you''re coming back yourself? |
42429 | Arm, and march up and down the river bank? 42429 Big Bill,"marching his men down to his end of the bridge, so as to prevent any attempt to cross it, now repeated his question,"Are you Yorkers? |
42429 | But how do you know they''d do it? |
42429 | But we do n''t care what they think, do we? 42429 But what''s to be done?" |
42429 | But who started the story? |
42429 | Ca n''t catch you boys asleep, can we? |
42429 | Can you shelter me from the storm? |
42429 | Can you think of one, Michael? |
42429 | Could Master Hugh spare you long enough to run down to the village and fetch us a bottle of brandy? |
42429 | Did I get there? |
42429 | Did the children tell these things themselves? |
42429 | Did you really get to Dutton''s? |
42429 | Did you, Sam? 42429 Do n''t mind a little wetting, do ye?" |
42429 | Do you know a good hiding- place? |
42429 | Do you really think he was? |
42429 | Do you surrender? |
42429 | Do you think Mr. Hackett was right about our people not being ready to fight? |
42429 | Do you think it''s big enough for any one to come down? |
42429 | Do your boots need mending? |
42429 | Even if you know they''re illegal and unjust? |
42429 | Fetch a blanket for my horse, will you? |
42429 | Have you ever heard of a Frenchman named De Castris? |
42429 | He is n''t a pirate, too? |
42429 | He knows a good deal about them, does n''t he? |
42429 | He? 42429 How could any one believe those two guilty of such evil deeds?" |
42429 | If you go ashore, wo n''t you give this paper to somebody? |
42429 | Is there no way by which she may stay here? |
42429 | Is what he says about Philadelphia and the Quakers true? |
42429 | Jonathan Leek? |
42429 | Jonathan Leek? |
42429 | Might we know your name? |
42429 | Might we see the shed where you keep your dogs? |
42429 | Not so terrible, was he? |
42429 | Oh, you''ve got''em, have you? 42429 Oho, so you''re playing David, are you? |
42429 | Only seven at one meeting, and a great many at the other? |
42429 | So he''s a fighting man, is he? 42429 So this is Philadelphia''s volunteer militia, is it?" |
42429 | So you think Penn''s colony is different from the others, do you? |
42429 | So you told your father of our little chat at the shoemaker''s, did you? |
42429 | So you''ve met before, have you? |
42429 | So you''ve not fled from town like the rest? |
42429 | So? |
42429 | Suppose that French captain came up the Delaware and did what Mr. Hackett thought he might? |
42429 | The little shoemaker? |
42429 | There, my young friend,said he,"how would you parry that? |
42429 | These are the troops I could count on to defend our homes from an enemy? |
42429 | They were, eh? |
42429 | Thomas, will you fetch some apples from the pantry? |
42429 | Want to come with me, and see something of the Bay? |
42429 | Well, lads,said the smith, after a minute,"and what did ye learn to- day?" |
42429 | Well, now, lad,said the man at the oars,"where were ye bound at such a pace? |
42429 | Well, that shows our friends are n''t very warlike, does n''t it, Jack? |
42429 | What are they hurrying for? |
42429 | What are you going to do with the things in your house? |
42429 | What children say this? |
42429 | What did he say to it? |
42429 | What did he want of Farmer Robins''place then? |
42429 | What do you mean? |
42429 | What do you men mean by marching into a peaceful village an''trying to turn people out o''their lawful homes? |
42429 | What do you want? |
42429 | What do you want? |
42429 | What does this mean? |
42429 | What is it, Michael? |
42429 | What is your name? |
42429 | What was I telling you? |
42429 | What was the name of this man who brought the charges? |
42429 | What''s Mr. Wragg doing there? |
42429 | What''s the matter, old boy? |
42429 | What''s the talk about us there? |
42429 | Where are our gallant soldiers? |
42429 | Where are they going? |
42429 | Where''s Farmer Robins''place? |
42429 | Where''s that rascal George? |
42429 | Who''s governor here? |
42429 | Who''s that? |
42429 | Who? |
42429 | Why did n''t Tomochichi come back? |
42429 | Why should n''t I tell him about those other roads? |
42429 | Will you own His Majesty or no? |
42429 | Would they listen to me? |
42429 | Would you like me to take some of our things there too? |
42429 | Ye did n''t, eh? 42429 You can find the road?" |
42429 | You do n''t intend to be caught napping, do you, Jack? |
42429 | You''re loyal to the chief of the clan, are n''t you, Michael? 42429 You''ve heard then that people are saying that Mistress Swan is a witch, and that I''m another?" |
42429 | And what would happen then? |
42429 | Are n''t our men in Philadelphia as big and strong as the Frenchmen?" |
42429 | Are there any Green Mountain Boys hereabouts?" |
42429 | Are these two witches? |
42429 | Are we to be their judges? |
42429 | As he passed Mat he said,"See to the dogs for me, will you? |
42429 | Bound out from Charles Town, were n''t ye?" |
42429 | But if we let ourselves suspect such evil things of our neighbors so readily, who knows when others may suspect such dealings of us as easily? |
42429 | But that does n''t keep the wolves from preying on them, does it? |
42429 | But when they talk about him, the rest of us shut them up, do n''t we, Mat?" |
42429 | But, God help us, where shall we turn for assistance, to the north or to the south, to the east or to the west? |
42429 | Can not some accommodation yet be agreed upon? |
42429 | Did they say anything about Ethan Allen, Jack?" |
42429 | Going to row across the ocean or down to St. Augustine? |
42429 | Hackett?" |
42429 | Hackett?" |
42429 | How can any man or woman or child in Salem bring such charges against Mistress Swan?" |
42429 | How''s a boy to know whether they''re true or not?" |
42429 | Or are you friends? |
42429 | Sir William said coldly,"Mr. Bacon, have you forgot to be a gentleman?" |
42429 | Suppose the Indians should drink too much fire- water some day and make a raid on your farms; where would your treaties be then? |
42429 | Talbot?" |
42429 | The governor turned to Hackett"I might as well disband the militia, eh? |
42429 | Was the colonial hero received with the praise his great services deserved from England? |
42429 | Well, you and I''ll stand by him, wo n''t we, Joe? |
42429 | What can you be thinking of? |
42429 | What d''ye say to that, mates?" |
42429 | What had become of the charter? |
42429 | What is Salem coming to? |
42429 | What then is to be done? |
42429 | What was Peter Stuyvesant doing as the frigates so insolently sailed past under his very eyes? |
42429 | What was Sir William Berkeley doing meantime? |
42429 | What would you do then?" |
42429 | What''s your name?" |
42429 | Where could he go? |
42429 | Why do n''t you come along with me in the morning?" |
42429 | Why should I fear? |
42429 | Would n''t you hate to, Peter?" |
42429 | Would you boys like to go for a walk with the three of us?" |
42429 | Yet are you or I any more honest than this woman who has befriended others, or this man who teaches and cares for maimed dogs? |
42429 | You know Salem Village, or Salem Farms, as some appear to call it?" |
42429 | or would he look as much impressed as Jacob Titus had looked? |
7436 | ( b) What was the proper mode of ecclesiastical redress if these rights were ignored? |
7436 | ( c) What were those baptismal rights and privileges which the Cambridge Platform had not definitely settled? |
7436 | And who may be freemen? |
7436 | Are we sharers in redemption, and do we grudge to support religion? |
7436 | Can you any better submit to hire a minister to preach up a doctrine which you in your heart believe contrary to the institution of Christ? |
7436 | Did the inheritance of faith, of which baptism was the sign and seal, stop with the children, or with the grandchildren, or where? |
7436 | He concluded his arraignment with:-- But would a man be tried, judged and excommunicated by such a standard as this? |
7436 | He further stated that when such a situation was in some measure relieved he would be only too glad to make the question"Is he capable? |
7436 | How firm a grip upon her had that incubus of her own raising, the pernicious union of Church and State? |
7436 | How had not Connecticut fallen? |
7436 | How passed her ancient glory, how ignored her charter''s rights? |
7436 | Is he faithful to the Constitution?" |
7436 | Is he honest? |
7436 | Is it not shame? |
7436 | Is this a Constitution? |
7436 | Is this an instrument of government for freemen? |
7436 | Must they, in order to send their sons to college, deprive them for four years of a"Gospel ministry"and lay them open to consequent grave perils? |
7436 | What right, the Federals asked, had they to attack a constitution they had sworn to uphold? |
7436 | [ b]"Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, which frameth mischief by law?" |
7436 | _ i.e._, in plain terms, how does it tend to lying hypocrisy and lying? |
51426 | Dost thou still haunt the brink Of yonder river''s tide? 51426 In your intercourse with the dwellers in the great city, have you alighted on Mr. Edward Palmer, who studies with Dr. Beach, the Herbalist? |
51426 | Is thy brow clear again, As in thy youthful years? 51426 Nor king, nor duke? |
51426 | Then how does he come by his English? |
51426 | What bird wilt thou employ To bring me word of thee? 51426 What season didst thou find? |
51426 | Where chiefly shall I look To feel thy presence near? 51426 Where is the finch, the thrush I used to hear? |
51426 | Who is the speaker? |
51426 | Who sings the praise of woman in our clime? 51426 ''Ca n''t we study up something?'' 51426 ''Why should I? 51426 *****Is''t then too late the damage to repair? |
51426 | A fellow- sufferer from the same affliction, who lived in Cohasset, was asked, the other day, what in the world he took for it? |
51426 | Along the neighboring brook May I thy voice still hear? |
51426 | And is fear the foundation of that worship? |
51426 | And may I ever think That thou art by my side? |
51426 | And was that ugly pain The summit of thy fears? |
51426 | Are not the Fates more kind Than they appear? |
51426 | But as I am, equally with you, an admirer of Cowper, why should I not prove a sort of unnecessary addition to your neighborhood possibly? |
51426 | But as I did not, will you allow me to seek you out, when next I come to Concord? |
51426 | But is not their whole process marred by leaving out common sense, by which mankind are generally governed? |
51426 | But what do I, or does any friend of mine in America care for a journal? |
51426 | Ca n''t you ask her to write it for me? |
51426 | Ca n''t you cut it into three or four, and omit all that relates to time? |
51426 | Did they wait for his Counsell?" |
51426 | Do I exercise the faith in the divine care and protection which I ought to do? |
51426 | Do I not withhold more than is meet from pious and charitable uses? |
51426 | Do you wish to swap any of your''wood- notes wild''for dollars? |
51426 | Does a man deserve to be rewarded for refraining from murder? |
51426 | Does anybody still think of coming to Concord to live? |
51426 | Does that execrable compound of sawdust and stagnation L. still prose about nothing? |
51426 | Dost thou, indeed, fare well, As we wished here below? |
51426 | Have I done well to get me a shay? |
51426 | Have I not been proud or too fond of this convenience? |
51426 | He at once recognized his Concord friend, greeted him cordially with"How do you do, my little rebel?" |
51426 | He can keep them as a literary_ curio_, and in his old age amuse himself with thinking,''How could ever I have liked these?''" |
51426 | He has a vast many Talents,--is it an easy thing for so Wise a man to become a Fool for Christ? |
51426 | His deeds may never be forgotten; but is this greatness? |
51426 | How camest thou there? |
51426 | How old should you think he was? |
51426 | I mean new people? |
51426 | I vow-- you-- what noise was that? |
51426 | Indeed, what Greek would not be proud to claim this fragment as his own? |
51426 | Is anything going on about it now? |
51426 | Is fear the ruling principle of our religion? |
51426 | Is hope a less powerful incentive to action than fear? |
51426 | Is it a bargain? |
51426 | Is it not rather the mother of superstition? |
51426 | Is the greatest virtue merely negative? |
51426 | May he not have a prospect of doubling his Wealth and Honours, if crowned with Success? |
51426 | May we depend on you? |
51426 | Should I not be more in my study, and less fond of diversion? |
51426 | Should we not be likely to find the truth, in all moral subjects, were we to make more use of plain reason and common sense? |
51426 | Some have asked,''Can not reward be substituted for punishment? |
51426 | Thoreau?'' |
51426 | Was I not present to thee, likewise?" |
51426 | Was the Lord first consulted in the affair? |
51426 | What Demonstration has he given of being so entirely devoted to the Lord? |
51426 | What about your book( the''Week'')? |
51426 | What do you think of following out your thought in an essay on''The Literary Life?'' |
51426 | What images can be more natural, what sentiments of greater weight and at the same time more noble and exalted than those with which they abound? |
51426 | What sun shines for thee now? |
51426 | When a political pharmacopoeia has the command of both ingredients, wherefore employ the bitter instead of the sweet?'' |
51426 | When asked why he did not stop the trespasser, he replied,"Could not the poor man have a tree?" |
51426 | Where was George Minott? |
51426 | Who can predict his comings and goings? |
51426 | Who wonders that the flesh declines to grow Along his sallow pits? |
51426 | Why did not Emerson try it in England? |
51426 | Will you finish the poem in your own way, and send it for the''Dial''? |
51426 | Will you not send me some other records of the_ good week_?" |
51426 | Wo n''t you send them again? |
51426 | Would it be no advantage to his Estate to win the place? |
51426 | Yet what could a companion do at present, unless to tame the guardian of the Alps too early? |
51426 | You will see that they apply to himself:"--"Brother, where dost thou dwell? |
51426 | and I wonder-- you-- if Henry''s been to see George Jones yet? |
51426 | and that nutmeg- grater of a Z. yet shriek about nothing? |
51426 | do you make the Lord your Guide and Counselor in ye affair? |
51426 | or does it rather consist in the performance of a thousand every- day duties, hidden from the eye of the world?" |
51426 | or that his life, To social pleasure careless, pines away In dry seclusion and unfruitful shade? |
51426 | so great a man to become a Little Child? |
51426 | so rich a man to crowd in at the Strait Gate of Conversion, and make so little noise?... |
51426 | the reply was,"Why are you_ not_ here?" |
51426 | you-- does he look as if he were two years younger than I?''" |
6609 | And the men? |
6609 | Are you a patriot? |
6609 | Are you hurt much? |
6609 | Are you lame, that you do n''t get it yourself? |
6609 | Fear ye that God will give you up to yonder heathen dogs? 6609 Have I welcomed a traitor? |
6609 | What brings you here? |
6609 | What do you here on my land? |
6609 | What proof may there be that you can do your part in the compact? |
6609 | Where away? |
6609 | Who are you? |
6609 | Who was that insolent fellow? |
6609 | Why are you not gone? |
6609 | Why sink your hearts? |
6609 | Will you have it so, or will you share your lover''s punishment? |
6609 | And did not the same spirit of evil plague the old women of Massachusetts Bay and craze the French and Spaniards in the South? |
6609 | And what brought the stranger to the house? |
6609 | And you, king and queen of the May, have you no better things to think about than fiddling and dancing? |
6609 | But how could that be when the skeleton had neither eyes nor a place to carry them? |
6609 | But to let a host go down to death and never lift a helping hand-- was that a fair revenge? |
6609 | Do n''t you see how old and shrewd it is? |
6609 | Do you recall the finding of young Clark beside the river, years ago? |
6609 | Had he been crossed in love? |
6609 | Had he been scarred by accident or illness? |
6609 | He kicked it, to shake the dirt off, when a gruff voice spake:"What are you doing in my grounds?" |
6609 | How dare you stop the king''s governor?" |
6609 | How if I punish you both?" |
6609 | How is this? |
6609 | How wrinkled and ugly? |
6609 | Is Nantucket a corruption of that word, or was that word the result of a struggle to master the Indian name? |
6609 | Is it a bargain?" |
6609 | Is she calling on the corpses to rise and have a dance among the graves? |
6609 | It is often missing for weeks together, and its reappearances are heralded by the low booming of-- what? |
6609 | Look at the boy''s face-- his brows: in them do you not see Katahdin? |
6609 | Perhaps you do n''t know that I am an officer of the law?" |
6609 | She flushed as she replied,"Why does not Captain Standish come to me himself? |
6609 | Was he demented? |
6609 | Well, what is it to be?" |
6609 | What does such a thing as you in Lady Eleanore''s apartment?" |
6609 | What villainy may this lead to? |
6609 | What was in the cushion? |
6609 | Who is it that lies buried in that tomb, with its ornament of Masonic symbols? |
6609 | Who knows her secret? |
6609 | Who was the thief? |
6609 | Who will console you for the loss of your brig?" |
6609 | Why do you torment me about what you might all see? |
6609 | Why is the old Berkshire town so troubled? |
6609 | Why was the heavy iron knocker placed on the door? |
6609 | Will Bright Star''s people shut their lodges against him and his friends?" |
6609 | Will there be mercy for me there? |
6609 | Would not his hearers add to that sum? |
6609 | or has she been asked to call the occupant of that house at a given hour? |
7082 | And did you not bring away something from his house? |
7082 | For what purpose am I called? |
7082 | What is it you demand to have done? |
7082 | Wherefore am I called? |
7082 | Who are you? |
7082 | ''How now?'' |
7082 | And how is this devil employed according to sir Matthew Hale and sir Thomas Browne? |
7082 | And, if these poor women were too obtuse of soul entirely to feel the pang, did that give their superiors a right to overwhelm and to crush them? |
7082 | Are all the Gods subject to this control, or, is there one God upon whom it has power, who, himself compelled, compels the elements? |
7082 | Do they yield from necessity, or is it a voluntary subjection? |
7082 | He said, he was not guilty; but, being asked how he would be tried? |
7082 | How can I be secure from the false accusations of the unprincipled informers who infest your court? |
7082 | Is it the piety of these hags that obtains the reward, or by menaces do they secure their purpose? |
7082 | Macduff pursued him, and was hard at his heels, when the tyrant turned his horse, and exclaimed,"Why dost thou follow me? |
7082 | Now the first circumstance that strikes us in this affair is, why the crime was not expressed in more perspicuous and appropriate language? |
7082 | Now what are the premises on which they proceed in this question? |
7082 | The wife in great terror asked,"Were you not at Dr. Lamb''s to- day?" |
7082 | We hear there is likely to be a battle shortly: what, fled from your colours?'' |
7082 | Well may they exclaim, like the ghost of Samuel in the sacred story,"Why hast thou disquieted me?" |
7082 | What can be more tyrannical, than an inquisition into the sports and freaks of fancy? |
7082 | What is, to a proverb, more lawless than imagination? |
7082 | What more unsusceptible of detection or evidence? |
7082 | What shall we say to the story of his various transmigrations? |
7082 | When Mr. Thoroughgood saw his friend Lindsey come into his yard, his horse and himself much tired, in a sort of a maze, he said,''How now, colonel? |
7082 | Why, for example, was it not said, that the first and chief branch of treason was to"kill the king?" |
7082 | Wot ye not that such a man as I could certainly divine?" |
7082 | Yet what so irrational as man? |
7082 | [ 19] They brought the strangers again into the presence of Joseph, who addressed them with severity, saying,"What is this deed that ye have done? |
7082 | said Cromwel,''What, troubled with the vapours? |
7082 | said he,"and what is it that you demand?" |
6317 | Aladdin,I cried,"where is your lamp? |
6317 | And alone? |
6317 | And you know Captain Pedro Samblich? |
6317 | And you know me? |
6317 | At the mission? |
6317 | Cuantos? |
6317 | Do you know John Wilson of Boston? |
6317 | From where is the sloop? |
6317 | How fast will it crawl? |
6317 | How long has it been calm about here? |
6317 | How so? |
6317 | It must be mine,he thought,"for am I not the first to see it on the beach?" |
6317 | Well, yes,the doctor admitted at last,"your crew are healthy enough, no doubt, but who knows the diseases of your last port?" |
6317 | What for you come long way? |
6317 | What if she should strike a rock? |
6317 | What is your depth of water? |
6317 | What vessel is that? |
6317 | What''s the weather goin''t''be? 6317 Where are the rest of the crew?" |
6317 | Who''ll pay for that? |
6317 | Why not? |
6317 | Will it pay? |
6317 | Will you come along? |
6317 | Yes; why not? |
6317 | You man come''lone? |
6317 | ("Jalan, jalan?") |
6317 | After a considerable pause Mr. Stanley asked,"What if a swordfish should pierce her hull with its sword?" |
6317 | Again from my cabin I cried to an imaginary man at the helm,"How does she head, there?" |
6317 | Ahoy the_ Hebe_, can you spare your sailmaker? |
6317 | And do n''t you think we''d better go back t''r- r- refit?" |
6317 | And so when times for freighters got bad, as at last they did, and I tried to quit the sea, what was there for an old sailor to do? |
6317 | And why should not one rejoice also in the main chance coming so of itself? |
6317 | But do you suppose he could hand a letter to a seaman? |
6317 | But how could one tell but that he had died of loneliness and grief? |
6317 | But where, after all, would be the poetry of the sea were there no wild waves? |
6317 | But, say, what repairs do you want? |
6317 | Did I tire of the voyage in all that time? |
6317 | For seven years they had asked,"I wonder what Captain Eben Pierce is going to do with the old_ Spray? |
6317 | Hail and sleet in the fierce squalls cut my flesh till the blood trickled over my face; but what of that? |
6317 | He was a good man, but did this glorify the Architect-- the Ruler of the winds and the waves? |
6317 | How could one help loving so hospitable a place? |
6317 | However, it was not long before the thought came to me that when I was a lad I used to sing; why not try that now, where it would disturb no one? |
6317 | I heard water rushing by, with only a thin plank between me and the depths, and I said,"How is this?" |
6317 | In the midst of the gale I could do no more than look on, for what is a man in a storm like this? |
6317 | In their musical voices they would say,"Are you walking?" |
6317 | Is it a- goin''to blow? |
6317 | Jenkins?" |
6317 | Know you not that it is against the law to ride thus through the village of our fathers?" |
6317 | Labor- saving appliances? |
6317 | Let the day go by; why should we mourn over that? |
6317 | Mr. Trood, an old Eton boy, came in this manner to see me, and he exclaimed,"Was ever king ferried in such state?" |
6317 | One of the fair crew, hailing with the naive salutation,"Talofa lee"("Love to you, chief"), asked:"Schoon come Melike?" |
6317 | Smooth- water sailors say,"Where is her overhang?" |
6317 | The only thing that now worried my friends along the beach was,"Will she pay?" |
6317 | Was I not? |
6317 | Was the crew well? |
6317 | What could I do but fill away among the breakers and find a channel between them, now that it was day? |
6317 | What did you eat?" |
6317 | When I came to a Samoan village, the chief did not ask the price of gin, or say,"How much will you pay for roast pig?" |
6317 | Where are the other two?" |
6317 | Why? |
6317 | Yes, my health was still good, and I could skip about the decks in a lively manner, but could I climb? |
6317 | You Hare, do n''t you know that rum and roast pig are not a sailor''s heaven?" |
6317 | [ Illustration:"''Is it a- goin''to blow?''"] |
6317 | and again,"Is she on her course?" |
6317 | cried I, as soon as his shirt- collar appeared over the sloop''s rail;"have you any charts?" |
6317 | will you see to the_ Spray_? |
46102 | Again? |
46102 | Again? |
46102 | Ah, good evening,he said,"was it not a beautiful concert? |
46102 | All? |
46102 | And the new picture, is it finished yet? |
46102 | And who is it this time? |
46102 | And-- and do you fight there? |
46102 | Are all the stores open Sunday? |
46102 | Are many Wagner operas produced here? |
46102 | Broad? |
46102 | But what_ do_ you find to fight about in these peaceful times? |
46102 | By the bye,said I, as we were walking through Theatiner- strasse,"did I make a great many mistakes in my note to you?" |
46102 | Could n''t you tell me what city she lives in? |
46102 | Have you ever played string quarters from score, Fräulein? |
46102 | Is it the custom to celebrate this instead of the birthday? |
46102 | Is n''t it awful? |
46102 | Is n''t it odd that some of them choose red and the others choose green, as if they belonged to a college team? |
46102 | Is n''t it splendid? |
46102 | Is that by your national composer, Sousa? |
46102 | Is the class full,_ Herr Sekretariat_? |
46102 | Like Munich? 46102 My dear young lady, what can you possibly want of orchestral scores?" |
46102 | Orchestral scores? |
46102 | So you are enjoying the Parada, are you? |
46102 | Was the lieutenant in town then? |
46102 | We thought you were lost, is n''t it? |
46102 | Well, Fräulein, what have you? |
46102 | What can you expect when a girl betrothed to an officer makes ready for a grand wedding in the spring? 46102 What does one have to do?" |
46102 | What_ are_ you doing? |
46102 | Why not soothe our ears with a ditty akin to this? |
46102 | You are English, are you not? |
46102 | You do n''t have anything half as jolly in America, do you? |
46102 | You really did n''t think me lost, or kidnapped, or perchance murdered in cold blood, did you? |
46102 | _ Bin ich nicht nett, gnädiges Fräulein?_( Am I not fine?) |
46102 | _ Bin ich nicht nett, gnädiges Fräulein?_( Am I not fine?) |
46102 | ( A_ finale_ would seem more appropriate, would n''t it?) |
46102 | ***** How can I write you about the evening or rather afternoon and evening which followed? |
46102 | After all,_ kleine Amerikanerin_,"she continued naïvely,"do n''t you think that people are happier without a lot of money to look after? |
46102 | After much misgiving she consented and a meeting was arranged----""At a carnival ball?" |
46102 | Although six months ago the thought of all the delightful things money could buy----""Including a lieutenant?" |
46102 | Always on entering they say"Good day"and the proprietor comes up with"How can I serve you,_ gnädiges Fräulein_?" |
46102 | Am I living in another world? |
46102 | Amerika!_"What mattered it that it was only an unpretentious pupils''concert? |
46102 | And the drum in the scherzo-- who could ever forget it? |
46102 | And the giants were such wild- looking creatures with grotesque tufts of hair on the crown of their heads-- should I have taken them more seriously? |
46102 | Beethoven has indeed caught the spiritual note, do n''t you think so? |
46102 | Can Germany and the dear old Hof- Theatre be but a day''s trip away? |
46102 | Can you imagine anything more fascinating than living in a house where every nook and corner is alive with memories of the past? |
46102 | Can you imagine spending Christmas riding through the Brenner Pass? |
46102 | Did I play any"pieces"or only"five- finger exercises"? |
46102 | Did I say no carpet? |
46102 | Did I tell you that a servant is engaged at so much a week_ with_ beer? |
46102 | Did I tell you that some weeks ago I made a translation into English of the_ Rosenlied_( Rose- song) by Anna Ritter? |
46102 | Did I use the loud pedal much? |
46102 | Did I write you that the Americans in the_ pension_ opposite were to give a St. Valentine''s party? |
46102 | Did you ever notice the effect of a boy with pompadour hair opening his mouth very wide? |
46102 | Did you know the tarts here are not nearly so good as those in Berlin? |
46102 | Do n''t you know that ten pfennigs( two cents and a half) for each person is considered quite sufficient?" |
46102 | Do you know it? |
46102 | Do you know that the men bow first in this country? |
46102 | Do you not feel proud when I tell you that out of the ten medals presented two were captured by American girls? |
46102 | Do your æsthetic sensibilities shrink at these materialistic descriptions? |
46102 | Does n''t it sound interesting? |
46102 | Does n''t that sound imposing, as though I had graduated with honors from some academy? |
46102 | Does n''t that strike you as rather extraordinary? |
46102 | Does that stop the cry of the heart?--for it does cry: does n''t it? |
46102 | Have I explained that in front of the Feldernhalle is a triangular open space? |
46102 | Have you ever been among the mountains in winter? |
46102 | Have you ever seen a gull circling with wide- spread wings above a fish in the water beneath, and then suddenly dart down and bear away his prey? |
46102 | How did you guess? |
46102 | I am right, am I not,_ Herr Sekretariat_?" |
46102 | I can hardly imagine a placid Tschaikowsky or an unruffled Dvorák, can you? |
46102 | I managed to get Beethoven''s"_ Kennst du das Land?_"to suit her, but only after much toil for both of us. |
46102 | I was longing to ask"Reuben who"? |
46102 | Is it possible that it is only her money that he is after? |
46102 | Is it that which the fountain-- my fountain, as I claim it now-- sang to me as I passed to- day? |
46102 | Is n''t it queer to picture the nobility of Europe as running boarding- houses? |
46102 | Is n''t that fine, and does n''t it make you long to be with us? |
46102 | Is n''t that truly German? |
46102 | Is there anything in the world grander, more truly religious than a Bach choral? |
46102 | Is there anything in the world more marvellous than music or more indescribable than its hidden soul? |
46102 | Is there anything more lovely than the quintette? |
46102 | Is there anything more marvellously worked out than that street scene? |
46102 | M. Do you know the"Beethoven- Lied"by Cornelius? |
46102 | O departed gods of Olympus, is there anything more disheartening than this Fashionable Insincerity? |
46102 | Or did I myself unconsciously hum the melody and hear in the ripple of the falling water the soft rhythm of accompanying''cellos and violins? |
46102 | Realizing all this, I judged it wiser to change the subject by asking quickly,--"Are the girls coming to- day?" |
46102 | Strange, is it not, with what a keenly human note inanimate things sometimes appeal to us? |
46102 | Then what do you think he did? |
46102 | To what are we coming next? |
46102 | Was I at fault because when I first heard the giant motif I smiled? |
46102 | Was n''t it sweet of her? |
46102 | What do you think I paid for my seat? |
46102 | What do you think they are doing? |
46102 | What do you think? |
46102 | What need when I am writing to one who Understands? |
46102 | When I tell you that it was my first hearing of"Tristan and Isolde"in the wonderful new Prince Regent Theatre, are you surprised that I hesitate? |
46102 | Who do you think it was? |
46102 | Who ever associated sausages with anything so idyllic as a waterfall? |
46102 | Who ever thought of connecting them with the legends of the Middle Ages? |
46102 | Who was it said that in Tristan the"thrills relieve one another in squads"? |
46102 | Why is it that the most shrinking, retiring, and timid- appearing member of an orchestra is always the one to play the instruments of percussion? |
46102 | Why not?" |
46102 | Why on earth did n''t they rise and go out? |
46102 | Why, you inquire? |
46102 | Will you tell my aunt? |
46102 | Would I pardon him if he gave me my lesson in his hunting costume? |
46102 | You have heard that old adage, have n''t you,"Laugh and the world laughs with you, weep and you weep alone"? |
46102 | You remember the time when he was such a prominent conductor and musician in Boston, do you not? |
46102 | as in a fit of indigestion? |
46102 | while his wife joined in with,"Is n''t Wagner simply delicious?" |
45165 | ''And what may be his name?'' 45165 ''I hope you bear it with submission?'' |
45165 | ''I try tu; but oh, doctor, I sometimes feel in my heart-- Goosy, goosy gander, where shall I wander?'' |
45165 | ''Stha- a- t? |
45165 | And did n''t you tell us that Joshua commanded the sun and moon to stand still? |
45165 | And have you been there? |
45165 | And how was that? |
45165 | And what then? |
45165 | At a dollar a- day: that makes thirty dollars, I think? |
45165 | C."Sna- a- a- t? |
45165 | Did you really write that book about Africa? |
45165 | Done: now I''ll just put it under the fore- stick? |
45165 | How do you know that? |
45165 | Mother,said the child, in a voice of silver,"is father at home?" |
45165 | Never in Africa? |
45165 | No: that person beyond, and to the left? 45165 No? |
45165 | Oh, is it you? |
45165 | Oh, that small, red- faced, freckled man? 45165 Ought I not to consult my parents?" |
45165 | Salamander? |
45165 | Sna- a- a- t? |
45165 | So you do n''t believe this? |
45165 | That is near the old Bay State? |
45165 | That large, noble- looking person, with a gown and wig? 45165 This is rather a new theory, is it not?" |
45165 | To Massachusetts? 45165 Well, and what is it?" |
45165 | Well, and what then? |
45165 | Well, then, why did you say you had been there? |
45165 | Well: did n''t you preach last Sunday out of the 10th chapter of Joshua? |
45165 | Well: what was the use of telling the sun to stand still if it never moved? |
45165 | What is that, sir, in comparison with the earth, which Kepler, the greatest philosopher that ever lived, conceived to be a huge beast? |
45165 | What''s that? |
45165 | What, the real, salt sea-- the ocean-- with the ships upon it? |
45165 | What, then,said he, ruminating deeply,"is a noun? |
45165 | Where are you from? |
45165 | Who is that gentleman? |
45165 | Why did n''t you ask that afore? 45165 Yes, but the meeting- house?" |
45165 | Yes, but where is the centre of the place? |
45165 | Yes; but did he prove it? |
45165 | You regard the creature as a huge shell- fish, then? |
45165 | Again, a third time, she said,"What''s that?" |
45165 | And children know His A B C, As bees where flowers are set; Wouldst thou a skilful teacher be? |
45165 | And is God here in the field, all around me-- in every blade of grass, in every leaf, and stem, and flower? |
45165 | And the rest-- where are they? |
45165 | And what are we That hear the question of that voice sublime? |
45165 | And what is that life? |
45165 | And why so?'' |
45165 | And yet, bold babbler, what art thou to Him Who drown''d a world, and heap''d the waters far Above its loftiest mountains? |
45165 | Are you not ashamed to say such things? |
45165 | As he left the throng he came near me, and I said, inquiringly,"Down with Louis Philippe?" |
45165 | At a dollar a time, that makes twenty- five dollars-- don''t it?" |
45165 | Brought up under such influences, how could I give up my heart to trade? |
45165 | But can it be compared-- I appeal to all unprejudiced infants-- with that first chapter of our Second Expedition? |
45165 | Can it be? |
45165 | Canning''s wit got the better of his reverence, and so he profanely suggested that, if his majesty was a Dog of Dogs, what must the queen be? |
45165 | Cur-- r- r- r- r- r? |
45165 | Did not children love truth? |
45165 | Did you ever see it, stranger?" |
45165 | Do n''t you like that, mother? |
45165 | Do n''t you think it pretty good? |
45165 | Do you not love to read these rhymes, even though they are silly? |
45165 | Do you remember that picture which served as the frontispiece of the_ Tales of the Stars_? |
45165 | Do you talk to me of dramatic effect, Aristarchus, in those tomes you are always maudling over? |
45165 | Dr. B----, sir? |
45165 | For myself, I felt rather serious, and asked a certain anxious feeling in my stomach,--"What''s to be done?" |
45165 | From leaf, from page to page, Guide thou thy pupil''s look; And when he says, with aspect sage,"Who made this wondrous book?" |
45165 | Has it life? |
45165 | How''ll you take it, Mr. Kellogg? |
45165 | I asked if Mr. H---- was in? |
45165 | I replied:"Why do n''t you tell me what it is? |
45165 | If so, was it necessary to feed them on fiction? |
45165 | If the child knew his letters, the"what''s that?" |
45165 | If you turn a thing that''s got water in it bottom up, the water''ll run out, wo n''t it?" |
45165 | In cash, or in my way-- say in''taters, pork, and other things?" |
45165 | Is it not Jenkins that I see in Asia, defending himself stoutly, in the midst of an arid plain, against a mounted Arab? |
45165 | Is not that a grand_ denouement_? |
45165 | Is there not a gulf as wide as eternity, between the human soul and animal instinct? |
45165 | It can not think; it can not walk; who makes it grow then? |
45165 | It was something different from the frank, familiar,"How are you, stranger?" |
45165 | It was the precise point at which Sydney Smith had uttered that bitter taunt in the Edinburgh Review--"Who reads an American book?" |
45165 | Kellogg?" |
45165 | Listen to what I say? |
45165 | Ought I to be ashamed to say any thing that I find in a pretty book you have given me? |
45165 | Placing herself directly in front of the speaker, she exclaimed,"Ward, what do you mean?" |
45165 | Pray who made it?" |
45165 | Shall I not be accused of penning truisms? |
45165 | The particular scene of the act which the delightful artist( what was_ his_ name? |
45165 | These are high titles; but what were they to the author of Waverley? |
45165 | Three men in a tub-- And how do you think they got there? |
45165 | Was ever a mortal in so dire an extremity? |
45165 | Was it not curious to see the most renowned personage in the three kingdoms sitting at the very feet of these men: they the court, and he the clerk? |
45165 | What can be the matter? |
45165 | What is the matter with you?'' |
45165 | What makes it grow? |
45165 | What shall I du?" |
45165 | What will Deacon Benedict say? |
45165 | What will come next? |
45165 | What''s the matter with my eyes? |
45165 | Which of Peter Parley''s numerous writings did you give the preference to, my reader? |
45165 | Who is that sailor I see crouching on that bank? |
45165 | Who made this blade of grass? |
45165 | Who told you how to make poetry? |
45165 | Who, then, will be our helper? |
45165 | Why should I be? |
45165 | Why, then, do you give me such things to read? |
45165 | Would you like to know him?" |
45165 | Yea, what is all the riot man can make, In his short life, to thy unceasing roar? |
45165 | You say, Parson Goodrich, that the sun is fixed, and do n''t move?" |
45165 | _ Grows!_ What does that mean? |
45165 | _ M._[_ Aside._] Dear, dear, what shall I do? |
45165 | _ Mother._ Your poetry, my son? |
45165 | _ T._ Absurd? |
45165 | _ T._ And"Doodledy, doodledy, dan"--mayn''t I say that? |
45165 | _ T._ Ashamed? |
45165 | _ T._ But, mother, what''s the use of understanding you? |
45165 | _ T._ Dear me, what shall I do? |
45165 | _ T._ Do you call them sensible things? |
45165 | _ T._ Ma''am? |
45165 | _ T._ Nor"Hey, diddle, diddle?" |
45165 | _ T._ Such as what? |
45165 | _ T.__ Sense?_ Who ever thought of_ sense_, in poetry? |
45165 | _ T.__ Sense?_ Who ever thought of_ sense_, in poetry? |
45165 | very soon ran on thus:--"What''s that?" |
45165 | what are all the notes that ever rung From war''s vain trumpet by thy thundering side? |
45165 | which are his pictures in the National Gallery?) |
45165 | who goes there?" |
505 | How came the diversity of language? |
505 | Were beasts of prey and venomous animals created before, or after, the fall of Adam? 505 What aroused the vengeance of Jehovah or of Allah to work these miracles of desolation?" |
505 | Whence these pillars of salt? |
505 | Which was the first language? |
505 | Why did the Creator not say,''Be fruitful and multiply,''to plants as well as to animals? 505 Why is this region thus blasted?" |
505 | Why were only beasts and birds brought before Adam to be named, and not fishes and marine animals? |
505 | ( Domine quo vadis? |
505 | Among the foremost of these questions were three:"Whence came language?" |
505 | Among the many questions he then raised and discussed may be mentioned such as these:"What caused the creation of the stars on the fourth day?" |
505 | And again, in an agony of supplication, he cries out:"Do we see the sword blazing over us? |
505 | And for what were the youth of Oxford led into such bottomless depths of disbelief as to any real existence of truth or any real foundation for it? |
505 | As we discussed one after another of the candidates, he suddenly said:"Who is to be your Professor of Moral Philosophy? |
505 | But DID he ever do it? |
505 | But verses quite as good appeared on the other side, one of them being as follows:"Is this, then, the great Colenso, Who all the bishops offends so? |
505 | For the account of the Dead Sea serpent"Tyrus,"etc., see La Grande Voyage de Hierusalem, Paris( 1517? |
505 | He also asked,"If the primeval language existed even up to the time of Moses, whence came the Egyptian language?" |
505 | He says:"My heart answered in the words of the prophet,''Shall a man speak lies in the name of the Lord?'' |
505 | He then asks,"Why should our age be so completely destitute of them?" |
505 | How can they have been redeemed by the Saviour?" |
505 | How can they trace back their origin to Noah''s ark? |
505 | How can we determine which of these opposite statements is the very truth till we know what motion is? |
505 | If it be urged that birds could reach America by flying and fishes by swimming, he asks,"What of the beasts which neither fly nor swim?" |
505 | If there are other planets, since God makes nothing in vain, they must be inhabited; but how can their inhabitants be descended from Adam? |
505 | In a medieval text- book, giving science the form of a dialogue, occur the following question and answer:"Why is the sun so red in the evening?" |
505 | Let it put us upon crying to God, that the judgment be diverted and not return upon us again so speedily.... Doth God threaten our very heavens? |
505 | Might not the Almighty himself be willing to employ the malice of these powers of the air against those who had offended him? |
505 | New epoch in chemistry begun by Boyle Attitude of the mob toward science Effect on science of the reaction following the French Revolution:{?} |
505 | On the first page of the introduction the author, after stating the two theories, asks,"Which is right?" |
505 | On the other hand, what had science done for religion? |
505 | On the other hand, what was gained by the warriors of science for religion? |
505 | St. Chrysostom says:"What can be more unreasonable than to sow without land, without rain, without ploughs? |
505 | The Dominican Father Caccini preached a sermon from the text,"Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven?" |
505 | The belief was strongly held that the writers of the Bible were merely pens in the hand of God( Dei calami.{;?} |
505 | This being the case, who could care to waste time on the study of material things and give thought to the structure of the world? |
505 | W. E. Adams, article in the Lutheran Quarterly, April, 1879, on Evolution: Shall it be Atheistic? |
505 | What are comets? |
505 | What do they indicate? |
505 | What have we to do with their significance? |
505 | What matters it that the inculcation of high duty in the childhood of the world is embodied in such quaint stories as those of Jonah and Balaam? |
505 | What was his influence on religion? |
505 | Which is more consistent with a great religion, the cosmography of Cosmas or that of Isaac Newton? |
505 | Which presents a nobler field for religious thought, the diatribes of Lactantius or the calm statements of Humboldt? |
505 | Who does not see that great confusion would result from this motion?" |
505 | Who woulde likewise say that they have carried Tygers and Lyons? |
505 | Why study the old heavens and the old earth, when they were so soon to be replaced with something infinitely better? |
505 | Why, indeed, give a thought to it? |
505 | Why, then, should it be studied? |
505 | and who would wish to plant colonies of such creatures in new, desirable lands?" |
505 | and, thirdly,"DOES THAT STATUE STILL EXIST?" |
505 | or"Whence these blocks of granite?" |
505 | secondly,"WHERE was she thus transformed?" |
505 | that the crops and trees grow downward?... |
505 | that the rains and snow and hail fall upward toward the earth?... |
505 | what have you done with the Son of God?" |
505 | who would trust himself with them? |
505 | why do you stop and hold back, when you know that your strength is lost on Christ? |
816 | Amidst the ruins which surround me, shall I dare to say that revolutions are not what I most fear coming generations? |
816 | But is this really the case? |
816 | But life is slipping away, time is urgent-- to what is he to turn? |
816 | Can anyone fail to recognize the peculiar want of that singular community which was formed for the conquest of the world? |
816 | Can it be wondered that the men of our own time prefer the one to the other? |
816 | Chapter XXIII: Which Is The Most Warlike And Most Revolutionary Class In Democratic Armies? |
816 | Have we more sensibility than our forefathers? |
816 | Is it enough to observe these things separately, or should we not discover the hidden tie which connects them? |
816 | Is this a consequence of contempt of decency or contempt of women? |
816 | Is this the result of accident? |
816 | Out of the pale of the constitution they are nothing: where, when, could they take their stand to effect a change in its provisions? |
816 | That country having no written constitution, who can assert when its constitution is changed? |
816 | Thus they do not presume that they have arrived at the supreme good or at absolute truth( what people or what man was ever wild enough to imagine it?) |
816 | Voulez- vous savoir des nouvelles de Rennes? |
816 | Vous avez donc baise toute la Provence? |
816 | What can be expected of a man who has spent twenty years of his life in making heads for pins? |
816 | What could be said more to the purpose at the present day, when the Revolution has achieved what are called its victories in centralization? |
816 | What is this but aristocracy? |
816 | What more is needed by the venal souls which are born in courts, or which are worthy to live there? |
816 | Whence does this arise? |
816 | Which are wrong?--the French of the age of Louis XIV, or their descendants of the present day? |
816 | Which was right?--the English people of the last century, or the English people of the present day? |
816 | Whilst he was engaged in providing thus kindly for us, how came it that in spit of ourselves we felt our gratitude die upon our lips? |
816 | Why did the Reformers confine themselves so closely within the circle of religious ideas? |
816 | Why should I say more? |
816 | Why then should he confound his life with theirs, and whence should so strange a surrender of himself proceed? |
816 | Why then should they stand so cautiously apart? |
816 | Will nobody undertake to make them understand how what is right may be useful? |
816 | Will the administration of the country ultimately assume the management of all the manufacturers, which no single citizen is able to carry on? |
816 | does the equality of social conditions habitually and permanently lead men to revolution? |
816 | or is there in reality any necessary connection between the principle of association and that of equality? |
816 | or who does not understand what is about to follow, before I have expressed it? |
9583 | A common coat now serves for both, The hat''s no more a fixture; And which was wet and which was dry, Who knows in such a mixture? 9583 Arise,"he said,"why look behind, When hope is all before, And patient hand and willing mind, Your loss may yet restore? |
9583 | God left men free of choice, as when His Eden- trees were planted; Because they chose amiss, should I Deny the gift He granted? 9583 I walked by my own light; but when The ways of faith divided, Was I to force unwilling feet To tread the path that I did? |
9583 | And some have gone the unknown way, And some await the call to rest; Who knoweth whether it is best For those who went or those who stay? |
9583 | And take Cotton Mather in place of George Fox? |
9583 | Go to burning church- candles, and chanting in choir, And on the old meeting- house stick up a spire? |
9583 | Is''t fancy that he watches still His Providence plantations? |
9583 | Life was risked for Michael''s shrine; Shall not wealth be staked for thine? |
9583 | Make our preachers war- chaplains? |
9583 | O dwellers in the stately towns, What come ye out to see? |
9583 | Or sighs for dainties far away, Beside the bounteous board of home? |
9583 | Shall it be of Boston said She is shamed by Marblehead? |
9583 | Shall we fawn round the priestcraft that glutted the shears, And festooned the stocks with our grandfathers''ears? |
9583 | Should the heart closer shut as the bonnet grows prim, And the face grow in length as the hat grows in brim? |
9583 | Talk of Woolman''s unsoundness? |
9583 | This common earth, this common sky, This water flowing free? |
9583 | What cares the unconventioned wood For pass- words of the town? |
9583 | What matters our label, so truth be our aim? |
9583 | When she makes up her jewels, what cares yon good town For the Baptist of Wayland, the Quaker of Brown? |
9583 | Who murmurs at his lot to- day? |
9583 | Who scorns his native fruit and bloom? |
9583 | Why search the wide world everywhere For Eden''s unknown ground? |
9583 | as there, Hast thou none to do and dare? |
9583 | count Penn heterodox? |
9583 | quote Scripture to take The hunted slave back, for Onesimus''sake? |
34123 | And shall I see his face again? 34123 But is the almighty ever bound to please, Build by my wish, or studious of my ease? |
34123 | Fame, wealth, or honor,--what are ye to love? |
34123 | Glows my resentment into guilt? 34123 Have you heard of the success of the_ Rattlesnake_, of Philadelphia, and the_ Sturdy Beggar_, of Maryland, Mr. Burne? |
34123 | Well, Burne, what is the lie of the day? |
34123 | Why do n''t you pay for the tea? 34123 17:Hast thou not procured this unto thyself, in that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God, when He led thee by the way?" |
34123 | Adams?" |
34123 | Amidst these interruptions, how shall I make it out to write a letter? |
34123 | And as this is most certainly our case, why not proclaim to the world, in decisive terms, your own importance? |
34123 | And can they believe with what patience and fortitude we endure the conflict? |
34123 | And does not the example of vice and folly in magistrates descend and spread downwards among the people? |
34123 | And does your heart forebode that we shall again be happy? |
34123 | And shall I hear him speak?" |
34123 | And shall we not run into dissensions among ourselves? |
34123 | And will not many men have many minds? |
34123 | Are New England men such sons of sloth and fear as to lose this opportunity? |
34123 | Are insolence, abuse, and impudence more tolerable in a magistrate than in a subject? |
34123 | Are not riots raised and made by armed men as bad as those by unarmed? |
34123 | Are not the gentry lords, and the common people vassals? |
34123 | Are they held in disdain as they are here? |
34123 | Are they not like the uncivilized vassals Britain represents us to be? |
34123 | Are they not more constantly and extensively pernicious? |
34123 | Are they putting themselves into a state of defense? |
34123 | Are titles of honor the reward of infamy? |
34123 | Are you all this time conferring with his Lordship? |
34123 | Ask him how he can answer it? |
34123 | But how can you spare him from here? |
34123 | But in addition to this separation what have I not done? |
34123 | But is not the heart deceitful above all things?"] |
34123 | But is this conquering America? |
34123 | But the best story I have heard yet was his doctrine in a sermon from this text:"Lord, what shall we do?" |
34123 | But what is all this to me? |
34123 | But what shall we do for sugar and wine and rum? |
34123 | But what will be the fate of a scorbutic army, cooped up in a fleet for six, seven, or eight weeks, in such intemperate weather as we have had? |
34123 | But when shall I get home? |
34123 | But where am I running? |
34123 | But whither am I rambling? |
34123 | But"Will you come and see me?" |
34123 | Ca n''t you recollect who you had it of? |
34123 | Can any government be free which is not administered by general stated laws? |
34123 | Can it be effected? |
34123 | Can it be true? |
34123 | Can it, will it be? |
34123 | Can nothing be done at Rhode Island at this critical time? |
34123 | Can the best of friends recollect that for fourteen years past I have not spent a whole winter alone? |
34123 | Can the one or the other give that pleasure to the heart, that comfort to the mind, which it derives from doing good? |
34123 | Can they realize what we suffer? |
34123 | Can you form to yourself an idea of our sensations? |
34123 | Can you make his place good? |
34123 | Can you supply it with a man equally qualified to save us? |
34123 | Courage I know we have in abundance; conduct I hope we shall not want; but powder,--where shall we get a sufficient supply? |
34123 | Did ever any kingdom or state regain its liberty, when once it was invaded, without bloodshed? |
34123 | Did not Mr. Gilman mention bribery and corruption as another cause? |
34123 | Did you save your clothes, or have they fallen into the hands of the enemy? |
34123 | Did you think I should be alarmed? |
34123 | Did you? |
34123 | Do my friends think that I have been a politician so long as to have lost all feeling? |
34123 | Do n''t you know me better than to think me a coward? |
34123 | Do n''t you recollect, upon this occasion, Dr. Byles''s benediction to me when I was inoculated? |
34123 | Do n''t you think I am somewhat poetical this morning, for one of my years, and considering the gravity and insipidity of my employment? |
34123 | Do not you want to see Boston? |
34123 | Do our people intend to leave the continent in the lurch? |
34123 | Do they mean to submit? |
34123 | Do they suppose I have forgotten my wife and children? |
34123 | Do they wish to see another crippled, disastrous, and disgraceful campaign, for want of an army? |
34123 | Do you know I have not had a line from him for a year and a half? |
34123 | Do you know it is eleven o''clock at night? |
34123 | Do you look like the miniature you sent? |
34123 | Do you not sometimes sigh for such a seclusion? |
34123 | Do you write by the post? |
34123 | Does Mr. Wibird preach against oppression and the other cardinal vices of the times? |
34123 | Does every member feel for us? |
34123 | Does our State intend to send only half or a third of their quota? |
34123 | Father Smith prayed for our scow crew, I doubt not; but how did my dear friend Dr. Tufts sustain the shock? |
34123 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
34123 | Graves''s fleet, Arbuthnot''s, and Rodney''s, all here; with such a superiority, can it be matter of surprise if M. de Ternay should fall a sacrifice? |
34123 | Had you much knowledge of him? |
34123 | Has he forgotten all his American friends, that, out of four vessels which have arrived, not a line is to be found on board of one of them from him? |
34123 | Have you any prospect of returning? |
34123 | Have you ever read J. J. Rousseau? |
34123 | Have you seen a list of the addressers of the late Governor? |
34123 | He came upon the floor and asked a member,"What state are you in now?" |
34123 | He will stop the trade of rice and indigo, but what then? |
34123 | How are all our vast magazines of cannon, powder, arms, clothing, provision, medicine, etc., to be restored to us? |
34123 | How are you all this morning? |
34123 | How can any person yet dream of a settlement, accommodations, etc.? |
34123 | How could it happen that you should have £ 5 counterfeit New Hampshire money? |
34123 | How could you be so imprudent? |
34123 | How do the Virginians relish the troops said to be destined for them? |
34123 | How is flour sold there by the hundred? |
34123 | How is he to be bound whom neither honor nor conscience holds? |
34123 | How is he treated? |
34123 | How is his other self and their little selves, and ours? |
34123 | How is my brother and friend Cranch? |
34123 | How is this? |
34123 | How many calamities might have been avoided if these measures had been taken twelve months ago, or even no longer ago than last December? |
34123 | How many men and horses will he cripple by this strange coasting voyage of five weeks? |
34123 | How many men and horses will he lose in this sea ramble in the heat of dog- days? |
34123 | How much better do the Tories fare than the Whigs? |
34123 | How shall our lost honor be retrieved? |
34123 | How shall we be governed so as to retain our liberties? |
34123 | How shall we contrive to make so wise and good a man ambitious? |
34123 | How will it be administered? |
34123 | I know not whether the evidence will support the word treachery, but what may we not expect after treachery to himself, his wife and children? |
34123 | I said,"An honest man?" |
34123 | If a form of government is to be established here, what one will be assumed? |
34123 | If any trade is allowed to the West Indies, would it not be better to carry some commodity of our own produce in exchange? |
34123 | If he should get Charleston, or indeed the whole State, what progress will this make towards the conquest of America? |
34123 | If not, the question may be asked,"Hast thou not procured this?" |
34123 | If so, would it not be best for Mr. Thaxter to return? |
34123 | If we separate from Britain, what code of laws will be established? |
34123 | Inquire of the historic page, and let your own observations second the inquiry, Whence arises the difference? |
34123 | Is gold a compensation for vice? |
34123 | Is it good generalship? |
34123 | Is it not a saying of Moses,"Who am I, that I should go in and out before this great people"? |
34123 | Is it not a sin to be so modest? |
34123 | Is it to remain unmolested this winter? |
34123 | Is not this a pretty employment for great statesmen as we think ourselves to be? |
34123 | Is that designed for me? |
34123 | Is there a scarcity of grain in Philadelphia? |
34123 | Is there any policy on this side of hell that is inconsistent with humanity? |
34123 | Is there no communication? |
34123 | Is there no way for two friendly souls to converse together although the bodies are four hundred miles off? |
34123 | Is this the day we read of, when Satan was to be loosed? |
34123 | It is true, your resolutions, as a body, have hitherto had the force of laws; but will they continue to have? |
34123 | Let me ask you, rather, if you are not of my opinion? |
34123 | Look( is there a dearer name than_ friend_? |
34123 | May I ask, may I wish for it? |
34123 | May I be permitted to add an humble opinion that it is this feature in them which constitutes their chief attraction? |
34123 | May not I in my turn make complaints? |
34123 | Must not the vaporing Burgoyne, who, it is said, possesses great sensibility, be humbled to the dust? |
34123 | My delicate Charles, how has he endured the fatigue of his voyage? |
34123 | Now, my dear friend, shall I ask you when you will return, a question I have not asked for these ten months? |
34123 | Oh, why was I born with so much sensibility, and why, possessing it, have I so often been called to struggle with it? |
34123 | On second thoughts, why should I? |
34123 | One morning I asked my landlady what I had to pay? |
34123 | Or are they all absorbed in the great public? |
34123 | Or are they so panic- struck with the loss of Canada as to be afraid to correspond with me? |
34123 | Or have they forgotten that you have a husband, and your children a father? |
34123 | Ought I to give relief to my own by paining yours? |
34123 | Pray how does your asparagus perform? |
34123 | Pray what is become of your Judas? |
34123 | Pray what is your opinion? |
34123 | Pray where do you get your maxims of state? |
34123 | Pray, how do you like it? |
34123 | Shall I close here, without a word of my voyage? |
34123 | Shall I determine where his frowns shall fall, And fence my grotto from the lot of all? |
34123 | Shall I exclaim at measures now impossible to remedy? |
34123 | Shall I expect you, or do you determine to stay out the year? |
34123 | Shall I live to see it otherwise? |
34123 | Shall I say, remember me as you ought? |
34123 | Shall I send[182] in the beginning of December? |
34123 | Shall I write you a sheet upon each of these questions? |
34123 | Shall we not be despised by foreign powers, for hesitating so long at a word? |
34123 | Shall we submit to Parliamentary taxation to avoid mobs? |
34123 | Should I wish you less wise, that I might enjoy more happiness? |
34123 | Should you not be better pleased to hear it said,"_ That is Captain Burne''s lady_, the captain of marines on board the Rattlesnake"?'' |
34123 | Sick, weak, faint, in pain, or pretty well recovered? |
34123 | That we have but twelve hundred at Ticonderoga? |
34123 | The disagreeable news we have from Quebec is a great damper to our spirits, but shall we receive good and not evil? |
34123 | Was it not the Saracens who turned their backs upon the enemy, and were slain by their women, who were placed behind them for that purpose? |
34123 | Was you frightened when the sheep- stealers got a drubbing at Grape Island? |
34123 | We are hoping for the fall of Gibraltar, because we imagine that will facilitate the peace; and who is not weary of the war? |
34123 | Were not her talents and virtues too much confined to private, social, and domestic life? |
34123 | Were they suffering as we are, could Americans sit thus coldly whilst Britons were bleeding? |
34123 | What an_ ignis fatuus_ this ambition is? |
34123 | What are your thoughts with regard to Dr. Church? |
34123 | What can be done with it? |
34123 | What can be done with them? |
34123 | What can be done? |
34123 | What can these people hope for? |
34123 | What consequence is to be drawn from this description? |
34123 | What could we do, if you and all the family were with me? |
34123 | What effect does the expectation of Commissioners have with you? |
34123 | What good do they expect to do by it? |
34123 | What guilt Can equal violations of the dead? |
34123 | What have I done, or omitted to do, that I should be thus forgotten and neglected in the most tender and affecting scene of my life? |
34123 | What have I not hazarded? |
34123 | What have I not suffered? |
34123 | What if we should? |
34123 | What is become of all the Massachusetts Continental troops? |
34123 | What is the example? |
34123 | What is the matter with Mr. Thaxter? |
34123 | What is? |
34123 | What pleasure has not this vile war deprived me of? |
34123 | What shall I do with my office? |
34123 | What shall I say of my brother Cranch? |
34123 | What shall I say of or to my children? |
34123 | What shall I say of our political affairs? |
34123 | What shall I say of the Solicitor General? |
34123 | What shall I say, too, of my dear young friends by your fireside? |
34123 | What shall I say? |
34123 | What shall I say? |
34123 | What should I write? |
34123 | What signifies a word? |
34123 | What will be their condition, landing on a burning shore abounding with agues and mosquitoes, in the most unwholesome season of the whole year? |
34123 | What will they say to me for leaving them, their education, and fortune so much to the disposal of chance? |
34123 | What would I give for some of your cider? |
34123 | When shall I see my friend? |
34123 | When shall we have in America such collections? |
34123 | When, oh when shall I see you again, and live in peace? |
34123 | Where is General Gates? |
34123 | Where is General Lee? |
34123 | Where shall I begin my list of grievances? |
34123 | Who could make and spread it? |
34123 | Who is the writer of"Common Sense"? |
34123 | Who is to have the command at Ticonderoga? |
34123 | Who knows but this year may be more prosperous for our country than any we have seen? |
34123 | Who shall compensate to me those years I can not recall? |
34123 | Who shall frame these laws? |
34123 | Who shall give me back time? |
34123 | Who will be the Moses, the Lycurgus, the Solon? |
34123 | Who will give them force and energy? |
34123 | Who would not rather be Aristides than even William the Third? |
34123 | Who would not rather be Fabricius than Cæsar? |
34123 | Who would not rather be Sidney than Monk? |
34123 | Who would not rather be brave even though unfortunate in the cause of liberty? |
34123 | Who, but an idiot, would believe that forty were equal to seventy- five? |
34123 | Why is Carolina so much better furnished than any other State, and at so reasonable prices? |
34123 | Why is it that I hear so seldom from my dear John? |
34123 | Why is man called_ humane_, when he delights so much in blood, slaughter, and devastation? |
34123 | Why should I look for them? |
34123 | Why should I? |
34123 | Why should not his countenance be sad, when the city, the place of his father''s sepulchre, lieth waste, and the gates thereof are consumed with fire? |
34123 | Why should we borrow foreign luxuries? |
34123 | Why should we wish to bring ruin upon ourselves? |
34123 | Why, then, not put it out of the power of the vicious and the lawless to use us with cruelty and indignity with impunity? |
34123 | Will Mr. Howe get possession of the city? |
34123 | Will gold and silver remedy this evil? |
34123 | Will it be left to our Assemblies to choose one? |
34123 | Will it not render magistrates servile and fawning to their vicious superiors, and insolent and tyrannical to their inferiors? |
34123 | Will not Parliamentary taxation, if established, occasion vices, crimes, and follies infinitely more numerous, dangerous, and fatal to the community? |
34123 | Will not Parliamentary taxation, if established, raise a revenue unjustly and wrongfully? |
34123 | Will you come and have the small- pox[105] here? |
34123 | Will you not return ere the close of another year? |
34123 | Would you advise me? |
34123 | Yet, will not ten thousand difficulties arise in the formation of it? |
34123 | You ask if every member feels for us? |
34123 | You ask what sort of defense Virginia can make? |
34123 | You ask where the fleet is? |
34123 | You ask, Can they realize what we suffer? |
34123 | [ 153] If you complain of neglect of education in sons, what shall I say with regard to daughters, who every day experience the want of it? |
34123 | [ 176] But, what is vastly more, how shall the disgrace be wiped away? |
34123 | [ 95] Why should we not assume your titles when we give you up our names? |
34123 | are ye not those patriots in whose power That best, that godlike luxury is placed Of blessing thousands, thousands yet unborn Thro''late posterity? |
34123 | from a consciousness of acting upon upright and generous principles, of promoting the cause of right, freedom, and the happiness of men? |
34123 | of"Cassandra"? |
34123 | of"Cato"? |
34123 | or are the post- riders all dismissed? |
34123 | or have you a score or two of such? |
34123 | or what fatality attends them? |
34123 | that my dear mother has left me? |
34123 | what art thou? |
34123 | what avail these mournful reflections? |
34123 | what shall we do with it? |
34123 | where are you? |
34123 | where art thou? |
9598 | Down the chill street, which winds in gloomiest shade, What marks betray yon solitary maid? 9598 Is this thy mane, my fearless Surtur, That streams against my breast? |
9598 | Are those the Normes that beckon onward As if to Odin''s board, Where by the hands of warriors nightly The sparkling mead is poured? |
9598 | But what avails her beauty? |
9598 | Is this thy neck, that curve of moonlight Which Helva''s hand caressed? |
9598 | Nay, is it not his duty to be merry, by main force if necessary? |
9598 | Were not the good St. Pierre, and Fenelon, and Howard, and Clarkson visionaries also? |
9598 | Were the Puritans themselves the men to cast stones at the Quakers and Baptists? |
9598 | What was John Woolman, to the wise and prudent of his day, but an amiable enthusiast? |
9598 | What, to those of our own, is such an angel of mercy as Dorothea Dix? |
9598 | Who does not feel the power of this simple picture of the old man in the last- mentioned poem? |
9598 | Why, then, should not even the doctor have his fun? |
8659 | And do n''t we sometimes have pretty soft preaching? |
8659 | Out of whose womb came the ice? 8659 --were they not as other men? 8659 29. her wise dames, answered Yea she turned answer to herself 30. and what have they not sped? 8659 A Salem man was, in 1687, fined ten shillings for a misdemeanor, butin case he shall cutt off his long har of his head into a sevill( civil?) |
8659 | A third and favorite metre was this:--"Mais sa montagne est un sainct lieu: Qui viendra done au mont de Dieu? |
8659 | And for three successive years he delivered once a year a sermon on the text,"Is Thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?" |
8659 | And the hoary frost of heaven, who hath gendered it? |
8659 | And who can doubt it? |
8659 | Because it is not permitted to a woman to speake in the Church, how then shall they sing? |
8659 | Canst thou set the dominion thereof on the earth? |
8659 | Do you think his duties were light in July and August, when school was out, to watch the boys of ten families? |
8659 | Do you wonder that the bachelors resented this towering"maids pue?" |
8659 | Had not the Puritans left the Church of England to escape"stinted prayers"? |
8659 | Have they not speed? |
8659 | He gave out as his text,"Why do the wicked live?" |
8659 | He thinks a final tion should be spelt chon-- and why not? |
8659 | He was at last worsted by the grimaces of the victorious smith( where was the Duxbury tithingman? |
8659 | His chariot wheels why tarry they? |
8659 | His chariot- wheels why tarry they? |
8659 | It can be said of them, as of the Jew, had they not"eyes, hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?" |
8659 | Knowest thou the ordinance of heaven? |
8659 | Lord when wilt thou amend this geare why dost thou stay& pause? |
8659 | Mr. Wigglesworth preached on the text, Who can stand before His Cold? |
8659 | Of divers- colour''d needle- work Wrought curious on each side Of various colours meet for necks Of those who spoils divide? |
8659 | One thrifty parson, while watching a farmer unload his yearly contribution, remarked,"Is n''t that pretty soft wood?" |
8659 | Out of a window Sisera His mother look''d and said The lattess through in coming why So long''s chariot staid? |
8659 | Out of a window Sisera his mother looked and said The lattess through in coming why so long his chariot staid? |
8659 | Qui est- ce qui là tiendra place? |
8659 | Stand still, will ye?" |
8659 | Taking up this very volume he turned to me and remarked that''This looks a rare edition, Mr. Stevens, do n''t you think so? |
8659 | The prey by poll; a maid or twain what parted have not they? |
8659 | The prey to each a maid or twain Divided have not they? |
8659 | Though I suspect"painful"in the Puritan vocabulary meant"painstaking,"did it not? |
8659 | To Sisera have they not shar''d A divers- colour''d prey? |
8659 | Two young men of like intent met Mr. Haynes, of Vermont, and said with mock sad faces,"Have you heard the news? |
8659 | Were the dill and"sweetest fennel"chosen Sabbath favorites for their old- time virtues and powers? |
8659 | What right had the people to sing God''s word,"I will bless the Lord at all times, His praise shall be continually in my mouth"? |
8659 | Why dost thou tyrant boast thyself thy wicked deeds to praise Dost thou not know there is a God whose mercies last alwaies? |
8659 | Why doth thy mind yet still deuise such wisked wiles to warp? |
8659 | _ Sefighiattly_ is"sufficiently;"but who can translate"Fesy"? |
8659 | and when the startled and blinking men jumped up, calling out"Where?" |
8659 | can it mean"facy"or faced smoothly? |
8659 | how could she sing with ease or reverence such confused verses? |
8659 | must I be shut up in a closet and sit on a shelf?" |
8659 | that they would not be scornfully looked down upon every Sabbath by women- folk, especially by a girl named"meachem"? |
8659 | what will become of you?" |
8659 | you know I mean you; why do n''t you hang down your head?" |
9565 | Did we count on this? 9565 Have not,"he asks,"these negroes as much right to fight for their freedom as you have to keep them slaves?" |
9565 | Shall we demurBecause the vision tarrieth? |
9565 | Thou of the God- lent crown, Shall these vile creatures dare Murmur against thee where The knees of kings kneel down? |
9565 | What is it, my Pastorius? |
9565 | And Anna''s aloe? |
9565 | And could it be, she trembling asked, Some secret thought or sin Had shut good angels from her heart And let the bad ones in? |
9565 | And did a secret sympathy possess That tender soul, and for the slave''s redress Lend hope, strength, patience? |
9565 | Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way That Adam heard in the cool of day? |
9565 | Did light girl laughter ripple through the bushes, As brooks make merry over roots and rushes? |
9565 | Did the boy''s whistle answer back the thrushes? |
9565 | Did we leave behind The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease Of our English hearths and homes, to find Troublers of Israel such as these? |
9565 | Had she in some forgotten dream Let go her hold on Heaven, And sold herself unwittingly To spirits unforgiven? |
9565 | If it flowered at last In Bartram''s garden, did John Woolman cast A glance upon it as he meekly passed? |
9565 | Out spake the King to Henrik, his young and faithful squire"Dar''st trust thy little Elsie, the maid of thy desire?" |
9565 | Shall I pity them? |
9565 | Shall I spare? |
9565 | Was I more than these? |
9565 | Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze Sang in their saddest of minor keys? |
9565 | Was it a dream, or did she hear Her lover''s whistled tune? |
9565 | What blessing is thy choice?" |
9565 | What hate of heresy the east- wind woke? |
9565 | What heard they? |
9565 | What hints of pitiless power and terror spoke In waves that on their iron coast- line broke? |
9565 | What noble knight was this? |
9565 | What was it the mournful wood- thrush said? |
9565 | What whispered the pine- trees overhead? |
9565 | What words for modest maiden''s ear? |
9565 | Who is strong, If these be weak? |
9565 | Who knows what goadings in their sterner way O''er jagged ice, relieved by granite gray, Blew round the men of Massachusetts Bay? |
9565 | Who shall rebuke the wrong, If these consent? |
9565 | Yet, who shall guess his bitter grief who lends His life to some great cause, and finds his friends Shame or betray it for their private ends? |
9565 | said a voice,"What seekest thou? |
9565 | was that Thy answer From the horror round about? |
5374 | And do you remember how she used to play under the maple there, with her dolls? |
5374 | And he had ambition, did n''t he, Aunt Mary? |
5374 | And how about my ready- made clothes? |
5374 | And what would Aunt Mary say to me? |
5374 | And whensaid Honora,"when Mrs. Dwyer has dinner- parties for celebrated people who come here, why does she invite you in to see the table?" |
5374 | And you,she asked,"where are you going?" |
5374 | Anything the matter? |
5374 | But you have seen him? |
5374 | Did n''t I? |
5374 | Disease? |
5374 | Do I? |
5374 | Do you expect me to take down all my mirrors, Eleanor? 5374 Do you remember how stiff they were, Tom?" |
5374 | Do you want me to ruin her utterly? |
5374 | Does it make any difference who made it, Honora? |
5374 | Does that cause you to like it any less, Honora? |
5374 | He was very handsome, was n''t he? |
5374 | How could you know what I wanted, Peter? |
5374 | How did you guess it? |
5374 | Is to- morrow Christmas? |
5374 | It''s very beautiful, is n''t it? 5374 Like what?" |
5374 | Mrs. Leffingwell is only giving the child the advantages which her companions have-- Emily has French, has n''t she? |
5374 | Oh, Aunt Mary, is it really true that I am going? |
5374 | Oh, it''s Christmas, Cathy, is n''t it? 5374 Oh,"cried Honora,"do n''t you want to be? |
5374 | Peter,asked Honora,"ca n''t you get Judge Brice to send you on to New York this winter on law business? |
5374 | Peter,she demanded,"why do you dress like that?" |
5374 | Randolph again? |
5374 | Silverdale? |
5374 | Susan, what''s this? |
5374 | The Leffingwells used to be great once upon a time, did n''t they, Aunt Mary? |
5374 | Then why is n''t he rich, as my father was? |
5374 | To boarding- school, Aunt Mary? |
5374 | Until next summer, I believe,replied Aunt Mary, gently;"June is a summer month- isn''t it, Tom?" |
5374 | Very much? |
5374 | Was Cousin Randolph handsome? |
5374 | We? |
5374 | Well, my dear, why should we complain? 5374 What are serious things?" |
5374 | What are you doing, Cathy? |
5374 | What in the world are we going to do with all these things? |
5374 | What is it? |
5374 | What is this disease you''ve got? |
5374 | What kind of ambition do you mean, Honora? |
5374 | What was he like? |
5374 | What would you like to happen? |
5374 | What''s the matter, Honora? |
5374 | What''s the matter, dear? |
5374 | What''s the use of making an impression if you ca n''t follow it up? |
5374 | What? |
5374 | Where did he live? |
5374 | Who has been putting such things in your head, my dear? |
5374 | Why I all alone? |
5374 | Why by not? |
5374 | Why do n''t you congratulate me? |
5374 | Why do n''t you ever talk to me about my father, Aunt Mary? 5374 Why do n''t you go as far as old Catherine, and call her a princess?" |
5374 | Why do you say I''ll never come back? |
5374 | Why does n''t she invite you to the dinners? |
5374 | Why not? |
5374 | Why not? |
5374 | Why should I desire what I can not have, my dear? 5374 Why, Peter,"Uncle Tom had said slyly,"why do n''t you kiss her?" |
5374 | Why, Tim, it''s you, is it? |
5374 | Would you be content to stop then? |
5374 | You are Mrs. Thomas Leffingwell? |
5374 | And Lucy Hayden, that doll- like darling of the gods? |
5374 | And beautiful Mrs. Hayden what has become of her? |
5374 | And how often, during the summer days and nights, had she listened to the chimes of the Pilgrim Church near by? |
5374 | And it wo n''t be for long-- will it? |
5374 | And what would Cousin Eleanor''s yard have been without Honora? |
5374 | And-- what will Uncle Tom and Aunt Mary do-- without you?" |
5374 | Are n''t you glad? |
5374 | But--""But what, Honora?" |
5374 | CLIO, OR THALIA? |
5374 | Did Honora know it? |
5374 | Did you send all the way to New York for it?" |
5374 | Do you think you ought to dress her that way?" |
5374 | Do you understand?" |
5374 | Dwyer''s?" |
5374 | Has he no existence, no purpose in life outside of that perpetual gentleman in waiting? |
5374 | How could she explain to Aunt Mary that the sight of beautiful things gave her a sort of pain-- when she did not yet know it herself? |
5374 | If Honora is a complicated mechanism now, what will she be at twenty? |
5374 | Is n''t that being rich?" |
5374 | May I wear it to Cousin Eleanor''s to- day?" |
5374 | Oh, Mary, ca n''t you see? |
5374 | Or perhaps you''d rather get married when you are eighteen?" |
5374 | Rossiter?" |
5374 | She was leaving them-- for what? |
5374 | WHAT''S IN HEREDITY? |
5374 | Was it instinct or premonition that led them to accost the bonne? |
5374 | We ought to be willing to spare her for-- how many months?" |
5374 | What Saint Louisan of the last generation does not remember Uhrig''s Cave? |
5374 | What is Peter? |
5374 | What man, even Peter, would not have married her if he could? |
5374 | What was the cause of this longing to break the fetters and fly away? |
5374 | What were lawyers for, if not to win suits? |
5374 | What were these privations compared to that magic word Change? |
5374 | What would the Mediterranean Sea and its adjoining countries be to us unless the wanderings of Ulysses and AEneas had made them real? |
5374 | Who can say? |
5374 | Would n''t Uncle Tom ever be rich? |
5374 | Would the day ever come when she, too, would depart for the bright places of the earth? |
5374 | nor look without regret upon the thing which has replaced it, called a Coliseum? |
6449 | Are you still a Quaker? |
6449 | Did you ever see anything like that? |
6449 | Do you know you are under sentence of death? |
6449 | Do you renounce the Quakers? |
6449 | Even though it is wrong? |
6449 | For how much? |
6449 | I do n''t want to study; ca n''t I go and wade in the brook? |
6449 | Is your heart right? |
6449 | May it not be a consequence of this that so many of you are a generation of triflers with God, with one another, and your own souls? 6449 Of course, of course-- oh, but-- but where are you going to kill snakes with your mongoose?" |
6449 | Oh, I see-- but what is a mongoose? |
6449 | Once more: what shall we say of the youth of this place? 6449 Shall I have the men of God pray for you?" |
6449 | Then you can commit any act you wish? |
6449 | Then you say that you can commit no sin? |
6449 | What is your favorite book? |
6449 | Why do you entrust me with all these goods when you know I am not worth a thousand pounds in my own name? |
6449 | Will you have the people pray for you? |
6449 | --_Rousseau_[ Illustration] Who is the great man? |
6449 | After the sermon they said,"Is it I-- Is it I?" |
6449 | And doth not the Most High regard it? |
6449 | And how about teaching the catechism and memorizing the Ten Commandments? |
6449 | And if it is the divine right of a child to dig in the dirt, why is n''t it the divine right of the grown- up? |
6449 | And one asked,"Is it me?" |
6449 | Are no drunkenness and uncleanness found among you? |
6449 | Are there not a multitude of you that are forsworn? |
6449 | Are we dead to the world and the things of the world? |
6449 | Are we then patterns to the rest in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity? |
6449 | Are you better managers of your fortune than of your time? |
6449 | Are you diligent in your business, pursuing your studies with all your strength? |
6449 | Being brought before Governor Endicott, she was asked,"Are you the same Mary Dyer that was here before?" |
6449 | But how in the name of breeding must we account for the degeneracy of the human form in this otherwise mammoth- producing soil? |
6449 | But is it not the wages of iniquity? |
6449 | Can you bear, unless now and then in a church, any talk of the Holy Ghost? |
6449 | Do you know how to possess your bodies in sanctification and honor? |
6449 | Do you put forth all your strength in the vast work you have undertaken? |
6449 | Do you redeem the time, crowding as much work into every day as it can contain? |
6449 | Do you take care to owe no man anything? |
6449 | Does it not prove that there is a radical error in the system? |
6449 | Does not that remind you of the not- to- be- forgotten opening words of"The Crisis":"These are the times that try men''s souls"? |
6449 | Ever besought the king to lighten the weight of his heavy hand? |
6449 | Ever protested against feudal wrongs? |
6449 | Ever shown the least desire that the condition of the masses should be improved? |
6449 | Finally a personage leaned over and said to the man of the mysterious package:"Stranger, may I be so bold as to ask what you have in that box?" |
6449 | Had he introduced books among them? |
6449 | Had the Church ever pleaded the peasant''s case at the bar of public opinion? |
6449 | Have we a bitter zeal, inciting us to strive sharply and passionately with those that are out of the way? |
6449 | Have we a burning zeal to save souls from death? |
6449 | Have you either the form or the power of Christian godliness? |
6449 | He parted from the Church without a struggle, and adopted as his motto,"If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6449 | If famine could occur in Cork and Dublin, why not in Manchester and London? |
6449 | If the Puritans won, no one knew the result-- would power be safe in their hands? |
6449 | In the name of the Lord God Almighty I ask, What religion are ye of?" |
6449 | Information upon such matters as concerned their material welfare? |
6449 | Is there a Horse Heaven? |
6449 | Is this the general character of Fellows of Colleges? |
6449 | Liberal ideas? |
6449 | Must not we say prayers, and attend divine worship, and pay tithes, and obey magistrates? |
6449 | Or is our zeal the flame of love, so as to direct all our words with sweetness, lowliness and meekness of wisdom? |
6449 | Schools? |
6449 | So soon as a citizen says, What are State Affairs to me? |
6449 | Suddenly I thought,"Can not God heal man or beast as He will?" |
6449 | The Society of Friends-- I like the phrase, do n''t you? |
6449 | Then the proposition was-- would they come again? |
6449 | Then the question arose, What should be done with the prisoners? |
6449 | Then they turned on Cotton and said,"So, you are one of them?" |
6449 | Then what is it goes after men who criticize the prevailing religion and shows where it can be improved upon? |
6449 | There is one test for all of our educational experiments-- will it bring increased love? |
6449 | This being true, does not the management of this factory call for men of heart and soul-- broad- minded, generous, firm in the right? |
6449 | Was ever mortal horse so honored? |
6449 | Was it the desire of Theodore Parker to transform Christian Boston into a Pagan Rome? |
6449 | Were they not Friends, indeed? |
6449 | What are the natural rights of a man? |
6449 | What is perjury, if this is not? |
6449 | When little Theodore was four years of age his sisters would stand him on a chair and ask,"What did grandpa say to the soldiers?" |
6449 | When we are smitten on one cheek, do we not resent it, or do we turn the other also, not resisting evil, but overcoming evil with good? |
6449 | Where are the seals of our apostleship? |
6449 | Who of you is, in any degree, acquainted with the work of the Spirit, His supernatural work in the souls of men? |
6449 | Who that were dead in trespasses and sins have been quickened by our word? |
6449 | Would you not take it for granted, if any one began such a conversation, that it was hypocrisy or enthusiasm? |
6449 | Yea, are there not many of you who glory in your shame? |
6449 | Yet what had the priest done for them? |
55635 | ''Whist, or Bumblepuppy?'' 55635 Is he not hospitable,"quaintly asks one of our American essayists,"who entertains thoughts?" |
55635 | Who henceforth shall sing to thy pipe, O thrice- lamented? 55635 ***** We die and are forgotten; but must we forget? 55635 --_Boston Journal._ WHIST, OR BUMBLEPUPPY? 55635 --_Boston Saturday Gazette._Is it a man''s or a woman''s book? |
55635 | Are not Spurius Cassius and the Gracchi vindicated, when the Agrarian law prevails at last? |
55635 | Are there none for whom you are lonely through the ages? |
55635 | Are there not centuries of old delight in your memory, unequalled now? |
55635 | Are they easy in their minds when street- bands are due? |
55635 | Are you not comely? |
55635 | By what means was the race of hens, for instance, preserved? |
55635 | By what unheard- of perverseness in the natural order is she framed delicately as a kind sunbeam, or a fragment of sea- foam? |
55635 | Can not the liberal soil absorb, without comment, the vast number of lives so sadly inessential to the world''s growth and beauty? |
55635 | Can you not tell us a tale of the Visigoth? |
55635 | Dare you despise him? |
55635 | Despise him? |
55635 | Did he wear the armor of the ancestral Franks under his clerical dress? |
55635 | Do I not encourage the handsome charges of our grocer, solely because I know his antecedents, and can trace his limp to Ball''s Bluff? |
55635 | Do I not take kindly yet to the battered coat bedizened with bright buttons, on the back of M., grimy vender of coal? |
55635 | Do they know a pick- pocket when they see him? |
55635 | Do you miss the smoke of altars? |
55635 | Do you not spiritualize the darkness with one touch of your pale garment? |
55635 | Doth Leo roar too loudly on your sensitive ear? |
55635 | FIRST SERIES.--Mercy Philbrick''s Choice; Afterglow; Deirdrè; Hetty''s Strange History; Is That All? |
55635 | Had I indeed been on a strange road, and among strange sounds? |
55635 | Has he a sensitive pen, jealous of its rectitude, true as the magnet- lured steel to what he believes to be his frank, unshared fancies? |
55635 | Hath a comet vexed you,--that tireless incendiary? |
55635 | Hath not the wholesome autumn light, which filtered into the fruit they affect, permeated their moral temperament? |
55635 | Have we not known hands dark and shrunken with age or suffering, instinct yet with so- called patrician blood? |
55635 | Have you forgotten the beginners of the"star- ypointing pyramid"? |
55635 | How brawny was Bajazet? |
55635 | How fair was Helen; Semiramis how cruel? |
55635 | How sang Blondel against the prison- door? |
55635 | How shall that affect the immutable law? |
55635 | How shall your country folk learn to jostle and be jostled? |
55635 | If I should be allowed to venture alone into the thicket, would the fiery eyes of the"reb"glare upon me? |
55635 | Is Mars civil, or heavy Saturn capable of laughter? |
55635 | Is it a braver sentiment to fret after reported continents? |
55635 | Is it not an apostrophe to thee? |
55635 | Is not the phrase the"scorn of scorn,"the catchword of insubordination, the blazing defiance of tongues unbroken as a two- years''colt? |
55635 | It was plain, thought the_ savants_ of P., that the apple- tree had eaten of ancient Roger; now who had eaten of the fruit of that apple- tree? |
55635 | Leaving Dives to the practice or omission of a virtue eminently appropriate to his coffers, what of the very poor? |
55635 | Might they creep over by night and fall upon us? |
55635 | Please could I settle difficulties with any little boy in the opposing camp? |
55635 | Shall such be thy mission, reader? |
55635 | Shall the fault of our frail ancestress rest upon thy rosy head? |
55635 | The diggers dug, and the beholders beheld-- what? |
55635 | Then what are they to us,--your dimensions and your distances? |
55635 | Therefore this delight of mine is no more mine than thine, and his, and theirs, and ours; and who would have it otherwise? |
55635 | This marvellous restlessness,--might it not once have been a human thing? |
55635 | Thou who art fair without as a cherub''s cheek, how couldst thou be abettor to the treacherous spirit? |
55635 | Thou who art full of virtue, what is this rumor of thy defection in Eden, thy remote causing of all contemporaneous woe? |
55635 | Was Jeff Davis lurking on the other bank of the stream? |
55635 | Was it not well said, not frankly? |
55635 | What avails all that? |
55635 | What business have we in the country? |
55635 | What glory and honor did it bring me? |
55635 | What hope is there in this world for redress? |
55635 | What joint mundane sin warranted this posthumous halving of their immortal fortunes? |
55635 | What more can it ever bring? |
55635 | What should Poe be like,--Poe the one and only,--but a blended brief echo of Marlowe and of Dryden? |
55635 | What was this spectre with whom I must not frolic, on whose shoulders I must not perch, whose head, bound in bandages, I must not handle? |
55635 | Whence got he that tremendous vigor, that aptitude for great and hazardous things? |
55635 | Where have they learned that sweet readiness of succor? |
55635 | Where is the plant that will teach us its name? |
55635 | Where, too, is the slow, mysterious evening of our childhood, or its dawn, anticipating change, as you turned away? |
55635 | Who can think of a breathless Athenian, save in the hour of battle, or of manly sport? |
55635 | Who could make doubtful issues surer than thou, least didactic, yet most practical of preachers? |
55635 | Who could so boldly pursue a simile, eking analogies out of stones? |
55635 | Who hath circumvented her? |
55635 | Who is there to heed that strange doctrine? |
55635 | Who shall gainsay it? |
55635 | Who shall set mouth to thy reeds?" |
55635 | Who so pitiless on impostures and shams, when thy gallant oratory"Blew them transverse, ten thousand leagues awry"? |
55635 | Who wants Beaumont and Fletcher in sombre cloth, or in anything out of folio, or Jeremy Taylor in red morocco and gilt? |
55635 | Who, indeed, that hath a mote in his eye, can not still discern a huge beam in yours? |
55635 | Why not metempsychosis? |
55635 | Why not? |
55635 | Why should you despise him? |
55635 | are we to indite a disquisition on the Decay of Hospitality? |
55635 | faces fairer than the lilies, on whose repose you still yearn to shine? |
55635 | gone before To that unknown and silent shore, Shall we not meet as heretofore Some summer morning?" |
55635 | or marched nigh six leagues of an Arcadian afternoon to front the gleaming waters at Ponkapog, the purple crests of Milton Hill? |
55635 | where be the treasures of the doughty Kidd? |
55635 | who is this Falstaffian, Toby Belchian, Kriss Kringlish person we see about your premises? |
55635 | why do we stay? |
9593 | What right, I demand,said an American orator some years ago,"have the children of Africa to a homestead in the white man''s country?" |
9593 | And had we them not without bloodshed or violence to the social compact? |
9593 | And with this case of atrocious injustice to Ireland placed before the reformers of Great Britain, what assistance, what sympathy, do we receive? |
9593 | But is this the end? |
9593 | But who is Daniel O''Connell? |
9593 | But who is Daniel O''Connell? |
9593 | Has God''s universe no wider limits than the circle of the blue wall which shuts in our nestling- place? |
9593 | Has not the time of''Cedant arma togae''come for us and the other nations of the earth?" |
9593 | Have they, then, no claim to an equal participation in the blessings which have grown out of the national independence for which they fought? |
9593 | Have we not had within my memory two great political revolutions? |
9593 | He defended himself in a long and eloquent address, which concluded in the following manly strain:--"What, then, has been my crime? |
9593 | He then carefully awakened his companion, who, starting up, forgetful of the cause of his disturbance, asked aloud,"What do you want?" |
9593 | Shall we, in view of these things, call back young, generous spirits just entering upon the perilous pathway? |
9593 | Sin abounds without; but is his own heart pure? |
9593 | Surely not the slaveholder? |
9593 | True, the world''s garden has become a desert and needs renovation; but is his own little nook weedless? |
9593 | We say an attempt, for who will say it has succeeded? |
9593 | What then? |
9593 | While smiting down the giants and dragons which beset the outward world, are there no evil guests sitting by his own hearth- stone? |
9593 | Who feels contempt for O''Connell? |
42318 | And what,we inquired,"is this something that you have attained?" |
42318 | Do you know who will be the next U. S. Senator from this State? |
42318 | In the hall of thieves,said the lady;"what on earth can be the meaning of that? |
42318 | Of what must I take care? |
42318 | What were they eating and drinking? |
42318 | When did I hurt thee? |
42318 | Where did she_ formerly_ live? |
42318 | Where? |
42318 | Will you try that over again? |
42318 | ''But how does friction produce heat in this case?'' |
42318 | ''But it flows from the Gulf of Mexico?'' |
42318 | ''But the Gulf Stream flows north; how, then, can the icebergs accumulate at its source?'' |
42318 | ''Is she happy?'' |
42318 | ''Is she in fault, or others?'' |
42318 | ''That,''said I,''is false;''but not having heard from the family for several years, I asked again,''How many_ did_ she have?'' |
42318 | ''Then why do n''t you go on?'' |
42318 | ''What are you going to do with me?'' |
42318 | ''What for?'' |
42318 | ''What is the name of the living one?'' |
42318 | ''What is your occupation?'' |
42318 | ''What makes her unhappy?'' |
42318 | ''When?'' |
42318 | ''Why?'' |
42318 | ''Will he ever pay me anything?'' |
42318 | ''_ Three._''''Where are the other two?'' |
42318 | And again, what of that spicy colloquy in which Planchette writes the words"devil,""devil''s brother,""stir fires,""broil you,"etc.? |
42318 | And how? |
42318 | Are not many of the usages and familiar forms of speech of modern Christendom a return to old heathenism? |
42318 | Are these the fruits of the misunderstood doctrine of total depravity?] |
42318 | Are they not what St. Augustine calls a repudiation of the Christian faith? |
42318 | At last I asked,''How many brothers has she?'' |
42318 | At this point she inquired:"Who is this that is giving this caution?" |
42318 | But Satan can work only through human agents; and who were his instruments for the affliction of these children? |
42318 | But is it a fact, then, that the great enemy whom Christ so constantly spoke of is dead? |
42318 | But what is this doctrine? |
42318 | But why should the devil connect himself with Planchette?... |
42318 | Can you cite me some familiar fact to prove that man is actually surrounded and pervaded by a sphere such as you describe? |
42318 | Curious, is it not? |
42318 | DR. DODDRIDGE''S DREAM[ In concluding these Psychological discussions, what is there more appropriate than the following? |
42318 | Do they believe they are united by intimate bonds with all Christ''s followers? |
42318 | For example, she on one occasion said to it:"Planchette, where did you get your education?" |
42318 | For illustration, suppose a man asserts at noonday that there is no sun, does he teach you there is no sun? |
42318 | Green?'' |
42318 | Has it not looked with a jealous eye upon the progress of science generally? |
42318 | He has been appointed to serve the world, and the world does not regard him; the negroes, and( who could believe it?) |
42318 | He says:"How, then, shall we account for the writing which is performed without any direct volition? |
42318 | How does that consideration stand? |
42318 | How does that sound to you, my ingenious friend? |
42318 | How so? |
42318 | I then said:''Who are you?'' |
42318 | If I am not an intelligence, in the name of common sense what am I? |
42318 | If a table may be made to spin around the room, why may not a wheel be made to turn as well?" |
42318 | If it be called only a dream, or, even a delusion, what harm can come of it? |
42318 | If thou believest the things which thou sayest to be true, why dost thou weep and lament and make a pageantry and a mock of thy singing? |
42318 | If thou believest them_ not_ to be true, why dost thou play the hypocrite so much as to sing?" |
42318 | In Planchette, public journalists and pamphleteers seem to have caught the"What is it?" |
42318 | In justice to my little friend, however, I must not omit to state that in respect to questions as to the kind of weather we shall have on the morrow? |
42318 | Is it anything more than the sheerest assumption? |
42318 | Is it not in keeping with Scripture teachings, as now interpreted? |
42318 | May I not, then, expect from_ you_ a solution of the mysteries which have thus far enveloped you? |
42318 | May it not be spiritual food, of which their mother, the Church, has abundance, which she has neglected to set before them? |
42318 | My friend C. here asked:"Ought she to go to Kentucky and attend to the matter?" |
42318 | My question was,_ Can you tell me anything about my nephew?_''_ Mr. |
42318 | Nevertheless, I am curious to know how you justify yourself in this disparaging remark on the theology and religion of the day? |
42318 | Pray, how do you account for that fact? |
42318 | She said to him:"For a further test, will you be kind enough to tell me where I last saw you?" |
42318 | St. Chrysostom, speaking of funeral services, quotes passages from the psalms and hymns that were in common use, thus:"What mean our psalms and hymns? |
42318 | Such were the answers to the questions:"How many brothers_ did_ she[ Mary C----] have?" |
42318 | Such, for instance, is the answer"Nobody knows,"to the question"Where is Mary C----?" |
42318 | Thinkest thou that I can not now pray to my Father, and he will give me more than twelve legions of angels?" |
42318 | Well, by what description of intelligence? |
42318 | Well, then, what is the way to deal with spiritualism? |
42318 | What is this communion which death can not prevent, and which with prayer can impart consolation? |
42318 | When this theory is offered in seriousness as a final solution of the mystery in question, we are tempted to ask, Who is electricity? |
42318 | Where is the shadow of proof? |
42318 | Why should we not hasten and run after them that we too may see our fatherland? |
42318 | Why? |
42318 | Will you have the kindness to gratify me in this particular? |
42318 | Would not a sermon conceived in the terms of this standard treatise excite an instant sensation as tending toward the errors of Spiritualism? |
42318 | [ 2] Query: Have we here the_ spiritus mundi_ of the old philosophers? |
42318 | _ I._ And what of the changed aspects of science that is to grow out of this alleged peculiar Divine manifestation? |
42318 | _ I._ I see the point, and acknowledge it is ingeniously made; but do you not see that the argument fails to meet the whole difficulty? |
42318 | _ I._ Of course they do; how otherwise? |
42318 | _ I._ On what ground do you assert that the religion of the day stands in a position"negative"to other influences? |
42318 | _ I._ Pray tell us what you mean by the dream- region that lies between the two worlds? |
42318 | _ I._ Well, I should say he would teach the latter; but what use would the knowledge that he is such a fool be to us? |
42318 | _ P._ Can you, then, bear an announcement still more startling than any I have yet made? |
42318 | _ P._ Did not the heathens consult familiar spirits as petty divinities, or gods, and as such, follow their sayings and commands implicitly? |
42318 | _ P._ May you not, then, from all this learn a rule which will always be a safe guide to you in respect to the matters under discussion? |
42318 | and how and where did he get his education? |
42318 | and is this the road our ancestors had to travel in their pilgrimage in quest of freedom and Christianity? |
42318 | and was not that the reason, and the only reason, why the practice was forbidden? |
42318 | and would not the Israelites to whom the Old Testament was addressed have violated the first command in the decalogue by adopting this practice? |
42318 | is my money in jeopardy?" |
42318 | or does he teach you that he is blind? |
42318 | or shall I see, or do this, that, or the other thing? |
42318 | so great an event heralded by so questionable an instrumentality as the rapping and table tipping spirits? |
42318 | that is to say, between mere verbal utterances and phenomenal demonstrations? |
42318 | what is his mental and moral_ status_? |
42318 | will such person go, or such a one come? |
9562 | ''What dost thou here, poor man? 9562 Come hither, child, and say hast thou This young man ever seen?" |
9562 | Is an English Christian''s home A chapel or a mass- house, that you make the sign of Rome? |
9562 | Midst soulless forms, and false pretence Of spiritual pride and pampered sense, A voice saith,''What is that to thee? 9562 My name indeed is Mary,"said the stranger sobbing wild;"Will you be to me a mother? |
9562 | O sister of El Zara''s race, Behold me!--had we not one mother? |
9562 | Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen, The flower of Ireland? 9562 Thou weariest of thy present state; What gain to thee time''s holiest date? |
9562 | What is this? |
9562 | What thought Chorazin''s scribes? 9562 Who is losing? |
9562 | Who knocks? |
9562 | Why wait to see in thy brief span Its perfect flower and fruit in man? 9562 Canst thou hear me? 9562 I often said to myself,''My sole study has been to merit well of mankind; why do I fear them?'' |
9562 | One with courteous gesture lifted the bear- skin from his head;"Lives here Elkanah Garvin?" |
9562 | SPEAK and tell us, our Ximena, looking northward far away, O''er the camp of the invaders, o''er the Mexican array, Who is losing? |
9562 | Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost, and who has won? |
9562 | The steed stamped at the castle gate, The boar- hunt sounded on the hill; Why stayed the Baron from the chase, With looks so stern, and words so ill? |
9562 | Then up spake a Scottish maiden, With her ear unto the ground"Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it? |
9562 | Thou hast our prayers;--what can we give thee more?" |
9562 | Was it an angel or a fiend Whose voice be heard? |
9562 | What faith In Him had Nain and Nazareth? |
9562 | What is the shame that clothes the skin To the nameless horror that lives within? |
9562 | When such lovers meet each other, Why should prying idlers stay? |
9562 | Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand and faintly smiled; Was that pitying face his mother''s? |
9562 | Who sought with him, from summer air, And field and wood, a balm for care; And bathed in light of sunset skies His tortured nerves and weary eyes? |
9562 | are they far or come they near? |
9562 | are they not in his Wonder- Book? |
9562 | at last he cried,--"What to me is this noisy ride? |
9562 | canst thou see? |
9562 | did she watch beside her child? |
9562 | lay thy poor head on my knee; Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? |
9562 | she cried,"now tell me, has my child come back to me?" |
9562 | we need nor rock nor sand, Nor storied stream of Morning- Land; The heavens are glassed in Merrimac,-- What more could Jordan render back? |
9562 | who is winning? |
9562 | who is winning?" |
9562 | why should we?" |
46347 | ''Did I do right?'' 46347 But not merely as a common sailor, I suppose?" |
46347 | But what makes the neap tides? |
46347 | Do you believe in the Perseverance of the Saints? |
46347 | Do you really think so? |
46347 | Fear? |
46347 | Have a cigar, Admiral? |
46347 | Have we not too long deluded ourselves with the idea that mild and conciliatory measures would influence them to return to their allegiance? 46347 He seemed depressed beyond measure, as he asked, slowly, and with great emphasis,''What_ is_ the North about? |
46347 | Henry, what do you think of when you hear a bell tolling like that? |
46347 | How many troops,asked the Secretary of War,"do you require in your department?" |
46347 | How old is he? |
46347 | I read them all through,he said quaintly,"and then I said to myself, Well, Abraham Lincoln, are you a man, or are you a dog?" |
46347 | Is that so? |
46347 | Let us see,says the Doctor,"Henry, how old are you?" |
46347 | My life is story enough,once said a person of this peculiar temperament,"what should I want to read stories for?" |
46347 | Now brother G----, you want my horse for a day? 46347 Practice them?" |
46347 | What do you think of it? |
46347 | What is that? |
46347 | What makes you think so? |
46347 | What sort of a style_ am_ I forming? |
46347 | Where do you dine? |
46347 | Why not let_ us_ make them a little more conventional, and file them to a classical pattern? |
46347 | Why, my son,exclaimed his father,"where are the men?" |
46347 | ''Canst thou draw out the leviathan, Slavery, with a hook? |
46347 | ''Tis true, my footsteps are confined-- I can not range beyond this cell; But what can circumscribe my mind? |
46347 | ''Who''s Massa Sam?'' |
46347 | ''Who''s dead, Aunty?'' |
46347 | *****"I am aware that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity? |
46347 | A Methodist brother once said to him,"Well now, really, Brother Beecher, what have you against Methodist doctrines?" |
46347 | Absorbed in a thousand trifles, how will the nation all at once come to a stand? |
46347 | And did not the most respectable citizens cry, Well done? |
46347 | And the question returns, WAS IT RIGHT_ to vote for an unjust and cowardly war, with falsehood, for slavery_?" |
46347 | And who but God is to be glorified? |
46347 | And why? |
46347 | Answer him? |
46347 | Besides, what am I-- what is any man among the living or among the dead, compared with the Question before us? |
46347 | But''I am struck,''is passive, because if you are struck you do n''t do any thing do you?" |
46347 | Call him out and fight him? |
46347 | Canst thou put a hook into his nose? |
46347 | Chase, who was feeling very disagreeably, inquired with surprise what he was congratulated for? |
46347 | Could he be bought, bribed, cajoled, flattered, terrified? |
46347 | Do they know our condition?'' |
46347 | Do you wish to become like one of those violent and blood- thirsty men who are seeking my life? |
46347 | Does not the constitution form a union with slaveholders? |
46347 | Does not the event show they judged rightly? |
46347 | Does success gild crime into patriotism and the want of it change heroic self- devotion into imprudence? |
46347 | Douglas, What course can I make them take? |
46347 | Douglas, What_ can_ I do? |
46347 | For what are outward prosperities compared with these interior intimacies of God? |
46347 | Had he not spoken the truth? |
46347 | Had not Garrison been dragged by a halter round his neck through the streets of Boston? |
46347 | Has any lady in the United States felt herself aggrieved that she was not honored with the company of Miss Dinah or Miss Chloe, on board these cars?" |
46347 | Has it not express compromises designed to protect slave property? |
46347 | Have you ever thought?" |
46347 | He asks:"Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? |
46347 | He put himself into the Massachusetts army and could say as Paul said of the churches:"who is weak, and I am not weak? |
46347 | How are the laws relating to it executed in this city? |
46347 | How could they? |
46347 | How did they do this?" |
46347 | How many mothers would often visit their children by such an effort? |
46347 | How then could they avoid the inference that they could have no union with slaveholders? |
46347 | How would the intimation have been received that Warren and his successors should have waited a better time?'' |
46347 | In our present differences, is either party without faith of being in the right? |
46347 | Is it in something that helps, or something that harms, the community?''" |
46347 | Is not the basis of representation throughout all the southern states made on three- fifths of a slave population? |
46347 | Is the assertion of such freedom before the age? |
46347 | Is there any better or equal hope in the world? |
46347 | Lincoln had trained himself always to ask, What is it right to do? |
46347 | Lincoln, to enquire What course_ ought_ they to take? |
46347 | Not one of them has returned; where_ are_ the troops?'' |
46347 | Not quite sure that she meant the President, I spoke again:''Who''s Massa Sam, Aunty?'' |
46347 | Now Mr. Garrison, what do you say to that? |
46347 | Of what value or utility are the principles of peace and forgiveness, if we may repudiate them in the hour of peril and suffering? |
46347 | People met with the salutation,"How are ye, stranger?" |
46347 | Phillips?" |
46347 | Shall not one be cast down at the sight of him? |
46347 | Shall we give blow for blow, and array sword against sword? |
46347 | So much before the age as to leave no one a right to make it because it displeases the community? |
46347 | Still more sharply and strongly he stated the question in the last debate, at Alton, as simply this: Is Slavery wrong? |
46347 | The President thought a moment and then said,''Did you consult the Secretary of War, Major?'' |
46347 | The inquiry began to grow more urgent: Who is to be our General? |
46347 | The man who keeps back the hire of his laborers by fraud-- what is he? |
46347 | The man who makes a chattel of his brother-- what is he? |
46347 | They have appealed to the arbitrament of the sword; why should we hesitate to use the sword, and press the cause to a decision? |
46347 | They who compel three millions of men and women to herd together, like brute beasts-- what are they? |
46347 | They who prohibit the circulation of the Bible-- what are they? |
46347 | They who sell mothers by the pound, and children in lots to suit purchasers-- what are they? |
46347 | True, he had never studied surveying, but what of that? |
46347 | Was Hampden imprudent when he drew the sword and threw away the scabbard? |
46347 | Was ever thirty years productive of a greater moral change than this 1st of January, 1864, witnessed? |
46347 | Was it not absolute social and political death to any young man to fall into those ranks? |
46347 | We had faith that some man was to arise; but where was he? |
46347 | What chance was there for laws or for public sentiment, or any other humanizing influence, to restrain absolute power in a district so governed? |
46347 | What could be expected if they_ would_ continue discussions which made our brethren across the river so uncomfortable? |
46347 | What judge who had any hopes of the presidency, or the Supreme Bench, would dare offend his southern masters by any other? |
46347 | What shall we do then? |
46347 | What was to be done with this man? |
46347 | What were their methods of statement? |
46347 | Where is the man who counselled the North to conquer their prejudices? |
46347 | Where is the man who raised a laugh in popular assemblies at the expense of those who believed the law of God to be higher than the law of men? |
46347 | Which, or all? |
46347 | Who can say of what ages of mournful praying and beseeching, what uplifting of poor, dumb hands that hour was the outcome? |
46347 | Who can say that the President did not lay down his life by the firmness of his devotion to a great duty? |
46347 | Who invented this libel on his country? |
46347 | Who was he that bid him forbear? |
46347 | Why? |
46347 | Will he make many supplications unto thee? |
46347 | You can say_ a man_--but you ca n''t say_ a men_, can you?" |
46347 | You want to get into the navy?" |
46347 | or bore his jaw through with a thorn? |
46347 | or his tongue with a cord which thou lettest down? |
46347 | said the young gentleman quite innocently;"Fear? |
46347 | who ever heard of such a proceeding? |
46347 | who is offended, and I burn not?" |
46347 | wilt thou take him for a servant forever? |
8530 | But why do you fight with him so often? |
8530 | Does the Pond look the same as when I was there? 8530 How came you out here?" |
8530 | Is there no holier, happier land Among those distant spheres, Where we may meet that shadow band, The dead of other years? 8530 What is the use,"says one,"of burning your brains out in the sun, if you can do anything better with them?... |
8530 | Why do they treat me so? |
8530 | Would you have me a damned author? |
8530 | ''What, for instance?'' |
8530 | ( Is it too fanciful to note that at this stage of the epistle"college"is no longer spelt with a large C?) |
8530 | Ah, prophet, who spoke but now so sadly, what is this new message that we see brightening on your lips? |
8530 | And what remains? |
8530 | Another part of this letter shows the writer''s standing at college:--"Did the President write to you about my part? |
8530 | Are not their windows darkened by the light of other days? |
8530 | But what, in Heaven''s name, is the motive? |
8530 | Collection of Voyages( Hakluyt''s?). |
8530 | Could anything be more perfectly compensatory? |
8530 | Could he have already connected the two things, the bloody footstep and this Anglo- American interest? |
8530 | Did not this desire of setting things right stir ever afterward in Hawthorne''s consciousness? |
8530 | Did the old, boyish association perhaps unconsciously supply him with a name for the Indian aunt of"Septimius Felton"?) |
8530 | Do not you remember how we used to go a- fishing together in Raymond? |
8530 | Do you know his books? |
8530 | Does any one seriously suppose it to be for the amusement of making stories out of it? |
8530 | Horse, how are you to- day?'' |
8530 | How can we call this weakness, which involved such strength of manly tenderness and sympathy? |
8530 | How much of his own delicious personality could Thackeray have described without losing the zest of his other portraitures? |
8530 | How much, we ask, is allegory in the poet''s own estimation, and how much real belief? |
8530 | How will that do? |
8530 | How would you like some day to see a whole shelf full of books, written by your son, with''Hawthorne''s Works''printed on their backs?" |
8530 | I get my lessons at home, and recite them to him[ Mr. Oliver] at 7 o''clock in the morning.... Shall you want me to be a Minister, Doctor, or Lawyer? |
8530 | I jumped up and said:''How do you feel, old fellow; any better?'' |
8530 | Imagine Dickens clearly accounting for himself and his peculiar traits: would he be able to excite even a smile? |
8530 | Is antiquity, then, afraid to assert itself, even here in this stronghold, so far as to appear upon the street? |
8530 | Is it not very significant, that he should have made so little of the story of Rip Van Winkle? |
8530 | Is it safe, then, to stake the book entirely on this one chance?" |
8530 | Is this not, in brief, what he conceives may yet be the story of his own career? |
8530 | It is a natural question, why did not Hawthorne write an English romance, as well, or rather than an Italian one? |
8530 | Looking at the end of the stick, the man bawled,''What little devil has had my goad?'' |
8530 | Mr. Wiley''s American series is athirst for the volumes of tales; and how stands the prospect for the History of Witchcraft, I whilom spoke of?" |
8530 | Now will you write and say when you are to be expected? |
8530 | One meets another near our house, and says,''Where did you meet Bill?'' |
8530 | Shall he not record it? |
8530 | We live in the ugliest little old red farm- house you ever saw.... What shall you write next? |
8530 | Were not these words, which I find in"Fanshawe,"drawn from the author''s knowledge of his own heart? |
8530 | Were such a man once more to fall, what plea could be urged in extenuation of his crime? |
8530 | What is the meaning of this added revelation of evil? |
8530 | What more logical issue from the Christian idea, what more exquisitely tender rendering of it than this? |
8530 | Where all the day the moonbeams rest, And where at length the souls are blest Of those who dwell in tears? |
8530 | Where is the sneer concealed in this serious and comprehensive utterance? |
8530 | Where, O where is the godmother who gave you to talk pearls and diamonds?... |
8530 | Where, within the covers of the book, could the deluded man have found this doctrine urged? |
8530 | Why did the Israelites complain so much at having to make bricks without straw? |
8530 | Why, then, should further risk of this be incurred, by issuing the present work? |
8530 | Will it solve the riddle of sin and beauty, at last? |
8530 | Yet who can be to the present generation even what Scott has been to the past?" |
8530 | Yet, on reflection, why should it? |
8530 | who rides yonder?''" |
9587 | ''But might not life be spared?'' 9587 ''Did she rail at, or cry out against any?'' |
9587 | And were you kindly treated by this chief? |
9587 | And what did become of the women? |
9587 | Are you content to live as a servant? |
9587 | But if I should tell you that you are free to go or stay, as you will, would you be glad or sorry? |
9587 | But what came of it? |
9587 | Come hither, child, and say hast thou This young man ever seen? |
9587 | Dear me,says the woman, looking very dismal,"have you seen anything of the Deacon?" |
9587 | Did it seem to go up, or down? |
9587 | Did the Evil Spirit whom they thus called upon testify against himself, by telling who were his instruments in mischief? |
9587 | Do you not remember, father,said Rebecca,"some verses of Tibullus, in which he speaketh of a certain enchantress? |
9587 | Do you speak of Margaret Brewster? |
9587 | How you know Amesbury wolf? |
9587 | How you think Sam know you? 9587 John,"said my cousin, in a quick, choking voice,"is it You?" |
9587 | Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen, The flower of Ireland? 9587 Or the swine of the Gadarenes?" |
9587 | Pray, how was that? |
9587 | Tell me,said the shape,"if thou canst, which of the twain is the Quaker and which is the Priest?" |
9587 | Where is the constable? |
9587 | Who makes strong drink? |
9587 | Who takes the Indian''s beaver- skins and corn for it? 9587 Why, Thankful, do n''t you know me? |
9587 | Would you leave me if you could? |
9587 | And the shape said,"Dost thou well to be angry?" |
9587 | Did he perish at the hands of the infidels, and does the maiden sleep in the family tomb, under her father''s oaks? |
9587 | Did the knight forego his false worship and his vows, and so marry his beloved Anna? |
9587 | Doth the eagle mount up at thy command, and make her nest on high?" |
9587 | Is there aught you want? |
9587 | Or did they part forever,--she going back to her kinsfolk, and he to his companions of Malta? |
9587 | Uncle Rawson came home to- day in a great passion, and, calling me to him, he asked me if I too was going to turn Quaker, and fall to prophesying? |
9587 | What avail great talents, if they be not devoted to goodness? |
9587 | Where be they now? |
9587 | said my uncle,"is that all? |
9587 | shall such Jacks as you come before authority with your hats on?'' |
9587 | who can tell? |
9597 | Do you not believe in the Devil? |
9597 | I believe in God,was the reply;"do n''t you?" |
9597 | Man giveth up the ghost, and where is he? |
9597 | Man giveth up the ghost; and where is he? |
9597 | What is religion? |
9597 | When one saith, Moses meant as I do,''and another saith,''Nay, but as I do,''I ask, more reverently,''Why not rather as both, if both be true? |
9597 | Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
9597 | And was not this a warning from Heaven? |
9597 | Had he not, in a moment of mad frenzy of which his memory made no record, actually murdered some one? |
9597 | Have I no desire to support myself in expensive customs, because my acquaintances live in such customs? |
9597 | Have none of my fellow- creatures an equitable right to any part which is called mine? |
9597 | Have the gifts and possessions received by me from others been conveyed in a way free from all unrighteousness? |
9597 | How faithful, yet, withal, how full of kindness, were his rebukes of those who refused labor its just reward, and ground the faces of the poor? |
9597 | How far am I in thought, word, custom, responsible for this? |
9597 | Occasionally, in Considerations on the Keeping of? |
9597 | Out of the depths of burdened and weary hearts comes up the agonizing inquiry,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
9597 | Was not his evil finger manifested in the contumacious heresy of Roger Williams? |
9597 | Why do n''t you throw off your Quaker coats as I do mine, and show yourselves as you are?" |
9597 | Yet is there not another side to the picture? |
7396 | And is Sir Isaac living? |
7396 | And was it true, then, what the story said Of Oxford''s friar and his brazen head? |
7396 | Are these"The Boys"our dear old Mother knew? |
7396 | As for himself, he seems alert and thriving,-- Grubs up a living somehow-- what, who knows? |
7396 | Can I forget the wedding guest? |
7396 | Could Williams make the hidden causes clear Of the Dark Day that filled the land with fear? |
7396 | Crabs? |
7396 | Do you know me, dear strangers-- the hundredth time comer At banquets and feasts since the days of my Spring? |
7396 | Do you know whom we send you, Hidalgos of Spain? |
7396 | Do you know your old friends when you see them again? |
7396 | Does not meek evening''s low- voiced Ave blend With the soft vesper as its notes ascend? |
7396 | Does not the sunshine call us to rejoice? |
7396 | Has Bowdoin found his all- surrounding sphere? |
7396 | Has Gannett tracked the wild Aurora''s path? |
7396 | Has he not his thorn? |
7396 | Has language better words than these? |
7396 | Has not every lie its truthful side, Its honest fraction, not to be denied? |
7396 | Hast thou no life, no health, to lose or save? |
7396 | His labors,--will they ever cease,-- With hand and tongue and pen? |
7396 | How can he feel the petty stings of grief Whose cheering presence always brings relief? |
7396 | Is he not here whose breath of holy song Has raised the downcast eyes of Faith so long? |
7396 | Is it an idle dream that nature shares Our joys, our griefs, our pastimes, and our cares? |
7396 | Is there no meaning in the storm- cloud''s voice? |
7396 | Is there no summons when, at morning''s call, The sable vestments of the darkness fall? |
7396 | Is there no whisper in the perfumed air When the sweet bosom of the rose is bare? |
7396 | Its sturdy driver,--who remembers him? |
7396 | No silent message when from midnight skies Heaven looks upon us with its myriad eyes? |
7396 | O Thou who carest for the falling sparrow, Canst Thou the sinless sufferer''s pang forget? |
7396 | Of all the guests at life''s perennial feast, Who of her children sits above the Priest? |
7396 | One figure still my vagrant thoughts pursue; First boy to greet me, Ariel, where are you? |
7396 | Or is thy dread account- book''s page so narrow Its one long column scores thy creatures''debt? |
7396 | Or the old landlord, saturnine and grim, Who left our hill- top for a new abode And reared his sign- post farther down the road? |
7396 | Per contra,--ask the moralist,--in sooth Has not a lie its share in every truth? |
7396 | Shall wearied Nature ask release At threescore years and ten? |
7396 | Smiling he listens; has he then a charm Whose magic virtues peril can disarm? |
7396 | Still in the waters of the dark Shawshine Do the young bathers splash and think they''re clean? |
7396 | The veteran of the sea? |
7396 | WHERE is this patriarch you are kindly greeting? |
7396 | Was ever pang like this? |
7396 | What does his saddening, restless slavery buy? |
7396 | What need of idle fancy to adorn Our mother''s birthplace on her birthday morn? |
7396 | What of our duck? |
7396 | What question puzzles ciphering Philomath? |
7396 | What save a right to live, a chance to die,-- To live companion of disease and pain, To die by poisoned shafts untimely slain? |
7396 | What say ye to the lovesick air That brought the tears from Marian''s eyes? |
7396 | What ugly dreams can trouble his repose Who yields himself to soothe another''s woes? |
7396 | What, Pope? |
7396 | Where is he? |
7396 | Where is the meddling hand that dares to probe The secret grief beneath his sable robe? |
7396 | Where is the patriarch time could hardly tire,-- The good old, wrinkled, immemorial"squire"? |
7396 | Where the tough champion who, with Calvin''s sword, In wordy conflicts battled for the Lord? |
7396 | Where''s Cotton Mather? |
7396 | While wondering Science stands, herself perplexed At each day''s miracle, and asks"What next?" |
7396 | Who Can guess beforehand what his pen will do? |
7396 | Who is this preacher our Northampton claims, Whose rhetoric blazes with sulphureous flames And torches stolen from Tartarean mines? |
7396 | Who, in these days when all things go by steam, Recalls the stage- coach with its four- horse team? |
7396 | Whose smile is that? |
7396 | Why should we look one common faith to find, Where one in every score is color- blind? |
7396 | Yet why with flowery speeches tease, With vain superlatives distress him? |
7396 | You were a school- boy-- what beneath the sun So like a monkey? |
7396 | mussels? |
7396 | we remember that angels have wings,-- What story is this of the day of his birth? |
39997 | Ah, how do you do, Mr. Nollekens? 39997 Ah, well,"replied Sheridan,"What did he say to it?" |
39997 | And as his strength Failed him at length, He met a pilgrim shadow:''Shadow,''said he,''Where can it be-- This land of Eldorado?'' 39997 And is the second volume to be had separately?" |
39997 | And what, O messenger of God, are the signs of that happy sect to which is insured the exclusive possession of paradise? |
39997 | Are we to think Pope was happy,said he, on another occasion,"because he says so in his writings? |
39997 | Can anything be so elegant,asks Emerson,"as to have few wants and serve them one''s self? |
39997 | Child, shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? 39997 Details?" |
39997 | Did he not repent him that he had made Nineveh? |
39997 | Do n''t you know,urged Sydney Smith,"as the French say, there are three sexes-- men, women, and clergymen?" |
39997 | Do n''t you think that statue indecent? |
39997 | Finishing? |
39997 | How could that be? |
39997 | I asked him,said a child,"how he felt when he left the eleven slaves, taken from Missouri, safe in Canada? |
39997 | Is not every infant that dies of disease murdered by an angel? |
39997 | Montaigne''s Travels I have been reading; if I was tired of the Essays, what must one be of these? 39997 No; but what was he great in? |
39997 | Not know,said the American,"the house of the great Wordsworth?" |
39997 | Pleasures of what? |
39997 | Pure,said Blake,"do you think there is any purity in God''s eyes? |
39997 | Way over yonder? |
39997 | Well, gentlemen, what is the matter here? 39997 Were you, indeed, Mr. Smith? |
39997 | What could entertain you? 39997 What did you give for it?" |
39997 | What do you bring me here for? |
39997 | What folks say''bout me dar? |
39997 | What is the meaning of all these shouts and cries? 39997 What stories are new?" |
39997 | When we see a special reformer, we feel like asking him,says Emerson,"What right have you, sir, to your one virtue? |
39997 | Where, then, and when,he says in his famous Confessions,"did I experience my happy life, that I should remember and love and long for it? |
39997 | Who can even in thought comprehend it, so as to utter a word about it? 39997 Who can readily and briefly explain this?" |
39997 | Who,said the five kings,"is this man who can afford to give a hundred times as much as any of us? |
39997 | Why did you run away from me? |
39997 | Why does everybody love you so much? |
39997 | Why, sir, what have you been doing? |
39997 | Why,asks Souvestre,"is there so much confidence at first, so much doubt at last? |
39997 | Will you be created a count? 39997 Will you be the judge of our quarrel?" |
39997 | Wilt thou not, Eyvind, believe in Christ? |
39997 | Yes; what is it? |
39997 | ''And why is it your favorite, Henry?'' |
39997 | ''And why not?'' |
39997 | ''At Ambrose''s?'' |
39997 | ''But is there such a tavern really?'' |
39997 | ''Indeed,''said I,''how did they go?'' |
39997 | ''Shall I give you a handkerchief,''he then asked,''and let you drop it as a signal?'' |
39997 | ''What, madam,''cried Berlaymont in a passion,''is it possible that your highness can entertain fears of these beggars? |
39997 | ''Where are my dead forefathers at present?'' |
39997 | ''Who is that?'' |
39997 | ''Why so?'' |
39997 | ''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks out to the steamer?'' |
39997 | A point in the conversation suggesting the thought, the president said,"Seward, you never heard, did you, how I earned my first dollar?" |
39997 | An elderly, well- to- do inhabitant of Beaconsfield, of whom the same person inquired where Burke had lived, made answer:"Pray, sir, was he a poet?" |
39997 | And there was Blake--"artist, genius, mystic, or madman?" |
39997 | Are you free from shame in your apartment, when you are exposed only to the light of heaven?" |
39997 | Are you, sir, also a king?" |
39997 | As the terrible breakers broke over them, he asked, wonderingly,"Is this the way you go? |
39997 | Augustine, St., and the idea of Fourierism, 182; subtleties on the question, What then is time? |
39997 | Being asked about the moral character of Dante, in writing his"Vision,"--was he pure? |
39997 | Bowyer asked me why I had made myself such a fool? |
39997 | But did you not do it likewise to save money?'' |
39997 | But how could I guess at that, never having treated ladies to a play before, and being, as I said, quite a novice in these kind of entertainments? |
39997 | But time, past or present,--time, what is it? |
39997 | But what in discourse do we mention more familiarly and knowingly, than time? |
39997 | But what shall we say of the instability of human greatness? |
39997 | But when the third rogue met him and said,"Father, where art thou taking that dog?" |
39997 | But who was he? |
39997 | But, my sister, what shall we do?" |
39997 | Calmly considering it, what can be more astonishing than vanity in a middle- aged person? |
39997 | Certainly, said Mathews; but what do you want it for? |
39997 | Compared with such spectacles, with such subjects of triumph as these, what can prætor or consul, quæstor or pontiff, afford? |
39997 | Comparing moral with natural evil, he said,"Who shall say that God thinks evil? |
39997 | Could he lift pots and roofs so handily? |
39997 | Did you ever read that remarkable paper of Lamb''s, the Reminiscences of Juke Judkins, Esq., of Birmingham? |
39997 | Did you ever try, like a little crab, to run two ways at once? |
39997 | Do we not know there have been many princes such as he describes? |
39997 | Do you know, my young friend, that the world has a contempt for the man that entertains it? |
39997 | Do you not see how they die of sadness in the midst of that fortune which has been a burden to them? |
39997 | Do you suppose society is going to take out its pocket- handkerchief and be inconsolable when you die? |
39997 | Do you think it nothing to speak with Orpheus, Musæus, Homer, and Hesiod?" |
39997 | Do you think there is only one? |
39997 | Does a man drink more when he drinks from a large glass? |
39997 | Dunsford, will you give us the words? |
39997 | Elliott, the Corn- Law Rhymer, being asked,"What is a communist?" |
39997 | From whence comes that universal dread of mediocrity, the fruitful mother of peace and liberty? |
39997 | God answered him,"I have suffered him these hundred years, although he dishonored me; and couldst not thou endure him one night?" |
39997 | Has Luther been crucified for the world?" |
39997 | Has, then, the knowledge of life no other end but to make it unfit for happiness? |
39997 | Hast thou not conversed familiarly with the only man greater than he, John Milton? |
39997 | Have the waves ever run after you yet, and turned your little two shoes into pumps, full of water? |
39997 | Have you been bathed yet in the sea, and were you afraid? |
39997 | He asked me,''What is the reason of your fears?'' |
39997 | He knew the ground, he knew his plans, he knew himself; but where should he find his men? |
39997 | How could he have done more? |
39997 | How could men have been guilty of such an inconsistency? |
39997 | How did you come? |
39997 | How is it possible that an act of Parliament can supply the place of nature and natural affection?" |
39997 | How is it that we can not truly say that time is, but because it is tending not to be?" |
39997 | How long was it before Cato could be understood? |
39997 | I had no alternative; I instantly went up to him:''What do you want?'' |
39997 | I took it, and said to it,''Art thou of heaven or earth? |
39997 | I''m no more an individual than your mother was?'' |
39997 | Is it not obvious what manner of men they are? |
39997 | Is it possible that he could have-- talked?''" |
39997 | Is the world, and is the individual man, intended, after all, to find rest only in an eternal childhood?" |
39997 | Is there anything in books more sad and touching? |
39997 | Is there anything more curious or remarkable in fiction than the simple fact expressed by Thucydides, that ignorance is bold and knowledge reserved? |
39997 | Is this the way you go?" |
39997 | Is virtue piecemeal?" |
39997 | It so happened that the question in the catechism which came to the stranger''s turn was that which asks,''How many commandments are there?'' |
39997 | Knowledge, in the common sense, as commonly acquired, what is it? |
39997 | Landor, in his Imaginary Conversations, makes Marvell thus to address Marten:"Hast thou not sat convivially with Oliver Cromwell? |
39997 | Men like ourselves are permitted to stand near, and indeed in the very presence of Milton: what do they see? |
39997 | Mrs. Jameson once asked Mrs. Siddons which of her great characters she preferred to play? |
39997 | Must we condemn ourselves to ignorance if we would preserve hope? |
39997 | On her pressing for his opinion of that work, he said,"That is the work-- is it not?--in which you and I are exhibited in the disguise of females?" |
39997 | Percy has preserved the ballad in his Reliques, but who remembers the air? |
39997 | Quoth Master More, How say you in this matter? |
39997 | Rogers said of Sydney Smith( of whose death he had just heard), in answer to the question,"How came it that he did not publicly show his powers?" |
39997 | Says Pope,"What is every year of a wise man''s life but a censure or critique on the past? |
39997 | Socrates asked Menon what virtue was? |
39997 | Socrates, upon receiving sentence of death, said, amongst other things, to his judges,"Is this, do you think, no happy journey? |
39997 | Suddenly she turned and said to him,"If your mother and myself were both to fall into this river, whom would you save first?" |
39997 | The History of the Plague is an example; and Robinson Crusoe: what boy ever doubted the truth of the narrative? |
39997 | The first said to him,"Good day, Master Dante;"the second,"Whence come you, Master Dante?" |
39997 | The stable of Confucius being burned down, when he was at court, on his return he said,"Has any man been hurt?" |
39997 | Then Pilate said unto them, Why, what evil hath he done? |
39997 | They have not had wisdom enough to manage their own estates, and are they now to teach the king and your highness how to govern the country? |
39997 | They would all have some people under them; why not then have some people above them?" |
39997 | Those two times then, past and to come, how are they, seeing the past now is not, and that to come is not yet? |
39997 | To get away from the ideal to the physical, what can at first blush be so absurd as the climatic changes believed by some to be produced by railroads? |
39997 | Toward Allah''s house how dar''st thou turn thy feet?" |
39997 | Walpole?" |
39997 | Walpole?" |
39997 | Was he a preacher or a doctor?" |
39997 | Well, you have not commenced the model?" |
39997 | What could they not, if only they would?" |
39997 | What do you mean?'' |
39997 | What does it avail me that all the roses of Sharon tenderly glow and bloom for me? |
39997 | What professor has ever yet been able to classify the wondrous variety of human character? |
39997 | What resemblance do you suppose there is between your spirit and his?" |
39997 | What signifies what a man thought who never thought of anything but himself? |
39997 | What then is time? |
39997 | What think you to be the cause of these shelves and flats that stop up Sandwich Haven? |
39997 | What to do? |
39997 | What want ye?" |
39997 | What, then, has a jail that is formidable? |
39997 | When did you return? |
39997 | When the visitor approached His Majesty,--the dance suspended,--he exclaimed:"English?" |
39997 | Whither go ye? |
39997 | Who and what is Luther? |
39997 | Who would read capabilities like these, in those heavenly and child- like features?" |
39997 | Why are such princes angry at being immortalized by his means? |
39997 | Why do you live upon potatoes?'' |
39997 | Why should it care, very much, then, whether your worship graces yourself or disgraces yourself? |
39997 | Why, in all ages and among every people, do we meet with some one of these mad festivals? |
39997 | Will you come forward?'' |
39997 | You are bankrupt under odd circumstances? |
39997 | You are taken to prison and fancy yourself indelibly disgraced? |
39997 | You drive a queer bargain with your friend and are found out, and imagine the world will punish you? |
39997 | [ Talleyrand, when Rulhière said he had been guilty of only one wickedness in his life, asked,"When will it end?"] |
39997 | and what signifies what a man did who never did anything?" |
39997 | and"Why should we start and fear to die?" |
39997 | cried Lord Durham,''how did you find that out? |
39997 | did you not know that Cicero was quæstor of Syracuse?" |
39997 | hast thou looked with love on a man who invokes an idol in a pagoda?" |
39997 | how did you cure yourself?" |
39997 | how to do? |
39997 | is n''t it enough?" |
39997 | it cried;"what am I in such a sea?" |
39997 | it will be questioned,''when the sun rises, do you not see a disc of fire somewhat like a guinea?'' |
39997 | or that by Emerson, that the astonishment of life is the absence of any appearance of reconciliation between the theory and practice of life? |
39997 | or that by Hazlitt, that every man, in his own opinion, forms an exception to the ordinary rules of humanity? |
39997 | or that by Prescott, that in every country the most fiendish passions of the human heart are those kindled in the name of religion? |
39997 | or that by Thomas Fuller, that learning has gained most by those books by which the printers have lost? |
39997 | or, while he was reading them, the adventures of Lemuel Gulliver, incredible as they are? |
39997 | she replied;"and why did you not tell me that before? |
39997 | she screamed,''what do you mean by that? |
39997 | the little dear, is he going to open his eyesy- pysy?" |
39997 | the third,"Are the waters deep, Master Dante?" |
39997 | who has not wanted one thing? |
39997 | why dost thou carry that dog on thy shoulder?" |
7393 | About those conditions? |
7393 | Why strikest not? 7393 ( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--Gambrel?--Gambrel?" |
7393 | (?) |
7393 | (?) |
7393 | Ah, wilt thou yet return, Bearing thy rose- hued torch, and bid thine altar burn? |
7393 | All these have left their work and not their names,-- Why should I murmur at a fate like theirs? |
7393 | An idol? |
7393 | And was he noted in his day? |
7393 | And what shall I say, if a wretch should propose? |
7393 | Are we less earthly than the chosen race? |
7393 | Art thou, too, dreaming of a mortal''s kiss Amid the seraphs of the heavenly sphere? |
7393 | At twoscore, threescore, is he then full grown? |
7393 | Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal? |
7393 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
7393 | Cuprum,(?) |
7393 | Had the world nothing she might live to care for? |
7393 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of men? |
7393 | Have I not loved thee long, Though my young lips have often done thee wrong, And vexed thy heaven- tuned ear with careless song? |
7393 | His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it; This little speck the British Isles? |
7393 | Hope you do.-- Born there? |
7393 | I from my clinging babe was rudely torn; His tender lips a loveless bosom pressed; Can I forget him in my life new born? |
7393 | IDOLS BUT what is this? |
7393 | If any, born of kindlier blood, Should ask, What maiden lies below? |
7393 | If the men were so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
7393 | If what my Rabbi tells me is the truth Why did the choir of angels sing for joy? |
7393 | Is it the God that walked in Eden''s grove In the cool hour to seek our guilty sire? |
7393 | Know old Cambridge? |
7393 | Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you, Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations? |
7393 | Lo, the pictured token Why should her fleeting day- dreams fade unspoken, Like daffodils that die with sheaths unbroken? |
7393 | No second self to say her evening prayer for? |
7393 | Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the acarus bred in Crosse''s flint- solution? |
7393 | Or is he a_ mythus_,--ancient word for"humbug"-- Such as Livy told about the wolf that wet- nursed Romulus and Remus? |
7393 | PROLOGUE A PROLOGUE? |
7393 | Questioning all things: Why her Lord had sent her? |
7393 | RIGHTS WHAT am I but the creature Thou hast made? |
7393 | Read, flattered, honored? |
7393 | Shall I die forgiven? |
7393 | Sometimes a sunlit sphere comes rolling by, And then we softly whisper,--can it be? |
7393 | THE ANGEL And whence thy sadness in a world of bliss Where never parting comes, nor mourner''s tear? |
7393 | The God who dealt with Abraham as the sons Of that old patriarch deal with other men? |
7393 | The jealous God of Moses, one who feels An image as an insult, and is wroth With him who made it and his child unborn? |
7393 | The sky grows dark,-- Was that the roll of thunder? |
7393 | They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--But stay-- Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day? |
7393 | Vain? |
7393 | Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty? |
7393 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But_ all_ must be of buhl? |
7393 | Were school- boys ever half so wild? |
7393 | What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
7393 | What have I rescued from the shelf? |
7393 | What have I save the blessings Thou hast lent? |
7393 | What hope I but thy mercy and thy love? |
7393 | What is a Prologue? |
7393 | What were these torturing gifts, and wherefore lent her? |
7393 | When paper money became so cheap, Folks would n''t count it, but said"a heap,"A certain RICHARDS,--the books declare,--( A. M. in''90? |
7393 | Who but myself shall cloud my soul with fear? |
7393 | Who forged in roaring flames the ponderous stone, And shaped the moulded metal to his need? |
7393 | Who found the seeds of fire and made them shoot, Fed by his breath, in buds and flowers of flame? |
7393 | Who gave the dragging car its rolling wheel, And tamed the steed that whirls its circling round? |
7393 | Who is he, The one ye name and tell us that ye serve, Whom ye would call me from my lonely tower To worship with the many- headed throng? |
7393 | Who knows a woman''s wild caprice? |
7393 | Who knows? |
7393 | Who shall say? |
7393 | Whom do we trust and serve? |
7393 | Whose hand protect me from myself but thine? |
7393 | Why not? |
7393 | You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL? |
7393 | are the southern curtains drawn? |
7393 | fill a fresh bumper, for why should we go While the nectar( logwood) still reddens our cups as they flow? |
7393 | what is this my frenzy hears? |
8641 | Did not Hawthorne,I said,"predict something like this in an article in the''Atlantic Monthly''?" |
8641 | Do I? |
8641 | We know those who have reached the goal, but who can tell how many have fallen by the way? |
8641 | What do I think of Wasson? |
8641 | What hope is there for him,they said,"in such a profession? |
8641 | And in what way could he deliver this message? |
8641 | And who is that plainly dressed girl with the meekly determined look who goes back and forth so quietly and regularly? |
8641 | And why is it? |
8641 | Are the Rocky Mountains her monument; and shall the Falls of Niagara chant forever her requiem?" |
8641 | At another time he came to me and said,"What deep problems of government are you thinking over there all by yourself?" |
8641 | At the time of the Dred Scott decision, he exclaimed:"Is Liberty dead? |
8641 | But did he contribute one great thought or one grand and salutary imagination to the world''s stock? |
8641 | But how is he to persuade others to take an interest in these subjects? |
8641 | But is not this effort a virtue in itself? |
8641 | But why multiply these unpleasant examples of misrepresentation? |
8641 | Can the descendant of five generations of New England clergymen have the same blood in his veins that warmed the hearts of Marshal Ney and Mirabeau? |
8641 | Could a chief justice have decided the case better? |
8641 | Did he lay a noble emphasis upon any great truth or order of truths and so recommend it effectually to the attention and consideration of mankind? |
8641 | Did he realize the magnitude of the work before him-- one which thousands of patriotic men have since attempted and signally failed to accomplish? |
8641 | Did this man of heroic nature lack the courage to face tragedy?] |
8641 | Does he mean the spirit of the age? |
8641 | Does he partially expose here a peculiarity in his literary procedure? |
8641 | Does it so much as breathe upon them a salubrious air? |
8641 | Had Judge Story already discovered a centrifugal and uncontrollable element in the man? |
8641 | He walked out into the streets, and somebody said to him,''What think you of Athenian liberty?'' |
8641 | How could he make known to others what was in his full heart, except from the pulpit? |
8641 | How could it be otherwise? |
8641 | How could it happen that Hawthorne deceived himself? |
8641 | How did these bare, bleak and barren rocks come to be inhabited? |
8641 | How did they get there?" |
8641 | How should this be, unless, indeed, the century as a whole is inferior, and prominence in it is no token of greatness? |
8641 | If a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, what should be said of unripe and superficial thinking? |
8641 | If his friends did not agree with him he would reply with a mildly interrogative"Yes?" |
8641 | In fine, does his work serve to enlarge the souls, enlighten the minds, direct the wills or quicken and inspire the better powers of man? |
8641 | Is it not better for us to look at the matter in this way? |
8641 | Is it possible that he was in the right, and men like Emerson, Ripley, and James Freeman Clarke in the wrong? |
8641 | Is not all progress in this world accomplished as the frog escaped from the well, by jumping up three feet and falling back two? |
8641 | Is not the very crown of character that which we derive from failure, penitence, and self- reproach? |
8641 | Is the valley of the Mississippi her grave? |
8641 | It is not likely the boy is a genius, and who is going to purchase his pictures?" |
8641 | May not the career of any great man be compared to the course of a river? |
8641 | My wife seized me by the arm, half terrified, and said,''Wendell, what are you going to do?'' |
8641 | Or did he even write a single sentence which one treasures up as an imperishable jewel? |
8641 | Perpetual constraint and self- denial may strengthen character, but will human nature be better for it in the end? |
8641 | Surely enough true civilization is and always has been an immediate necessity: a necessity like the feast of Tantalus: but how is it to be realized? |
8641 | Then she wrote on the paper:"Where is my father?" |
8641 | Was it an inherited public tendency from the spirit of intolerance which formerly persecuted the Quakers? |
8641 | Was there a strange fatality in the name, so that Patrick Henry might say with added force,"Gentlemen may cry peace, peace, but there is no peace"? |
8641 | Was this the summary and net result of their stroll in Walden woods? |
8641 | Wasson''s direct influence during his life was limited to a very small circle; but who can tell how far it extended indirectly beyond this? |
8641 | What answer can be made to such accusations? |
8641 | What but a future candidate for the senate of the United States, or even for the presidency? |
8641 | What does Emerson intend by trusting the time? |
8641 | What else can we expect of them? |
8641 | What good would a Webster''s dictionary have been at Harper''s Ferry? |
8641 | When it is a question of motive, of moral consciousness, how are such charges to be refuted? |
8641 | Who can doubt that this was a personal experience with him, as it has been with some others? |
8641 | Who can remember the like of it? |
8641 | Who indeed can explain it? |
8641 | Who, looking on these things, does not acknowledge that man is indeed fearfully as well as wonderfully made? |
8641 | Why does he consider Miss Fuller to have had a strong, coarse nature, and to have been morally unsound? |
8641 | Will you come?" |
8641 | With such an achievement at the age of twenty- six, what might not have been expected of his maturer years,--of the full fruition of his genius? |
8641 | and that Alcott answered,"Waldo, why are you not here? |
7800 | Song of the WellWHAT IS LITERATURE? |
7800 | ''But dost thou love life? |
7800 | ***** ALEXANDER POPE( 1688- 1744) It was in 1819 that a controversy arose over the question, Was Pope a poet? |
7800 | Al be I not the firste that dide amis, What helpeth that to doon my blame awey? |
7800 | And he said,''What shall I sing?'' |
7800 | And these things I see suddenly, what mean they? |
7800 | Art thou rich, yet is thy mind perplexed? |
7800 | As we read we seem to hear the question,"What readest thou, Hamlet?" |
7800 | At least one novel in each group should be read; but if it be asked, Which one? |
7800 | Can wisdom be put in a silver rod, Or love in a golden bowl? |
7800 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas? |
7800 | Does a flower appeal to him? |
7800 | Dost laugh to see how fools are vexed To add to golden numbers golden numbers? |
7800 | Frets doubt the maw- crammed beast? |
7800 | He is a proper man''s picture, but, alas, who can converse with a dumb show? |
7800 | Hwarof kalenges tu me? |
7800 | INTRODUCTION: AN ESSAY OF LITERATURE What is Literature? |
7800 | If it be asked, What is Milton''s adjective? |
7800 | If it be asked, What novels of the early type ought one to read? |
7800 | If it be asked,"What is a ballad?" |
7800 | If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell, And the crier rang the bell, What would you buy? |
7800 | In a single stanza of his"Dream Pedlary"he has reflected the spirit of the whole romantic movement: If there were dreams to sell, What would you buy? |
7800 | Is it the prophet''s thought I speak, or am I raving? |
7800 | It is also one of the best answers ever given to the question, Is life worth living? |
7800 | Many have read this story and found pleasure therein; but others ask frankly,"Why bother to write or to read such palpable nonsense?" |
7800 | Many of his lines are rather gritty: Irks care the crop- full bird? |
7800 | O Love, has she done this to thee? |
7800 | Of what blamest thou me? |
7800 | Prithee why so pale? |
7800 | Should it be asked,"What did he do that had not been as well or better done before him?" |
7800 | So also does"Pioneers,"a lyric that is wholly American and Western and exultant: Have the elder races halted? |
7800 | Some readers, meeting with Bunsby, are reminded of a walrus; and who ever saw a walrus without thinking of the creature as nature''s Bunsby? |
7800 | Swim''st thou in wealth, yet sink''st in thine own tears? |
7800 | The"Prelude"begins almost spontaneously, and when it reaches the charming passage"And what is so rare as a day in June?" |
7800 | Then hey noney, noney; hey noney, noney!_ Canst drink the waters of the crisped spring? |
7800 | There were brave men among them, but of what use was courage when their weapons were powerless against the monster? |
7800 | These also have their value; for who ever read them without asking, What would I have done or thought or felt under such circumstances? |
7800 | These yearnings why are they? |
7800 | Thus, Suckling habitually made love a joke: Why so pale and wan, fond lover, Prithee why so pale? |
7800 | To the question, Which of these essays should be read? |
7800 | Wants not a fourth Grace to make the dance even? |
7800 | What do I know of life? |
7800 | What matter how the north- wind raved? |
7800 | What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than he Whom thunder hath made greater? |
7800 | What say you, then, to Falconbridge, the young baron of England? |
7800 | When asked why he liked the poem his face lighted:"W''y I lak heem, M''sieu Whittier? |
7800 | When they read of the winter scenes, of the fire roaring its defiance up the chimney- throat at the storm without, What matter how the night behaved? |
7800 | Whose fault? |
7800 | Why are there men and women that while they are nigh me the sunlight expands my blood? |
7800 | Why are there trees I never walk under but large and melodious thoughts descend upon me? |
7800 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? |
7800 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight, and not of tradition?" |
7800 | Why when they leave me do my pennants of joy sink flat and lank? |
7800 | Why, rising by the roadside here, do you the colors greet? |
7800 | Will, when looking well wo nt move her, Looking ill prevail? |
7800 | [ Sidenote: PLAN OF THE FAERY QUEEN] What, then, was Spenser''s object in writing_ The Faery Queen_? |
7800 | [ Sidenote: THE POET] And Bryant''s poetry? |
7800 | [ Sidenote: THE QUALITY OF GREATNESS] To the inevitable question, What are the marks of great literature? |
7800 | [ Sidenote: WHAT TO READ] If it be asked,"What shall one read of Poe''s fiction?" |
7800 | and another answers,"What did he do that was not cleverly, skillfully done?" |
7800 | and half his blank verse is neither prose nor poetry: What, you, Sir, come too? |
7800 | become of me? |
7800 | hwat heved heo ionswered? |
7800 | the very stars are gone: Brave Admiral, speak; what shall I say?" |
7800 | these thoughts in the darkness why are they? |
7800 | this mournful gloom For that celestial light? |
7800 | what of myself? |
7800 | what would she have answered? |
13707 | ''Where are you going, my pretty maid?'' |
13707 | A procession of the regicide judges of King Charles the martyr? |
13707 | All have been her victims; who so worthy to be the final victim as herself? |
13707 | And did you also hear them? |
13707 | And did you really see him at the province- house? |
13707 | And do you feel it, then, at last? |
13707 | And how,inquired I,"did his wife bear the shock of joyful surprise?" |
13707 | And must I also pick up such worthless luggage in my travels? |
13707 | And shall not the youth''s hair be cut? |
13707 | And so, Peter, you wo n''t even consider of the business? |
13707 | And the cost, Peter? 13707 And this dancing bear?" |
13707 | And what shall be the token? |
13707 | And what,inquired Ralph Cranfield, with a tremor in his voice--"what may this office be which is to equal me with kings and potentates?" |
13707 | And who is there by this green pool that can bring thee news from the ends of the earth? |
13707 | And yet,whispered Alice Vane,"may not such fables have a moral? |
13707 | Are we grown old again so soon? |
13707 | Are you mad, old man? |
13707 | Are you sure it is our parson? |
13707 | Art thou here with me, and none other? 13707 But did Ponce de Leon ever find it?" |
13707 | But how if he wakes? |
13707 | But in what capacity? |
13707 | But what has good Parson Hooper got upon his face? |
13707 | But what if the world will not believe that it is the type of an innocent sorrow? |
13707 | But what is the meaning of it all? |
13707 | But who were the three that preceded him? |
13707 | But will ye lead him in the path which his parents have trodden? |
13707 | But would it be possible,inquired her cousin,"to restore this dark picture to its pristine hues?" |
13707 | Call you this liberty of conscience? |
13707 | Can that be my old playmate Faith Egerton? |
13707 | Can there be a funeral so late this afternoon? |
13707 | Can ye teach him the enlightened faith which his father has died for, and for which I-- even I-- am soon to become an unworthy martyr? 13707 Catharine, blessed woman,"exclaimed the old man,"art thou come to this darkened land again? |
13707 | Come,said I to the damsel of gay attire;"shall we visit all the wonders of the world together?" |
13707 | Couldst thou have thought there were such merry times in a mad- house? |
13707 | Cruel? |
13707 | Dark old man,exclaimed the affrighted minister,"with what horrible crime upon your soul are you now passing to the judgment?" |
13707 | Did not my great- grand- uncle, Peter Goldthwaite, who died seventy years ago, and whose namesake I am, leave treasure enough to build twenty such? |
13707 | Did not the door open? |
13707 | Did you never hear of the Fountain of Youth? |
13707 | Didst thou see it too? |
13707 | Dighton,demanded the general,"what means this foolery? |
13707 | Do we not all spring from an evil root? 13707 Do you see no change in your portrait?" |
13707 | Does Fate impede its own decree? |
13707 | Dost thou desire nothing brighter than gold, that thou wouldst transmute all this ethereal lustre into such dross as thou wallowest in already? 13707 Edith, sweet Lady of the May,"whispered he, reproachfully,"is yon wreath of roses a garland to hang above our graves that you look so sad? |
13707 | Elinor,exclaimed Walter, in amazement,"what change has come over you?" |
13707 | For heaven''s sake, what is the matter? |
13707 | Friend Tobias,inquired the old man, compassionately,"hast thou found no comfort in these many blessed passages of Scripture?" |
13707 | Had not you better let me take the job? |
13707 | Hath she not likewise a gift to declare her sentiments? |
13707 | Have any ever planned such a temple save ourselves? |
13707 | Have you a mother, dear child? |
13707 | Have you done much for the improvement of the city? |
13707 | Have you torn the house down enough to heat the teakettle? |
13707 | Hide it under thy cloak, sayest thou? 13707 How came it there?" |
13707 | How dare you stay the march of King James''s governor? |
13707 | How many stripes for the priest? |
13707 | How, fellow? |
13707 | I am a woman-- I am but a woman; will He try me above my strength? |
13707 | If I hide my face for sorrow, there is cause enough,he merely replied;"and if I cover it for secret sin, what mortal might not do the same?" |
13707 | In mine? 13707 In the devil''s name, what is this?" |
13707 | Is he one whom the wilderness- folk have ravished from some Christian mother? |
13707 | Is it known, my dear uncle,inquired she,"what this old picture once represented? |
13707 | Is the man thinking what he will do when he is a widower? |
13707 | Is there not a change? |
13707 | Is, then, the picture less like than it was yesterday? |
13707 | Mistress Dudley, why are you loitering here? |
13707 | Mr. Peter,remarked Tabitha,"must the wine be drunk before the money is found?" |
13707 | Must he share the stripes of his fellows? |
13707 | My dear old friends,repeated Dr. Heidegger,"may I reckon on your aid in performing an exceedingly curious experiment?" |
13707 | My poor boy, are you so feeble? |
13707 | No,said his bride,"for how could we live by day or sleep by night in this awful blaze of the Great Carbuncle?" |
13707 | Oh, Tabitha,cried he, with tremulous rapture,"how shall I endure the effulgence? |
13707 | Oh, maiden,said I aloud,"why did you not come hither alone?" |
13707 | Pray, how was it effected? |
13707 | See you not he is some old round- headed dignitary who hath lain asleep these thirty years and knows nothing of the change of times? 13707 Shall I tell the secrets of yours? |
13707 | Shall we go on? |
13707 | Shall we not waken him? |
13707 | So, Faith, you have kept the heart? |
13707 | Stern man,cried the May- lord,"how can I move thee? |
13707 | That, I suppose, will be provided for off- hand by drawing a check on Bubble Bank? |
13707 | The portraits-- are they within? |
13707 | Then who shall divulge the secret? 13707 Then you are going toward Vermont?" |
13707 | They are not under the sod,I rejoined;"then why should I mark the spot where there is no treasure hidden? |
13707 | To what purpose? |
13707 | Valiant captain,quoth Peter Palfrey, the ancient of the band,"what order shall be taken with the prisoners?" |
13707 | Walter, are you in earnest? |
13707 | We are not wo nt to show an idle courtesy to that sex which requireth the stricter discipline.--What sayest thou, maid? 13707 What castle- hall hast thou to hang it in?" |
13707 | What does this old fellow here? |
13707 | What does this rascal of a painter mean? |
13707 | What else have you brought to insure a welcome from the discontented race of mortals? |
13707 | What grievous affliction hath befallen you,she earnestly inquired,"that you should thus darken your eyes for ever?" |
13707 | What hast thou to do with conscience, thou knave? |
13707 | What have you been doing in the political way? |
13707 | What is here? 13707 What is it, mother?" |
13707 | What is that to the purpose? |
13707 | What is the coroner''s verdict? 13707 What may this portend?" |
13707 | What means the Bedlamite by this freak? |
13707 | What means this blaze of light? 13707 What new jest has Your Excellency in hand?" |
13707 | What pale and bright- eyed little boy is this, Tobias? |
13707 | What sweeter place shall we find than this? |
13707 | What thing art thou? |
13707 | What worthies are these? |
13707 | What''s here? |
13707 | When did you taste food last? |
13707 | When have I triumphed over ruined innocence? 13707 Whence did he come? |
13707 | Where has this mad fellow stolen that sacramental vessel? |
13707 | Where in this world, indeed? |
13707 | Where in this world,exclaimed Adam Forrester, despondingly,"shall we build our temple of happiness?" |
13707 | Where is the Lady Eleanore? |
13707 | Where is your great humbug? |
13707 | Who is this gray patriarch? |
13707 | Who is this insolent young fellow? |
13707 | Who is this man of thought and care, weary with world- wandering and heavy with disappointed hopes? 13707 Who is this venerable brother?" |
13707 | Who undid the door? |
13707 | Whose grand coach is this? |
13707 | Whose voice hast thou stolen for thy murmurs and miserable petitions, as if Lady Eleanore could be conscious of mortal infirmity? 13707 Why do I waste words on the fellow?" |
13707 | Why do you haunt me thus? |
13707 | Why do you look back? |
13707 | Why do you seek her now? 13707 Why do you tremble at me alone?" |
13707 | Why had that young man a stain of blood upon his ruff? |
13707 | Why should we seek farther for the site of our temple? |
13707 | Will not Your Excellency order out the guard? |
13707 | Wilt thou betray me? |
13707 | Wilt thou still worship the destroyer and surround her image with fantasies the more magnificent the more evil she has wrought? 13707 Would Your Excellency inquire further into the mystery of the pageant?" |
13707 | Would you forget your dead friends the moment they are under the sod? |
13707 | Wouldst thou hear more? |
13707 | Wretched lady,said the painter,"did I not warn you?" |
13707 | Wretched lunatic, what do you seek here? |
13707 | Yes,said she, blushing deeply; then, more gayly,"And what else have you brought me from beyond the sea?" |
13707 | You positively refuse to let me have this crazy old house, and the land under and adjoining, at the price named? |
13707 | Young man, what is your purpose? |
13707 | Am I not thy prophet?" |
13707 | And could such beings of cloudy fantasy, so near akin to nothingness, give valid evidence against him at the day of judgment? |
13707 | And did her beauty gladden me for that one moment and then die? |
13707 | And did she dwell there in utter loneliness? |
13707 | And had he found them? |
13707 | And has he sent for me at last? |
13707 | And the man? |
13707 | And were the Lily and her lover to be more fortunate than all those millions? |
13707 | And what are the haughtiest of us but the ephemeral aristocrats of a summer''s day? |
13707 | And what is time to the married of eternity?" |
13707 | And what means it?" |
13707 | And what news from Boston?" |
13707 | And what speak ye of James? |
13707 | And what the feast? |
13707 | And who are these on whom, and on all that appertains to them, the dust of earth seems never to have settled? |
13707 | And who was the Gray Champion? |
13707 | And will Death and Sorrow ever enter that proud mansion? |
13707 | And wilt thou sink beneath an affliction which happens alike to them that have their portion here below and to them that lay up treasure in heaven? |
13707 | And, after all, can such philosophy be true? |
13707 | Are the murderers apprehended? |
13707 | Are there any two living creatures who have so few sympathies that they can not possibly be friends? |
13707 | Are they spent amiss? |
13707 | Are we not all in darkness till the light doth shine upon us? |
13707 | Are you all satisfied? |
13707 | Are you quarrelling with the Old Scratch?" |
13707 | Are you ready for the lifting of the veil that shuts in time from eternity?" |
13707 | Are you telling me of a painter, or a wizard?" |
13707 | Art thou come to bear a valiant testimony as in former years? |
13707 | As we went on--""Have I not borne all this, and have I murmured?" |
13707 | At"Yet... profit?" |
13707 | But did the dead man laugh? |
13707 | But how is he to attain his ends? |
13707 | But what cares Annie for soldiers? |
13707 | But what dismal equipage now struggles along the uneven street? |
13707 | But what think ye now? |
13707 | But what was the wild throng that stood hand in hand about the Maypole? |
13707 | But where are the hulks and scattered timbers of sunken ships? |
13707 | But where is the Lady Eleanore?" |
13707 | But where was the Gray Champion? |
13707 | But where was the mermaid in those delightful times? |
13707 | But where would Annie find a partner? |
13707 | But why had she returned to him when their cold hearts shrank from each other''s embrace? |
13707 | But would it influence the event?" |
13707 | By her long communion with woe has she not forfeited her inheritance of immortal joy? |
13707 | Can I decline? |
13707 | Can it be that nobody caught sight of him? |
13707 | Could Mr. Hooper be fearful of her glance, that he so hastily caught back the black veil? |
13707 | Could it be that a footstep was now heard coming down the staircase of the old mansion which all conceived to have been so long untenanted? |
13707 | Did Annie ever read the cries of London city? |
13707 | Did he seek to hide it from the dread Being whom he was addressing? |
13707 | Did his broken spirit feel at that dread hour the tremendous burden of a people''s curse? |
13707 | Do ye touch bottom, my young friends? |
13707 | Do you believe it?" |
13707 | Do you not envy her, Elinor?" |
13707 | Do you not feel it so?" |
13707 | Do you remember any act of enormous folly at which you would blush even in the remotest cavern of the earth? |
13707 | Do you remember it? |
13707 | Do you see that bundle under his head?" |
13707 | Does any germ of bliss survive within her? |
13707 | Does he strive to be melancholy and gentlemanlike, or is he merely overcome by the heat? |
13707 | Doth he stand here among this multitude of people? |
13707 | Doubtless you know their purport?" |
13707 | Eh?" |
13707 | Eh?" |
13707 | Forget them? |
13707 | Had I created her? |
13707 | Had I ever heard that sweet, low tone? |
13707 | Had it passed away or faded into nothing? |
13707 | Had the changes of a lifetime been crowded into so brief a space, and were they now four aged people sitting with their old friend Dr. Heidegger? |
13707 | Has it been merely this? |
13707 | Has it talked for so many ages and meant nothing all the while? |
13707 | Hath he cast me down never to rise again? |
13707 | Hath he crushed my very heart in his hand?--And thou to whom I committed my child, how hast thou fulfilled thy trust? |
13707 | Have I not achieved it? |
13707 | Have men avoided me and women shown no pity and children screamed and fled only for my black veil? |
13707 | Have not I resolved within myself that the whole earth contains no fitter ornament for the great hall of my ancestral castle? |
13707 | Have not my musings melted into its rocky walls and sandy floor and made them a portion of myself? |
13707 | Have you been hanged, or not?" |
13707 | He often paused with his axe uplifted in the air, and said to himself,"Peter Goldthwaite, did you never strike this blow before?" |
13707 | He then added with his usual good- nature,"How can Cupid die when there are such pretty maidens in the Vineyard?" |
13707 | Heap of diseased mortality, why lurkest thou in my lady''s chamber?" |
13707 | Honestly, now, doctor, have you not stirred up the sober brains of some of your countrymen to enact a scene in our masquerade?" |
13707 | How came I among these wanderers? |
13707 | How came it in your mind too?" |
13707 | How could I ever reach her? |
13707 | How does Winter herald his approach? |
13707 | How does our worthy Governor Winthrop? |
13707 | How goes it, friend Peter?" |
13707 | How mean you, good sir, to enjoy the prize which you have been seeking the Lord knows how long among the Crystal Hills?" |
13707 | How shall the widow''s horror be represented? |
13707 | How, then, came the doomed victim here? |
13707 | If not sunshine, what can it be?" |
13707 | If the murder had not been committed till Tuesday night, who was the prophet that had foretold it in all its circumstances on Tuesday morning? |
13707 | Is Annie a literary lady? |
13707 | Is Mr. Higginbotham''s niece come out of her fainting- fits? |
13707 | Is he in doubt or in debt? |
13707 | Is he-- if the question be allowable-- in love? |
13707 | Is it accomplished? |
13707 | Is not little Annie afraid of such a tumult? |
13707 | Is not the kindred of a common fate a closer tie than that of birth? |
13707 | Is the doorkeeper asleep?" |
13707 | Is there not a deep moral in the tale? |
13707 | Is this a toyshop, or is it fairy- land? |
13707 | Is this like Elinor?" |
13707 | It was musical, but how should there be such music in my solitude? |
13707 | Kind patrons, will not you redeem the pledge of the New Year? |
13707 | May I rest its weight on you?" |
13707 | May I rest its weight on you?" |
13707 | Nevertheless, as slight differences are scarcely perceptible from a church- spire, one might be tempted to ask,"Which are the boys?" |
13707 | Not a soul would ask,''Who was he? |
13707 | Now think ye that I would have done this grievous wrong to my soul, body, reputation and estate, without a reasonable chance of profit?" |
13707 | Now, hoping no offence, I should like to know where this young gentleman may be going?" |
13707 | Now, think ye that I would have done this grievous wrong to my soul, body, reputation and estate without a reasonable chance of profit?" |
13707 | Now, what should an old woman wish for, when she can go but a step or two before she comes to her grave? |
13707 | Now, which of these slabs would you like best to see your own name upon?" |
13707 | Now, would you deem it possible that this rose of half a century could ever bloom again?" |
13707 | Of sunken ships and whereabouts they lie? |
13707 | Of what mysteries is it telling? |
13707 | Oh, when the deliverer came so near, in the dull anguish of her worn- out sympathies did she never long to cry,"Death, come in"? |
13707 | Or, in good truth, had a lovely girl with a warm heart and lips that would bear pressure stolen softly behind me and thrown her image into the spring? |
13707 | Perhaps little Annie would like to go? |
13707 | Peter?" |
13707 | Possibly, could it be made visible, it might prove a masterpiece of some great artist; else why has it so long held such a conspicuous place?" |
13707 | See how lightly he capers away again!--Jowler, did your worship ever have the gout? |
13707 | Shall I put these feelings into words?" |
13707 | Shall thy silken bridegroom suffer thy share of the penalty besides his own?" |
13707 | Shall we waken him?" |
13707 | She broke forth with sudden and irrepressible violence:"Tell me, man of cold heart, what has God done to me? |
13707 | Supposing the legend true, can this be other than the once proud Lady Eleanore? |
13707 | Take a passenger?" |
13707 | The boy has been baptized in blood; will ye keep the mark fresh and ruddy upon his forehead?" |
13707 | Then would she mark out the grave the scent of which would be perceptible on the pillow of the second bridal? |
13707 | Time-- where man lives not-- what is it but eternity? |
13707 | Unhang the old gentleman? |
13707 | Was he not alive within five years, and did he not, in token of our long friendship, bequeath me his gold- headed cane and a mourning- ring?" |
13707 | Was her existence absorbed in nature''s loveliest phenomenon, and did her pure frame dissolve away in the varied light? |
13707 | Was it an illusion? |
13707 | Was it delusion? |
13707 | Was it not for liberty to worship God according to our conscience?" |
13707 | Was it not for the enjoyment of our civil rights? |
13707 | Was it worth while to rear this massive edifice to be a desert in the heart of the town and populous only for a few hours of each seventh day? |
13707 | Was not Martha wedded in her teens to David Tomkins, who won her girlish love and long enjoyed her affection as a wife? |
13707 | Was not her white form fading into the moonlight? |
13707 | Was not his own the form in which that Destiny had embodied itself, and he a chief agent of the coming evil which he had foreshadowed? |
13707 | Was she the daughter of my fancy, akin to those strange shapes which peep under the lids of children''s eyes? |
13707 | Was the King of Terrors more awful in those days than in our own, that wisdom and philosophy have been able to produce this change? |
13707 | Was the old fellow actually murdered two or three nights ago by an Irishman and a nigger?" |
13707 | Were we not like ghosts? |
13707 | What but the mystery which it obscurely typifies has made this piece of crape so awful? |
13707 | What cares the world for that? |
13707 | What clouds are gathering in the golden west with direful intent against the brightness and the warmth of this summer afternoon? |
13707 | What does old Esther''s joy portend?" |
13707 | What has she to do with weddings? |
13707 | What have we to do with England?" |
13707 | What have we to do with this mitred prelate-- with this crowned king? |
13707 | What have you been about during your sojourn in this part of infinite space?" |
13707 | What heart could resist him? |
13707 | What if Remorse should assume the features of an injured friend? |
13707 | What if he should stand at your bed''s foot in the likeness of a corpse with a bloody stain upon the shroud? |
13707 | What if the fiend should come in woman''s garments with a pale beauty amid sin and desolation, and lie down by your side? |
13707 | What if this embassy should bring me the message of my fate?" |
13707 | What is guilt? |
13707 | What is his purpose? |
13707 | What is the mystery in my heart?" |
13707 | What is there for me but your decay and death? |
13707 | What made him hide it so snug, Tabby?" |
13707 | What miracle shall set all things right again? |
13707 | What news from the camp- meeting at Stamford?" |
13707 | What other shelter is there for old Esther Dudley save the province- house or the grave?" |
13707 | What saith the people''s orator? |
13707 | What say you, again?" |
13707 | What sort of a man was Wakefield? |
13707 | What to me is the outcry of a mob in this remote province of the realm? |
13707 | What were you thinking of?" |
13707 | What''s the latest news at Parker''s Falls?" |
13707 | What, then, in sober earnest, were the delusive treasures of the chest? |
13707 | What, then? |
13707 | Whence come they? |
13707 | Whence comes that stifled laughter? |
13707 | Where do they build their nests and seek their food? |
13707 | Where would be Death''s triumph if none lived to weep? |
13707 | Wherefore have all other adventurers sought the prize in vain but that I might win it and make it a symbol of the glories of our lofty line? |
13707 | Wherefore have we come hither to set up our own tombstones in a wilderness? |
13707 | Wherefore, I say again, have we sought this country of a rugged soil and wintry sky? |
13707 | Whither did the wanderer go?'' |
13707 | Who are the choristers? |
13707 | Who but the fiend and his bond- slaves the crew of Merry Mount had thus disturbed them? |
13707 | Who can this old man be?" |
13707 | Who has not heard their name? |
13707 | Who heeds the poor organ- grinder? |
13707 | Who knows but I may take a glimpse at myself and see whether all''s right?" |
13707 | Who reared it? |
13707 | Who shall enslave us here? |
13707 | Who stands guard here? |
13707 | Whom had my heart recognized, that it throbbed so? |
13707 | Why should not an old man be merry too, when the great sea is at play with those little children? |
13707 | Why should we follow Fancy through the whole series of those awful pictures? |
13707 | Why will they disturb my pious meditations? |
13707 | Why, at least, did no smile of welcome brighten upon his face? |
13707 | Will she ever feel the night- wind and the rain? |
13707 | Will you meet me there? |
13707 | With that sentiment gushing from my soul, might I not leave all the rest to him? |
13707 | Would it not be so among the dead? |
13707 | Would you go to the sole home that is left you? |
13707 | Would you have me wait till the mob shall sack the province- house as they did my private mansion? |
13707 | Yet why should it be so? |
13707 | You are repairing the old house, I suppose, making a new one of it? |
13707 | asked Dr. Heidegger,"which Ponce de Leon, the Spanish adventurer, went in search of two or three centuries ago?" |
13707 | cried Mr. Brown, again;"what the devil are you about there, that I hear such a racket whenever I pass by? |
13707 | cried old Gascoigne;"is the stream yet pure from the stain of the murderer''s hands?" |
13707 | have you already asked yourselves that question?" |
13707 | inquired he of the domestic; then, recollecting himself,"Your master and mistress-- are they at home?" |
13707 | or"Peter, what need of tearing the whole house down? |
13707 | or, rather,"Which the men?" |
13707 | said Colonel Killigrew, who believed not a word of the doctor''s story;"and what may be the effect of this fluid on the human frame?" |
13707 | where the corpses and skeletons of seamen who went down in storm and battle? |
13707 | where the corroded cannon? |
13707 | where the treasures that old Ocean hoards? |
13707 | will she die? |
13707 | you do not fear to sit beneath the gallows on a new- made grave, and yet you tremble at a friend''s touch? |
44140 | ''And do you remember any thing about him?'' 44140 ''Do you remember any thing of his sermons?'' |
44140 | ''Of Whitefield? 44140 Ah,"asked Dr. Hopkins,"and what is the error?" |
44140 | And you, rich men, wherefore do you hoard your silver? 44140 Any Baptists?" |
44140 | Any Presbyterians? |
44140 | Aye, aye,continued the preacher, looking at him,"I have waked you up, have I? |
44140 | But why speak I of David, when Jesus of Nazareth, David''s Lord and David''s King, had for his reputed father a carpenter? 44140 Have you any Methodists, Seceders, or Independents there?" |
44140 | My hands and body,says he,"were pierced with cold; but what are outward things, when the soul is warmed with the love of God? |
44140 | Need I say that_ earnestness_ was characteristic of Whitefield''s preaching? 44140 Oh, is that the case? |
44140 | Well, do you believe that Christians have any other witness of the Spirit than that afforded by the testimony of their own holy affections? |
44140 | What may not be done, and is not done by earnestness? 44140 What, not answer so modest a request, namely, to snatch a few moments to send dear Captain Scott a few lines? |
44140 | What,asked his companion,"did you gain by your trouble?" |
44140 | Who knows,he says,"what a fire this little spark may kindle?" |
44140 | Why, Mary,asked the old man,"is this indeed our old book? |
44140 | Why, who have you there? |
44140 | Yes,said the baronet;"what do you call it?" |
44140 | ''Did I not say unto thee, If thou wouldest believe, thou shouldst see the glory of God?'' |
44140 | ''Oh,''thought I,''does this man put this glass into one furnace after another, that it may be rendered perfect? |
44140 | ''Sir, can you forgive me?'' |
44140 | ''_ One thing I do_:''and_ how_ did he accomplish it? |
44140 | A large number of ministers were present, and when he came to the words,"Art thou a master in Israel, and knowest not these things?" |
44140 | And as to righteousness of life, are not the people of this land dead in trespasses and sins? |
44140 | And did not Paul think so when he determined to know nothing there, but''Christ, and him crucified?'' |
44140 | And shall he ascend, and not bear with him the news of one sinner, among all this multitude, reclaimed from the error of his ways?'' |
44140 | And what thought Whitefield himself on his arrival at Northampton? |
44140 | And where was that country? |
44140 | And where will ye be, my hearers, when your lives have passed away like that dark cloud? |
44140 | Another, wondering why I said negroes had black hearts, was answered by his black brother,''Ah, thou fool, dost not thou understand it? |
44140 | Are we not too fearful to break in with the thunders of a violated law upon those who are at ease in Zion? |
44140 | Are we not too gentle and courteous to mention such a word as''hell''to modern ears polite? |
44140 | But alas, how can a drunkard enter there? |
44140 | But have they not looked too much for the beauties of style, and overlooked the simple energy of their scriptural truths? |
44140 | But should we not likewise mention his deep gratitude to all whom God had used as instruments of good to him? |
44140 | But was Columbus, therefore, only an ordinary man? |
44140 | But was he, therefore, only a child in intellect?" |
44140 | But what evil or crime worthy of expulsion can there be in that? |
44140 | But what if you do not find Christ there? |
44140 | But what made those thoughts so common? |
44140 | But what may these few months produce? |
44140 | But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from beneath the western horizon? |
44140 | But who were these maligners? |
44140 | Can any thing but love beget love? |
44140 | Did ever any one trust in God, and was forsaken?" |
44140 | Did your ladyship notice, about half an hour ago, a very modest single rap at the door? |
44140 | Do n''t you see those flashes of lightning? |
44140 | Do not you think, my dear brethren, I must be as much concerned for truth, or what I think truth, as you? |
44140 | Do we not see this principle at work in the history and present state of the Jews; and has it not often appeared also in the history of Christianity? |
44140 | Do you not begin to long to see him more than ever? |
44140 | Do you not groan in this tabernacle, being burdened? |
44140 | Do you think you will get to heaven? |
44140 | Do you think, sir, that Jesus Christ would receive me?'' |
44140 | Do, master, let me return home, and be discharged from this hard service?'' |
44140 | Fools who came to mock, began to pray, and to cry out,"What must we do to be saved?" |
44140 | For how can dead men beget living children? |
44140 | For this, indeed, he was reproached and maligned:''Is not this,''said they,''the carpenter''s son?'' |
44140 | For what purpose, my dear child, have you sent for me? |
44140 | He further asked,"Was not the Reformation begun and carried on by itinerant preaching?" |
44140 | Hervey wrote to Whitefield,"Your journals and sermons, and especially that sweet sermon on''What think ye of Christ?'' |
44140 | How can they then precede, or be in any way the cause of it? |
44140 | How can you say you will not dispute with me about election, and yet print such hymns? |
44140 | How do we know but some of us may awake in hell before morning?" |
44140 | How many pardons shall I ask for mangling, and, I fear, murdering your''Theron and Aspasio?'' |
44140 | I asked him,''What harm do we do? |
44140 | I asked him,''Why do you put that into so many fires?'' |
44140 | I hope, my dear, that this is the language of faith out of the mouth of a babe; but tell me what ground you have for saying this? |
44140 | I remember a thought which passed my mind, I think, as I was going to hear his last sermon--''Which would I rather be, Garrick or Whitefield?'' |
44140 | I suppose, sir, you''ll be going to see his bones? |
44140 | If God will choose a red- coat preacher, who shall say unto him,''What doest thou?'' |
44140 | In another letter were these words:''Do you ask me what you shall have? |
44140 | Is it not built upon a rock? |
44140 | Is not that rock the blessed Jesus? |
44140 | Is there not an awfully retributive providence connected with the rejection of the gospel and its ministers? |
44140 | Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?'' |
44140 | Let me see, what can I acquire first? |
44140 | Man, woman, sinner, put thy hand upon thy heart, and say, Didst thou ever hear Christ''s voice so as to follow him?... |
44140 | Mr. Bacon replied,"A new religion, sir?" |
44140 | Mr. Whitefield, from Zechariah 4:10,''For who hath despised the day of small things?'' |
44140 | My dear child, you make my very heart to rejoice; but are you not a sinner? |
44140 | My dear girl, I trust that the desire of your heart will be granted; but where do you think you will find your Redeemer? |
44140 | My dear girl, what do you know about Christ? |
44140 | Nay,''Is not this the carpenter?'' |
44140 | Nor did those who came to me_ then_, come so much with the inquiry,''What shall we do to be saved?'' |
44140 | Not unfrequently has the question been discussed, to what denomination of Christians does the Tabernacle really belong? |
44140 | Now, my lady, did you ever hear of such a thing since you were born?" |
44140 | Numbers were pricked to the heart; the word of God became quick and powerful; and,"What shall we do?" |
44140 | Oh THOU, our Head, enthroned on high, By whom thy members live, Wilt thou not hear our fervent cry, The holy unction give? |
44140 | Oh, speed thy chariot wheels; why are they so long in coming? |
44140 | Oh, what plea can you make before the Judge of the whole earth? |
44140 | Oh, wherefore did I doubt? |
44140 | On her death- bed she cried out for her"soul friend"Mr. Whitefield; but checking her own impatience, she asked,"Why should I do so? |
44140 | Remembering that this thirst occurred near the end of the Saviour''s sufferings, the thought arose in his mind,"Why may it not be so with me? |
44140 | Should this be? |
44140 | Should we not mention that he had a heart susceptible of the most generous and the most tender friendship? |
44140 | Shuter was exceedingly struck, and going afterwards to Whitefield, he said,"I thought I should have fainted; how could you serve me so?" |
44140 | Sometimes he was employed almost from morning till night answering those who, in distress of soul, cried out,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
44140 | Speaking of this journey, he says,"What have I seen? |
44140 | The crisis was now come; the Rubicon had been passed, and the inquiry might well be made,"What will Whitefield now do?" |
44140 | The last was the first laid hold of, and being asked,"Are you for the covenant?" |
44140 | The text was,"Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire?" |
44140 | Then one of the deacons gave out the hymn,"''Why do we mourn departing friends?'' |
44140 | These words,''The Jews sought to stone thee, and goest thou thither again?'' |
44140 | They had not to ask,"For whom is all this intended?" |
44140 | They were both soon in tears, and the inquiry was excited in their hearts,"What shall we do to be saved?" |
44140 | Under these circumstances he was addressed by Whitefield, in his own peculiar and energetic style:"What said our Lord to Martha? |
44140 | Was Mr. Whitefield to be censured for the use of this language? |
44140 | Was it not principally by this that the hearts of others were so strongly drawn and knit to him? |
44140 | We never before saw so many brought under soul concern, and with great distress making the inquiry,''What must we do to be saved?'' |
44140 | What art thou come to at this day? |
44140 | What can I do for you? |
44140 | What did our fathers come into this wilderness for? |
44140 | What is it that has given such success to popery, to infidelity, to Mormonism? |
44140 | What is more common than a voyage across the Atlantic? |
44140 | What next?" |
44140 | What shall I do? |
44140 | What should I say? |
44140 | What, when the love of God, the death of Christ, the salvation of souls, the felicities of heaven, and the torments of hell are the theme? |
44140 | When I had recovered myself, I said,''My dear man, if God should so pour his wrath upon you, what would become of you? |
44140 | When or where had an appeal been made like this? |
44140 | Where does his mantle rest? |
44140 | Where is the voice of Whitefield now? |
44140 | Wherefore count the price you have received for Him whom you every day crucify in your love of gain? |
44140 | Whitefield?" |
44140 | Whitefield?'' |
44140 | Who can tell the results of a single sermon, or trace the consequences of one conversion? |
44140 | Who knows but the root, as well as the branches, may be taken by and by? |
44140 | Who more unlikely to be wrought upon than soldiers? |
44140 | Who of us now can say that we have seen any thing such as this? |
44140 | Who shall hinder, if God will work? |
44140 | Who that has ever read, can ever forget Cowper''s exquisite description of him? |
44140 | Who would have supposed that the mercy of God was now about to be extended to this transgressor of his law? |
44140 | Why are you so furious against us? |
44140 | Why did you in particular, my dear brother Charles, affix your hymn, and join in putting out your late hymn- book? |
44140 | Why did you print that sermon against predestination? |
44140 | Why may I not now dare to trust and rejoice in the pardoning mercy of God?" |
44140 | Why may I not now receive deliverance and comfort? |
44140 | Why me, Lord; why me? |
44140 | Would you have me go and tell my Master that you will not come, and that I have spent my strength in vain? |
44140 | _ Earnestness._ And shall the apostles and advocates of error be more in earnest than the friends of truth? |
44140 | and turning to him, said,"Will you go to Oxford, George?" |
44140 | and,"Is it designed for us?" |
44140 | any Episcopalians?" |
44140 | do n''t you hear the distant thunder? |
44140 | do you not hear? |
44140 | replied,"Yes;"and being further asked,"What covenant?" |
44140 | was not the gospel in all its purity and simplicity adapted to human nature as it existed in commercial, scholastic, philosophical Corinth? |
20569 | ''Not to speak of''--what do you mean? |
20569 | A fine day Ezekiel-- how are things in Ipswich? |
20569 | Abigail Williams, have you been hurt by this woman? |
20569 | Ah, how is that? 20569 Ah, indeed-- what motive has he?" |
20569 | Ah, who is that? |
20569 | Ah-- who? |
20569 | Am I too late? 20569 And Antipas?" |
20569 | And Dulcibel? |
20569 | And all of you go off into perpetual banishment and have all your property confiscated? |
20569 | And do you think I really am a witch, uncle Robie? |
20569 | And he submits to it? |
20569 | And he will allow the shedding of innocent blood to go on, in order to promote his own selfish ambition? |
20569 | And incur the certainty of punishment when she returns? |
20569 | And is it all over? |
20569 | And it thundered when the black beast entered the cloud, did it not? |
20569 | And now for the last point-- what do I pay you? 20569 And so brave Bridget was executed near this place? |
20569 | And so you have no conscientious scruples against breaking the law, by carrying off any of these imprisoned persons? |
20569 | And so you think she hates Dulcibel, mainly because you love her? |
20569 | And then you think there is no special enmity against Dulcibel? |
20569 | And they all tell you to hurt the children? |
20569 | And thus make yourselves parties to Dulcibel''s escape? 20569 And why should not the young witch look so?" |
20569 | And you are certain of it? |
20569 | Any more accusations? |
20569 | Anything new at brother Thomas''s? 20569 Are they in possession? |
20569 | Are you certain of that, Captain? 20569 Are you not going to put irons on her, Master Foster?" |
20569 | At what hour will it suit your ladyship? |
20569 | At whose complaint? |
20569 | Authority? 20569 Buccaneers occasionally, I suppose?" |
20569 | But did you not send your spectre to torment them? |
20569 | But do you really believe in witches, uncle Robie? |
20569 | But how about this afternoon? |
20569 | But how do you happen to be here? |
20569 | But no matter about that now-- can you do an errand for me? |
20569 | But she did not? |
20569 | But what harm was there in that? |
20569 | But why should she pursue so fiendishly an innocent girl like Dulcibel, who is not conscious of ever having offended her? |
20569 | But you must admit that your projected visit has been frustrated in a very singular, if not remarkable manner? |
20569 | Can you not lend me another horse-- say the one Elizabeth always rides? |
20569 | Captain Alden, why do you torment these poor girls who never injured you? |
20569 | Cease what? |
20569 | Could he bear the ride? |
20569 | Could we trust them? |
20569 | Did Leah Herrick say anything to you against me the other night at the husking? |
20569 | Did you ever hear such nonsense as that about her tearing down a part of the meeting- house simply by looking at it? 20569 Did you ever pay her any attentions?" |
20569 | Did you ever see the Devil? |
20569 | Did you not give the witch, Dulcibel Burton, a yellow bird, which is one of her familiars? |
20569 | Did you not pinch Elizabeth Hubbard this morning? |
20569 | Do you believe in witches, Captain? |
20569 | Do you believe that? |
20569 | Do you expect to remain long in Salem? |
20569 | Do you know that Master Raymond can have his action against you for very heavy damages, for slander and defamation? |
20569 | Do you know that Satan can not torment these people except through the agency of other human beings? |
20569 | Do you know, Squire, how Master English''s sailors are talking around the wharves? |
20569 | Do you not remember me, little Dulcy? 20569 Do you remember Junius Brutus playing idiot-- and King David playing imbecile?" |
20569 | Do you think it will come true? |
20569 | Do you think so? 20569 Do you think so? |
20569 | Do you think so? |
20569 | Does she suffer much? |
20569 | Dulcibel Burton,said Squire Hathorne,"you have heard what these evidence against you; what answer can you make to them?" |
20569 | Dying? |
20569 | Had you any hand in this, Master Raymond? |
20569 | Has Sarah Good any familiar? |
20569 | Has the Devil any other shapes? |
20569 | Have you brought them? |
20569 | Have you communicated this view to your brother and sister? |
20569 | Have you made no contracts with the Devil? |
20569 | Have you no reverence for the law? |
20569 | He will not? 20569 How about the yellow bird?" |
20569 | How about those feathers? |
20569 | How are you getting along? |
20569 | How could I? 20569 How dared you bring him here without being handcuffed?" |
20569 | How did you go? |
20569 | How did you manage it? |
20569 | How do you make it out? |
20569 | How does the Devil appear to you? |
20569 | How soon? |
20569 | I can not? 20569 I could not borrow a horse, then, of them, you think?" |
20569 | I never thought of that before; it seems to me a very reasonable explanation, does it not strike you so, Master Putnam? |
20569 | I suppose however you will sail for New York? |
20569 | I suppose she found out that I went frequently to see the Captain, when in Boston? |
20569 | I suppose you go back to Boston to morrow? |
20569 | I suppose you will be as good as your word, Master Mather and admit that with all your wisdom you were entirely mistaken? |
20569 | If I were imprisoned what would become of her? |
20569 | If it hurts them so much, would it not hurt you a little? |
20569 | If she were released, could you both get away from Boston-- at once? |
20569 | In what shape does the spectre come, Mistress Putnam? |
20569 | Is brother Thomas at home, Sister Ann? |
20569 | Is it because the Salem gentlewomen are so fascinating that you have remained here? 20569 Is it not strange that when you are examined, these persons should be afflicted thus?" |
20569 | Is it not uncle Robie? |
20569 | Is not her spectre riding around on that devil''s mare half the night, and having a good time of it? |
20569 | Is that the way you generally ride, Dulcibel? |
20569 | Is there not another chief, called Nucas? |
20569 | Is this a time for idle levity? |
20569 | It is not? 20569 It is only a form, my lady; but you have not shown me the Governor''s warrant yet?" |
20569 | Many French privateers out there? |
20569 | Master Jethro Sands, what have you to say against this young man? 20569 Master Parris? |
20569 | Mean? 20569 Nonsense, is it?" |
20569 | Of course it is not-- why, you silly loon, how could it be when he has gone to Plymouth? 20569 Of witchcraft? |
20569 | Oh, by the way, Ezekiel, I wonder if you could do a little errand for me? |
20569 | Oh, if you choose, I will put a pillion on Sweetbriar, and see how that works? |
20569 | Oh, pshaw, Ann; you do not mean that my simple- hearted brother, Joseph Putnam, ever planned and carried out a subtle scheme of that kind? |
20569 | On what charge? |
20569 | On whose complaint? |
20569 | Or you? |
20569 | Ride on up to Topsfield? |
20569 | Sarah Good, why do you not tell us the truth? 20569 Shall I take you anywhere in my carriage?" |
20569 | Shall I use force, sir, if he will not come peaceably? |
20569 | Shall we attack and break open the jail some dark night, sword in hand? 20569 She must dislike you very much then?" |
20569 | She would not? |
20569 | So I must be compelled to do as you wish, and stay away from the examination? |
20569 | So you got out of the clutches of those Salem rascals safely? |
20569 | So you have been to Boston? |
20569 | Suppose we carry her off some night by force, she having no hand in the arrangements? 20569 That Ellis Raymond? |
20569 | That was all she said to you? |
20569 | Then what do you plan? |
20569 | There never was any troth plighted between you? |
20569 | These are serious charges, Mistress Nurse,said Squire Hathorne,"are they true?" |
20569 | They sent you on board, I suppose? |
20569 | Tituba, why do you hurt these children? |
20569 | Too hard, am I? 20569 Trickery? |
20569 | Was there any reality in those pretended afflictions? |
20569 | Well what can I do for you? |
20569 | Well, Robie, how''s the little girl? |
20569 | Well, and so you want me to get Mistress Dulcibel, this witch descendant of that famous old witch, Cleopatra, out of prison? |
20569 | Well, how are things getting along at Salem? |
20569 | Well, now, what shall we do? 20569 Well, what did the Captain say?" |
20569 | Well, what do you mean to do? |
20569 | Well, what have you to say,--Jethro Sands? |
20569 | Well, what is it, Master Arnold? |
20569 | Well, what now? |
20569 | Well, what would you suggest, Master Putnam? 20569 Well, where is your horse?" |
20569 | Well, which is it? |
20569 | Well? |
20569 | Were you ever tempted further? |
20569 | What devil''s mischief is this? |
20569 | What deviltry is coming next? |
20569 | What did it say to you? |
20569 | What did she say when you threatened her? |
20569 | What did that crafty creature wish to find out by stopping me? |
20569 | What did you say to it? |
20569 | What do I think about it? |
20569 | What do these deuced Barebones Puritans know about witches, or the devil, or anything else? 20569 What do you mean by barring my way in this manner?" |
20569 | What do you mean? |
20569 | What do you say to that, Master Alden? |
20569 | What do you say to those charges? |
20569 | What do you wish to know, Lady Mary? |
20569 | What does Mistress Putnam say? |
20569 | What does all this mean, friend Herrick? |
20569 | What friend? |
20569 | What ground did the Governor take? |
20569 | What had he gone for? 20569 What is it?" |
20569 | What is she engaged in? |
20569 | What is that convict doing here? 20569 What is the reason?" |
20569 | What is the scriptural view of it? 20569 What is this?" |
20569 | What is your plan? |
20569 | What is your view? 20569 What lying spirit was this?" |
20569 | What makes you suppose that Satan torments them? |
20569 | What shall I send you from England? |
20569 | What shall you send me from England? 20569 What time of night will suit you best?" |
20569 | What was it? |
20569 | What!--not the girl with the snake- mark? |
20569 | What-- in Boston jail? |
20569 | When am I to go? |
20569 | When are you going back to England? |
20569 | When are you going, Captain? |
20569 | Where is the Captain to be examined? |
20569 | Where is the dying man who requires my spiritual ministrations? |
20569 | Where is the yellow bird-- her familiar-- that she was sending on some witch''s errand when we were watching at the window? |
20569 | Who are they that still torment you in this horrible manner? |
20569 | Who could have informed her? |
20569 | Who did you see-- any of our people? |
20569 | Who does hurt them then? |
20569 | Who does hurt them then? |
20569 | Who does torment them, then? |
20569 | Who else have you seen? |
20569 | Who else? |
20569 | Who gave you the message? |
20569 | Who hurts you? |
20569 | Who is it hurts you? |
20569 | Who is it that torments you, Mistress Putnam? |
20569 | Who is this maiden? 20569 Who sent yer-- to-- me?" |
20569 | Who then did you buy the witch''s familiar of? |
20569 | Who then does torment them? |
20569 | Who torments you now? |
20569 | Who was the yellow bird afflicting, when these feathers were cut? |
20569 | Why are you here then-- why making this haste? 20569 Why did not your sweetheart go with the Englishes?" |
20569 | Why did you go to Thomas Putnam''s last night and hurt his daughter Ann? |
20569 | Why did you yield then to the Devil, not to go to meeting for the last three years? |
20569 | Why do tigers slay, and scorpions sting? 20569 Why do you not cease this?" |
20569 | Why do you not say a lover of yours, at once? |
20569 | Why does not my look knock you down too? |
20569 | Why not you too? 20569 Why should he hurt them?" |
20569 | Why then do you hurt these children? |
20569 | Why, had you heard anything? |
20569 | Why, how could Thomas know where to go then? |
20569 | Why, how is that? |
20569 | Why, you know something about this then? 20569 Why? |
20569 | Why? |
20569 | Why? |
20569 | Will I help you? 20569 Will you aid her to escape, should her life be in danger? |
20569 | Will you dismount and stay to supper, brother Joseph? |
20569 | Will you not be suspected? |
20569 | Will your ladyship pardon me if I ask a question first? 20569 Would it not do as well to ask him to come and marry us?" |
20569 | Yes, Jo married early, but he is big enough and strong enough, do n''t you think so? |
20569 | Yes-- who sent you to me? |
20569 | You are not in a great hurry, are you? |
20569 | You certainly are not serious, Lady Mary? |
20569 | You do not ask where we are going, Dulcibel? |
20569 | You do not suppose the magistrates will commit me on such a trumped- up nonsensical charge as this? |
20569 | You heard of course that Captain Alden was off, and Master and Mistress English? |
20569 | You know how to keep silent, and how to talk also, Ezekiel-- especially when you are well paid for it? |
20569 | You know that England is ruled by William and Mary, why should not the Province of Massachusetts also be? |
20569 | You know where my brother Thomas lives? 20569 You know whose trial comes on next?" |
20569 | You think that Mistress Dulcibel is an angel, do you not? |
20569 | You will not-- how will you help it? |
20569 | You will uphold me, if I do this thing, Lady Mary? |
20569 | You would not have deserted me then, Captain? |
20569 | You, I believe, were the afflicted young man, to whom Master Mather has referred? |
20569 | And are you really going back there?" |
20569 | And how can a man possess a good moral character, without being a member of the true church?" |
20569 | And who else? |
20569 | And yet, how could such things have been without the knowledge either of himself or his wife? |
20569 | Are not those simply chicken feathers?" |
20569 | Are they all at home?" |
20569 | As Joseph Putnam said afterwards,"Why did I not bring them out to my house? |
20569 | As the crowd thinned out a little, Abigail Williams called him aside;"and did you really see the yellow bird, Master Raymond?" |
20569 | Because Jannes and Jambres imitated with their sorceries the miracles of Moses, did it prove that Moses was an impostor? |
20569 | Being asked when he appeared there,"Where he came from?" |
20569 | But I am going to see them again this afternoon; will you go too, Master Raymond?'' |
20569 | But do you seriously mean that a few hundred or thousand of wild heathen, have a right to prior occupancy to the whole North American continent? |
20569 | But how shall we mend it?" |
20569 | But if a doctor does nothing-- neither cures, nor anything else-- with what face can he bring in a weighty bill? |
20569 | But some fair reader may ask,"What were these two doing during all the winter, that they had not seen each other?" |
20569 | But why then had he been lured off on a wild- goose chase all the way to Ipswich? |
20569 | But you have not told me what I shall send you from London when I return?" |
20569 | But, answer my question: what will you do, if they dare to accuse me? |
20569 | But, coming back to our first point, do you know of any savage that we could trust to guide us safely to the settlements on the Hudson?" |
20569 | Can it be easily done?" |
20569 | Coming to a little, she cried out:"Did you not bring the black man with you? |
20569 | Could his wife have stayed away purposely? |
20569 | Could you give me a line of introduction to him?" |
20569 | Did Master Raymond intend to accuse anyone? |
20569 | Did it happen while you were in Salem?" |
20569 | Did that continue up to the time I came to the village?" |
20569 | Did you know her?" |
20569 | Did you not eat and drink the red blood to your own damnation?" |
20569 | Did you not tell me to tempt God and die? |
20569 | Did you see how sister Ann, with all her assurance, grew pale and almost fainted? |
20569 | Do you know what I saw that Leah Herrick doing?" |
20569 | Do you mean to impeach my attestation of Sir William''s signature? |
20569 | Do you think then, that no man really wanted to see me at Ipswich?" |
20569 | Do you understand?" |
20569 | Dulcibel went up to the minister, and put her hand upon his arm:--"Do I look so much like a witch?" |
20569 | For if the elfish creature had not vanished in the black cloud, to the sound of thunder, where was she? |
20569 | For is he not prevailing, in spite of all our efforts? |
20569 | For, as he asked himself,"Why should it not be? |
20569 | Had the jailer''s courage given away at the last moment? |
20569 | Has Mistress Putnam any ideas upon the subject? |
20569 | Has she broken jail?" |
20569 | Have you any idea what she meant?" |
20569 | Have you met the stranger yet?" |
20569 | Have you seen her lately-- and is she well?" |
20569 | He knew he was not consciously doing anything; but what could it all mean? |
20569 | Here she turned to one who had always been her right- hand as it were, and said:--"I suppose you have been tormented in the same way, dear Abigail?" |
20569 | How about Mary Walcot secretly biting herself, and then screaming out that good Rebecca Nurse had bitten her? |
20569 | How about the pins that the girls had concealed around their necks, and taken up with their mouths? |
20569 | How did he manage it?" |
20569 | How did you do it?" |
20569 | How do you know that I am not Captain Kidd himself?" |
20569 | How indeed could it be otherwise, so long as truth like light always shines down from above? |
20569 | How many do they usually give before they spring?" |
20569 | How many of his sailors are in port now?" |
20569 | How would that do? |
20569 | I am able and willing to pay you any reasonable price for your aid and assistance, Will you help me?" |
20569 | I flung them off; and I asked him what he meant by acting in that way? |
20569 | I managed to see Dulcibel for a few minutes to- day, and"--"How is she?" |
20569 | I said dying to get married-- did I not, Master Raymond?" |
20569 | I think I have heard something of her-- very beautiful, is she not? |
20569 | I will give some quotations to show how the examinations were conducted:--"Sarah Good, what evil spirit are you familiar with?" |
20569 | If I am imprisoned, what is to become of Dulcibel? |
20569 | In about five minutes he halted again, gave a low whistle, and a voice said, a short distance from them,"Who are you, strangers?" |
20569 | Is it not so, Master Parris?" |
20569 | It seems to me absurd?" |
20569 | It will be light enough to get out of the harbor?" |
20569 | Now if they cry out against me, what will you do?" |
20569 | Now, as a fair man, do you call that justice?" |
20569 | Or could he have betrayed them? |
20569 | Or was it merely a hint thrown out, that it was a game that two parties could play at? |
20569 | Permission being accorded:"What is insanity?" |
20569 | Shall we carry her off from under their very eyes?" |
20569 | Shall we not attend it?" |
20569 | Sir William laughed,"How about the smell of sulphur which Squire Hathorne and Master Mather have detected in the feathers?" |
20569 | So he answered by asking:--"Captain Tolley does not make too many inquiries then when a good offer is made him?" |
20569 | That important point being settled, the next followed of course,"Who has bewitched them?" |
20569 | That of your ministers? |
20569 | The Magistrates took all this wicked acting in sober earnest; and asked the prisoner,"what he had to say to it?" |
20569 | The North Church is nearest-- how would Master Cotton Mather do?" |
20569 | The woman was so fierce in this matter, that I sometimes have questioned, could she ever have loved and been scorned by Joseph Putnam? |
20569 | Then she thought, how could I ever have injured these neighbors so seriously that they have been led to conspire together to take my life? |
20569 | Then the worthy magistrate Hathorne said,"Do you not see that when your hands are loosed these people are afflicted?" |
20569 | There was one Judas among the twelve apostles, but does that invalidate the credibility of the eleven others, who were not liars and cheats? |
20569 | Up this road?" |
20569 | Was it because this very day a new vision had entered into the charmed circle of her life? |
20569 | Was it not merely wicked imposture and cunning knavery? |
20569 | Was that serpent mark too from Italy?" |
20569 | Was there ever any love compact between you?" |
20569 | Well, What Now? |
20569 | What are the rascals saying?" |
20569 | What could they mean but this? |
20569 | What did Jethro Sands do?" |
20569 | What did he know about witches-- compared to this rich young man from over the seas? |
20569 | What did it all mean? |
20569 | What do you mean, Master Raymond?" |
20569 | What has started you off on this track?" |
20569 | What made you think of such an absurd thing?" |
20569 | What then? |
20569 | What was done?" |
20569 | What was their real meaning? |
20569 | Where is my wife?" |
20569 | Where was the foul murder done?" |
20569 | Which of us has not been struck with wonder, even far more than indignation, at such times? |
20569 | Who dare you set up beside us? |
20569 | Who gives her away?" |
20569 | Who was it? |
20569 | Whom shall we send for? |
20569 | Whom will they attack next?" |
20569 | Why could not the whole thing have stopped just there? |
20569 | Why did she not go with them?" |
20569 | Why did you ever give her a name like that?" |
20569 | Why did you not do it before?" |
20569 | Why do you thus torment them?" |
20569 | Why need there have been anybody else? |
20569 | Why should he not be as able to do it as Abigail Williams, or any other of the"afflicted"circle? |
20569 | Why should not the angel or the Lord stand in her way also-- and the horse see him, even if his riders did not?" |
20569 | Why then, should I expect to fare better than they did? |
20569 | Why, what is the matter?" |
20569 | Will you marry us now-- or not? |
20569 | Would it do to bet upon? |
20569 | Would the Devil tell me to say that?" |
20569 | Would their enlightenment stop there? |
20569 | You are not afraid to come, are you?" |
20569 | You know them-- what do you think of that?" |
20569 | You remember me, do you not?" |
20569 | [ Illustration:"The Lord knows that I have n''t hurt them"]"Do you believe these afflicted persons are bewitched?" |
20569 | cried Robie, catching Raymond by the arm--"why, man, do you mean to walk straight over the cliff?" |
20569 | is this place then said to be haunted?" |
20569 | the gray mare is the better horse,''is she, as it is over at brother Thomas''s?" |
20569 | thought the minister;"but how am I going to do it, with the beast plunging and tearing in this fashion?" |
42447 | ''What does she say?'' 42447 A story? |
42447 | A woman? |
42447 | Actual men? |
42447 | And how many do you imagine, major, this one has stung to death in the last six years? |
42447 | And the mountains? |
42447 | And where did you drop from--accepting an Havana;"the Blue Grass?" |
42447 | And you say this happened near here? |
42447 | Are you mad? |
42447 | Are you satisfied? |
42447 | But was there no trial? |
42447 | But what are you doing in New England, when you should be in Kentucky? |
42447 | But what proof have I that you can perform what you promise? |
42447 | But what,I insisted,"do you think of your greatest mountain there?" |
42447 | But,I pursued,"has it not an unrepublican sound in a country where titles are regarded with distrust, not to say aversion?" |
42447 | Can I assist you in recovering what you have lost? |
42447 | Come, do we understand each other? 42447 Dew?" |
42447 | Dinner for one? |
42447 | Do you know who first tempted man to go up into a high mountain? |
42447 | Do you mean inhabitants? |
42447 | Does your excellency not find it to his taste? |
42447 | Doing, I? 42447 How know you dat?" |
42447 | How so? |
42447 | If you are afraid,sneered Satan,"why put me to all this trouble?" |
42447 | In that gale? 42447 Is that your opinion, too, George?" |
42447 | Is the route practicable? |
42447 | May not a flower look up at a mountain? |
42447 | Murdered him, and for that? 42447 No, I mean in what battle?" |
42447 | Not for a hundred feet, and in a matter of life and death? |
42447 | Nothing else? |
42447 | Perhaps this is yours? |
42447 | Perhaps, sir,I ventured,"you can inform us where the landlord may be found?" |
42447 | Running after a woman, perhaps? |
42447 | Running away from your creditors? |
42447 | Shall we have an old- fashioned tramp together? |
42447 | Sir,I observed,"seeing you are American- born, I infer your title must have been conferred by some foreign potentate?" |
42447 | Sir,said I,"can you tell us if it is possible to procure a dinner here?" |
42447 | So that you conclude--? |
42447 | So then for all those hours you expected from one moment to another to be swept into eternity? |
42447 | So, the wars over, you emigrated to America? |
42447 | Stop me? |
42447 | Suppose this house had gone, and the hotel stood fast, could you have effected an entrance into the hotel? |
42447 | Tell me about it, will you? |
42447 | Thank you; but the car? |
42447 | That was unlucky; where? |
42447 | This is Oakes''s Gulf-- agreed; but where in perdition is my hat? |
42447 | Trial? 42447 Was that your only encounter with bears?" |
42447 | Well, go on; what has that to do with the bear? |
42447 | Well, then, here we have been zigzagging about for a good hour, have n''t we? |
42447 | Well; but you did propose at last? |
42447 | Well? |
42447 | What did you do? |
42447 | What do you call this? |
42447 | What do you mean? |
42447 | What is it? |
42447 | What is it? |
42447 | What is the matter? |
42447 | What is your philosophy of life? |
42447 | What is your route? |
42447 | What shall I do? |
42447 | What was it? |
42447 | What was our brother saying to you? |
42447 | When do the great freshets usually occur? |
42447 | Where have I heard that man''s voice? |
42447 | Where shall I go? |
42447 | Which of you is named Nathaniel Copp? |
42447 | Why not? |
42447 | Why? |
42447 | Would we like dinner? 42447 You experience no regret, then, at leaving the city?" |
42447 | You hear those men pounding away up the hill? |
42447 | You pretend,he began,"that it''s only a thousand feet from the plateau to the top of this accursed mountain?" |
42447 | You wanted dinner, I believe? |
42447 | You? |
42447 | Your news is not bad? |
42447 | --would I put up with trout? |
42447 | A spectacle that can arouse the emotions of joy, fear, hope, suspense-- nothing? |
42447 | A trifle? |
42447 | Advance or retreat? |
42447 | Are n''t you very, very tired, sitting so long without any support to your back?" |
42447 | Are there anywhere else in the world people who travel two hundred miles for a single day''s recreation? |
42447 | Are we not all children who shrink from entering a haunted chamber, and shudder in the presence of death? |
42447 | As for the cascades, which lulled us to sleep, who shall describe them? |
42447 | Believing I saw a veteran of our great civil war, I asked, with undisguised interest,"Where did you serve? |
42447 | Besides, what air can rival that of winter? |
42447 | Besides, what is the difference? |
42447 | But how came these rocks here? |
42447 | But how long will the mountain resist the denuding process constantly going on, and what repair the gradual but certain disintegration of the peak? |
42447 | But how? |
42447 | But it''s now your turn; where are you going yourself?" |
42447 | But this moss: have you ever looked at it before your heel bruised the perfumed flowers springing from its velvet? |
42447 | But what is the buck- board? |
42447 | But what shall I say of the grand harlequinade of nature which the valley presented to our view? |
42447 | But where and what was the original prototype? |
42447 | But who shall describe all this solitary, this oppressive grandeur? |
42447 | But who shall describe the horse? |
42447 | But why mutilate the tree? |
42447 | By way of breaking the ice, he observed,"Apropos of your title, colonel, I presume you served in the Rebellion?" |
42447 | By- the- way, have you anything to drink in the house?" |
42447 | Come, what takes you from Lexington?" |
42447 | Could you, in the highest flights of fancy, imagine that you would one day sit in the courts of heaven, or feast sumptuously amid the stars? |
42447 | Delve deeper and deeper under the Alleghanies? |
42447 | Did I hear aright? |
42447 | Did you ever try running away from yourself? |
42447 | Do you know that the birch does not renew its bark, and that the tree thus stripped of its natural protection is doomed? |
42447 | Do you want my opinion?" |
42447 | Do you yield or no? |
42447 | Dodge''s fire after such a passive ascension as that just described? |
42447 | Does a traveller contemplate some arduous exploration in an unvisited region? |
42447 | For whom of the fifty or sixty occupants of the car had this flash overtaken the express train? |
42447 | Francis?" |
42447 | Have another bit of devilled ham? |
42447 | Have you seen Frankenstein?" |
42447 | How came it there? |
42447 | How came they there? |
42447 | How do you make that out?" |
42447 | How does it get out?" |
42447 | How does it happen that this catastrophe is still able to awaken the liveliest interest for the fate of the Willey family? |
42447 | How ironically the mountain repeated,"Who are you?" |
42447 | How long is this to continue? |
42447 | How should I know that what I saw were mountains, when the earth itself was not clearly distinguishable? |
42447 | How should she? |
42447 | I asked;"what is there?" |
42447 | I attempted to be cheerful, but how was one to rise above such surroundings? |
42447 | I disposed my ideas to hear my companion ask,"What is the news from the other world?" |
42447 | I exclaimed, in genuine surprise,"is it you, colonel?" |
42447 | I shouted,"what of the mountains?" |
42447 | In the West a man who plants a tree is a public benefactor; is he who saves the life of one in the East less so? |
42447 | Is not this a landscape worth coming ten miles out of one''s way to see? |
42447 | Is this your ordinary fare?" |
42447 | It was one of the last and fairest days of that bright season which made the poet exclaim,"And what is so fair as a day in June?" |
42447 | Let me see, where were you wounded?" |
42447 | May I ask if you inherit the genius of your distinguished namesake?" |
42447 | May we not attribute it to the influence which the actual scene exerts on the imagination? |
42447 | Native caution put the question,"Will you?" |
42447 | No? |
42447 | Others shook their heads, saying,"What does it signify? |
42447 | Paradise seemed to have opened wide its gates to my enraptured gaze; or had I surprised the secrets of the unknown world? |
42447 | Quoth she,"The men folks have all_ et_ their dinners, and there hain''t no more meat; but if you could put up with a few trout?" |
42447 | Sha''n''t I change places with you?" |
42447 | Shall I live long enough to forget this sublime tragedy of nature, enacted Heaven knows when or how? |
42447 | She say''Where I go?'' |
42447 | Should, do I say? |
42447 | Taine asks,"Can anything be sweeter than the certainty of being alone? |
42447 | Tell me, you who have seen it, if the sight has not caused a ripple of pleasurable excitement? |
42447 | The conductor put an end to the suspense by demanding,"Is Mr. George Brentwood in this car?" |
42447 | The mountain labors incessantly to re- create, but what can it do against such fearful odds? |
42447 | The question now merely is, how much power is necessary to overcome gravity and lift the weight of the machine into the air? |
42447 | V._ A SCRAMBLE IN TUCKERMAN''S._ The crag leaps down, and over it the flood: Know''st thou it, then? |
42447 | V._ THE CONNECTICUT OX- BOW._ Say, have the solid rocks Into streams of silver been melted, Flowing over the plains, Spreading to lakes in the fields? |
42447 | Was not the splitting of the mountains an after- thought? |
42447 | What am I saying? |
42447 | What if the same power that commanded these awful mountains to remove should hurl them back to ever- during fixedness? |
42447 | What if we should never wake? |
42447 | What is this youth, which, having it, we are so eager to escape, and, when it is gone, we look back upon with such longing? |
42447 | What is your will? |
42447 | What is yours?" |
42447 | What mysterious chord had the wild, flowing river touched in those savage breasts? |
42447 | What seek ye in the house of God?" |
42447 | What signify those letters, that every idler should gratify his little vanity by giving it a stab? |
42447 | What then? |
42447 | What to do? |
42447 | What would you have? |
42447 | When I rest, do you not behold the mother imaged in the features of the child? |
42447 | When we see mountains crumbling before our very eyes, may we not begin to doubt the stability of things that we are pleased to call eternal? |
42447 | When we were on top of the bowlders, looking down on the water of the two little lakes, we wonderingly ask,"Where does it go? |
42447 | Whence came this colossal débris? |
42447 | Whence comes this horrible, this uncontrollable desire to throw ourselves in? |
42447 | Whence does it come? |
42447 | Where was I? |
42447 | Where were you wounded?" |
42447 | Where would we go?" |
42447 | While he poured out the tea, I asked,"Whom have I the pleasure of addressing?" |
42447 | Who would have thought there was so much life in them? |
42447 | Who would wish to inhabit a treeless heaven? |
42447 | Why is it that the oft- repeated tale seems ever new in the ears of sympathetic listeners? |
42447 | Why, then, did the bird die and the butterfly live? |
42447 | You understand?" |
42447 | You wish to see the two great chains? |
42447 | _ Cui bono?_ When I am happy, shall I make myself miserable searching for the reason? |
42447 | _ Cui bono?_ When I am happy, shall I make myself miserable searching for the reason? |
42447 | and what language portray the awfulness of these untrodden mountains? |
42447 | and what shall we do when it can no longer furnish pine to build our homes, or wood to warm them? |
42447 | and what was the primitive structure, if these fragments we see are its relics? |
42447 | echoed the driver, laughing--"dew?" |
42447 | he slowly inquired;"perhaps, now, you could show us the very house?" |
42447 | here-- in the middle of the river?" |
42447 | is it a bargain or not?" |
42447 | is it so very tough as all that? |
42447 | what signifies a name?" |
42447 | where the deuce is my watch?" |
6622 | And your father''s name? |
6622 | Are they not gone to you along with Aoife? |
6622 | Are you mad, old man? |
6622 | Are you the children of Lir? |
6622 | Do you know who those riders are, sons of Lir? |
6622 | Fair mistress,said he,"have I now won your love? |
6622 | Felice? |
6622 | From a beggar? 6622 How dare you stay the march of King James''s Governor?" |
6622 | If Horn could not come himself,she said,"why did he not send Athulf, his faithful friend?" |
6622 | Is there a mind with you,said Lir,"to come to us on the land, since you have not your own sense and your memory yet?" |
6622 | Is there any way to put you into your own shapes again? |
6622 | It is truly Paradise where Felice is,Guy answered,"You hear? |
6622 | See you not, he is some old round- headed dignitary, who hath lain asleep these thirty years, and knows nothing of the change of times? 6622 Tell me, honest pilgrim, where thou gottest this ring?" |
6622 | That would be but a sorry Christmas service,said King Thurstan;"who can advise me how best to answer them?" |
6622 | The flower Felice? 6622 What does this old fellow here?" |
6622 | What have you to do with the young Queen here? |
6622 | What is your name, my good woman? |
6622 | Whence did he come? 6622 Where got you this token?" |
6622 | Where is your company? |
6622 | Where''s Brom Butcher? |
6622 | Where''s Van Bummel, the school- master? |
6622 | Who are you,he cried,"bearing arms and openly landing here? |
6622 | Who is this gray patriarch? |
6622 | Who is this venerable brother? |
6622 | Why comes not Horn for me himself? |
6622 | And he asked:"Who dwelleth beneath the standard with the head of a wolf?" |
6622 | And he said:"Bearest thou about thee a token of Rustem, that I may know that the words which thou speakest are true? |
6622 | And he said:"Who is Rustem, that he defieth my power and disregardeth my commands? |
6622 | And he said:"Who shall stand against this Turk? |
6622 | And what shape would you yourself think worst of being in?" |
6622 | And what speak ye of James? |
6622 | And who was the Gray Champion? |
6622 | Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear,"Whether he was Federal or Democrat?" |
6622 | Art thou afraid?" |
6622 | But where was the Gray Champion? |
6622 | Comfort thyself: what comfort is in me? |
6622 | Could that girl have been playing off any of her coquettish tricks? |
6622 | Do you not know me? |
6622 | Do you think to impose on the old men and sages of Ephesus? |
6622 | Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
6622 | Ernis, however, paid little heed to the tale, for he said:"Well, and what of it? |
6622 | Felice rebuked her, saying,"Could not? |
6622 | Felice? |
6622 | Felix? |
6622 | Florentine, King of Flanders, hearing it in his palace, said,"Who is this that slays the tall game on my lands?" |
6622 | How could the flogger of urchins be otherwise than animated and joyous? |
6622 | How shall it be accomplished? |
6622 | In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name? |
6622 | Must it ever be that no dozen of men can be got together but one will prove a traitor?" |
6622 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
6622 | Rip had but one question more to ask; and he put it with a faltering voice:"Where''s your mother?" |
6622 | Say, is it mine, sweet mistress?" |
6622 | So he said:"Why seekest thou to know Rustem the Pehliva? |
6622 | Speak out: what is it thou hast heard, or seen?" |
6622 | Summoning up, therefore, a show of courage, he demanded in stammering accents,"Who are you?" |
6622 | Tell unto me now whose is this pavilion that standeth thus in the midst of the whole camp?" |
6622 | The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"on which side he voted?" |
6622 | Then Horn spoke up from his seat at the table,"If these pagans are ready to fight, one against three, what may not a Christian dare? |
6622 | Then Sohrab said,"O man of many years, wherefore wilt thou not listen to the counsel of a stripling? |
6622 | Then Sohrab said,"To whom belongeth the tent draped with green tissues? |
6622 | Then Sohrab said,"Whose is the camp in which stand many warriors clad in rich armour? |
6622 | Then Sohrab said,"Whose is the seat over which are raised awnings and brocades of Roum, that glisten with gold in the sunlight?" |
6622 | Then laughingly Sir Guy asked, should he go another quest before they two were we d? |
6622 | Then said Felice to Guy,"Why kneel there weeping like a girl? |
6622 | Then spake King Arthur to Sir Bedivere:"Hast thou perform''d my mission which I gave? |
6622 | Then spoke King Arthur, breathing heavily:"What is it thou hast seen? |
6622 | Then the good King asked,"What is your name, my child?" |
6622 | To all men are known the deeds of Rustem, and since my birth be thus noble, wherefore hast thou kept it dark from me so long? |
6622 | Was her encouragement of the poor pedagogue all a mere sham to secure her conquest of his rival? |
6622 | Welcome home again, old neighbour-- Why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
6622 | Were it well to obey then, if a king demand An act unprofitable, against himself? |
6622 | What good should follow this, if this were done? |
6622 | What harm, undone? |
6622 | What is his purpose? |
6622 | What is it thou hast seen? |
6622 | What is it to her? |
6622 | What is this Kai Kaous that he should anger me? |
6622 | What recketh my life against the weal of Iran? |
6622 | What record, or what relic of my lord Should be to aftertime, but empty breath And rumours of a doubt? |
6622 | What was to be done? |
6622 | What was to be done? |
6622 | When he heard these words Gew trembled in his heart, but he said,"Dost thou set forth thy hand against Rustem?" |
6622 | Where is the Emperor Decius gone to?'' |
6622 | Where shall I hide my forehead and my eyes? |
6622 | Who can this old man be?" |
6622 | Who hath brought thee such an idle tale? |
6622 | You are our only help, dare you enter this horrible haunt?" |
6622 | and what am I that I have need of him? |
6622 | and why com''st thou here?" |
6622 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
6622 | how could you play me such a trick?" |
6622 | my Lord Arthur, whither shall I go? |
6622 | or what hast heard?" |
6622 | or what hast heard?" |
6622 | thought Rip--"what excuse shall I make to Dame Van Winkle?" |
6854 | Had much literature been produced there, would it not have been a miracle? 6854 How could you pass over their very long winter nights?" |
6854 | ''Mongst all the crueltyes by great ones done, Of Edward''s youths, and Clarence hapless son, O Jane, why didst thou dye in flow''ring prime? |
6854 | ***** Our Life compare we with their length of dayes Who to the tenth of theirs doth now arrive? |
6854 | Alas, dear Mother, fairest Queen and best, With honour, wealth and peace happy and blest; What ails thee hang thy head and cross thine arms? |
6854 | All this he did, who knows not to be true? |
6854 | And is thy splendid throne erect so high? |
6854 | And must myself dissect my tatter''d state, Which mazed Christendome stands wond''ring at? |
6854 | And sit i''th''dust, to sigh these sad alarms? |
6854 | And thou a child, a Limbe, and dost not feel My fainting weakened body now to reel? |
6854 | Art them so full of glory, that no Eye Hath strength, thy shining Rayes once to behold? |
6854 | But all you say amounts to this affect, Not what you feel but what you do expect, Pray in plain terms what is your present grief? |
6854 | But how should I know he is such a God as I worship in Trinity, and such a Savior as I rely upon? |
6854 | But these may be beginnings of more woe Who knows but this may be my overthrow? |
6854 | But yet I answer not what you demand To shew the grievance of my troubled Land? |
6854 | Did not the glorious people of the Skye Seem sensible of future misery? |
6854 | Did not the language of the stars foretel A mournfull Scoene when they with tears did Swell? |
6854 | Did not the low''ring heavens seem to express The worlds great lose and their unhappiness? |
6854 | Dids''t fix thy hope on mouldering dust, The arm of flesh dids''t make thy trust? |
6854 | Do Barons rise and side against their King, And call in foreign aid to help the thing? |
6854 | Do Maud and Stephen for the crown contend? |
6854 | Doe wee not know the prophecyes in it fullfilled which could not have been so long foretold by any but God himself? |
6854 | Doth Holland quit you ill for all your love? |
6854 | Doth your Allye, fair France, conspire your wrack, Or do the Scots play false behind your back? |
6854 | Few men are so humble as not to be proud of their abilitys; and nothing will abase them more than this-- What hast thou, but what thou hast received? |
6854 | For bribery, Adultery and lyes, Where is the nation I ca n''t parallize? |
6854 | For what''s this life but care and strife? |
6854 | Hath hundred winters past since thou wast born? |
6854 | Hath it not been preserved thro: all Ages mangre all the heathen Tyrants and all of the enemies who have opposed it? |
6854 | Hath not Judgments befallen Diverse who have scorned and contemd it? |
6854 | Have I not found that operation by it that no humane Invention can work upon the Soul? |
6854 | He that dares say of a lesse sin, is it not a little one? |
6854 | How doe the Goddesses of verse, the learned quire Lament their rival Quill, which all admire? |
6854 | How full of glory then must thy Creator be? |
6854 | I wist not what to wish, yet sure thought I, If so much excellence abide below; How excellent is he that dwells on high? |
6854 | If I decease, dost think thou shalt survive? |
6854 | If none of these, dear Mother, what''s your woe? |
6854 | If two be one as surely thou and I, How stayest thou there, whilst I at Ipswich lie? |
6854 | Is there any story but that which shows the beginnings of Times, and how the world came to bee as wee see? |
6854 | Is''t drought, is''t famine, or is''t pestilence, Dost feel the smart or fear the Consequence? |
6854 | It is the Puritan alive again, and why not? |
6854 | Lord, why should I doubt any more when thou hast given me such assured Pledges of thy Love? |
6854 | Mortals, what one of you that loves not me Abundantly more than my Sisters three? |
6854 | Must Edward be deposed? |
6854 | Must Richmond''s aid, the Nobles now implore, To come and break the Tushes of the Boar? |
6854 | O Bubble blast, how long can''st last? |
6854 | O Lord, let me never forget thy Goodness, nor question thy faithfulness to me, for thou art my God: Thou hast said and shall I not beleive it? |
6854 | O Lord, let me never forgett thy Goodness, nor question thy faithfullness to me, for thou art my God: Thou hast said, and shall not I believe it? |
6854 | Or by my wasting state dost think to thrive? |
6854 | Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone? |
6854 | Or hast thou any colour can come nigh The Roman purple, double Tirian dye? |
6854 | Or hath Canutus, that brave valiant Dane, The Regal peacefull Scepter from the tane? |
6854 | Or is''t Intestine warrs that thus offend? |
6854 | Or is''t a Norman, whose victorious hand With English blood bedews thy conquered land? |
6854 | Or is''t the fatal jarre again begun That from the red white pricking roses sprung? |
6854 | Or must my forced tongue my griefs disclose? |
6854 | Or who alive then I, a greater debtor? |
6854 | Pray do you fear Spain''s bragging Armado? |
6854 | Shall Creatures abject, thus their voices raise? |
6854 | Such Priviledges, had not the Word of Truth made them known, who or where is the man that durst in his heart have presumed to have thought it? |
6854 | Then may your worthy self from whom it came?" |
6854 | Then on a stately oak I cast mine Eye, Whose ruffling top the Clouds seemed to aspire; How long since thou wast in thine Infancy? |
6854 | Then streight I''gin my heart to chide, And did thy wealth on earth abide? |
6854 | This done, with brandish''d Swords to Turky goe, For then what is''t, but English blades dare do? |
6854 | What God is like to him I serve, What Saviour like to mine? |
6854 | What deluge of new woes thus overwhelme The glories of thy ever famous Realme? |
6854 | What famous Towns, to Cinders have I turned? |
6854 | What lasting forts my Kindled wrath hath burned? |
6854 | What means this wailing tone, this mournful guise? |
6854 | What shall young men doe, when old in dust do lye? |
6854 | What would such professors, if they were now living, say to the excess of our times?" |
6854 | When old in dust lye, what New England doe? |
6854 | Whence is the storm from Earth or Heaven above? |
6854 | Who heard or saw, observed or knew him better? |
6854 | Why should I live but to thy Praise? |
6854 | Y''affrighted nights appal''d, how do ye shake, When once you feel me your foundation quake? |
6854 | Ye Martilisk, what weapons for your fight To try your valor by, but it must feel My force? |
6854 | _ OLD ENGLAND._ Art ignorant indeed of these my woes? |
6854 | or is''t the hour That second Richard must be clapt i''th''tower? |
34573 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
34573 | Cain, where is thy Brother? |
34573 | Have any of the Rulers, or of the Pharisees, believed on him? |
34573 | What would you have thereof? |
34573 | Where is my lover? |
34573 | Who are you? |
34573 | ***** But why talk for ever? |
34573 | ***** In all these melancholy cases what is it best to do? |
34573 | ***** What can we do to make things better? |
34573 | ***** What shall be done for Criminals, the backward children of society, who refuse to keep up with the moral or legal advance of mankind? |
34573 | And you, my brothers, what shall you become? |
34573 | Are religion and conscience there to abate the fever of passion and regulate desire? |
34573 | Are the Quakers better born than other men? |
34573 | Are these rags the imperishable honors that cover them? |
34573 | Are you not all brothers, rich or poor? |
34573 | Are you so good that you must forsake him? |
34573 | As a class, did they ever denounce a public sin? |
34573 | Be it your folly or your crime, still cries the voice,"Where is thy brother?" |
34573 | But can she buy the people of the North? |
34573 | But have we a right to punish a man for the example''s sake? |
34573 | But how are they to be paid? |
34573 | But how does the rich man reconcile it to his conscience? |
34573 | But is it right to take vengeance; for me to hurt a man to- day solely because he hurt me yesterday? |
34573 | But is that all? |
34573 | But suppose it had happened-- what would become of your commerce, of your fishing smacks on the Banks or along the shore? |
34573 | But the glory which comes of epaulets and feathers; that strutting glory which is dyed in blood-- what shall we say of it? |
34573 | But the men--"Where is my husband?" |
34573 | But who ever told us such men could not compete with the slave of South Carolina who is paid nothing? |
34573 | But why talk of days so old? |
34573 | Can it not extirpate pauperism, prevent intemperance, pluck up the causes of the present crime? |
34573 | Can we not end this poverty-- the misery and crime it brings? |
34573 | Can we not lessen it? |
34573 | Can we say we have not deserved it? |
34573 | Can you frighten a starving girl into chastity? |
34573 | Can you not hinder him from being worse? |
34573 | Can you wholly abandon a friend or a child who thus deserts himself? |
34573 | Consider all these things, and who can doubt that a great moral progress has been made? |
34573 | Could such men do this without a secret shame? |
34573 | Could such men understand by what authority he taught? |
34573 | Did any one of you ever address an erring brother on the folly of his ways with manly tenderness, and try to charm him back, and find a cold repulse? |
34573 | Did far- sighted men know that there would be a war on Mexico, or else on the tariff or the currency, and prefer the first as the least evil? |
34573 | Did it never happen to one of you to be such a child, to have outgrown that rebellion and wickedness? |
34573 | Did not Christianity begin with a martyrdom? |
34573 | Did not God send his greatest, noblest, purest Son to seek and save the lost? |
34573 | Did not Jesus say, resist not evil-- with evil? |
34573 | Did not Jesus say,"Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these ye have done it unto me?" |
34573 | Did not Mr. Clay say he hoped he could slay a Mexican? |
34573 | Did not Mr. Webster, in the streets of Philadelphia, bid the volunteers, misguided young men, go and uphold the stars of their country? |
34573 | Did not he declare this war unconstitutional, and threaten to impeach the President who made it, and then go and invest a son in it? |
34573 | Did the generation that is passing from the stage ever comprehend and fairly judge the new generation coming on? |
34573 | Do I look to the authority of the greatest Son of man? |
34573 | Do famous men say,"Our country however bounded,"and vote to plunder a sister State? |
34573 | Do our methods of punishment effect that object? |
34573 | Do speech and silence mean the same thing? |
34573 | Do they do it now and here? |
34573 | Do they not know the ruin which they work; are they the only men in the land who have not heard of the effects of intemperance? |
34573 | Do they now? |
34573 | Do we forget our sires, forget our God? |
34573 | Do we not see that by our present course we are teaching men violence, fraud, deceit, and murder? |
34573 | Do you know the meaning of the name of the city? |
34573 | Do you not see that if a man have a new truth, it must be reformatory and so create an outcry? |
34573 | Do you say we can not diminish intemperance, neither by law, nor by righteous efforts without law? |
34573 | Do you think that is democratic? |
34573 | Do you wonder at the crime which fills your jails, and swells the tax of county and city? |
34573 | Do you wonder at the poverty just now spoken of; at the vagrant children? |
34573 | Do you wonder at this? |
34573 | Do you wonder that I asked: Who is sufficient for these things? |
34573 | Does not Christianity say the strong should help the weak? |
34573 | Does not that mean something? |
34573 | Does that favor man-- represent man? |
34573 | Does the Government know of these things; know of their cause? |
34573 | Does the good physician spend the night in feasting with the sound, or in watching with the sick? |
34573 | For how has it come to pass that in a land of abundance here are men, for no fault of their own, born into want, living in want, and dying of want? |
34573 | Good men ask, What shall we do? |
34573 | Has a single man in all New England lost his seat in any office because he favored the war? |
34573 | Has none of you ever been such a father or mother? |
34573 | Has the Christian fire faded out from those words, once so marvellously bright? |
34573 | Has the soil forgot its wonted faith, and borne a different race of men from those who struggled eight long years for freedom? |
34573 | Have they not Christ and God to aid and bless them? |
34573 | Have you ever known a capitalist, a man who lives by letting money, refuse to lend money for the war because the war was wicked? |
34573 | Have you ever known a northern manufacturer who would not sell a kernel of powder, nor a cannon- ball, nor a coat, nor a shirt for the war? |
34573 | Have you ever known a northern merchant who would not let his ship for the war, because the war was wicked and he a Christian? |
34573 | He blasphemeth Moses and the prophets; yea, he hath a devil, and is mad, why hear him?" |
34573 | He looks forward, and what prospect is there? |
34573 | How can it be otherwise? |
34573 | How can we repent, cast our own sins behind us, outgrow and forget them better, than by helping others to work out their salvation? |
34573 | How could it be otherwise? |
34573 | How long is it since men sent their servants to the"Workhouse,"to be beaten"for disobedience,"at the discretion of the master? |
34573 | How long will it be before we apply good sense and Christianity to the prevention of crime? |
34573 | How many men of the rank and file in the late war have since become respectable citizens? |
34573 | How many of them had any fault to find with this national butchery on the Lord''s day? |
34573 | How many of them will be reformed and cured by this treatment, and so live honest and useful lives hereafter? |
34573 | How many of your newspapers have shown its true atrocity; how many of the pulpits? |
34573 | How much better is it to choke the life out of a man behind the prison wall? |
34573 | How much better off are many women in Boston who gain their bread by the needle? |
34573 | I am strong; who dares assail me? |
34573 | I know some men care little for the rich, but when the owners keep their craft in port, where can the"hands"find work or their mouths find bread? |
34573 | I will not at this moment undertake to go behind their organization and ask,"How comes it that they are so ill- born?" |
34573 | I wish I could say,"They know not what they do;"but at this day who does not know the effect of intemperance in Boston? |
34573 | If it be the duty of the State to prevent crime, not avenge it, is it not plain what is the way? |
34573 | If it be treason to speak against the war, what was it to make the war, to ask for 50,000 men and$ 74,000,000 for the war? |
34573 | If it is right in the President of the United States to rob and murder, why not for the President of the United States Bank? |
34573 | If it were right to kill Mexicans for a few dollars a month, why was it not also right to kill Americans, especially when it pays the most? |
34573 | If one mock at the crimes of men, perhaps at their sins, at the infamous punishments they suffer-- what can you say of him? |
34573 | If the South wants this, would the North object? |
34573 | In Dartmoor prison? |
34573 | In all forms of social life hitherto devised these classes have appeared, and it has been a serious question, What shall be done with them? |
34573 | In scarlet garments from Bozrah? |
34573 | In war, what will become of them? |
34573 | Is fear of physical pain the highest element you can appeal to in a child; the most effectual? |
34573 | Is he so bad that he can not be made better? |
34573 | Is her day gone by? |
34573 | Is honesty gone, and honor gone, your love of country gone, religion gone, and nothing manly left; not even shame? |
34573 | Is it Christian or manly to reduce wages in hard times, and not raise them in fair times? |
34573 | Is it God''s will that large dividends and small wages should be paid at the same time? |
34573 | Is it better for the State to kill a man in cold blood, than for me to kill my brother when in a rage? |
34573 | Is it consistent for the State to take vengeance when I may not? |
34573 | Is it not better to acquire it by the schoolmaster than the cannon; by peddling cloth, tin, any thing rather than bullets? |
34573 | Is it? |
34573 | Is not society the father of us all, our protector and defender? |
34573 | Is not the poor man, too, most often cheated in the weight and the measure? |
34573 | Is our soil degenerate, and have we lost the breed of noble men? |
34573 | Is that a praise? |
34573 | Is that all? |
34573 | Is that all? |
34573 | Is that democratic too? |
34573 | Is that democratic, to tax every man''s breakfast and supper, for the sake of getting more territory to whip negroes in? |
34573 | Is that the will of God? |
34573 | Is the State only a step- mother? |
34573 | Is there manliness enough left in the North to do that? |
34573 | Is there not in the nation skill to heal these men? |
34573 | It is a good thing to forgive an offence: who does not need that favor and often? |
34573 | It is a sad question to society, What shall be done with the criminals-- thieves, housebreakers, pirates, murderers? |
34573 | It is a serious question to the world, What is to become of the humbler nations-- Irish, Mexicans, Malays, Indians, Negroes? |
34573 | Let him commit a small crime, which shall involve no moral guilt, and be legally punished-- who respects him again? |
34573 | Men will call us traitors: what then? |
34573 | Much may be said to excuse the rank and file, ignorant men, many of them in want-- but for the leaders, what can be said? |
34573 | Need I tell you how I felt at sight of the work which stretched out before me? |
34573 | Not tell the nation that she is doing wrong? |
34573 | Now it becomes a serious question, What shall be done for these stragglers, or even with them? |
34573 | Now, What is the amount of the national earnings? |
34573 | Of what use to shut a man in a jail, and release him with the certainty that he will come out no better, and soon return for the same offence? |
34573 | Once the great question was, How large is the standing army? |
34573 | Perhaps you can not cure these men!--is there not power enough to keep them from doing harm; to make them useful? |
34573 | Poor brothers, how could they? |
34573 | Said I not truly, our most famous politicians are, in the general way, only mercantile party- men? |
34573 | Seldom has it been the question, What shall be done for them? |
34573 | Shall I speak of their sisters; of the education they are receiving; the end that awaits them? |
34573 | Shall all this war, this aggression of the slave power be for nothing? |
34573 | Shall we ever waken out of our sleep; shall we ever remember the duties we owe to the world and to God, who put us here on this new continent? |
34573 | Shall we stop there? |
34573 | Should they rather worship the Grecian Jove, or the Jehovah of the Jews? |
34573 | Suppose the culprits ask,"Where will you hang so many?" |
34573 | Suppose the warriors should ask,"Why, what is that?" |
34573 | Suppose those three felons, the halters round their neck, should ask also,"Why, what is that?" |
34573 | Take the politicians most famous and honored at this day, and what have they done? |
34573 | That other man,[19] benevolent and indefatigable, where is he? |
34573 | That thirty thousand-- in the name of humanity I ask,"Where are they?" |
34573 | The Federalists did not see all things; who ever did? |
34573 | The beef is eaten up, the cloth worn away, the powder is burnt, and what is there to show for it all? |
34573 | The crime which is so terribly avenged on woman-- think you that God will hold men innocent of that? |
34573 | The first question is, What end shall we aim at in dealing with them? |
34573 | The ignorant man, ill- born and ill- bred, asks:"Why not when done on a small scale; why not good for me?" |
34573 | The little children who survive-- are they to be left to become barbarians in the midst of our civilization? |
34573 | The possession of the West Indies would bring much money to New England, and what is the value of freedom compared to coffee and sugar and cotton? |
34573 | The power of America-- do we need proof of that? |
34573 | Their character will one day be a blot and a curse to the nation, and who is to blame? |
34573 | Then what do you think despotism would be? |
34573 | Then who shall dare break its peace? |
34573 | They have labored for a tariff, or for free trade; but what have they done for man? |
34573 | This result was doubtless God''s design, but was it man''s intention? |
34573 | This, that is glorious in his apparel, Proud in the greatness of his strength? |
34573 | Those that remain, what have they gained by this expulsion of their brothers? |
34573 | Throw him over, what good would that do? |
34573 | To take one man''s life is murder; what is it to practise killing as an art, a trade; to do it by thousands? |
34573 | Treason is it? |
34573 | Tried by these three standards, the judgment was true; what could he do to please these three parties? |
34573 | Under such circumstances how many of you would have done better? |
34573 | Under such circumstances, what marvel that the poor man becomes unthrifty, reckless and desperate? |
34573 | Virginia sells her negroes; what does New England sell? |
34573 | Was it through any fault or deficiency of Jesus, that these men refused him? |
34573 | We call ourselves Christians; we often repeat the name, the words of Christ,--but his prayer? |
34573 | We have seen them do this with lunatics, why not with those poor wretches whom now we murder? |
34573 | What adequate sum of gold, or what honors could mankind give to Columbus, to Faustus, to Fulton, for their works? |
34573 | What are we doing; what do we design to do? |
34573 | What are we to expect of children, born indeed with eyes and ears, but yet shut out from the culture of the age they live in? |
34573 | What better work is there for able men? |
34573 | What can we say in our defence? |
34573 | What causes have produced the class that is permanently poor? |
34573 | What dare they? |
34573 | What do they give in return? |
34573 | What do you think the Commons would have said? |
34573 | What does that teach him; science, letters; even morals and religion? |
34573 | What effect has he on young men? |
34573 | What good would that do? |
34573 | What have the strong been doing all this while, that the weak have come to such a state? |
34573 | What have these abandoned children to help them? |
34573 | What have we got to show for all this money? |
34573 | What hinders them from following the example set by the nation, by society, by the strong? |
34573 | What if Congress had refused to receive petitions relative to a tariff, or free trade, to the shipping interest, or the manufacturing interest? |
34573 | What if a public teacher never took back to college a boy who once had broke the academic law-- but made him infamous for ever? |
34573 | What if a shepherd made it a rule to look one hour for each lost sheep, and then return with or without the wanderer? |
34573 | What if he had said, as others,"None can be greater than Moses, none so great?" |
34573 | What if she forewent her native instinct and the mother said,"My boy is deformed, a cripple-- let him die?" |
34573 | What if your men of low degree are a vanity, and your men of high degree are a lie? |
34573 | What influence on society? |
34573 | What is it on the criminals themselves? |
34573 | What is the educational effect of our present political conduct, of our invasions, our battles, our victories; of the speeches of"our great men?" |
34573 | What is the effect of this punishment on society at large? |
34573 | What is their practical influence on Church and State-- on the economy of mankind? |
34573 | What is unavoidably the lot of such? |
34573 | What keeps you from a course of crime? |
34573 | What of that? |
34573 | What recognized amusement have they but this, of drinking themselves drunk? |
34573 | What shall be done for the dangerous classes, the criminals? |
34573 | What shall become of the children of such men? |
34573 | What shall restrain him? |
34573 | What shall the fool answer; what the traitor say? |
34573 | What shall the future Sundays be, and what the year? |
34573 | What shall we do for all these little ones that are perishing? |
34573 | What shall we do? |
34573 | What then? |
34573 | What was taught to the mass of men, in those days, better than the character of Christ? |
34573 | What was the reason for all this? |
34573 | What was the result? |
34573 | What will be the fate of these 2,000 children? |
34573 | What will be their fate? |
34573 | What will their influence be as fathers, husbands? |
34573 | What would the Lords say? |
34573 | What would you do next, after you have thrown him over? |
34573 | What would you say if a teacher refused to help a boy because the boy was slow to learn; because he now and then broke through the rules? |
34573 | What would you say? |
34573 | What years of noble life are deemed enough to wipe the stain out of his reputation? |
34573 | When money is the end, what need to look for any thing more? |
34573 | When sinners slew him, did God forsake mankind? |
34573 | When such men set about reforming the evils of society, with such a determined soul, what evil can stand against mankind? |
34573 | When the parents are there, what is left for the children? |
34573 | Whence come the tenants of our almshouses, jails, the victims of vice in all our towns? |
34573 | Where are its"Resolutions?" |
34573 | Where are the men we sent to Mexico? |
34573 | Where could they find bread or cloth in time of war? |
34573 | Where is the treasure we have wasted? |
34573 | Where is the wealth they hoped from the spoil of churches? |
34573 | Where would be the more hideous deformity? |
34573 | Wherefore is thine apparel red, And thy garments like those of one that treadeth the wine- vat? |
34573 | Which of the sectarian journals of Boston advocates any of the great reforms of the day? |
34573 | Which of these men has shown the most interest in those three million slaves? |
34573 | While educated and abounding men acknowledge no rule of conduct but self- interest, what can you expect of the ignorant and the perishing? |
34573 | Who asks,"What do the clergy think of the tariff, or free trade, of annexation, or the war, of slavery, or the education movement?" |
34573 | Who ever saw a Quaker in an almshouse? |
34573 | Who ever yet had faith in God that had none in man? |
34573 | Who is it that organizes the sin of society? |
34573 | Who is there that can do this? |
34573 | Who is to blame for all that? |
34573 | Who of you has not lost a relative, at least a friend, in that withering flame, that terrible_ Auto da fe_, that hell- fire on earth? |
34573 | Who shall dare stop his ears, when they preach their awful denunciation of want and woe? |
34573 | Who that is fifty years of age, does not remember the aspect of Boston on public days; on the evening of such days? |
34573 | Who would employ such a youth; with such a reputation; with the smell of the jail in his very breath? |
34573 | Who would not wish his forehead the altar for such a vow? |
34573 | Whose business is it, if it is not yours and mine? |
34573 | Why not? |
34573 | Why not? |
34573 | Why should they honor or even tolerate him? |
34573 | Why should they not? |
34573 | Why so? |
34573 | Why was it that we did nothing? |
34573 | Why, if the people can not discuss the war they have got to fight and to pay for, who under heaven can? |
34573 | Will a white lily grow in a common sewer; can you bleach linen in a tan- pit? |
34573 | Will the North say"Yes?" |
34573 | Will they say,"We should lose our influence were we to tell of this and do these things? |
34573 | Will you cause them to perish; you? |
34573 | Will you let them perish? |
34573 | Will you not prevent their perishing? |
34573 | Will you refuse to go? |
34573 | With his education, exposure, temptation, outward and from within, how much better would the best of you become? |
34573 | Would it not be a work profitable to ourselves, and useful to others weaker than we? |
34573 | Would not a reputation for uprightness and truth be a good capital for any man, old or young? |
34573 | Yet how few preached against the war? |
34573 | Yet is there one who wishes to be a foe to mankind? |
34573 | Yet what does it teach? |
34573 | You are the nation''s head, and if the head be wilful and wicked, what shall its members do and be? |
34573 | You ask, O Americans, where is the harmony of the Union? |
34573 | Your morality, your religion? |
34573 | Your peace societies, and your churches, what can they do? |
34573 | _ The People._ 1. Who is this that cometh from Edom? |
34573 | a popular sin? |
34573 | and has it come to this, that men are silent over such a sin? |
34573 | and not raise them again in extraordinary times? |
34573 | butcher a nation to get soil to make a field for slaves? |
34573 | how could they? |
34573 | how long would twelve hundred rum- shops disgrace your town? |
34573 | how should you feel towards such? |
34573 | is that the body of men who a year or two ago went forth, so full of valor and of rum? |
34573 | nay, which is not an obstacle in the path of all manly reform? |
34573 | says one;"And my son?" |
34573 | screams a woman whom anguish makes respectable spite of her filth and ignorance;--"And our father, where is he?" |
34573 | send him to call sinners to repent? |
34573 | then why shall not the poor man, hungry and cold, say,"My purse however bounded,"and seize on all he can get? |
34573 | treason to discuss a war which the government made, and which the people are made to pay for? |
34573 | what are they doing in the nation? |
34573 | what of that fleet which crowds across the Atlantic sea, trading with east and west and north and south? |
34573 | what of your Indiamen, deep freighted with oriental wealth? |
34573 | what of your coasting vessels, doubling the headlands all the way from the St. John''s to the Nueces? |
34573 | what of your whale ships in the Pacific? |
34573 | what shall the parents do to mend their dull boy, or their wicked one? |
34573 | where are thy brothers?" |
34573 | where is thy brother? |
34573 | yes a large class of women in all our great cities? |
16631 | ''Fraid of your brother, hey? |
16631 | A what? |
16631 | Advertisin''yourself, be ye? 16631 Ai n''t I got trouble enough on my hands with them six Durham steers forrads to manage without gettin''into a free fight with old Bodge?" |
16631 | Ai n''t any one goin''to warn him? |
16631 | Ai n''t got anything like that on your conscience, have you? |
16631 | Ai n''t it about time I got let in on this? |
16631 | Ai n''t old pickalilly-- that brother of yourn-- ever been in love? |
16631 | Ai n''t witches? |
16631 | Ai n''t you engaged to her? |
16631 | Ai n''t you goin''to sail for it? |
16631 | All gurry, and wet as sop? 16631 Always felt that way?" |
16631 | Am I right, boys? |
16631 | An elder? 16631 And the crowned heads and the high and mighty-- where will they be then?" |
16631 | And there bein''no time like the present, and my horse bein''hitched out there in the shed,advised Hiram, briskly,"why not go now? |
16631 | And you believed that kind of infernal tomrot? |
16631 | And you let''em hornswoggle you into takin''it? |
16631 | Anything the matter with that duff? |
16631 | Are n''t you proud of your noble husband, Mis''Look? 16631 Are you the commander of those men?" |
16631 | Arrest me, hey? |
16631 | Arrest me, will ye? 16631 As a seafarin''man you know that there was a Cap''n Kidd, do n''t you?" |
16631 | As it was or as it is? |
16631 | Be I an outlaw, or ai n''t I? |
16631 | Be I goin''to raid or ai n''t I goin''to raid? |
16631 | Be you goin''to do your duty-- yes or no? |
16631 | Be you goin''to kill''Liah? |
16631 | But how are we goin''to get the money to pay up for the sports, the fireworks, and things? |
16631 | But if anything should be said, you could hunt up those men and--"Hunt what? |
16631 | But the boys is pretty well beat out, and so I''ve run over to ask if you''ll let us use your ten- dollar fine for a treat? 16631 But you''ve talked so much of deep water, and weatherin''Cape Horn, and--""Afraid? |
16631 | Ca n''t what? |
16631 | Ca n''t you go after him and make him change his mind back? |
16631 | Can they do any such infernal thing as that in law? |
16631 | Cap''n Sproul,said he,"in your seafarin''days did n''t you used to hear the sailormen sing this?" |
16631 | Charles,she said, gently,"wo n''t you come into the house for a few minits? |
16631 | Chist bound with iron? |
16631 | Citizens ruther have it said, hey, that we are supportin''a land- pirut here in this town, and let him disgrace us even over in Vienny? |
16631 | Colonel Gideon Ward,he shouted to the limp and dripping figure in the tree,"do you own up?" |
16631 | Did deceased leave her that farm, title clear, and well- fixed financially? |
16631 | Did he--? |
16631 | Did n''t I tell you and command you and order you to throw away all the liquor round this place, you one- eyed sandpipe? |
16631 | Did n''t I warn you not to drive so fast? |
16631 | Did n''t it ever occur to you that some things in this world ai n''t none of your business? |
16631 | Did they let you resign? |
16631 | Did they? |
16631 | Did ye hear me make a remark about my feelin''s? |
16631 | Did ye telegraft or ride to the bank on a bicycle? |
16631 | Did you ever ride on an elephant, Cap''n Sproul? |
16631 | Do n''t you know enough to understand that I was tryin''to save your lives by ratchin''her off''m this coast? |
16631 | Do n''t you realize that we''re on the high seas now and that you''re talkin''mutiny, and that mutiny''s a state- prison crime? |
16631 | Do you hear that? |
16631 | Do you mean that you disown it? |
16631 | Do you mean to tell me that you ai n''t agoin''to land when there''s dry ground right over there, with people signallin''and waitin''to help you? |
16631 | Do you mean to tell me that you''re standin''in with him on any such jing- bedoozled, blame''foolishness as this? 16631 Do you see any signs that I am out of my head, or that I need these ropes on me?" |
16631 | Do you think it''s a decent proposition to step up to me and ask me to sell you gold dollars for a cent apiece? 16631 Do you think there''s any in this last mess that''ll be li''ble to come if they''re asked?" |
16631 | Do you think you''re an Emp''ror Nero? |
16631 | Do you want to hear a word on that? |
16631 | Does politeness come nat''ral to you, or did you learn it out of a book? |
16631 | Engagements do n''t hold, hey? 16631 Er-- what other races have we?" |
16631 | Fam''ly pets, then, has a right to do as it is their nature for to do? |
16631 | Gammon,said he,"what are you goin''to do to him? |
16631 | Gents, do you know what''s the most solemn sound in all nature? |
16631 | Goin''to let him get to the bank and stop payment on that check? 16631 Goin''to put my wife in the poorhouse, hey?" |
16631 | Had you just as soon come through the kitchen with me? |
16631 | Hain''t got no fault to find with that plum- duff? |
16631 | Hain''t you goin''to squirt? |
16631 | Hain''t your wife said northin''about it? |
16631 | Has, hey? |
16631 | Have any idea who''s been stuffin''their heads with them notions? |
16631 | Have n''t I told you to pick out your business and''tend to it? |
16631 | Have n''t brought yourn, have you? |
16631 | Have to do what? |
16631 | Have you come back here strapped? |
16631 | He ai n''t dead again, is he? |
16631 | He is, is he? |
16631 | He sailed and he sailed, and he robbed, and he buried his treasure, ai n''t that so? |
16631 | He''s dead and he''s buried, ai n''t he? |
16631 | Him and that gander? |
16631 | Hire''em for what? |
16631 | How about pets known as medder hummin''-birds? |
16631 | How be we goin''to work to run it? |
16631 | How did you figger it? |
16631 | How do you suppose any one ever knew enough to write a cyclopedy,said he,"if they did n''t go investigate and find out? |
16631 | How in the devil did you ever let yourself get trimmed that way? |
16631 | How much did you let him have? |
16631 | How much money have you got? |
16631 | How would that be-- a circus every week- day and a sacred concert Sundays? 16631 How?" |
16631 | Hunt tarheels once they''ve took their dunnage- bags over the rail? 16631 I do n''t dast to be an outlaw, hey?" |
16631 | I do n''t dast to be an outlaw, hey? |
16631 | I do n''t dast to be an outlaw, hey? |
16631 | I reckon ye like me? |
16631 | I s''pose you''ve jest seen our first selectman- elect pass this way, have n''t ye? |
16631 | I understand you to say, do I,resumed Hiram,"that he is shooing them hens-- or, at least, condonin''their comin''down into your garden ev''ry day?" |
16631 | I was goin''along''tendin''to my own business, and you can''t--"Business? |
16631 | I was sayin'', was n''t I, that I did n''t see how I''d let you stick yourself into this fam''ly as you''ve done? 16631 I''ve used Marengo Orango, there, or whatever you call him, all right, ai n''t I? |
16631 | If that''s the case,called the committeeman, heart- brokenly,"wo n''t you put your name down for a little?" |
16631 | If you''ve got anything to tell me, why in the name of the three- toed Cicero do n''t you tell it? |
16631 | If-- if-- you ai n''t a-- say, what have you got that rope around your neck for? |
16631 | Is it pardnership? |
16631 | Is the cat put out, Louada? |
16631 | It''s you, is it, you straddled- legged, whittled- to- a- pick- ed northin''of a clothes- pin, you? 16631 Land o''Goshen, Aaron, what was it?" |
16631 | Lemme see, where was I? |
16631 | Let''s see: This here is the cord that I pull to signal the horses to start, is it? |
16631 | Lie to me, will ye? 16631 Looks innercent, childlike, and sociable, hey?" |
16631 | Luff, luff? |
16631 | Me get in a boat again with that outfit? 16631 Me pay the bills?" |
16631 | Me put on an ap''un, and go out there, and kitchen- wallop for that jimbedoggified junacker of a tin- peddler? 16631 Me, that kicked my dunnage- bag down the fo''c''s''le- hatch at fifteen years old? |
16631 | Me-- the first s''lectman of this town out poppin''off a widder''s hens? 16631 Mebbe you''ve got money to back your opinion of Widder Pike''s hen there?" |
16631 | Mutiny on me, will they? |
16631 | My Gawd, Cap''n,gasped Odbar Broadway when the notables had received their money and had filed out,"what does this mean? |
16631 | Never heard of them? 16631 New elder?" |
16631 | New management goin''to inorg''rate the plum- duffin''idee as a reg''lar system? |
16631 | Noticed it, have you? |
16631 | Now will you go on with that story of the storm? |
16631 | Now, how about there never bein''any witches? |
16631 | Now, old button on a graveyard gate, what do you want? |
16631 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
16631 | Oh, there will, hey? |
16631 | Property? 16631 Quite a hand to hector, ai n''t ye, toll- keeper? |
16631 | Reckon it''s buried deep, do you? |
16631 | Reconciled? |
16631 | Same as they had over that surplus in the town treasury, hey? |
16631 | Say, did you ever try to drive a hog? |
16631 | Say, look here, you can understand this, ca n''t you, that I''ve been done out of good property-- buncoed by a jeeroosly old hunk of hornbeam? |
16631 | Say, you did n''t bring them three shells and rubber pea that you used to make your livin''with, did ye? |
16631 | She did n''t call names, did she? |
16631 | She did n''t say anything only about women, did she? |
16631 | She''ll strike shore, wo n''t she? 16631 She''s goin''to be a widder, hey? |
16631 | She? 16631 Skatin''-rink?" |
16631 | So it''s you, hey? |
16631 | So that''s how you''ve been spendin''the money of this town-- writin''to folks that you knew would n''t come, so as to get their autographs? |
16631 | So you''re Miss Jane Ward, be ye? |
16631 | Take it? |
16631 | Ten, did you say? 16631 That stove is too good for me, is it? |
16631 | That''s your idee of sport, is it? |
16631 | Them other two-- be they--? |
16631 | Them vouchers is all right, ai n''t they? |
16631 | Them vouchers with letters attached? |
16631 | Then s''pose you resign and let me take the job and run it the way it ought to be run? |
16631 | Then ye''re goin''to let''em do it, be ye? |
16631 | There ai n''t goin''to be no foolishness about rules and sport, and hitchin''and hawin'', is there? 16631 There ai n''t no mistake about his measurin''to that spit?" |
16631 | They come hard, but we must have''em, hey? |
16631 | They_ ca n''t''_ do anything, ca n''t they? |
16631 | Think I do n''t know how to make plum- duff-- me that''s sailed the sea for thutty- five years? |
16631 | This firemen''s muster is runnin''this craft, is it? 16631 Tiger, hey?" |
16631 | Turn round, you devilish idjit? |
16631 | Was that in a Bost''n horsepittle? |
16631 | Was you buried here or was your remains taken away? |
16631 | We be goin''back, hey? |
16631 | We will, hey? |
16631 | We''ve been kind of neglectin''that, hain''t we, wife? 16631 Well, from what you know of me, do you think I''m the kind of a man that''s goin''to squat like a hen in a dust- heap and not do him? |
16631 | Well, he ai n''t got cold in his legs, has he? |
16631 | Well, he gets his share, do n''t he? |
16631 | Well, me what? |
16631 | Well, now, what have you done to_ him_? |
16631 | Well, what does public say? |
16631 | Well, what insane horsepittle did you get out of by crawlin''through the keyhole? |
16631 | What are ye tryin''to do, advertise this sociable? |
16631 | What are ye tryin''to get through you, anyway? |
16631 | What are you goin''to do to him? |
16631 | What be them men peradin''past here to your house for, and tellin''me it ai n''t none of my business? 16631 What be ye gettin''ready for-- an auction?" |
16631 | What be ye goin''to do now? |
16631 | What be ye writin''--a novel or only a pome? |
16631 | What be you goin''to tell the wimmen? |
16631 | What be you, a''tomatom that do n''t move till you pull a string, or be you an officer that''s supposed to know his own duty clear, and follow it? |
16631 | What can we do now? |
16631 | What did I tell you would happen? 16631 What did you bet on?" |
16631 | What did you say, Aaron? |
16631 | What do I understand by all these bushels of epistles to the Galatians that you''ve been sluicin''out? |
16631 | What do they say-- what''s their excuse? |
16631 | What do ye want of Pharline Pike? |
16631 | What do you and I know about witches, anyway, even if there are such things? 16631 What do you call that thing you brought in the bag?" |
16631 | What do you mean, you old fool, by stoppin''me when I''m busy? 16631 What do you suppose is goin''to become of us when she strikes?" |
16631 | What do you take this for-- an afternoon readin''-circle? |
16631 | What do you think now, old hearse- hoss? 16631 What do you think that firemen''s association is for, anyway?" |
16631 | What do you think this is-- one of your circus wagons with a span of hosses hitched in front of it? 16631 What do you want to know where Miss Pike lives for?" |
16631 | What good is that land when there ai n''t been a buildin''built in this town for fifteen years, and no call for any? 16631 What have you done, Aaron?" |
16631 | What in Josephus''s name has that got to do with this trip? |
16631 | What in the name of Josephus Priest do I care what the public demands? |
16631 | What is he waitin''for-- for her to grow up? |
16631 | What is it, Aaron? |
16631 | What is it, if it ai n''t a foot- race? |
16631 | What is it? |
16631 | What is this job lot, anyway-- a circus in distress? |
16631 | What is this, jedges, a dog- fight or a hoss- trot? |
16631 | What more is there to do? |
16631 | What then? |
16631 | What were you mixed up in-- mutiny or barratry? |
16631 | What will you take for that team jest as it stands? |
16631 | What''s that he''s sayin'', put in human language? |
16631 | What''s that infernal thing? |
16631 | What''s that you''re luggin''in that paper as though''twas aigs? |
16631 | What''s that? |
16631 | What''s the matter? |
16631 | What''s them? |
16631 | What? 16631 What?" |
16631 | What? |
16631 | Where are you goin'', Aaron? |
16631 | Where be ye goin''to? |
16631 | Where be ye, ye scalawags that are round tryin''to hector a respectable woman that would n''t wipe her feet on ye? 16631 Where be ye?" |
16631 | Where have you been? |
16631 | Where would you shoot him? |
16631 | Where''s that Spitz poodle with the blue ribbon? |
16631 | Where? |
16631 | Which was wuss? |
16631 | Whiskey? |
16631 | Who be they, and what are you writin''to''em for? 16631 Who do ye suspect?" |
16631 | Who do you expect will bid in a second- hand gravestone? |
16631 | Who in thunderation are you, anyway? |
16631 | Who is this secretary that I''ve got to chum with? |
16631 | Who picked out that old cross between a split- saw and a bull- thistle to umpire this muster? |
16631 | Who''s been lyin''about me? |
16631 | Whose is that dog? 16631 Why ai n''t you been down and dug it up?" |
16631 | Why do n''t you print it on a play- card that I''m engaged to Pharlina Pike and hang it on the fence there? |
16631 | Why do n''t you shoot''em? |
16631 | Why in devilnation do n''t you ask him who''twas that engineered it? |
16631 | Will he go? |
16631 | Will you have this transferred to your account, Captain Sproul? |
16631 | With them pea- bean pullers to work ship? |
16631 | Would it be satisfactory to the citizens if I pulled my wallet and settled the damage? |
16631 | Would, hey? |
16631 | Ye''re jest gittin''back from up- country, ai n''t ye? |
16631 | Yes, but who did you pay the money to? |
16631 | You ai n''t objectin''any to the special town- meetin'', then? |
16631 | You ai n''t tryin''to make out that what I do ai n''t all right and proper, are you? |
16631 | You do n''t mean to say you''d hurt that unfortunate man? |
16631 | You do n''t own up, then? |
16631 | You do n''t pretend to tell me, do ye, that the Smyrna Ancients are afraid to have one of their own citizens as a referee? |
16631 | You do, hey? |
16631 | You know, do n''t you, what the voters want this special meetin''for? |
16631 | You said that chore feller''s name was Haskell, hey? |
16631 | You spoke it, did n''t ye? |
16631 | You think, do you, that you''ve got over being driven up and that now you can stop flying and perch a few minutes? |
16631 | You will, hey? |
16631 | You''re the first selectman, are n''t you? |
16631 | You''re_ runnin''_ it, be you? |
16631 | A man that uses that kind of language?" |
16631 | Aaron, ca n''t you speak?" |
16631 | Ai n''t I usin''you square on goods?" |
16631 | Ai n''t that so, boys?" |
16631 | Ai n''t they the wickin''?" |
16631 | And I reckon that two more suiteder persons never started down the shady side-- holt of hands, hey?" |
16631 | And do n''t you know that two officers stood right over behind the stone wall and saw you do it? |
16631 | And what can we do?" |
16631 | And what do you s''pose she done? |
16631 | And when she turns herself into a cat and--""Does_ what_?" |
16631 | And will any one think of property and the vain things of this world then?" |
16631 | Be ye goin''to let''em outsquirt ye? |
16631 | Be ye ready to listen to reason?" |
16631 | Because Cap''n Sproul has put you where you belong in town business, you''re tryin''to do him, too, hey? |
16631 | Bickford and Sproul, hey? |
16631 | But have they? |
16631 | But here-- heard what they did last night?" |
16631 | But what''s the good of my goin''and lickin''him? |
16631 | Can a horse- trot or a firemen''s muster call attention to the progress of a hundred years? |
16631 | Did you measure in twenty extry feet up to your spit mark? |
16631 | Did you ride out from your place or walk?" |
16631 | Do I state it right, Colonel Ward?" |
16631 | Do n''t you s''pose I know where I got''em? |
16631 | Do you know what kind of a game they''ve gone to work and rigged up on your friend, the human curling- tongs? |
16631 | Do you know?" |
16631 | Do you mean to stand here and tell me I''m a liar?" |
16631 | Do you pretend to tell me for one minute, Hiram Look, that you take any kind of stock in this sort of thing? |
16631 | Does it still ache, dear?" |
16631 | Er-- do you wear a silk hat officially, Captain Sproul, as selectman?" |
16631 | First, what''s her name again-- the woman that''s doin''it all?" |
16631 | Give me p''ints o''compass, will ye?" |
16631 | Has any one else ideas?" |
16631 | Have I got to share pro raty?" |
16631 | Have you heard enough to let you in on this? |
16631 | He even inquired:"How much do you reckon there is of it?" |
16631 | He noted a look of alarm on the Cap''n''s face, and muttered to him under his breath:"You ai n''t goin''to let a pack of wimmen back ye down, be ye?" |
16631 | Him and me run this thing together? |
16631 | Hiram endeavored to open the hack- door as the animals started-- but who ever yet opened a hack- door in a hurry? |
16631 | How be ye, Dep?" |
16631 | How do you figger it, Cap''n?" |
16631 | How is it my brains gallop when other brains creep? |
16631 | How much will ye take for your bridge?" |
16631 | How''s that for Foreman Hiram Look and the Smyrna Ancients and Honer''bles?" |
16631 | I do n''t dast to be one, hey? |
16631 | I hear you have long followed the sea, Cap''n Sproul-- I believe that''s the name, Cap''n Sproul?" |
16631 | I know I promised not to talk business with you, but could n''t you consider a proposition to stand in even?" |
16631 | I''m afeard o''daminite, hey? |
16631 | If you are hurt what made''em let their Chief come home all alone with that wild hoss? |
16631 | Is n''t he a credit to the home and an ornament to his native land?" |
16631 | It was this plaintive remark of the foreman:"Are you goin''to stand by and see Gideon Ward do us, and then give you the laugh?" |
16631 | Law? |
16631 | Lie to me-- a man that''s associated with liars all my life? |
16631 | Me afraid?" |
16631 | Me wear that bird- cage?" |
16631 | My Gawd, Cap''n, ai n''t that something to raise a blister on the motto,''God Bless Our Home''?" |
16631 | My-- I mean, Mis''Pike''s rooster licked, did n''t he? |
16631 | Never heard of the poets and orators and_ savants_ whose names are written there? |
16631 | Never heard of them?" |
16631 | Not your knife, when your name is scratched on the handle? |
16631 | Nothing been said to Sproul? |
16631 | Now do ye want to fight?" |
16631 | Now see how a quick mind like mine acts? |
16631 | Now what does this mean?" |
16631 | Now, bein''as I''m one of the fam''ly, I''m going to ask you what ye''re lally- gaggin''along for? |
16631 | Now, what are you goin''to do?" |
16631 | Now, what was it?" |
16631 | Odd names, eh? |
16631 | Oh, have n''t you been weaned from the sea yet, Aaron?" |
16631 | Oh, is n''t that band just lovely?" |
16631 | Or do you want to be proved out as the original old Mister Easymark, in a full, illustrated edition, bound in calf? |
16631 | Right, Colonel Ward?" |
16631 | Say, you two people, why do n''t you hoorah a few times and rush up and hug and kiss and live happy ever after?" |
16631 | So you call on, do you, marm?" |
16631 | Spurring his resolution by howling over and over:"I do n''t dast to be an outlaw, hey? |
16631 | That would be a nice soundin''case when it got into court, would n''t it?" |
16631 | That''s it, is it?" |
16631 | Then we''ll be three of a kind, eh? |
16631 | Then you ai n''t heard northin''of what she said?" |
16631 | There ai n''t much business nor look- ahead to wimmen, is there?" |
16631 | They''ll want three square meals when they get here, wo n''t they? |
16631 | They''re hearty eaters, ai n''t they? |
16631 | They--""Well, they ai n''t all mind, be they? |
16631 | Thinks nobody else do n''t want her, hey? |
16631 | Try to arrest me, will ye? |
16631 | Understand? |
16631 | Well, when you''d told her the straight truth and had been as square as you could, what did you say to her when she flared up?" |
16631 | What I want to know now is, how many thousands of them blasted grasshoppers you''ve gone to work and managed to tole in here to be fed? |
16631 | What I was goin''to ask you, Cap''n Sproul, was whether there ai n''t an overplus in some departments? |
16631 | What are you goin''to do about him?" |
16631 | What are you talkin''about? |
16631 | What be ye, gittin''items for newspapers?" |
16631 | What did I tell ye, trustees? |
16631 | What do you reckon we''re goin''to do with you?" |
16631 | What do you think of a man of that stamp?" |
16631 | What have you got to say to that?" |
16631 | What if it should come calm and you ai n''t got him talked over and they should take the boat and row over to the mainland? |
16631 | What started this? |
16631 | What''s the matter with you?" |
16631 | What''s the use of buckin''your own people as you are doin''? |
16631 | What''s this first grab for?" |
16631 | What''s your idea?" |
16631 | When a woman says that about herself, what be ye goin''to do-- tell her she''s a liar, or be a gent and believe her?" |
16631 | Where else should a husband be goin''that''s been gallivantin''off for twenty years?" |
16631 | Where is that old hell- hound that''s got my check?" |
16631 | Where''d you and your check be if he gets to the bank first? |
16631 | Who be them plug- hatters from all over God''s creation, chalkin''up railroad fares agin us like we had a machine to print money in this town?" |
16631 | Who is he?" |
16631 | Who is takin''all the resks? |
16631 | Who is this woman and where does she live, and what''s the matter with her?" |
16631 | Who knows? |
16631 | Who talks of property?" |
16631 | Who?" |
16631 | Why have n''t you arrested him in times past, same as you ought to have done?" |
16631 | Why, you old black and tan, what has fightin''got to do with the makin''of a fire department? |
16631 | Would the Colonel consent to mutual forgiveness, and to dwell thereafter in bonds of brotherly affection? |
16631 | Would the Colonel shake hands? |
16631 | You do n''t think a man like Cotton Mather is lettin''himself be fooled on the witch question, do you? |
16631 | You jest tell me, Pharline Pike, what you mean by triflin''in this way?" |
16631 | You ketch, do n''t you?" |
16631 | You say no one of you wants to orate? |
16631 | You''ve got the stakes, eh, Wixon?" |
16631 | Your cyclopedy do n''t say anything about any of''em gettin''away and comin''over to this country, does it?" |
16631 | he bellowed,"what do you mean by stickin''that fish- hawk beak of your''n into my business and make me lose count? |
16631 | he gasped,"how did you skin this out of him?" |
16631 | said Hiram, fingering his nose,"was it real money or Confederate scrip that_ you_ let him have on_ your_ morgidge?" |
16631 | them wimmen ca n''t? |
16631 | under bonds to keep the peace? |
46585 | At what time this morning will you take your departure? |
46585 | But wherefore fasten''d? 46585 Have you a watch?" |
46585 | Here too is a human skull produced, which is fractured; but was this the cause, or was it the consequence, of death? 46585 How long a time first?" |
46585 | How long did Carrots live with you? |
46585 | How long was that before your death? |
46585 | How was the poison administered, in beer or in purl? |
46585 | I would beg to know( he continued) what course it was possible for me, after receiving this letter, to pursue? 46585 Is there, gentlemen, any comparison between the enormity of these two offenders? |
46585 | The officers are waiting for you,said the sheriffs;"can anything be done for you before you quit this world?" |
46585 | What do I mane? |
46585 | What do you mean? |
46585 | What would have been said, what believed, if this had been an accident to the bones in question? 46585 Why not?" |
46585 | Why then, mysterious Providence, pursued With such unfeeling ardour? 46585 You knew they were for the purpose of overturning the constitution of the country? |
46585 | ''For what to do?'' |
46585 | ''Madam,''says he,''you want a parson?'' |
46585 | ''To buy meat and drink, to be sure: do n''t you perceive I''m to be kept alive?'' |
46585 | ''What do you want with it?'' |
46585 | --''Doth not Mr. Rushworth know it?'' |
46585 | --''Who are you?'' |
46585 | After they had been all sitting together, Carter called Chater out, and demanded to know where Diamond, one of those suspected of the robbery, was? |
46585 | And thou, dear Kitty, peerless maid, Do thou a pensive ear incline; For canst thou weep at every woe, And pity every''plaint, but mine? |
46585 | And who, that once begins a career of vice, can say to himself,"Thus far will I go, and no farther?" |
46585 | Brought to the bar, and sentenced from the bench, Only for ravishing a country wench? |
46585 | But how far must this argument go? |
46585 | But what remained? |
46585 | But what was the return for the lenity of the governor? |
46585 | But what would be thought of a prosecution commenced against any one seen last with Thompson? |
46585 | But what, it might be said, was all this to the prisoner at the bar? |
46585 | But, being true, ought not I to have been redressed? |
46585 | By the indulgence of the government of this country, the subsisting law was to continue; the question was, What was that subsisting law? |
46585 | Can you conceive any condition more horrible than mine? |
46585 | He afterwards exhibited great composure, and when he came to the gallows, he asked whether that"was the tree he was to die on?" |
46585 | He asked the deceased if he knew of any one who could owe him a grudge? |
46585 | He asked''What is that?'' |
46585 | He came into the room where Sir Theodosius lay, and said to her,"What do you want?" |
46585 | He had before declared that he could not distinguish the real offender, and what better opportunity had been since afforded him? |
46585 | He happened once to omit to take it; upon which Mr. Donellan said,"Why do n''t you set it in your outer room? |
46585 | He inquired what it was? |
46585 | He replied,"Here I am; what do you want with me?" |
46585 | He then inquired whether she had anything to say why judgment should not be pronounced against her? |
46585 | He then, after rinsing it, emptied it in some dirty water that was in a wash- hand basin; and on his doing so she said,"What are you at? |
46585 | Holloway, just before the murder, called me out from the Turk''s Head, and asked me if I had any objection to be in a good thing? |
46585 | How assume such an exalted motive, and meditate the introduction of a power which has been the enemy of freedom in every part of the globe? |
46585 | I am not afraid; why should you be so?" |
46585 | I asked her"What milk?" |
46585 | I asked who was to go with us? |
46585 | I might ask, where was the generous and powerful hand that was ever stretched forth to rescue George Barrington from infamy? |
46585 | I then went into the kitchen, and called Henry, who said''What is the matter?'' |
46585 | If his majesty''s government thus refused me redress, what must be my next step? |
46585 | If it was violence, was that violence before or after death? |
46585 | If they are not referred to that branch of the legislature, to whose consideration then ought they to be submitted? |
46585 | Immediately after she was gone out, Mrs. King, hearing the tread of somebody in the parlour, called out,"Who is there?" |
46585 | In answer to the question,"What to judge of deathe, I pray you?" |
46585 | Is it, then, to be supposed, that I would be slow to make the same sacrifice to my native land? |
46585 | It is possible, indeed, it may; but is there any certain known criterion which incontestably distinguishes the sex in human bones? |
46585 | Let it be considered, my lord, whether the ascertaining of this point ought not to precede any attempt to identify them? |
46585 | Loud cries of"Shut the door-- let no one out,"were heard immediately after the shot was fired, and several persons exclaimed,"Where''s the murderer?" |
46585 | Mr. Newland was sent for, and asked whether any of the exchequer bills could, by possibility, get into the market again from the Bank? |
46585 | My lord, must some of the living, if it promotes some interest, be made answerable for all the bones that earth has concealed and chance exposed? |
46585 | On the magistrate''s rapping, the woman asked,"Who is there?" |
46585 | On this, she let him in, and asked him what he had to say to her? |
46585 | Prisoner.--Is it my age you mean? |
46585 | Reviewing the conduct of France to other countries, could we expect better towards us? |
46585 | Shall men of honour meet no more respect? |
46585 | Shall their diversions thus by laws be check''d? |
46585 | She asked him"Where the bottle was?" |
46585 | She then, as well as she was able, being almost stunned, called to her sister to make haste, adding,"Do n''t you see the wretch behind us?" |
46585 | She was frightened and asked,"Who was there?" |
46585 | Shelton.--What is your age? |
46585 | Shelton.--You have been convicted of robbery; what have you to say why sentence of death shall not be passed upon you, according to law? |
46585 | So baffled( he pursued), what could a man do? |
46585 | Still no one came, and a watchman coming up at the moment inquired what she was doing there? |
46585 | Suppose, for instance, the charge I brought could have been proved to be erroneous, should not I have been called to a severe account for my conduct? |
46585 | The clergyman said to him,"You admit you attended meetings?" |
46585 | The dying penitent, now three score years and ten, casting his languid eyes upon Ross, said,''Can it be you who raised my fortune-- who saved my life? |
46585 | The first contained reasons for his attempt upon his life, and was as follows:--"What am I better than my fathers? |
46585 | The jury having found him guilty, the prisoner was asked what he had to say for himself, why sentence of death should not be passed according to law? |
46585 | The latter, on entering the door of the house, hearing several of the spectators ask eagerly,"Which is Lord Balmerino?" |
46585 | The papers are to be given to me after the trial, but how can that avail me for my defence? |
46585 | The prisoner asked whether his counsel had nothing to urge in his defence? |
46585 | The prisoner then requested Mr. Smith would answer him one question--"My friends say I am out of my senses; is it your opinion that I am so?" |
46585 | The question was, whether at the time the murder was perpetrated he possessed sufficient sense to distinguish between right and wrong? |
46585 | The witness asked,"Whom he meant by themselves?" |
46585 | The witness said,"For God''s sake, captain, who could do it?" |
46585 | Then casting his eyes on a Jew, whose name was Deveries,''Apropos, sir,''said he,''wo n''t you please to pay me the ten shillings you owe me?'' |
46585 | They do n''t take me for the monster who is advertised?" |
46585 | They then passed on to an ante room, when the governor asked"whether it was a fine morning?" |
46585 | To the question"What reason he had why judgment and sentence of death should not be passed on him?" |
46585 | To this Sir John Coventry, one of the members, by way of reply, asked"Whether the king''s pleasure lay among the men or among the women players?" |
46585 | Travelling through his whole life, what ground could they adduce for such a plea? |
46585 | Two hours elapsed, however, before anything was seen of him, and then he came to the garret window and called out,"How is Johnson?" |
46585 | Were there no fowls in the house? |
46585 | What conclusion could they draw in favour of the idea which had been suggested? |
46585 | When the indictment was read, the usual question,"Guilty, or not guilty?" |
46585 | While the watchman was gone for the liquor, Williams took up the chisel, and said,"D-- n my eyes, where did you get this chisel?" |
46585 | Who does not shudder at the idea? |
46585 | Witness asked if it was loaded? |
46585 | Witness then said to the prisoner,"You have another pistol?" |
46585 | and might not a place where bones lay be mentioned by a person by chance as well as found by a labourer by chance? |
46585 | or is it more criminal accidentally to name where bones lie than accidentally to find where they lie? |
46585 | related by a gentleman who was counsel for the crown? |
46585 | says she, horribly frighted, fearing it was a madhouse:''what has the Doctor to do with me?'' |
46585 | was it owing to violence, or was it the effect of natural decay? |
46585 | what is this?" |
46585 | what satisfaction can I make to the afflicted family of my master and mistress, whom without any provocation I so barbarously murdered? |
46585 | what shall I do? |
46585 | what shall I do?" |
46585 | what''s that?'' |
37872 | A message, Gabriel? |
37872 | And I suppose you were frightened? |
37872 | And are you happy? |
37872 | And did he take the parcel with him? 37872 And have you no coals?" |
37872 | And how can you? |
37872 | And how would you spend your days, Julie, had you the choice of your own way of life? |
37872 | And pray, who constrains my will? |
37872 | And she''s gone, is she, Susan? |
37872 | And so your aunt loves a white rose better than a slice of bread? |
37872 | And the pictures in the hall? |
37872 | And trying to be happy, Westbourne? 37872 And what am I to do with this little bauble?" |
37872 | And what does he mean to do now? |
37872 | And what''s the matter? 37872 And where is he now?" |
37872 | And will you,said he, in a voice stifled with emotion,"tell me which of the four you love?" |
37872 | Ay, my dear, why not? 37872 Ay, why not?" |
37872 | Be you going there? |
37872 | But I am too poor to part with it on such terms, and you too proud to take it-- is that your meaning? 37872 But are you sure he''s dead?" |
37872 | But at any rate, would it not be better to write first, and apprise him of the additional visitor? |
37872 | But did she say why she desired it, and what she wished to speak to me about? |
37872 | But did you hear anything of the parcel? |
37872 | But still, though L''Estrange is doubtless all you say, do n''t you think he rather wastes his life-- living abroad? |
37872 | But the farmers want work here as well as elsewhere, I suppose? |
37872 | But what are you? |
37872 | But you do not love him? |
37872 | But you? 37872 By my word of honor, no,"retorted the old woman, in her turn surprised--"no, my dear; but what is the matter-- why do you blush so?" |
37872 | Can I offer you a glass of wine-- it is pure, of our own making? |
37872 | Could n''t I carry the message for you? |
37872 | Dear me,cried Mrs. Leslie,"who can that possibly be? |
37872 | Did anything disturb you in the night, father? |
37872 | Did he? |
37872 | Did you never, when you were on the lakes, see them eat ham and molasses? 37872 Do you know who built this bridge?" |
37872 | Do you not see,replied Scorpione,"that I am opening the door for the escape of the poison?" |
37872 | Do you remember,said Lucille, after a long pause,"the story of the fair demoiselle of Alsace you used to tell me long ago? |
37872 | Eh? |
37872 | Feed_ who_? 37872 Had my uncle nothing with him but what I have found in his pockets?" |
37872 | Her name? |
37872 | How dare you speak in that tone to me? |
37872 | How did he die? 37872 How know you that I would not have done as much for each of your friends?" |
37872 | I forget whether he has any family? |
37872 | I hope my roughness has not hurt you? |
37872 | I hope so, my little pet-- why not? |
37872 | I suppose she_ is_ a fortune- teller; and how did she come to ask for me? |
37872 | Is he as amusing as ever? |
37872 | Is that queer fellow ever coming back to England? |
37872 | Is this a time to talk of such things? 37872 Is this the village of Rood?" |
37872 | It is: what do you want? |
37872 | It seems, sir, that you have made the acquaintance of Mademoiselle de Charrebourg? |
37872 | May I ask your permission? |
37872 | May I consult the family? |
37872 | Me? 37872 Monsieur!--for the love of God do you mean-- do you mean----?" |
37872 | Mr. Hazeldean has company staying with him? |
37872 | No papers? |
37872 | Not Ephraim Aldridge? |
37872 | Oh yes, I likes them well eno''; mayhap you are at school with the young gentleman? |
37872 | Oh, Tracy, Tracy,cried Mary, addressing her little boy,"what_ are_ you doing with that book? |
37872 | Oh-- I-- no; but they are well done, are n''t they, sir? |
37872 | On Saturday, then? |
37872 | Really? |
37872 | Say you so? |
37872 | She inquired if the Visconte de Charrebourg still lived on the estate, and then she said,''Has he not a beautiful daughter called Lucille?'' 37872 Signor,"continued Maulear,"what principle, what opinions can combat your desire to see your mother, and to rescue her from despair? |
37872 | So you are Lucille de Charrebourg? |
37872 | So,said he, after they had run through the most important items--"so you have found a tenant for the house in Thomas Street? |
37872 | Taken from nature-- eh? |
37872 | Tell me, Lucille, are you angry with me? |
37872 | Then am I condemned to be henceforward a stranger to_ dear_ Mademoiselle de Charrebourg? |
37872 | Then nobody was present but your father? |
37872 | Then you had a doctor? |
37872 | Then you saw it? |
37872 | Then you were not in the room when the accident happened? |
37872 | There again I give you a_ carte blanche_; say I am a benevolent fairy; you do n''t seem to like that? 37872 This_ is_ sixty, sir,"said Miss Cecilia; adding to herself,"I wonder if it was sixteen he was sent to?" |
37872 | Those are very funny,said he:"they seem capitally done-- who did''em?" |
37872 | To me? |
37872 | Was there any message, Sue? |
37872 | Well, Gabriel, and what is it? |
37872 | Well, Madame? |
37872 | Well, Miss Gibbs, I hope you have something that will suit me? |
37872 | Well, Mr. Mayor,said Audley, pointing to a seat,"what else would you suggest?" |
37872 | Well, shall I tell you? 37872 What accident, sir?" |
37872 | What are you about, Randal? |
37872 | What are you about? |
37872 | What did it contain? 37872 What do you know about pointed- heads? |
37872 | What do you pay for peeping? |
37872 | What do you think of his condition? |
37872 | What does this mean, Monsignore? |
37872 | What does_ Niagara_ mean? |
37872 | What hopes have you, doctor, of the poor lad? |
37872 | What is he? |
37872 | What is life to a duty? |
37872 | What is the matter? 37872 What made you go out so late for that purpose?" |
37872 | What now shall we believe? |
37872 | What object did you propose to yourself in committing these acts? |
37872 | What rule does a gentleman adopt in naming his country- seat when he acquires a new one, or is there any rule? |
37872 | What shall we give you, Gabriel, now that you have won the game? 37872 What should he take?" |
37872 | What sized book? |
37872 | What strange chance has conducted you to this spot? |
37872 | What surprises you? |
37872 | What was it? 37872 What''s the matter?" |
37872 | What, Randal? |
37872 | What, monsieur, has happened? |
37872 | What,said he,"only twenty pounds?" |
37872 | When did my uncle come here? 37872 Where am I?" |
37872 | Where is he? |
37872 | Where is it? 37872 Where? |
37872 | Who are you? 37872 Who can that be?" |
37872 | Who is it? 37872 Who says so?" |
37872 | Why ask that question? |
37872 | Why do you say that, Marguerite? |
37872 | Why does he not go to them? |
37872 | Why fear my love? |
37872 | Why how came he to know the Lanes? 37872 Why should I only be absent from my brother''s funeral?" |
37872 | Will you give me a receipt for the note, sir? |
37872 | Will you please to walk in? 37872 Will you pull me down that bough, Oliver?" |
37872 | Without compliment? |
37872 | Yes; an odd name enough for a private soldier, is n''t it? |
37872 | You are an officer''s servant, I see? |
37872 | You have no food either, I suppose? |
37872 | You have perhaps heard, sir, that Mr. Lane is dead? |
37872 | Your father seems in bad health? |
37872 | ''Shall I dare to ask, Monsignore, is the visit I receive an act of benevolence, or of official duty?'' |
37872 | --"What exile from his country can fly himself as well?" |
37872 | A true lover of his country should be exempted from the pain of blushes, when a foreigner inquires of him,"_ Whom does this statue represent? |
37872 | After a few observations on the last debate, this gentleman said--"By the way, can you dine with me next Saturday, to meet Lansmere? |
37872 | After twenty, does the heart ever rise up from her green sod and sing at Heaven''s gate as in childhood? |
37872 | And count me your loves, fair lady-- How many may they be?" |
37872 | And to return to matters of more consequence, I want to know what you''ve done with the tenements in Water Lane?" |
37872 | And where was the pocket- book and the notes? |
37872 | Are you sure it is not we who waste our lives? |
37872 | Besides, who was to take care of her father, and the lodger, and the shop? |
37872 | But could she forbear? |
37872 | But how did you happen to meet her?" |
37872 | But how is he to pay the rent?" |
37872 | But then, what could he do? |
37872 | But what do you say to a youngster''s seating himself upon a piano in the public parlor, while a lady is playing on it?" |
37872 | But where was the evidence of the constraint? |
37872 | But why do they withhold it now? |
37872 | But"who shall control his fate?" |
37872 | But, after all, what''s in a name? |
37872 | Call we for harp or song? |
37872 | Can that boy in years be already aged in heart? |
37872 | Can you be Mr. Ephraim Aldridge''s nephew?" |
37872 | Could anything be prettier? |
37872 | Could the surgeons be the guilty parties? |
37872 | Did it ever strike you, by the way, how behindhand your countrymen are in the matter of hotels? |
37872 | Did you mean to follow him and rob him-- perhaps murder him? |
37872 | Do you hear, Mary?" |
37872 | Do you suppose I can listen to you now?" |
37872 | Ewart?" |
37872 | Fair Evelyn pouted proudly; She sighed"Will he never have done?" |
37872 | Had the princess Leonora''s ghost visited the scenes Tasso loved so well? |
37872 | Had you much trouble in getting rid of the Lanes?" |
37872 | Have they stung her? |
37872 | He who gives the sunshine, shall he not bring the clouds? |
37872 | How could he arouse her without awaking the reptiles also? |
37872 | How could she have got it?" |
37872 | How d''ye think the Premier would take it?" |
37872 | I hope Mr. Jonas is well?" |
37872 | I hope it is nothing serious?" |
37872 | I wonder if gentlemen are as true of heart now?" |
37872 | In all these chances and changes, what fixed and rigid mind could escape the fangs of persecution and wrong? |
37872 | Is he very ill? |
37872 | Is it any thing serious?" |
37872 | Is this meant to guard against too sanguine notions of inheritance, which his generosity may have excited? |
37872 | It may be asked, why then did not the Colonel go the same length as his Majesty? |
37872 | It was a dreadful shock for him, being so ill.""How did it happen?" |
37872 | It was easy to read that, for he always called her_ his darling Mary_--but what came next? |
37872 | Leslie''s?" |
37872 | Mayor._--"And if I go to the last chap, what do you think he''ll say?" |
37872 | Now, where were his hopes? |
37872 | Or that of another, addressed to her: Thou wouldst be loved? |
37872 | Or_ who''d_ listen to music by day, That had listened to music by night? |
37872 | Paulding?" |
37872 | President.--"And what did you do after one of these visits to a cemetery?" |
37872 | Rickeybockey?" |
37872 | Root them up, will you? |
37872 | She inwardly felt that there was danger in it, but what could it be? |
37872 | That''s speaking fair and manful, is n''t it?" |
37872 | Then turning to the young man, he said,"Philip, I think you loved your brother Arthur?" |
37872 | They must have been placed out of sight; and the question occurred to him, was_ she_ a party to the concealment? |
37872 | Tracy, what can it mean? |
37872 | True, he is very little in town; but why do n''t you go and see him in the country? |
37872 | Two votes for a free and independent town like ours-- that''s something, is n''t it?" |
37872 | Was Taddeo a relation or connection of Aminta? |
37872 | Was it a dream?" |
37872 | Was there ever such a triumph? |
37872 | Was there no address on it?" |
37872 | We translate the conclusion of the article:--"We shall be asked if Heine really continues to write? |
37872 | Well, then, about this Monsieur Le Prun?" |
37872 | Were contrasts ever seen more striking, and more likely to excite a powerful interest?" |
37872 | What am I saying?" |
37872 | What assistance could he render her? |
37872 | What business can he possibly have with me? |
37872 | What business have you here scandalizing the congregation, and brawling at the church door? |
37872 | What could he come for? |
37872 | What could he do but wait till the blow came? |
37872 | What could he do in his extremity? |
37872 | What did he come about?" |
37872 | What did he do or say-- how did he demean himself so as to produce in her bosom a feeling of horror and disgust toward him that nothing could remove? |
37872 | What did the parcel contain?" |
37872 | What does he want?" |
37872 | What had been thine effect upon Philip Hastings? |
37872 | What harm_ can_ be in it?" |
37872 | What has happened? |
37872 | What is the use of thought and example, if the mind remains thus feeble? |
37872 | What of that?" |
37872 | What say you, child?" |
37872 | What singer can sustain a high or a low tone, or execute a prolonged and varied shake, with more power and accuracy than Parodi? |
37872 | What was the secret of all this? |
37872 | What was to be done? |
37872 | What would a million men, taken at random from the multitude, have done, had they been so situated, so tempted? |
37872 | What''s the matter with him? |
37872 | When did_ he_ ever withhold his hand when I offered him money?" |
37872 | Where does he come from?" |
37872 | Where is he?" |
37872 | Where is it?" |
37872 | Where too, could be the danger? |
37872 | Where, then, could be the harm of helping himself to that which had been partly intended for him? |
37872 | Who can execute a musical tour de force with more effect than she has so recently done in Norma and Lucrezia? |
37872 | Who says he''s dead?" |
37872 | Who was this stranger, and how came he there lying dead on the floor of that poor house? |
37872 | Why did you not send for me sooner?" |
37872 | Why do n''t you tell me what it is that grieves you? |
37872 | Why should it trouble me? |
37872 | Why so?" |
37872 | Will you give me back the land, I say? |
37872 | Will you please to walk up stairs, and see him yourself?" |
37872 | Wilt thou come back? |
37872 | Yet, did he love or cherish her the less? |
37872 | You observe?" |
37872 | You remember that parcel we saved from the fire?" |
37872 | You see you were member for Lansmere once, and I think you came in but by two majority, eh?" |
37872 | You will be sure to deliver it into his own hands?" |
37872 | _ Blanche._--"But pray whom do you mean for a hero?--and is Miss Jemima your heroine?" |
37872 | _ Eh, bien!_ after all what more have I asked for? |
37872 | _ Pisistratus._--"Agreed; have you anything to say against the infant hitherto?" |
37872 | _ Pisistratus._--"Do you remember any of his reasons, sir?" |
37872 | and to whom?" |
37872 | and what do you want?" |
37872 | and when I got it, what did it bring me? |
37872 | are you deaf?" |
37872 | come where no troublesome eye Can look on the vigil love keeps; When there is not a cloud in the sky, What maid,_ but an old maiden_, sleeps? |
37872 | didst thou teach_ them_, or they teach_ thee_? |
37872 | do you call yourself a man? |
37872 | feed who?" |
37872 | for that and the song,_ Wo n''t_ you give me the locket of hair? |
37872 | he continued in a very different tone:"I''m afraid I gripped your arm too hard?" |
37872 | how should that be? |
37872 | is n''t it? |
37872 | or your guardian- angel? |
37872 | quoth Benson, in much dudgeon, turning to their chamberlain,"suppose we should want to wash in the morning, what are we to do?" |
37872 | said Lane;"where is it?" |
37872 | said Mr. Jonas, taking the note that Tracy brought him;"and she has found no papers?" |
37872 | said Rovero;"think you I sell my devotion? |
37872 | thought he;"how can man, who sees only the surface of things, ever hope to be just?" |
37872 | what its purpose, significance, or power? |
37872 | you painted them?" |
37872 | you?" |
39190 | Ah,said a bed- ridden old Hebrew woman to me, as I visited the mission hospital in Jerusalem,"what can the doctors do for me? |
39190 | And abandon his profession? 39190 And pray, sir, what times do you call the good old times?" |
39190 | And she-- where is_ she_? 39190 And what did you do?" |
39190 | And what did your neighbors say of the transaction? 39190 And when will ours come?" |
39190 | And why were your sufferings as nothing in comparison with poor Myra''s? |
39190 | And you travel alone by railway? 39190 Are not the people sovereign?--whose will have we sworn to obey, but theirs?" |
39190 | Are there so many men''s daughters in the list, that you forget her name? |
39190 | Are you made whole? |
39190 | But can not the divine wrath be appeased? |
39190 | But how came you to London? |
39190 | But what have you got for yourself? |
39190 | But why should she be vexed? 39190 Call me Catherine, wo n''t you? |
39190 | Could she speak? 39190 Did she know it was Lizzie''s child? |
39190 | Did she? |
39190 | Did you tell her about Lizzie, then? |
39190 | Do come and sit down,she said, encouraged by Mrs. Danvers''s invitation,"and tell us, have you breakfasted? |
39190 | Do n''t you think so? 39190 Does she play backgammon tolerably? |
39190 | E a Frosinone, e a Valomontone? |
39190 | For that God you have just spoken about-- for His sake-- tell me are you Susan Palmer? 39190 Han ye known Susan Palmer long?" |
39190 | Has the old Mr. Palmer thou telled me on a daughter? |
39190 | Has the workwoman brought her bill with her, Reynolds? |
39190 | Have you any idea when, sir? |
39190 | How could I? 39190 How do you know that I am called Maurice?" |
39190 | How so? |
39190 | Is it come at last? |
39190 | Is it not true, dear,said his mother,"that the pleasures we prepare for others are the best of all?" |
39190 | Is my sword a wreath of rushes, Or an idle plume my pen, That they dare to lay a finger On the meanest of my men? 39190 Is she cocket at all?" |
39190 | It is so fearfully cold,was the reply;"and when_ will_ you have done, and come to bed?" |
39190 | It would be inhospitable to permit you to depart,he said, addressing the legates,"without some refreshment; choose-- will you eat or drink?" |
39190 | May I look at the pattern? 39190 Mother, shall Tom read you a chapter? |
39190 | Mother,then said Will,"why will you keep on thinking she''s alive? |
39190 | My father was ill the last time you were in Nottinghamshire, do you not recollect, Miss Melwyn? 39190 Nay, my dears,"said Mrs. Danvers, kindly;"why this? |
39190 | Not so,he exclaimed, with a terrible oath;"you shall not leave my city without some remembrance of me; say, will you eat or drink?" |
39190 | Oh, a man ca n''t be cross with a reader? 39190 One o''clock striking, and you hav''n''t done yet, Lettice? |
39190 | Shall I do it for you? |
39190 | That was not the lodging I found you in? |
39190 | Those the good old old times? 39190 Was it in the good old times that Harold fell at Hastings, and William the Conqueror enslaved England? |
39190 | Well but,rejoined Catherine,"do pray tell us how you came to this cruel pass? |
39190 | Well then,resumed the Statue,"my dear sir, shall we take the two or three reigns preceding? |
39190 | Well, then,said Catherine, now quite relieved, and looking round the room,"where shall we begin? |
39190 | Well, what times do you mean by the good old times? |
39190 | Well; and your mother? 39190 Well?"... |
39190 | Were Charles the Second''s the good old times? |
39190 | What are you? |
39190 | What is your opinion of James the First''s reign? 39190 Whatten sort of a lass is she, for I ha''never seen her?" |
39190 | Where have they taken her to? |
39190 | Where is the order for this woman''s execution? |
39190 | Why did not she take better care of her child? |
39190 | Why is not the Père Michel with you now? |
39190 | Why should''st thou not tell her thou lov''s her? 39190 Why, madam, what am I to expect? |
39190 | Will you hold the child for me one instant? |
39190 | Would''st like to go back to Upclose Farm? |
39190 | _ Miss Melwyn!_ What does that mean? 39190 Alderman Carden-- If I send you for a month to Bridewell, and from thence into an industrial school, will you stick honestly to labor? 39190 And then a light comed into her face, trembling and quivering with some new, glad thought; and what dost thou think it was, Will, lad? 39190 And then, who''s to read to you, papa, when I am gone, and play backgammon? 39190 And you, dear, dear Lettice, how can you, how have you come to this? |
39190 | Are we not in one box? |
39190 | Are you enamored of the good old times of the Gunpowder Plot? |
39190 | Are you not sure? |
39190 | As a mere matter of policy, the state ought to educate the people; and why did he say so? |
39190 | At last she said:"Where is she now?" |
39190 | At what point of this series of bloody and cruel annals will you place the times which you praise? |
39190 | At what stage of King Charles the First''s career did the good old times exist, Mr. Alderman? |
39190 | Blenkinsop?" |
39190 | Blenkinsop?" |
39190 | But Mrs. Price, your aunt, who was so fond of Myra, what is become of her?" |
39190 | But after all it was natural in this case, for who could look at Susan without loving her? |
39190 | But all he could say was,"Oh, Susan, how can I comfort you? |
39190 | But do you think, poor dear girl, I could have a moment''s peace, and know you were here alone? |
39190 | But he only said,"How was she looking, mother?" |
39190 | But how? |
39190 | But if she took the shawl, had she not better light the fire before she went out? |
39190 | But what are_ you_? |
39190 | But where can she be?" |
39190 | By ALBERT SMITH 198 Globes, and how they are Made 165 Greenwich Weather- wisdom 265 Habits of the African Lion 480 Have great Poets become impossible? |
39190 | By LEIGH HUNT 400 What becomes of all the clever Children? |
39190 | By the good old times, do you mean the reign of George the Third?" |
39190 | By whom was Burns neglected? |
39190 | Can I, dear Mrs. Danvers? |
39190 | Can he undo the knowledge which men then attained of each other, and their suppressed ideas? |
39190 | Can not we think of poets without thinking of pensions? |
39190 | Catherine went on in a tone of the most affectionate kindness,"have you come all through the streets and alone this most miserable morning? |
39190 | Could this be the source of the Père''s sorrow? |
39190 | Dear Lettice, how has all this come about?" |
39190 | Did she do nothing?" |
39190 | Did they not think this rich man an arrant rogue?" |
39190 | Did you ever notice how things went on at home, my dear friend?" |
39190 | Do n''t you know that we statues are apt to speak when spoken to, at these hours? |
39190 | Do n''t you see it?" |
39190 | Do n''t you think so, too, ma''am?" |
39190 | Do they call this a bed? |
39190 | Do you like it strong?" |
39190 | Do you regard this wig and pigtail period as constituting the good old times, respected friend?" |
39190 | Does nature present insurmountable engineering difficulties to the Panama scheme? |
39190 | Does not this appear incredible? |
39190 | Does your worship fancy these were the good old times?" |
39190 | Faut- il être s''il chérissait l''image Do nt il est la réalité?" |
39190 | Had the maid a confederate-- perhaps her fellow- servant on the box-- to whom she might have given the signal? |
39190 | Had you not better settle it before she leaves?" |
39190 | Have we not troubles enough? |
39190 | Have you breakfasted?" |
39190 | Have you encountered cannon- balls and death in all shapes, and now want the strength and courage to meet the curse of idleness?" |
39190 | He asked again,"Will you, mother, agree to this?" |
39190 | He may come and see thee, may n''t he?" |
39190 | Her hair was dingy and disordered; to be sure there was but a broken comb to straighten it with, and who could do any thing with_ such_ a comb? |
39190 | How could you exist?" |
39190 | How have you lived through it? |
39190 | How old is this thing you''re trying to put upon us, did you say?" |
39190 | How should_ she_ ever get through the debates, with her breath so short, and her voice so indistinct and low? |
39190 | I am very sorry-- won''t you forgive me?" |
39190 | I am very thankful, deeply thankful, for this offer, which I should gladly accept, only what is to become of you?" |
39190 | I ca n''t go, indeed, Mrs. Danvers, I ca n''t go;"with a pleading look,"may I stay one day longer?" |
39190 | I pay tithes enough to the black coated gentlemen, without being bothered with their children, and who ever pays tithes to us, I wonder? |
39190 | If I can not bear a few disagreeable things, what do I go there for? |
39190 | In vain they dipped their hands in the red life- blood, and, holding up their dripping fingers, asked,"How did it differ from that of the canaille?" |
39190 | Is it my child that lies a- dying?" |
39190 | Is it not all the same to us both? |
39190 | Is this our time, when we have lost those who gave us bread, and got in their place only those who would feed us with carnage?" |
39190 | Lamb in thanking the poet for his strange but clever poem, asked"Where was''The Wagoner?''" |
39190 | Lomax?" |
39190 | Melwyn''s?" |
39190 | Nay( and she smiled as the idea presented itself), was it not possible that she might be supposed to have a better bonnet at home? |
39190 | Nay, her romantic imagination traveled still farther-- gentlemen sometimes come up with ladies to show- rooms,--who could tell? |
39190 | No amount of circumcision can annul the Briton''s right-- Are they mad, these lords of Athens, for I know they can not fight? |
39190 | Of British subjugation by the Romans? |
39190 | Of Danish ravage and slaughter? |
39190 | Of John''s declaring himself the Pope''s vassal, and performing dental operations on the Jews? |
39190 | Of Richard the Second''s assassination? |
39190 | Of the Forest Laws and Curfew under the Norman kings? |
39190 | Of the advent of Hengist and Horsa? |
39190 | Of the battles, burnings, massacres, cruel tormentings, and atrocities, which form the sum of the Plantagenet reigns? |
39190 | On consideration, should you fix the good old times any where thereabouts?" |
39190 | One hundred and ten pounds a year, was that all? |
39190 | Or were they those of the Saxon Heptarchy, and the worship of Thor and Odin? |
39190 | Pauvre petite, what had you to do with politics?" |
39190 | Pray come to the fire, and sit down and warm yourself; and have you breakfasted?" |
39190 | Presently Lettice, for Lettice it was, awakened a little, and said,"What is it, love? |
39190 | Rather than part from her what would he not do? |
39190 | Said his sister''s angel to the leader,"Is my brother come?" |
39190 | Said his sister''s angel to the leader:"Is my brother come?" |
39190 | Said his sister''s angel to the leader:"Is my brother come?" |
39190 | She spoke to me in a kind voice, asked me my name? |
39190 | Should she borrow it? |
39190 | Should you think ninepence an unreasonable charge? |
39190 | So, at least, it seems to me-- but who knows? |
39190 | That''s what humble friends are expected to do, I believe; what else are they hired for?" |
39190 | The alderman, moved by his manner, asked him if he had parents? |
39190 | The back of the fire? |
39190 | The rajah returns to- morrow from his hunting-- what can I say? |
39190 | Then he said,"What took you there, mother?" |
39190 | Then what will you say to those of James the Second? |
39190 | They used to say to one another, sometimes, Supposing all the children upon earth were to die, would the flowers, and the water, and the sky be sorry? |
39190 | This era of inhumanity, shamelessness, brigandage, brutality, and personal and political insecurity, what say you of it, Mr. Blenkinsop? |
39190 | Thou''lt not be harder than thy father, Will? |
39190 | WHY IS HARD WATER UNFIT FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES? |
39190 | Was not that beautiful?" |
39190 | Was this all that you had to say, my dear?" |
39190 | Were the good old times those of Northumberland''s rebellion? |
39190 | Were they the good old times when Judge Jefferies sat on the bench? |
39190 | Were those blissful years the ages of monkery; of Odo and Dunstan, bearding monarchs and branding queens? |
39190 | Were those the good old times when Sanguinary Mary roasted bishops, and lighted the fires of Smithfield? |
39190 | What Spectre, gliding tow''rd the rays Of rising sun, meets Russian gaze, And is it fright, amaze, or awe, Distends each eye and hangs each jaw? |
39190 | What do you want most? |
39190 | What has been the condition of the countries under consideration? |
39190 | What has made thy heart so sore as to come and cry a- this- ons? |
39190 | What is your charge, my dear? |
39190 | What must I do with thee? |
39190 | What shall I do without her?" |
39190 | What think you of the then existing state of prisons and prison discipline? |
39190 | What was I to do? |
39190 | What will you have? |
39190 | What would Everybody have thought of the murder of Mary Queen of Scots? |
39190 | What''s come o''er the woman?" |
39190 | What, then, would have been the use of cutting a canal, through which there would not have passed five ships in a twelvemonth? |
39190 | When Henry the Eighth, the British Bluebeard, cut his wives heads off, and burnt Catholic and Protestant at the same stake? |
39190 | When Jack Cade marched upon London? |
39190 | When Richard the Third smothered his nephews in the Tower? |
39190 | When so spoken to, she answered only,"You do n''t know a poor girl they call Lizzie Leigh, do you?" |
39190 | When the Wars of the Roses deluged the land with blood? |
39190 | When we were disgracefully driven out of France under Henry the Sixth, or, as disgracefully, went marauding there, under Henry the Fifth? |
39190 | When you_ have_ work, you wo n''t forget me, will you, dear?" |
39190 | Where is your father? |
39190 | Wherefore did ye lay a finger on the carpets of the Jew? |
39190 | While he was away, the tongue of Rome was let loose, and can he make the ear of Rome forget what it heard in those days of license? |
39190 | While we were looking at the half- finished buildings, my maid said,''Was it not in this neighborhood that M. de S---- died?'' |
39190 | Who can it be? |
39190 | Who can prove his own personal identity? |
39190 | Who taught thee that famous canticle?" |
39190 | Why could he not feel this for his wife and children? |
39190 | Why did you not come last night? |
39190 | Why did you not put up your umbrella?" |
39190 | Why were they needed? |
39190 | Would you like to see your mother?" |
39190 | Yet a child appreciates at once the divine necessity for truth; never asks,"What harm is there in saying the thing there is not?" |
39190 | You hear me, child?" |
39190 | Your mother? |
39190 | Your sister?" |
39190 | _ Are_ they such poor creatures, that they can not earn an honest living? |
39190 | and can she read without drawling or galloping?" |
39190 | and when does the next go? |
39190 | and whether it was for the interest of Britain to maintain the balance of Europe? |
39190 | cried she, piteously,"poor dear things, how could you sleep at all? |
39190 | how has all this come about?" |
39190 | my children, who will care for them? |
39190 | or did not his affliction seem too great for such a cause? |
39190 | or if knowledge could be too much disseminated among the lower ranks of the people? |
39190 | or when Sir Walter Raleigh was beheaded? |
39190 | said Lettice,"can you really be so naughty? |
39190 | stammered the officer, with a painful air;"How dare you to step between me and death?" |
39190 | those two wandered away together? |
39190 | what crime did my father commit that I should thus be disgraced?" |
39190 | what''s come o''er thee?" |
39190 | what''s this about going to Manchester?" |
39190 | where are they all? |
39190 | where we were going? |
39190 | who were my parents? |
39190 | why should I be a domestic slave? |
39190 | wo n''t you love it?" |
39190 | ye shades Of Pope and Dryden, are we come to this? |
26977 | ''Is there no one,''said the old King at last,''who will build me my tower in less than six years and a half?'' 26977 ''Ow can a park sit down and play a fiddle?" |
26977 | ''Ow could''e''ave liver,said he,"hif there was only bycon an''heggs?" |
26977 | A what? |
26977 | Ai n''t it just like you to keep me and Freddie waiting here all night, while-- And where''s Mr. Punch and all the rest of''em? |
26977 | Ai n''t we never,_ never_, going to get down to this here map? 26977 Ai n''t you always s- s- saying-- saying-- ch- ch- chops, s- s- s- steak, b- b- b- b- bacon and eggs? |
26977 | Ai n''t you goin''to wear a hat? |
26977 | Ai n''t you never comin''for the tobacco? |
26977 | Ai n''t you pirates yourselves? |
26977 | Ai n''t you the most maddening old feller that ever was in the world? 26977 And glad to be back here in the shop again?" |
26977 | And what are all those other towers in the city? |
26977 | And what are they going to do with us when they get us there? |
26977 | And what was her name? |
26977 | And what,said the Sly Old Fox,"what may be the price of these interesting objects?" |
26977 | Are they going to poison us? |
26977 | Are we nearly there? |
26977 | Are we ourselves now, or were we ourselves before? |
26977 | Are you a sailor, sir? |
26977 | Are you an Englishman? |
26977 | Are you as old as that? |
26977 | Are you going to take us with you? |
26977 | Are you pirates? |
26977 | Are you sure it''s perfectly safe? |
26977 | Are you,he faltered,"are you-- Aunt Amanda?" |
26977 | Are you--? 26977 Are you--? |
26977 | Art going to keep us here all night? 26977 Bless me heyes, what do I see? |
26977 | Boy, do you know you''re as pretty as a-- Well, anyway, what is your name? |
26977 | But how on earth,said Aunt Amanda,"are we ever to get ashore on such a place as that?" |
26977 | But what about the children? |
26977 | But what time is it? 26977 Ca n''t you see you''re hurting his hand? |
26977 | Can you talk? |
26977 | Captain Lingo, I presume? |
26977 | Come along,he said,"you''d better come in here and see my Aunt Amanda, or Mr. Punch may step out and get you; and_ then_ where would you be?" |
26977 | Could we take our belongings with us? |
26977 | Dead? 26977 Did James like that?" |
26977 | Did he really fly? |
26977 | Did n''t anybody ever want you? |
26977 | Did n''t you never hear a joke? |
26977 | Did they all go to school? |
26977 | Did you ever see a pirate in a tree? |
26977 | Did you say''why''? 26977 Do n''t you see the ship''s settling deeper in the water?" |
26977 | Do you admit that you are not pirates? |
26977 | Do you feel well, Freddie? 26977 Do you know me?" |
26977 | Do you mean to say you are sorry those rascally pirates are gone? |
26977 | Do you mean to say----? |
26977 | Do you mean to tell me that you came away on this long journey without an extra boat? |
26977 | Do you mean to tell me--? |
26977 | Do you think it''s really pirates? |
26977 | Do you think you could look after the shop for twenty minutes, while I''m gone? |
26977 | Do you think you''d better go home now? |
26977 | Do you think-- ahem!--there is any-- er--_danger_? |
26977 | Do you want some more cake and lemonade? |
26977 | Do you-- er-- think,said the Old Codger with the Wooden Leg,"that we are in-- er-- danger?" |
26977 | Does anybody live there? |
26977 | Freddie, we''ve seen that little act before, have n''t we? |
26977 | Freddie,said Aunt Amanda,"have you got the map?" |
26977 | Frederick,said his father, looking at him with that look,"where have you been? |
26977 | Gentlemen,said the Third Vice- President,"is it the sense of the committee that we begin our researches in Low Dudgeon?" |
26977 | Good- bye what? |
26977 | Has them thirteen men been a- sitting here all these years? |
26977 | Have we far to go? |
26977 | Have you been to China? |
26977 | Have you got the Odour of Sanctity? |
26977 | How are we to----? |
26977 | How do I know? |
26977 | How many children were there that you did n''t have? |
26977 | How much further? |
26977 | How_ can_ you say such a thing? 26977 I was just going by, and I thought I would drop in to-- er-- ahem!--I hope I am not in the way?" |
26977 | I wonder where Toby is? 26977 I wonder,"thought Freddie,"what makes him so crooked?" |
26977 | Is everybody agreed? 26977 Is it a place, or is it just the way you feel?" |
26977 | Is it really true? |
26977 | Is it, really? |
26977 | Is it,said Freddie, hesitating,"is it-- the Churchwarden?" |
26977 | Is it? |
26977 | Is that where you live? |
26977 | Is there a lady here? 26977 Is this Correction Island? |
26977 | Just because I s- s- s- s- s- stutter, do you-- do you-- do you have to-- have to-- s- s- s- s- stut- stutter too? |
26977 | Look here,said Toby,"how long ago was all this?" |
26977 | Look here,said Toby,"what''s the number of this place?" |
26977 | Low Dudgeon? 26977 M- m- m- m- me? |
26977 | Me? 26977 Me? |
26977 | Now ai n''t that just like you, Toby Littleback? 26977 Oh, do you suppose it could really be true? |
26977 | One what, Freddie? |
26977 | Please, sir,said Freddie, opening his eyes wide,"am I grown up now?" |
26977 | Please, sir,said Freddie,"would you mind telling me what it is you would like to have?" |
26977 | Quit wrangling for a minute, will you? 26977 Should n''t I tell mother first?" |
26977 | Sorry I''m so late,he cried,"but the barber got to talking about-- What, young feller, are you still here?" |
26977 | Suppose he should come this way? |
26977 | The children? |
26977 | Then perhaps you happen to know the whereabouts of a place called Low Dudgeon, where the pirates formerly lived? |
26977 | There is one little point on which I-- that is to say-- Will there be any expense? |
26977 | They''re a fine pair now, ai n''t they? 26977 Thirteen what?" |
26977 | Toby,she said,"what did you mean by a celebration?" |
26977 | Well, Freddie,said Mr. Toby, as the raft continued to float slowly away from the ship,"what do you think of this, eh? |
26977 | Well, what of it? |
26977 | Well? 26977 Were n''t you ever pretty?" |
26977 | What about you? 26977 What are we going to do?" |
26977 | What do you mean by too slow? |
26977 | What do you suppose-- er-- ahem!--if you will pardon me-- what are those little things sparkling out there on the surface of the water? |
26977 | What does that say up there? |
26977 | What else do you have to be? |
26977 | What is so beautiful as the love of friends? |
26977 | What is the name of it? |
26977 | What is the sense of the Committee on this proposal? |
26977 | What is your name, now? |
26977 | What kind of a map? |
26977 | What mistake? |
26977 | What note? |
26977 | What on earth is the child talking about? 26977 What then?" |
26977 | What was the number we were to find him by? |
26977 | What would have been the use of life- preservers if the dippers were all on board? 26977 What''ll it be?" |
26977 | What''s a Churchwarden? |
26977 | What''s that there smell in the air? |
26977 | What''s that you say? |
26977 | What''s that? |
26977 | What''s the paper he give you? |
26977 | What''s the writing on it, Aunt Amanda? |
26977 | What''s this? |
26977 | What''s your name today? |
26977 | What? 26977 What? |
26977 | What? |
26977 | What? |
26977 | Where are Aunt Amanda and the others? |
26977 | Where do you live? |
26977 | Where''s Toby? 26977 Where''s Toby? |
26977 | Where''s the paper of directions? |
26977 | Who are you? |
26977 | Who are you? |
26977 | Who next? 26977 Who next?" |
26977 | Who''s your f- f- f- friends, L- l- lem? |
26977 | Who''s your f- f- f- friends? |
26977 | Who''s your f- f- f- friends? |
26977 | Who''s your f- f- f- friends?] |
26977 | Who? 26977 Who?" |
26977 | Why do n''t you look at the paper? |
26977 | Why do n''t you say what you mean? 26977 Why do you call me that?" |
26977 | Why not? |
26977 | Will you do it again? |
26977 | Will you talk to me? |
26977 | Wo n''t you never get a head on your shoulders, you Toby Littleback? 26977 Wot, me? |
26977 | Wot? 26977 Would a little tobacco make you feel better?" |
26977 | Would n''t you? |
26977 | Would you like to go there? |
26977 | Would you like to hear it? |
26977 | Would you like to hear the second verse? |
26977 | Would you mend socks, ma''am? |
26977 | Yes, but he went to Sunday- school just as regular, and liked it, and----"He_ liked_ it? |
26977 | You are better? |
26977 | You buy? |
26977 | You carn''t murder a fellow- countryman in cold blood, now can you? 26977 You command it?" |
26977 | You could n''t baste a turkey with needle and thread, and you could n''t baste dress- goods with gravy----"Why not? |
26977 | You know about them, do n''t you? 26977 You mean Freddie, do n''t you?" |
26977 | You mean a man, do n''t you, Freddie? |
26977 | Young man,said Mr. Toby,"if I write a letter to your ma, will you give it to her?" |
26977 | _ Me?_ Douse my binnacle light, wot I want is a chew o''terbacker; but the question before the chart- house is, wot do_ you_ want, skipper? |
26977 | _ Me?_ Douse my binnacle light, wot I want is a chew o''terbacker; but the question before the chart- house is, wot do_ you_ want, skipper? |
26977 | ''Ere''s a surprise, what? |
26977 | ''Owever did you come''ere? |
26977 | Ai n''t I been telling you? |
26977 | Ai n''t he done the best he could? |
26977 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself?" |
26977 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself?" |
26977 | Ai n''t you even able to dress yourself?" |
26977 | Ai n''t you got no shame? |
26977 | Ai n''t you got nothin''to offer in extenuation?" |
26977 | Ai n''t you? |
26977 | Am I right, gentlemen?" |
26977 | And are you grown up now?" |
26977 | And look here, young man; I reckon you ai n''t surprised to see that the Chinaman''s head is gone; eh?" |
26977 | And now what''ll we do if we ever get separated from Mr. Mizzen? |
26977 | And that there Chinaman''s head up there-- you do n''t think you can go and smoke that magic tobacco now, do you? |
26977 | And where''s the map? |
26977 | And you are-- let me see; what was your name? |
26977 | Anybody want breakfast?" |
26977 | Anyway, what harm could just one or two little whiffs do? |
26977 | Anyway, what we want to know is, can you cure the Chevalier?" |
26977 | Anyway--"Said the one old codger, Wo n''t ye gimme a chew? |
26977 | Applejohn?" |
26977 | Are you all right now?" |
26977 | Are you glad to be here in the shop, the same as ever?" |
26977 | Are you going to let us drown without turning a hand?" |
26977 | Are you hungry?" |
26977 | Are you ready?" |
26977 | Are you sure?" |
26977 | Are you the one that brought that tobacco here?" |
26977 | Are you well? |
26977 | At such a moment as this, dear friends, a warm feeling invades my heart, a feeling of-- of-- Did I hear a suggestion to divide the treasure?" |
26977 | Aunt Amanda leaned forward and said to him:"Ketch, are we going to have more bacon tonight?" |
26977 | Aunt Amanda, do you want me to cast off your enchantment?" |
26977 | Ay, ay; there shall be fine sport at his taking off, eh, lads? |
26977 | Bless me; that''s where the pirates used to----""Pirates?" |
26977 | But he got away safe and sound after all, did n''t he, eh?" |
26977 | But why,_ why_ did so many of you come at once? |
26977 | By the way, Warden, have you got your Odour of Sanctity?" |
26977 | By the way, young man, what is your name today?" |
26977 | Ca n''t you never remember anything? |
26977 | Ca n''t you understand that?" |
26977 | Can you do that?" |
26977 | Come back again; what did you say your name was?" |
26977 | Confound it, that''s an easy word, ai n''t it? |
26977 | Could n''t you have come, say two at a time? |
26977 | Could you perhaps direct us? |
26977 | Cross your heart?" |
26977 | Did Bobby know how to mind his P''s and Q''s?" |
26977 | Did n''t I tell you to hurry?" |
26977 | Did n''t you know I''ve got to come when you smoke the pipe with the Chinaman''s''baccy in it?" |
26977 | Did n''t you smoke the Chinaman''s''baccy,_ in_ a pipe?" |
26977 | Did you ever hear that song?" |
26977 | Did you get lost? |
26977 | Did you know him? |
26977 | Did you see how he skipped off in a hurry? |
26977 | Did you think it was Sunday?" |
26977 | Do n''t you know who you are?" |
26977 | Do n''t you see? |
26977 | Do you all agree to that?" |
26977 | Do you intend to remain long in the City of Towers?" |
26977 | Do you know where that tobacco come from? |
26977 | Do you mark that, lads? |
26977 | Do you promise me that? |
26977 | Do you see it?" |
26977 | Do you see that clock on the church- tower over there?" |
26977 | Do you see this?" |
26977 | Do you want to hear it?" |
26977 | Freddie pointed to the writing underneath the picture, and said:"What does that say?" |
26977 | Freddie watched for a long time, and then said:"What are you doing?" |
26977 | Freddie''s eyes opened wide; did this lady eat pins? |
26977 | Freddie, have you got the map?" |
26977 | Freddie, will you run down the street and get the Churchwarden?" |
26977 | Had she swallowed them? |
26977 | Hanlon?" |
26977 | Hanlon?" |
26977 | Have I been sick?" |
26977 | Have you ever been there?" |
26977 | Have you got the Chinaman''s head?" |
26977 | Have you got the map of Correction Island with you?" |
26977 | He was a very mischievous boy, but he was his-- mother''s-- own----""Did he play marbles for keeps?" |
26977 | Her mouth seemed to be full of them; did n''t they hurt? |
26977 | Here''s a pretty kettle of fish, now ai n''t it? |
26977 | Hi remember when I was a lad--""Why do n''t you sing for us yourself?" |
26977 | Housewife''s Favorite?" |
26977 | How could they be, after two hundred years? |
26977 | How could we buy anything?" |
26977 | How is this for a corking spree? |
26977 | How much do you offer?" |
26977 | How''ll we ever call him up to help us out of trouble if we get into it? |
26977 | How_ can_ you----?" |
26977 | However,--would you like to hear any more of this song?" |
26977 | I hope you do n''t mind it now, do you?" |
26977 | I suppose you do n''t like gingerbread? |
26977 | I suppose you do not know that you are enchanted; you think that you are yourselves; is it not so? |
26977 | I suppose you would n''t want to be a Little Boy_ all_ the time, and never grow up at all, would you?" |
26977 | Is n''t the air invigorating?" |
26977 | Is that right?" |
26977 | Is the raft balanced now?" |
26977 | Is the whole party going?" |
26977 | It is your wish to see Shiraz the Persian?" |
26977 | It was just before the old chap came and built the Tower in a night; you know about that, do n''t you? |
26977 | Ketch, art thou ready?" |
26977 | King James dead? |
26977 | Look here; it''s my duty to report this here violation of the Sunday law, but as long as-- you''re sure you ai n''t_ particeps criminis_?" |
26977 | M- m- m- m- m- me?" |
26977 | May I not promise myself the bliss of your approval?" |
26977 | Me been to the Spanish Main? |
26977 | Me? |
26977 | Mizzen?" |
26977 | No? |
26977 | Now ai n''t it like him to keep me waiting here all night? |
26977 | Now then, skipper, you piped me up, wot''s the orders?" |
26977 | Now then, what''ll you have? |
26977 | Now''e''s got us on''is back, what''s''e going to do with us?" |
26977 | Now, then; what about this Sailorman? |
26977 | Only, where were they to go, after all? |
26977 | Our next mission is to determine for our Society this most important question: are you alive or dead?" |
26977 | Piped me up with a pipe?" |
26977 | Piped me up with a''baccy pipe, he did, and where''s he gone? |
26977 | Plenty of goods left in the shop whenever-- you see all that?" |
26977 | Pound o''Maiden''s Prayer?" |
26977 | Professor,"said he, turning round,"what''s the words to bring out Shiraz the Rug- Merchant?" |
26977 | She leaned forward and said to him:"Is that High Dudgeon?" |
26977 | Shiver my timbers, where''s the skipper? |
26977 | Speak up, Warden; what do you think we ought to do?" |
26977 | That would be a rare fine thing, but a bit too slow, lads, eh?" |
26977 | That''s clear?" |
26977 | The Chinaman''s head? |
26977 | The Dean and Chapter has made that rule, by and with the advice and consent of the City Council, do n''t you know that? |
26977 | Toby?" |
26977 | W- w- w- what do you m- m- m- mean by m- m- m- mocking me all the t- t- t- ime?" |
26977 | Was this some new danger? |
26977 | We''ll call up Mr. Lemuel Mizzen-- is that his name? |
26977 | Were there other pirates to be reckoned with? |
26977 | What about this here map? |
26977 | What about you, Freddie?" |
26977 | What are you going to murder him for? |
26977 | What did you mean by it, sir?" |
26977 | What do you mean by Low Dudgeon?" |
26977 | What do you mean by saying that my Freddie''s reprehensible? |
26977 | What do you say, Aunt Amanda?" |
26977 | What kind o''tobacco did you say your farver wanted? |
26977 | What next?" |
26977 | What on earth are we going to do about it?" |
26977 | What was the use of being grown up if you could n''t take a little risk now and then? |
26977 | What will become of the shop?" |
26977 | What would I be doing on the Spanish Main? |
26977 | What''ll it be? |
26977 | What''ll we do? |
26977 | What''ll we do?" |
26977 | What''s all this about a Sailorman and a paper?" |
26977 | What''s for supper, eh?" |
26977 | What''s in the larder? |
26977 | What''s that you''ve got on your lip?" |
26977 | What''s that?" |
26977 | What''s that?" |
26977 | What''s that?" |
26977 | What''s the matter, Mr. Punch, ca n''t you put in a little''h''now and then? |
26977 | What''s the matter?" |
26977 | What''s the meaning of all this? |
26977 | What''s your name?" |
26977 | What, thou reprobate, dost thou not know''tis a felony, punishable by death, to imagine the death of the King?" |
26977 | What_ did_ he mean? |
26977 | Whatever are we going to do? |
26977 | Where am I? |
26977 | Where are all the others? |
26977 | Where do you suppose is this Gate of Wanderers?" |
26977 | Where on earth have you been? |
26977 | Where''s Shiraz? |
26977 | Where''s the-- what''s the-- who said-- Where''s Toby? |
26977 | While he was spreading the branches and blankets for her, she said to him:"Ketch, where are we going?" |
26977 | Who are you?" |
26977 | Who on earth is King James?" |
26977 | Who shall be first? |
26977 | Why did n''t I never once think of this before? |
26977 | Why did n''t we think of that before? |
26977 | Why do n''t that Toby Littleback come? |
26977 | Why do n''t you sit in the middle, Warden?" |
26977 | Why, why,_ why_ ca n''t you never remember anything? |
26977 | Will it do to pay fer the cargo with?" |
26977 | Will you come to see me?" |
26977 | Will you risk the fire?" |
26977 | Will you take me there today?" |
26977 | Will you?" |
26977 | Wo n''t that M- m- marmaduke and that M- m- m- mizzen sing another tune when they f- f- f- find out?" |
26977 | Would a good Quaker captain, with a sister in New Bedford, say it if it was n''t true? |
26977 | Would it be possible to be big at once, without waiting all that long dreary time? |
26977 | Would they never reach the bottom? |
26977 | Would you like to do that?" |
26977 | Would you like to stay here with our little party? |
26977 | Would you rather sit here on the pavement than do anything else?" |
26977 | You are a Henglishman, are n''t you?" |
26977 | You buy?" |
26977 | You desire to see my great- great- grandfather?" |
26977 | You do n''t think you can go and smoke cigarettes now, just because you''re grown up, do you?" |
26977 | You know what that means?" |
26977 | You piped me up, did n''t you? |
26977 | You saw him go, did n''t you?" |
26977 | You understand?" |
26977 | You want what? |
26977 | You''ve got to k- k- k- k- quit-- r- r- right_ now_, d''you_ hear_? |
26977 | You''ve heard of the Spanish Main, have n''t you?" |
26977 | do you suppose it_ could_ be true? |
26977 | do you think it could be true? |
26977 | he said,"ca n''t we get down here and see all those sights? |
26977 | well?" |
26977 | wo n''t we get blown up, though? |
39347 | ''What can this mean?'' 39347 ''What''s that?'' |
39347 | ''Why so?'' 39347 A tumor? |
39347 | Air you in earnest, colonel? |
39347 | And the priests? |
39347 | And what does the Government do for the poor? |
39347 | And what have you got to say in Latin? |
39347 | And what is it? |
39347 | And who is this man in the basket? |
39347 | And your name? |
39347 | Are the roads quiet now? |
39347 | Brother, saies one, what doe you thinke, I pray, Of these proud Prelates, which so lofty are? 39347 But how much?" |
39347 | But how was the harvest? |
39347 | But you have two hundred francs? |
39347 | But,says the lady,"can I get my note back, and find out who took it?" |
39347 | Can you cipher? |
39347 | Can you read? |
39347 | Can you write? |
39347 | Claim for damages against_ me_? |
39347 | Do you hesitate? |
39347 | Do you speak German? |
39347 | Do you speak Italian? |
39347 | Dost thou not know Tom Miller of Oseney? |
39347 | Every one else has a mistress,remarks Barbier, advocate and magistrate;"why should n''t the king?" |
39347 | Have you a dog''s ticket? |
39347 | Have you seen the colonel? |
39347 | Have you, indeed? 39347 Heard you that Groan? |
39347 | Here, miss? |
39347 | How can you speak so exactly? |
39347 | How far from the two combatants were you standing? |
39347 | How is it? |
39347 | How much did it cost? |
39347 | How much is it? |
39347 | How old are you? |
39347 | How on earth am I to prevent it? |
39347 | How, my Adela, can you ask me to whisper in your ear when you have put that cover over it? |
39347 | I take cold? 39347 Is n''t that a funny story? |
39347 | Is n''t that a funny story? |
39347 | Isaac had two sons, Esau and Jacob,said the examiner:"who was Jacob''s father?" |
39347 | Latin? |
39347 | Nay stay Sir, first You must_ my Story_ Hear: How could you thus_ Delude_ your_ Bosome- Friend_? 39347 No matter; utilize your capital; have n''t you got a gold mine?" |
39347 | Pray, madam,asked Dodington,"what_ is_ his province?" |
39347 | Tell me, Fanny,says one of the girls,"are not those two gentlemen brothers?" |
39347 | The one you nearly broke your neck in getting? 39347 Then thou knowest he had two sons, Tom and Jacke: who is Jacke''s father?" |
39347 | Vot, eighteen shillings for that ere little pig? 39347 What are you going to do about it?" |
39347 | What are you in civil life? |
39347 | What do I care? 39347 What do we want with monks?" |
39347 | What do you know, then? |
39347 | What does his Highness mean by thin soup? |
39347 | What for, and with whom? |
39347 | What have you done, my lord, to merit so many advantages-- rank, fortune, place? 39347 What language do you speak?" |
39347 | When will your father be in New York? |
39347 | Where can I get some javelins? |
39347 | Who has money to lend at two per cent.? |
39347 | Who''s Himself? |
39347 | Why have you so many cats? |
39347 | Why, did n''t he see you, after all? 39347 Why?" |
39347 | Why? |
39347 | Will it last? 39347 Wo n''t give me any thing, wo n''t you?" |
39347 | Would you believe,said he to Madame de Pompadour,"that there is a man in my court who dares to lift his eyes to one of my daughters?" |
39347 | Yes-- but afterward? |
39347 | You have thrown down a knife,said Sheridan;"where is the fork?" |
39347 | You were at work in the vicinity of the place where the scuffle occurred? |
39347 | _ Doctor._ But what''s this? 39347 _ Eh!_ They live well, always well; they have a good time in this world-- but?" |
39347 | _ Elsie._ And what is this that follows close upon it? 39347 _ King._ Yon Covenant pretenders, must I bee The subject of your Tradgie Comedie? |
39347 | ''Do you suppose that, during these seven years past, I have maintained_ our_ French journals with my old chignons?'' |
39347 | ''I say, Master Chokichi, is it off yet?'' |
39347 | ''What has become of it?'' |
39347 | 171 Matrimony-- A Man loaded with Mischief 173 Settling the Odd Trick 174"Who was that gentleman that just went out?" |
39347 | 321 Shin- plaster Caricature of General Jackson''s War on the United States Bank 322 City People in a Country Church 323"Why do n''t you take it?" |
39347 | 324 Popular Caricature of the Secession War 325 Virginia pausing 326 Tweedledee and Sweedledum 328"Who Stole the People''s Money?" |
39347 | A book? |
39347 | A scene in a police court, the magistrate questioning a witness:"You are a carpenter, are you not?" |
39347 | An idiot in a night- cap says to an idiot bare- headed, with ludicrous intensity,"And when you have taken Lombardy, then what?" |
39347 | And have not all modern communities a common interest in discrediting anonymous calumny? |
39347 | And having drunke so deepe of Babels cup, Was it not time, d''ee think, to chaine him up?" |
39347 | And if a country squire''s spouse will have a train after her full fifteen ells long, pray what shift must a princess make to distinguish herself? |
39347 | And which part of it all do you like best?" |
39347 | And why? |
39347 | Another picture presents to view a little girl seated on a garden bench eating nuts, and talking to a young man:"The rose which you gave to mamma?" |
39347 | Are there_ any_ people in France who behave and live as these people on the stage behave and live? |
39347 | As each article appears, the doctor and his patient converse upon it:"_ Doctor._ What''s this? |
39347 | As they pass in the street, one of the Cocks says to his companions:"Do you see how the tallest one blushes?" |
39347 | Bachelor friend asks,"What''s the matter?" |
39347 | But are there any? |
39347 | But is this humor dangerous?" |
39347 | But let Mæcenas send you an invitation for early lamp- light,_ then_ what do we hear? |
39347 | But what is a tumor?" |
39347 | But what would mamma say to your drawing jockeys on a Sunday?" |
39347 | But when? |
39347 | But who, then, has this humor?" |
39347 | But, then, where will he go?" |
39347 | Call''st thou that slave a man? |
39347 | Can I help you? |
39347 | Can that mean me?" |
39347 | Chadband-- where is he? |
39347 | Chuang watched her go off with a cynical sigh, Thought he,''Now suppose I myself were to die, How long would_ my_ wife in her weeds mourn my fate? |
39347 | Could comic artists and caricaturists be wanting in Athens? |
39347 | Could it be a fish- hook? |
39347 | Could it be a net? |
39347 | Davus innocently asks,"What need is there here of such a thing as a stone?" |
39347 | Did you cause this to be made also? |
39347 | Do n''t you see?" |
39347 | Do you condemn it?" |
39347 | Do you know Greek?" |
39347 | Does any body hear me?_ You bellow and storm with fury. |
39347 | Does he remember me?" |
39347 | Does it not smell of a garlicky Mansard? |
39347 | Enter a very ill- favored pair, to whom the clergyman says:"So you wish to be married, do you? |
39347 | Enter the family doctor, who cries, aghast,"Why, what''s this, baroness? |
39347 | George''s real disposition, do you ask? |
39347 | Give you leave to tell me I know nothing at all about the matter? |
39347 | Got any more nuts?" |
39347 | Had you any hand in this? |
39347 | He does so, and when they have reached the top she thanks him, and adds,''Oblige me also, dear sir, by telling me who preaches to- day?'' |
39347 | He says:"You wish to see the landlord? |
39347 | He tells us that when people were brought before him charged with being Christians, he asked them the question, Are you a Christian? |
39347 | He was in love, then? |
39347 | Here are a few of the questions and answers:_ Priest._"What signify the two ears of the ass?" |
39347 | How are they to go to school with those people quarreling in the door- way? |
39347 | How could_ I_ have lain, Body and beak and feathers, legs and wings, And my deep heart''s sublime imaginings, In there? |
39347 | How do I know I ever_ was_ inside? |
39347 | How, then, is the heart a thing which can be hidden? |
39347 | How, then, must those poor silly asses fare That leave their native land to settle there?" |
39347 | I know that women can not inform him; but if his education was in my power absolutely, to whom could I address him? |
39347 | I wish you could manage to be rather less of a shrew,''what do you think the scullery- maid would answer then? |
39347 | If I were of a bad heart or an angular disposition, should I be here helping him? |
39347 | If he abstains, she will surely fast also; if he is sad, will she not be sorrowful? |
39347 | If the heart be awry, what though your skin be fair, your nose aquiline, your hair beautiful? |
39347 | Is it not obvious that this was"evolved?" |
39347 | Is it not thus that tickets, trinkets, and dresses are won every day in the cities of the modern world? |
39347 | Little Emily asks her mother,"What is capital punishment?" |
39347 | Luxembourg replied to the person reporting this,"How does he know that my back is hunched? |
39347 | Léon?" |
39347 | Need it be said that her person was not spared? |
39347 | O Speak_;_ That in this Frightful Form, a_ Dragon''s_ hew Presents_ One_ Sainted, to_ my_ Trembling View? |
39347 | Oh, what shall I do? |
39347 | Pasquino enters the chamber, where he holds the following conversation with the plenipotentiaries:"Do you speak French?" |
39347 | Shall I guess, miss?" |
39347 | She replies:"But if she does not deceive her husband, whom is she to deceive?" |
39347 | Shoddy?" |
39347 | Shortly?" |
39347 | Since you''ve been there all the time, why did you not roar?'' |
39347 | Suppose we found a religion?" |
39347 | The elder says:"Why do you quarrel with your husband so often?" |
39347 | The emperor asked,''Is the prince of your country well?'' |
39347 | The innocent reader may well ask, What is the comedy of the situation? |
39347 | The philosopher speaks:"Why callest thou me, thou creature of a day?" |
39347 | The prince impatiently said, after a defeat,"Shall I, then, never be able to beat that hunchback?" |
39347 | The six- bottle men of Sheridan''s time-- where are they? |
39347 | The strange pictures excite the curiosity of Elsie, and the Prince explains them to her as they walk:"_ Elsie._ What is this picture? |
39347 | The words signify:"All I ask is, did that ancient race take their afternoon nap in cuirass and helmet?" |
39347 | Then he added the words which gave him his high place in the Order of the Weather- cock:"But now what part to take? |
39347 | To which he replies by asking:"And what do you call good intentions?" |
39347 | To which innocent Mr. Green, anxious to say something agreeable, replies,"Has it really, sir? |
39347 | To which the baroness languidly replies, looking from her book,"Why not?" |
39347 | Under the picture was printed:"But, dear Mr. Undertaker, are you so perfectly sure that she is dead?" |
39347 | Vehement? |
39347 | Was it a gift or a purchase? |
39347 | Was this book, he asks, made on purpose for the queen? |
39347 | Well, have you maturely reflected upon it?" |
39347 | Were the tai and the other fish caught? |
39347 | What company can I wish him to keep? |
39347 | What do you think? |
39347 | What fine lady could have managed this delicate affair better? |
39347 | What friendships can I desire him to contract? |
39347 | What is his answer? |
39347 | What is it you have to say?'' |
39347 | What is it? |
39347 | What must it have been when it was new?" |
39347 | What must we do when we have sinned[_ péché_]?" |
39347 | What proofs? |
39347 | What says the old song? |
39347 | What says the''Chin- Yo?'' |
39347 | What signifies it if the hand or the foot be deformed? |
39347 | What woman would eat till her husband has first had his fill? |
39347 | What''s that for?" |
39347 | What''s this? |
39347 | What, for example, can be less like truth than that solemn donkey of a Scotch duke in M. Octave Feuillet''s play of"The Sphinx?" |
39347 | Where are Thackeray''s snobs? |
39347 | Who, then, dares say that state can be accurst Where the last day''s as happy as the first?" |
39347 | Why a blue ball? |
39347 | Why do n''t you make''em''move on?''"] |
39347 | Would any one believe that the following sentences were written nearly four hundred years ago? |
39347 | Would_ she_, like this woman, have patience to wait_ Till the mold was well dry on her poor husband''s grave?_''"[ Footnote 29: Small feet.] |
39347 | You bought me for five hundred drachmas, but what if it turns out that you are the greater fool of the two?" |
39347 | You know mathematics?" |
39347 | You reason, Why Should the poor innocent be doomed to die? |
39347 | You''ve dressed yourself in red, too!_ What means this mummery? |
39347 | [ Illustration: Why do n''t you take it?] |
39347 | [ Illustration:"''_ My dear Baron, I am in the most pressing need of five hundred franc!_''Must I put an_ s_ to franc?" |
39347 | [ Illustration:"But, dear Mr. Undertaker, are you so perfectly sure that she is dead?" |
39347 | [ Illustration:"What are the Wild Waves saying?" |
39347 | [ Illustration:"Where are the diamonds exhibited?" |
39347 | [ Illustration:"Who Stole the People''s Money?" |
39347 | [ Illustration:"Who was that gentleman that just went out?" |
39347 | _ Boy._"But, mother, why should we be so afraid of the thunder storm? |
39347 | _ He._"And you?" |
39347 | _ He._"But( you know we must think of every thing) suppose it should rain to- morrow morning?" |
39347 | _ Japanese Embassador._"Then these people, your Grace, I suppose, are heathen?" |
39347 | _ Like_ it, did I say? |
39347 | _ Master Joinville._"Am I?" |
39347 | _ Master Joinville._"Oh, am I?" |
39347 | _ Of course_ she knows how to rub the shoulders and loins, and has learned the art of shampooing?" |
39347 | _ Priest._"What signifies the ass''s mouth?" |
39347 | _ Priest._"What signifies the head of the ass?" |
39347 | _ Priest._"What signifies the paunch of the ass?" |
39347 | _ Priest._"What signifies the tail of the ass?" |
39347 | _ Priest._"What signify the four feet of the ass?" |
39347 | _ Punch_ remarks that"the curate is puzzled, and wonders, do they refer to his lecture in the school- room?" |
39347 | _ Sentinel._"Who goes there? |
39347 | _ Whosoever hath bin at church may exercise lawful recreations on Sunday._ What''s the meaning of this? |
39347 | _ Will no one bring the oil quicker? |
39347 | _ Woman._"Well, what will you buy for mother''s birthday?" |
39347 | _ from whence? |
39347 | and do you call that a fault? |
39347 | and if he is gay, will she not leap for joy? |
39347 | are_ you_ dying too? |
39347 | exclaims Bertrand, aghast,"a_ bona- fide_ dividend?" |
39347 | if you are not ashamed of such useless things, how, at least, can you avoid regretting the enormity of their cost?" |
39347 | is styled"The Restorer of Liberty,"but underneath we read the sad question,"_ Eh bien_, but when will that put the chicken in the pot?" |
39347 | my Power''s grown weak_, What art thou Fiend? |
39347 | or where? |
39347 | or,"Was n''t that delightful?" |
39347 | said the man to the deer,''what''s this? |
39347 | says the short man,"you wonder that your light goes out so often? |
39347 | was familiarly styled) is seen reading a placard headed"Reform Bill,"and muttering,"Reform_ Bill_? |
39347 | what do you think of_ that_? |
39347 | what does it matter whether I die of a disease, or by plunder and extortion?" |
39347 | what mortal pen could paint her horror and her dread? |
39347 | when, can you tell? |
39347 | where can it be?'' |
39347 | whereabouts is it?" |
39347 | wo n''t it last?" |
39347 | yet more Apparitions nigh?_"WHITEBREAD. |
7131 | Are your men loaded? |
7131 | But what if necessaries of life should be taxed? |
7131 | Does thee call it freedom, Friend Winthrop,says he,"to fear contact with such as believe otherwise than thee does? |
7131 | Hast thou the proclamation there in thy doublet, Simon? |
7131 | How, for treason? |
7131 | May we not restrain the church from apostasy? |
7131 | Maybe we''ll get a better chance at''em out here, colonel-- eh? |
7131 | Ought the government of Massachusetts to submit to the pleasure of the court as to alteration of their charter? 7131 Shall he who commissioned us to protect the country from the heathen, betray our lives?" |
7131 | The civil liberties of New England are part of the inheritance of their fathers; and shall we give that inheritance away? 7131 Well, my lad,"says Paul,"are you ready to fight to- morrow?" |
7131 | What did they want? |
7131 | Who shuts the door against his majesty''s commissioners? |
7131 | Why is the devil so loth to have testimony borne against you? |
7131 | Will you violate the law of Parliament? |
7131 | --"By what authority?" |
7131 | A window was thrown open above:"Who''s there?" |
7131 | All stared at one another: what had happened? |
7131 | Americans were as well off as these Englishmen; on what ground could they demand to be better off? |
7131 | And fear, is it not bondage? |
7131 | And here was Colonel Robinson of Westford too, a volunteer to- day: but what was his opinion? |
7131 | And how many pounds of tobacco was a good wife worth? |
7131 | And is it not well that it should be so? |
7131 | And might the people of Virginia be free from any tax not approved by their assembly? |
7131 | And why all this uproar about the stamp tax? |
7131 | Are we a decadent fruit that is rotten before it is ripe? |
7131 | Beggars could have faith; princes and prelates might lack it; of what avail was it to gain the whole world if the soul must be lost at last? |
7131 | But could it really be true that these men meant to kill American farmers in sight of their own homes? |
7131 | But of what profit was it? |
7131 | But so far as her brief past may serve as a key wherewith to open the future? |
7131 | But was it enough, indeed? |
7131 | But what if England were to meet this move by laying a duty on some necessary of life, and then forbid Americans to manufacture it at home? |
7131 | But why may they not have believed they were in the right? |
7131 | By what agency did they perish, and when? |
7131 | Camden confessed that he did not know what to do; the law must be executed: but how? |
7131 | Can truth fear aught? |
7131 | Clarendon?" |
7131 | Did any of them wish they had not come? |
7131 | Had they harmed their killers? |
7131 | Has any one seen him go? |
7131 | How can devotion to liberty co- exist in the mind with advocacy of servitude? |
7131 | How many mothers felt that pang in the pale dawn of that frosty morning in Deerfield? |
7131 | How was a governor to govern people who refused to be governed? |
7131 | How, then, is the early prosperity of Virginia to be explained? |
7131 | If a witness simply by holding his peace can hang a minister of blameless life, who may escape hanging by a witness who will talk? |
7131 | If the law it made could be disregarded, what could stand? |
7131 | If the mother country allowed the colony to fix the amount it should pay, what guarantee could she have that it would pay anything? |
7131 | If the word of Parliament was not law, what was? |
7131 | Is Sir Edmund afraid? |
7131 | Is it objected that we shall be exposed to great sufferings? |
7131 | It was the warning of our Lord--"I am not come to bring peace? |
7131 | Might it not then be wiser to yield? |
7131 | Might the colony, they concluded, be permitted to buy itself out of the hands of its new owners, at their own price? |
7131 | Nay, how does thee know that the atheist, whom thee excludes, is further from the truth than thee thyself is? |
7131 | No doubt they might prevail: but would not the moral defeat counterbalance the gain? |
7131 | None could compete with the Pilgrims on their own ground; for were they not growing up with the country, and the Lord-- was He not with them? |
7131 | She was bound for Europe; but whither is Hudson bound? |
7131 | The English fleet was impending; what was to be done? |
7131 | The commissioners finally wanted to know, yes or no, whether the colonists meant to question the validity of the royal commission? |
7131 | The history of the United States does mean something: what is it? |
7131 | The men began to ask one another whether it was not incumbent on them to march to the rescue of their town? |
7131 | The people may be incompetent to frame laws: but what if they decline to fight for you when called upon? |
7131 | The protection of a colony was expensive: why should not the protected one bear a part at least of the expense? |
7131 | These misgivings might now be dismissed; if the ruler of so many tribes was willing to stand their friend, who should harm them? |
7131 | They are dear to us as ourselves, as how should they not be, since what, other than ourselves, are they? |
7131 | They must help themselves, since no man would help them; and why not-- since they had God on their side? |
7131 | They were halted by the gruff"Who goes there?" |
7131 | They were in the house of God: would He provide help for His people? |
7131 | They would not be taxed without representation; why should they submit to any legislation whatever without representation? |
7131 | This was excellent for such as could afford to become patroons; but what about the others? |
7131 | Was it the purpose to provoke one? |
7131 | Were English soldiers really enemies of their own flesh and blood? |
7131 | What can less than threescore minute- men do against them? |
7131 | What could be done then? |
7131 | What could they do? |
7131 | What easier, more equitable way could be devised to get the financial tribute required without pressing hard on any one? |
7131 | What is death to him who has already triumphed over the fetters of the flesh, and tasted the drink of immortality? |
7131 | What is to be said of these tragedies? |
7131 | What right had England to enforce the Navigation Acts? |
7131 | What said Captain Barrett-- and Isaac Davis of Acton, and Buttrick? |
7131 | What says our poet?--"How am I theirs, When they hold not me, But I hold them?" |
7131 | What was crossing the Delaware( almost exactly twenty- three years afterward) compared to this? |
7131 | What was that root?--or, let us say, the mother lode, of which these were efferent veins? |
7131 | What was the explanation of this extraordinary step? |
7131 | What was their home? |
7131 | What was to be the result? |
7131 | What were the commissioners, that they should venture to call a public meeting in the town of a free people? |
7131 | What would have been the political result had the absence of all artificial pressure indefinitely continued? |
7131 | Where''s our charter?" |
7131 | Where, indeed? |
7131 | Why not take them to America? |
7131 | Why should they complain of the Navigation Acts? |
7131 | Why should they feel aggrieved at the restriction on their manufactures? |
7131 | Why should they sever themselves from these? |
7131 | Why were they killed? |
7131 | Would England repeal the act? |
7131 | and how shall he call his conviction the truth, since all truth is one, but the testimony of no man''s private conscience is the same as another''s? |
7131 | demanded a citizen, stepping up to Preston; and when the latter nodded--"Will they fire upon the inhabitants?" |
7131 | did any doubt in his or her heart whether a cold abstraction was worth adopting in lieu of the great, warm, kindly world? |
7131 | ejaculated the good parson, between his set teeth,"are n''t they going to shoot?" |
7131 | he calls out in a harsh, peremptory voice:"Ye rebels-- why do n''t you lay down your arms and disperse?" |
7131 | or are we the bud of the mightiest tree of time? |
9929 | To whom shall we go now for orders, Your Majesty? |
9929 | What is there for us to do? |
9929 | What means this? |
9929 | Why hast thou brought out the holy icon? |
9929 | Would you like,says the tender- hearted lady to her daughter,"would you like to have news of Rennes? |
9929 | Ah, you will go to Panama, will you? |
9929 | An inconsistent, treacherous man? |
9929 | And this, then, is the end of Sweden, and its bad neighborhood on these shores, where it has tyrannously sat on our skirts so long? |
9929 | Could Frederick the Great have saved it had he been_ par impossible_ Louis XIV''s successor? |
9929 | Could this be the far- famed Mississippi, or was it not rather old Avernus? |
9929 | Could this be true? |
9929 | Had anyone ever before seen a czar of Moscow quit Holy Russia to wander in the kingdoms of foreigners? |
9929 | Had not Pulcheria, daughter of an emperor, reigned at Constantinople in the name of her brother, the incapable Theodosius? |
9929 | Had she not contracted a nominal marriage with the brave Marcian, who was her sword against the barbarians? |
9929 | I have not my Louisa now; to whom now shall I run for advice or help?" |
9929 | In other words, what was the cause of the consummate failure, the unexampled collapse, of the French monarchy? |
9929 | Is there not something extremely romantic in the characters of the men of that epoch? |
9929 | It is toward that cause, that great"Why?" |
9929 | Lights were soon obtained, and then--"Where is the charter?" |
9929 | Louisiana had been named from a king: was it not in keeping that those lakes should be called after ministers? |
9929 | Now what did the emissaries of Sophia propose to them? |
9929 | Of what importance to him was the ruin of many thousand innocent families? |
9929 | Question by the Court:"Ann Putnam, who hurts you?" |
9929 | Question by the Court:"What do you say, Goodman Procter, to these things?" |
9929 | Shall we regain our rights?" |
9929 | Sophia could only save herself by seizing the throne-- but who would help her to take it? |
9929 | The Prince only asked what he now thought of predestination? |
9929 | The next Sunday after this accusation Parris preached from the verse,"Have I not chosen you twelve, and one is a devil?" |
9929 | The person answered:"What is that to you? |
9929 | The streltsi? |
9929 | They undertook that deputies[ others than some of those present?] |
9929 | Under an unknown sky, at the extremity of the world, on the shores of the"ocean sea,"what dangers might he not encounter? |
9929 | Was it a dream-- a wild delirium of the mind? |
9929 | Was it to be the son of the Miloslavski, or the son of the Narychkine? |
9929 | What could Andros do? |
9929 | What did it mean? |
9929 | What is it you wait for? |
9929 | What meant this very unparliamentary conduct, or was it a gust of wind which had startled all? |
9929 | What then was Peter to do? |
9929 | What was to become of the poor czarevni, of the blood of kings? |
9929 | Where was the charter? |
9929 | Who knew what adventures might befall him among the_ niemtsi_ and the_ bousourmanes_? |
9929 | Who should succeed Feodor? |
9929 | Who should succeed him? |
9929 | Who was first to be attacked? |
9929 | Why not act?" |
9929 | and why I was not at home saying my prayers till the dead- cart came for me? |
9929 | how do you do? |
9929 | what is the matter?" |
34650 | ''Tis how many hundred years, Will, since this Prince Hamlet lived? |
34650 | An it be men in quest of Sir Valentine, you mean,said Kit, who was of quick divination,"where be their horses? |
34650 | And Anthony? |
34650 | And how goes the world with thee, Captain Kit? |
34650 | And now, mistress,said Marryott, turning to her, and speaking in a low voice,"what may be done for thy comfort? |
34650 | And the Puritan rides with us? |
34650 | And thou''lt wait? |
34650 | And what if I have already incurred penalties as grievous, on mine own account? 34650 And what the devil are you doing here?" |
34650 | And who is the fellow at their head? |
34650 | And why did your brother''s men so? 34650 Are they Barnet''s men, think you?" |
34650 | Are you Sir Valentine? |
34650 | Ay, truly? 34650 Being one of those players,"said she,"you are well- wisher to the foolish men who partook in the late treason?" |
34650 | But can they learn how bad thy wound is? 34650 But if a man rode ahead, and left tangible track, by being seen and noted in the taverns and highways? |
34650 | But if they were made to believe you had fled afar? |
34650 | But if you could not buy a dinner,said Hal, smiling,"how did you buy your way into the playhouse?" |
34650 | But if, not finding you in the first search, they should suppose you gone elsewhere? |
34650 | But thou? 34650 But to themselves?" |
34650 | But what a devil-- why, the pieces thou wert jingling? |
34650 | But what then? |
34650 | But what then? |
34650 | But where may they be left? |
34650 | But why lose this time, sir? |
34650 | But will you not send men after this traitor, while you bear the letters? |
34650 | But you?--you waited with the horse, that you might ride with me, is''t not so? |
34650 | But, madam, do you not perceive all is at stake upon my instant flight? 34650 By your leave, madam, sith you be in their secrets, I would fain know how far behind us they ride?" |
34650 | Certain riders from London, mean you? |
34650 | Delay, your Majesty? |
34650 | Did you lie just now, when you said you were Sir Valentine Fleetwood? |
34650 | Didst hear anything? |
34650 | Do you dare accuse this lady of false swearing? |
34650 | Else why came they never to Fleetwood house? |
34650 | Five and twenty? |
34650 | For what are you waiting? |
34650 | Given you cause,--how? |
34650 | God''s light, say you so? 34650 Hath Mr. Shakespeare never told you?" |
34650 | Hath life then lost all taste and motive? |
34650 | Have they complained? |
34650 | Have you seen aught of a key I lost? |
34650 | How if we shoot Barnet, from one of the windows? |
34650 | How know''st thou? |
34650 | How many miles to London town? |
34650 | How now, Anthony? |
34650 | How now, Hal? 34650 How now, officer?" |
34650 | How now? |
34650 | I dare say your honor hasna''fell in with the rascals, on your worship''s travels? |
34650 | I departing, when I am in yon narrow hole between timbers? 34650 I have said, what choice have I?" |
34650 | I he sees departing? |
34650 | I said truly, did I not? |
34650 | If I left Captain Bottle and Anthony Underhill with them? |
34650 | If I left men to protect you? |
34650 | If I left, also, the men who joined us from Rumney''s band? |
34650 | If it be so tight closed that others have not entered, for thievery or shelter, how can we get in? |
34650 | In pursuit of Sir Valentine? |
34650 | Is Anthony coming back? |
34650 | Is Barnet still yonder? |
34650 | Is Roger Barnet a keeper of his word? |
34650 | Is all well at the stable door? |
34650 | Is it Marryott? |
34650 | Is it of my asking? 34650 Is it true? |
34650 | Is not this the examination of Sir Valentine Fleetwood, and whose name else--? |
34650 | Is that thy master I see yonder? |
34650 | Is there no hiding- place near, to which you might be carried? |
34650 | Is''t true she is the sister of the gentleman Sir Valentine fought? |
34650 | Know you not their leader will be one that is well acquainted with my face? |
34650 | Know your duty, say you? |
34650 | Know''st thou the full speech,said he,"beginning,''How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank''?" |
34650 | Madam, madam, would you be left to the will of that villain? 34650 Madam, what am I to do?" |
34650 | Madam,he cried, in no very gentle tone,"may I know what is your purpose in this?" |
34650 | Marry, is this thy welcome? |
34650 | Moreover, where is a coach to be got in time? |
34650 | Ne''ertheless,said Hal,"is''t not as I say, an the false chase were once contrived?" |
34650 | Need the search for papers lead to the discovery of yon hiding- place? |
34650 | Of what do you prate, old fool? 34650 Of whom speak you?" |
34650 | Or in a coach, an one were to be had? |
34650 | Prithee, what should put hindrance in my way? |
34650 | Shall I give chase and make him eat his words? |
34650 | Shall I support thee to thy bed? |
34650 | Should these be the men? |
34650 | Sir Valentine Fleetwood, mean you? |
34650 | Sir Valentine, goest thou to bed so early? |
34650 | Stay here? |
34650 | The lady-- whither hath she gone, and when? 34650 Then why do you stay here?" |
34650 | Then, if they had reason to think you far fled? |
34650 | Think you that is her purpose? |
34650 | Thou hast never told me; never have I dared ask: was-- all-- counterfeit that night? |
34650 | Thou need''st fresh horses? 34650 Thou''rt alive, eh? |
34650 | Was that thy condition, then, when he took thee as coadjutor? |
34650 | Well, are you Sir Valentine? |
34650 | Well, what matters that? 34650 Wert caught in any of that shower, lad?" |
34650 | What a murrain hath befallen--? |
34650 | What deviltry are you about, following me from your bed, hiding in the darkness while I pass, and going to yonder shed? 34650 What do you see to make you stare so?" |
34650 | What dost here, Hal? 34650 What have officers of justice to do with me?" |
34650 | What holds him so long at the stable? 34650 What if Sir Valentine Fleetwood be not here?" |
34650 | What is that to you, fellow? |
34650 | What is that, I pray you? |
34650 | What is the matter? |
34650 | What is the matter? |
34650 | What is this? |
34650 | What is your name? |
34650 | What know you of this young gentleman? |
34650 | What made the rascals fly so suddenly? 34650 What matter?" |
34650 | What mean''st thou? |
34650 | What means this, Captain Rumney? |
34650 | What name shall I put down? |
34650 | What of the wounded men, sir? |
34650 | What say ye, mates? |
34650 | What say''st thou? |
34650 | What shall hinder her from crying out? |
34650 | What think you is his intent? |
34650 | What wild prating is this? |
34650 | What would you have done then? |
34650 | What wouldst thou have, Laertes? |
34650 | What yeoman or hind would take them under shelter? 34650 What''s afoot, you knave?" |
34650 | What, Hal,cried Sly,"is it some state affair that Bottle hath let thee into?" |
34650 | What, Harry? |
34650 | What, canst not see''tis old Kit, by the flame of his nose? |
34650 | What, old rook-- captain, I mean,called out Mr. Sly;"must ever be shaking thine elbow, e''en''twixt the dishes at thy supper?" |
34650 | What? |
34650 | Where are the provisions Anthony brought yestreen? |
34650 | Where else should he seek it, your Majesty? |
34650 | Where else, truly? |
34650 | Where''s Marryott? |
34650 | Where? |
34650 | Which party is it? |
34650 | Whither do we ride? |
34650 | Who else should be on the road at this hour? |
34650 | Who ever loved that loved not at first sight? |
34650 | Who is it disturbeth the night in this manner? |
34650 | Who the devil can be abroad at this hour? 34650 Who wishes to know?" |
34650 | Why did she not know me, either as Sir Valentine, or as not being Sir Valentine? |
34650 | Why, then, is there no course, no chance? |
34650 | Why,said Benvolio to the fellows who had played Tybalt''s followers,"came he not off with you?" |
34650 | Why? |
34650 | Will ye follow this cheap rascal Rumney''gainst gentlemen? 34650 Will you promise to return to the coach at my word, if I let you out to walk?" |
34650 | Will you sup in your chamber, or with me at this table? |
34650 | Would you dare use force? |
34650 | You could not be supported on horseback, I suppose? |
34650 | You know Burbage, and Shakespeare, and the rest? |
34650 | You know him? |
34650 | You mean that a band of highway robbers, more than common bold, hath been in the neighborhood? |
34650 | Your brother is dead, then? |
34650 | Zounds, sir, do you know what you hinder? 34650 [ 25]"Then this Barnet is like to keep on our track?" |
34650 | [ 30]A play? |
34650 | _ You_ have provided? |
34650 | ''And have you,''quoth I,''no other mark?'' |
34650 | ''What mean you by that?'' |
34650 | A cry of danger, say you? |
34650 | Already languishing from sheer fatigue, must she now famish also? |
34650 | Am I a common coney- catcher? |
34650 | An this rustic hath any trick worth two of mine, is he not welcome to play it? |
34650 | An thou art free, riding after me to London, who can say what chance may not occur for rescue and escape? |
34650 | And Mr. Richard Brewby''s?" |
34650 | And if she should, was it certain that she might not escape ere the next two days were up? |
34650 | And if your track were kept ever in view before him, would he not continue upon it to the end? |
34650 | And mine opponent-- hast heard yet how Mr. Hazlehurst fares, Anthony?" |
34650 | And one of Sir Valentine''s known servants, to show the road and leave the better trace? |
34650 | And shall not a constable judge of information that cometh to him first? |
34650 | And what gentleman leading them, and fighting with them, could hope to win unless he were armed, as I should be, by love for that lady? |
34650 | And what if I have some running away to do, for myself? |
34650 | And what will you do to hinder me?" |
34650 | And which door is best to carry it in through?" |
34650 | And why was he exercising a saddled horse in such a place so far from this inn, not perceptibly near any other? |
34650 | Are Barnet''s men behind?" |
34650 | Are you magistrate''s men?" |
34650 | Art for a merry night of it, my bawcock? |
34650 | Aught beyond the mere outward appearance, the mere indifferent willingness to join in a musical performance for the sake of the aural pleasure? |
34650 | Beef and beer for the belly? |
34650 | Blessed Mary, what are the times? |
34650 | But Hal, with a fierce cry"Talk you of killing?" |
34650 | But after that, what of the lives of Master Marryott and his men? |
34650 | But as to this mysterious gentleman, of whom she spoke to Master Marryott? |
34650 | But did this situation exist? |
34650 | But was he destined to succeed? |
34650 | But what choice have I? |
34650 | But what is to be done? |
34650 | But would she believe him? |
34650 | By your favor, what place is this?" |
34650 | Can you not find strength, somewhere deep- stored within you?" |
34650 | Can you not ride forth? |
34650 | Could I satisfy both with a sixpence? |
34650 | Could aught have befallen her? |
34650 | Did he keep the road to Stevenage, or turn out yonder?" |
34650 | Didst go to London, and stay there? |
34650 | Do I cheat with a gang? |
34650 | Do I consort with gull- gropers? |
34650 | Do I request aught of you? |
34650 | Do we leave things to chance in war? |
34650 | Do we not use our skill there, and every advantage God hath given us? |
34650 | Dost hear, Anthony?" |
34650 | For at this moment thou lov''st me, dost thou not? |
34650 | For look you, if thou''rt free, canst thou not serve me to the better effect? |
34650 | For my brother''s death? |
34650 | For, look you, since I must in any case be taken, why need also my men suffer? |
34650 | Foxby Hall, say you? |
34650 | God''s body, doth a sixpence or two signify?" |
34650 | Had she come to doubt whether he was indeed her brother''s slayer? |
34650 | Hast done aught wonderful in thy time? |
34650 | Hath he no mind of his own, by which he may judge of information? |
34650 | Have I no skill, no hardihood? |
34650 | Have I not full right to get my self- approval by this act? |
34650 | He did not add, but did he think, that Will Shakespeare''s plays were more like to be remembered, if at all, for Mr. Burbage''s having acted in them? |
34650 | Heard you not what Hudsdon said? |
34650 | How livest thou? |
34650 | If he have authority to receive information, hath he not authority to receive denial of it, and to render opinion''twixt the two?" |
34650 | If he should come and find them, how many three- farthing pieces would their lives be worth, think you?" |
34650 | Indeed, may not the virtue of loyalty and blind devotion have been an invention of ingenious rulers, for their own convenience? |
34650 | Is it not possible? |
34650 | Is it wonder that Roger Barnet, sitting not a man''s length away, hung breathlessly, and with wide eyes, upon the scene? |
34650 | Is it wonder that the audience was a- quiver with interest, under complete illusion? |
34650 | Is not a game a kind of mimic war, and shall not a man use skill and stratagem in games? |
34650 | Is''t not so?" |
34650 | It seemed to say,"You see, mistress, what soft stuff this captor of yours shall prove in my hands?" |
34650 | Kit thereupon rose, strode over to the players, drew them around him, and said, in a low tone:"What, boys, will ye spoil old Kit''s labor? |
34650 | Know you-- can you suppose--?" |
34650 | Let a man, or a hundred men, ride forth and leave traces, what shall make these officers think the man is I?" |
34650 | Lovest thou music, madam?" |
34650 | Madam, know you where Sir William Crashaw''s house is? |
34650 | May not one flight suffice for both? |
34650 | Might Hal venture from his present post for the brief time necessary to his purpose? |
34650 | Might it not be a harmless scratch?" |
34650 | Must I, then, leave you here, in this deserted house, in this wild night, to what terrible chances I dare not think of? |
34650 | My word of honor, my oath, avail not--""Speak you of oaths and words of honor? |
34650 | Ods- daggers, must I be a milksop, and afraid o''nights, because I was n''t born to wear hose instead of petticoats?" |
34650 | Once I am this fellow''s prisoner, and seem to have no will or spirit left, may not my guards grow heedless? |
34650 | Or a sight of the new play, to feed the mind withal? |
34650 | Or had her heart come to incline toward him despite the supposed gulf of bloodshed that parted them? |
34650 | Or was he fleeing from nothing, leaving a track for nobody to follow? |
34650 | Or was there signified an inner, perhaps unconscious, yielding of the woman''s nature to the man''s? |
34650 | Roger replied that he had only Kit''s word for that; moreover, what mattered it? |
34650 | Seeing but a rustical officiousness and news hunger in this speech, Hal paused, and asked:"What rascals, goodman?" |
34650 | Shall youth serve nothing, and strong arms, and hard legs? |
34650 | Should a man resign his faculties and fall back on chance? |
34650 | Sink this Rumney in perdition!--why did I ever encumber us with him and his rascals?" |
34650 | Sir Valentine himself was the first to speak; he did so with quiet gravity:"Art quite sure of this, Harry?" |
34650 | So Hal began, with Shakespeare''s"O mistress mine, where are you roaming?" |
34650 | So who''s to set the pursuers right?" |
34650 | Straight north toward Scotland, sayest thou, Master Marryott? |
34650 | Then the pursuivant turned to his informants:"An ye had eyes for so much, had none of you the wit to call out whither he went?" |
34650 | They are wo nt to play at the Globe,--why, that is where you played, is''t not so?" |
34650 | Think you, because I am some miles and days from all witnesses of the quarrel, save your own man, my mind is to be clouded upon it?" |
34650 | Warrant, say you? |
34650 | Was Roger Barnet still upon his track? |
34650 | Was his domination over her, begun, and hitherto maintained, by physical force, at last obtaining the consent of her heart? |
34650 | Was not the boy Francis? |
34650 | Was the horse waiting? |
34650 | Was this mere accident, thought Hal, or was it by precaution of Kit Bottle? |
34650 | Was this the boy''s own happy thought, or was it in obedience to a meaning glance from his mistress? |
34650 | What am I to do?" |
34650 | What choice have I?" |
34650 | What danger?" |
34650 | What design was she forming? |
34650 | What foolery is this, you rogue, to hinder one of her Majesty''s subjects travelling on weighty business?" |
34650 | What have I to do with scurvy, rustical justices?" |
34650 | What is thy place in the world?" |
34650 | What is your name, sir?" |
34650 | What meant this sudden flight? |
34650 | What might he infer from this? |
34650 | What says the play? |
34650 | What should it be, then? |
34650 | What should they of no religion understand of the bites of conscience?" |
34650 | What surprise is this you give us?" |
34650 | What the devil_ was_ he doing there? |
34650 | What was he doing yesterday, but teaching him to counterfeit Anthony Underhill''s psalm- singing? |
34650 | What was her mind toward him? |
34650 | What was in her thoughts? |
34650 | What was the matter? |
34650 | What would be the outcome of this strange flight? |
34650 | What would he not give now for means of escape? |
34650 | When he should have gone through with this business? |
34650 | When shall I see or hear?" |
34650 | When the two were alone in a corner, the soldier, having dropped his buoyant manner, whispered:"Hast a loose shilling or two about thy clothes, lad? |
34650 | Whence had this interest arisen? |
34650 | Where are the provisions Anthony brought, Kit?" |
34650 | Where is your writ?" |
34650 | Where was she at this moment? |
34650 | Where, Hal asked himself, had he recently heard that name? |
34650 | Which is your best horse, mistress? |
34650 | While the justice is away, is not the constable the main pillar of the law? |
34650 | Who are the players?" |
34650 | Who are you?" |
34650 | Who hath ever heard him flaunt his birth before us? |
34650 | Who is''t can read a woman?" |
34650 | Who shall know our very names, three poor hundred years hence?" |
34650 | Why did Tybalt delay? |
34650 | Why should Rumney have placed himself at the rear? |
34650 | Why should she have thought it necessary to carry the pretence so far? |
34650 | Will ye keep money from the needy? |
34650 | Will ye scare that birdling away? |
34650 | Wilt follow me?" |
34650 | Wilt not let me cheer myself with knowledge of having done this little deed befitting a gentleman? |
34650 | Wilt rob me of my one consolation, the saving of my faithful followers? |
34650 | Wilt send me entirely sad of heart to London? |
34650 | Wilt sing? |
34650 | Without decreasing his pace, Hal asked Anthony:"Was it she only that you saw coming? |
34650 | Would he take time for present search or occupancy of your house, or demand upon constable''s or sheriff''s men? |
34650 | Would you drag me forth to meet my death? |
34650 | Wouldst thou hinder my using the one right by which I may somewhat comfort myself? |
34650 | Yet how was Hal to summon Anthony? |
34650 | Yet thou wouldst love me, this one moment, even though the red gulf were indeed between us? |
34650 | [ 4]"What a plague are you looking at, Gil Crowe?" |
34650 | can it be that they are here already,--that they have come before me?" |
34650 | replied Rumney, with an insolent pretence of carelessness;"what matters it?" |
34650 | why should people sit tongue- tied in this manner? |
47805 | ''And is Michael Rust a lawyer?'' |
47805 | ''And why do you suppose them to be written by Rust? |
47805 | ''Annie, is that you? |
47805 | ''Are you not aware,''said he,''that in Egypt, by artificial heat, the people create thousands of chickens?'' |
47805 | ''But tell me farther,''said he,''what discoverest thou on it?'' |
47805 | ''But what signify your strong impressions,''says Reason,''if they are not founded on any evidence? |
47805 | ''But why ask?'' |
47805 | ''But,''says Reason,''what evidence have you that the place lies this way?'' |
47805 | ''Can such, things be, and overcome us like a summer- cloud, without our special wonder?'' |
47805 | ''Did all married people,''they will say,''break a certain commandment? |
47805 | ''Did you want your house battered about your ears?'' |
47805 | ''Do these letters prove what you say, beyond a doubt?'' |
47805 | ''Do they though?'' |
47805 | ''Do you never hear him speak of any one?'' |
47805 | ''Got any grind- stones?'' |
47805 | ''Have you ever had any business with him through others?'' |
47805 | ''Have you worked in secret, or openly?'' |
47805 | ''Holmes, Dick Holmes,''said he, after a moment,''are you at leisure?'' |
47805 | ''How do you know that the person who brought this letter was from Rust?'' |
47805 | ''How long have you been ferreting out this matter?'' |
47805 | ''How_ can_ you make me laugh so, when I am so sick?'' |
47805 | ''Is your name Henry Harson?'' |
47805 | ''Nor what it''s about?'' |
47805 | ''Shall_ I_ tell_ you_ who he is?'' |
47805 | ''So ye dinna ken my reasons, ye say, Mr. Bartlett, for the decision I mad''to- day? |
47805 | ''Then again,''says Reason,''I ask what is your evidence?'' |
47805 | ''Then you know him?'' |
47805 | ''Well, Townsend, what news, what news?'' |
47805 | ''Well, and what then?'' |
47805 | ''What ails thee, pup?'' |
47805 | ''What did you do?'' |
47805 | ''What is the reason,''said I,''that the tide and sea rise out of a thick mist at one end, and again lose themselves in a thick mist at the other?'' |
47805 | ''Where did you get this?'' |
47805 | ''Which way?'' |
47805 | ''Who comes to see him?'' |
47805 | ''Who is he?'' |
47805 | ''You''ve never seen Rust, you say?'' |
47805 | --How hath this thought Found life within my heart?-- Is this a change thy spell hath wrought, Thy spirit could impart? |
47805 | --as dead as the lecturer''s? |
47805 | A''commercial problem''must close our excerpts:''How can a junior partner be taken into a house over the senior partner''s head? |
47805 | And is there no doubt that he is at the bottom of all this villainy? |
47805 | And to the human soul, Speaks not THY still small voice in accents strong? |
47805 | And to what purpose would the power of enjoying the prospect of immortality be increased, if the prospect itself be hid in the blackness of darkness? |
47805 | And what are the effects of such_ acting_? |
47805 | And what good do you gëit ëout of it nëow? |
47805 | And what is it which encourages him in all this? |
47805 | Answer us, all ye that ever_ saw_ a summer butterfly in the country, is not that a_ perfect_ picture? |
47805 | Are any of these things so?--or, worst of all imaginings, have you_ breakfasted badly_? |
47805 | Are earth, air, fire, and water, more dissimilar in their elementary properties than are Lemon, Sugar, Water, and Rum? |
47805 | Are we charmed with the stateliness of Eastern fiction and the melancholy grandeur of Eastern allegory? |
47805 | Are we fond of examining the aids which history derives from some of the obscurer stores of antiquity? |
47805 | Are you trying to set a runaway match to music? |
47805 | Art thou alive to the grandeur of the original conception? |
47805 | Be quick-- what then? |
47805 | But after what lapse of time shall the mind''s horror at annihilation be softened into mournful complacency? |
47805 | But any how,''Squire, what''ll you give, s''posin''I_ do_ try?'' |
47805 | But here Reason interrupts him:''Why are you pursuing this course so fast? |
47805 | But if six sides are to be preferred, why not have the same number for the roof and floor? |
47805 | But if there_ be_ an exception, how does it happen that we find such long- continued uniformity? |
47805 | But is the_ fact_ altered by this trifling error? |
47805 | Can a part be equal to the whole, or the finite compared with the infinite? |
47805 | Can any experience convince us that these have a source of enjoyment equal to that which blesses his expectation who anticipates a triumph over death? |
47805 | Can human thought explore The boundaries of THY kingdom, or define Mid all the orbs that sweep the blue vault o''er Those that remotest shine? |
47805 | Can there be but one opinion concerning such shameless''_ literary_''expositions as this, among all right- minded persons? |
47805 | Can there be no doubt that these came from Rust,''said he, turning them over in his hand? |
47805 | Could appropriateness and power of metaphor reach much beyond this? |
47805 | Could n''t we get Glib to climb the steeple above the window and deliver an harangue? |
47805 | Cruel words, certes; but are they wholly groundless? |
47805 | Curious, was n''t it? |
47805 | Do n''t you know who are his acquaintances, or associates?'' |
47805 | Do n''t you think it is best for you to be making preparation for a future state? |
47805 | Do we seek for the opinions of a man of letters upon the aspect and the antiquities of the most famous country in Europe? |
47805 | Do you not feel impelled to achieve some great, some glorious act? |
47805 | Do you remember your first julep? |
47805 | Does it not''fortify like a cordial?'' |
47805 | GOD help_ him_, did I say? |
47805 | Good''eavens!--how''THEODORE''_ must_ have felt, as he''gradually recovered from the hurt of his fall,''(_ was_ his''limb''amputated?) |
47805 | Harson glanced at the letter, and then said:''Do you know the contents of this?'' |
47805 | Has your brain cooled? |
47805 | Have they got in a new barrel of beer? |
47805 | Have you heard this rumor, Sir? |
47805 | He was shown into the library, and was most cordially received:''My dear TOM, to what am I indebted for the favor of this visit?'' |
47805 | Hey, Spite?'' |
47805 | How many actions, how much noble labor, invite men to their performance, offering a full reward? |
47805 | How many things are there in this world which man was made to love? |
47805 | How now, Spite?'' |
47805 | How then can we doubt? |
47805 | In the scene with his sister the debutant should say:''Are you assured that Mr. BELCOUR gave you no diamonds?'' |
47805 | In thy wild and stormy might To cast o''er all earth''s lovely things Thy pale and withering blight? |
47805 | In what are they happy? |
47805 | In what do they excel the poor? |
47805 | Is it not time for you to be thinking about_ another world_? |
47805 | Is n''t that the thing?'' |
47805 | Is not the wit of this undeniable? |
47805 | It is astonishing, in the month of November, is it not, Monsieur? |
47805 | It would quite build me up; perhaps you''ll go with me?'' |
47805 | John what? |
47805 | Little boy, what is your name? |
47805 | Lost? |
47805 | May I trouble you for the milk?'' |
47805 | Nothing else? |
47805 | Or curb his swiftness in the forward race? |
47805 | Or do we seek to be withdrawn from the cares of our maturer life into the thoughtless sports and pleasures of our youth? |
47805 | Or when perchance upon a single voice Depends an alderman''s defeat or choice? |
47805 | Raise the dark veil hung o''er that mystic land, And light the wanderer''s path from time''s receding sand? |
47805 | Sir? |
47805 | Some one inquired if she had ever seen''the_ real_ falls, the great original?'' |
47805 | The question however was rendered thus:''Are you assured that Mr. DIMOND gave you no BELCOURS?'' |
47805 | There was much tramping, and shouting of''Where are the rascals?'' |
47805 | They have n''t bought up all the large flags in the ward? |
47805 | They have n''t engaged Murphy''s two starved horses, that always operate so on the popular sympathies and bring up so many voters? |
47805 | Thy bat, thy bow, Thy cloak and bonnet, club and ball; But where art thou? |
47805 | To the infidel, Nature must wear a repulsive aspect; for_ why_ should she create a phantom joy, which must soon vanish for ever? |
47805 | Townsend, Townsend, how d''ye do, Townsend?'' |
47805 | WHAT are the elements and traits of a religious character? |
47805 | Was it this which led the kindly''Boston Post''to pronounce''Puffer Hopkins''''about as flat an affair as it ever tried to wade through?'' |
47805 | Was it''malevolence''which suggested a new title- page, at the publisher''s expense, from which their names might be omitted? |
47805 | Was that not a shout of heart- felt gladness that then startled the echoes for miles around? |
47805 | Were you ever led to such a place as you seek by the aid of_ impression_ alone?'' |
47805 | What cared he for its schemes and dreams and turmoil? |
47805 | What combinations of virtue and excellence, of principle and attainment, enter into and form a character which answers to our conception of religion? |
47805 | What could we say more? |
47805 | What do these things mean? |
47805 | What do you do, what can you do, in such a moment of intense, overwhelming excitement?'' |
47805 | What do you think of it?'' |
47805 | What do you think of_ that_?--eh?'' |
47805 | What more total overthrow of every principle of action could possibly be conceived? |
47805 | What power against such rivalry could stand? |
47805 | What rumor, for Heaven''s sake? |
47805 | What shall it be, Sir? |
47805 | What then, Botch? |
47805 | What then, in the name of Heaven, shall it be? |
47805 | What though some trace of the barbarian state Betrays at times the newness of their date; What though their dwellings rose but yesterday? |
47805 | What was the world to him? |
47805 | What will you have?'' |
47805 | What''ll you do then? |
47805 | Who are you? |
47805 | Who shall say that_ this_ is n''t''genuine humor?'' |
47805 | Who so good a guide as ADDISON, in those papers which unlock all the gentler and purer emotions of the heart? |
47805 | Who would have thought that the aspect of things could become so changed? |
47805 | Why could they not, upon occasion, be constructed with three or four sides, or even round, equally as well? |
47805 | Why interest one''s self in a personage whom one knows must at the end of the second volume die a miserable death? |
47805 | Why must they always be made with just six sides to them, and no more? |
47805 | Will the writer permit another to express for her the very emotions which she evidently depicts with her''heart swelling continually to her eyes?'' |
47805 | Will you be kind enough to sit to Mr. HARLOWE for your portrait?'' |
47805 | Yet who can believe there is a single faculty in the mind which must ever desire, without rational hope, and whose despair must be without solace? |
47805 | Yet who can decide the measure of this indulgence or restraint for another? |
47805 | You can remember that?'' |
47805 | You''re an honest fellow; but I suppose there''s no harm however in wishing you a better employer?'' |
47805 | _ Minister._ Do n''t you think it is time for you to be thinking about your soul, my boy? |
47805 | across the blasted heath? |
47805 | and the''Poem on Man''a''mere pile of words,''in which even poetical thoughts were''completely spoiled by verbiage?'' |
47805 | and what have you got to say for yourself? |
47805 | and why should they be always constructed with one particular inclination? |
47805 | and wilt Thou not protect the innocent, and punish the guilty?'' |
47805 | answered the other, with apparent interest;''and pray what was it?'' |
47805 | hast thou carefully dwelt over this list of ingredients? |
47805 | how is this, Sir? |
47805 | inquired Harson;''what''s his profession?'' |
47805 | old fellow, do you hear that?'' |
47805 | or changed the tent and the cabin into the fabrick of diversified flights? |
47805 | or hired Blaster, the popular trumpeter? |
47805 | or the end of a tri- pronged beet or radish? |
47805 | said Harson, in a very dissatisfied tone, at the same time passing the milk;''and yet you are in his employ?'' |
47805 | said I, ramming away,''there; do n''t you see them?'' |
47805 | shall such things be? |
47805 | what are you? |
47805 | what do they refer to? |
47805 | what hand shall guide The trembling spirit on its passage now To regions yet untried? |
47805 | whence are you? |
47805 | which is the foundation of his exultation? |
47805 | whither are you going? |
47805 | who first contemplated or imagined STAIRS? |
8690 | How comes it then, that at the polling- booth this morning I did not perceive a single negro in the whole meeting? |
8690 | What, then, the blacks possess the right of voting in this country? |
8690 | What, then, the majority claims the right not only of making the laws, but of breaking the laws it has made? |
8690 | Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation? 8690 Am I, then, in contradiction with myself? 8690 And can you live nowhere but under your own sun? 8690 And if complete equality be our fate, is it not better to be levelled by free institutions than by despotic power? 8690 Are there no woods, marshes, or prairies, except where you dwell? 8690 At what time have we made the forfeit? 8690 Besides, what could they see but a hideous and desolate wilderness, full of wilde beasts, and wilde men? 8690 But can it be affirmed that the turmoil of revolution is not actually the most natural state of the South American Spaniards at the present time? 8690 But if the whites and the negroes do not intermingle in the north of the Union, how should they mix in the south? 8690 But to sum up the whole in one word, can it be possible that our author did not visit the patent office at Washington? 8690 But what now remains of those barriers which formerly arrested the aggressions of tyranny? 8690 But when patrimonial estates are divided, and when a few years suffice to confound the distinctions of a race, where can family feeling be found? 8690 Can they be accused of laboring in the cause of despotism, when they are defending of the revolution? 8690 Does not this sufficiently show that all human power and greatness is in the soul of man? 8690 From what cause, then, does so startling a difference arise? 8690 Has such been the fate of the centuries which have preceded our own? 8690 How can a populace, unaccustomed to freedom in small concerns, learn to use it temperately in great affairs? 8690 How comes it, then, that the American republics prosper, and maintain their position? 8690 How is it possible that society should escape destruction if the moral tie be not strengthened in proportion as the political tie is relaxed? 8690 I do not know whether all the Americans have a sincere faith in their religion; for who can search the human heart? 8690 I have spoken of the emigration from the older states, but how shall I describe that which takes place from the more recent ones? 8690 If he were free, and obliged to provide for his own subsistence, would it be possible for him to remain without these things and to support life? 8690 If so, why was not this forfeiture declared in the first treaty which followed that war? 8690 In what part of human tradition can be found anything at all similar to that which is occurring under our eyes in North America? 8690 In what respect is the country you inhabit better than another? 8690 Is it credible that the democracy which has annihilated the feudal system, and vanquished kings, will respect the citizen and the capitalist? 8690 Is it, then, wonderful that he does not resist such repeated impulses? 8690 Ought such a jury, which represents society, to have more power than the society in which the laws it applies originate? 8690 Out of the pale of the constitution, they are nothing; where, then, could they take their stand to effect a change in its provisions? 8690 Permit us to ask what better right can the people have to a country than the right of inheritance and immemorial peaceable possession? 8690 Recourse must be had to some other cause; and what other cause can there be except the manners of the people? 8690 Shall we, who are remnants, share the same fate? 8690 Was it when we were hostile to the United States, and took part with the king of Great Britain, during the struggle for independence? 8690 What are they to do? 8690 What could be said more to the purpose at the present day, when the revolution has achieved what are called its victories in centralization? 8690 What great crime have we committed, whereby we must for ever be divested of our country and rights? 8690 What influence could they possess over such men as we have described? 8690 What resistance can be offered by manners of so pliant a make, that they have already often yielded? 8690 What resistance can be offered to tyranny in a country where every private individual is impotent, and where the citizens are united by no common tie? 8690 What then is the cause of this strange contrast, and why are the most able citizens to be found in one assembly rather than in the other? 8690 What urges them to take possession of it so soon? 8690 When an individual or a party is wronged in the United States, to whom can he apply for redress? 8690 Whence, then, do their characteristic differences arise? 8690 Where are we then? 8690 Who can assure them that they will at length be allowed to dwell in peace in their new retreat? 8690 Who would not suppose that this poor hut is the asylum of rudeness and ignorance? 8690 Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground? 8690 Why, in the eastern states of the Union, does the republican government display vigor and regularity, and proceed with mature deliberation? 8690 Will it stop now that it has grown so strong and its adversaries so weak? 8690 Would it, then, be wise to imagine that a social impulse which dates from so far back, can be checked by the efforts of a generation? 8690 [ 176] How, then, can the inhabitant of the Union be called upon to contribute as largely as the inhabitant of France? 8690 [ 299] What cause can prevent the United States from having as numerous a population in time? 8690 and what can be done with a people which is its own master, if it be not submissive to the Divinity? 8690 and what would become of its immortality in the midst of perpetual decay? 8690 or was it necessary to create federal courts? 8690 where would that respect which belongs to it be paid, amid the struggles of faction? 49351 * What was this but"carrying their appeal from the justice to the fears of government?" |
49351 | An''wid three Vickeys sowed up in the waistbands? |
49351 | And all these have come on a friendly visit too? |
49351 | And all these men wish to converse with the chief too? |
49351 | Ay, Master Ford, is that you? |
49351 | But you surely do not consider his case and mine alike? |
49351 | By what authority do_ you_ demand it? |
49351 | Can you tell me,he said,"what causes that rainbow?" |
49351 | Do you ask for information? |
49351 | Do you know where we now are? |
49351 | For what? |
49351 | How can I? |
49351 | I have given you the countersign; why do you not shoulder your musket? |
49351 | I will go and see, sir,I said; and now, master, what is to be done? |
49351 | Indeed,answered Sir William;"what did my red brother dream?" |
49351 | Is he at home? |
49351 | Is it possible,said Franklin,"when he is so great a writer? |
49351 | Of what use is your standing army? |
49351 | Touch not the hand they stretch to you; The falsely- profferd cup put by; Will you believe a coward true? 49351 We have no countersign to give,"Barton said, and quickly added,"Have you seen any deserters here to- night?" |
49351 | Well,said Stark,"do you wish to march now, while it is dark and raining?" |
49351 | What aim? |
49351 | What can you do? |
49351 | What did my pale- faced brother dream? |
49351 | What need of repeating the same tale of horrors? 49351 What, Brother H----ske? |
49351 | What,feebly exclaimed Wolfe,"do they run already? |
49351 | Where''s the colonel[ Warner]? 49351 Who commands this garrison?" |
49351 | Who peopled all the city streets A hundred years ago? 49351 Who shall decide when doctors disagree?" |
49351 | Whom can we trust now? |
49351 | Will he fight? |
49351 | Will that do, colonel? |
49351 | ''How came it to pass?'' |
49351 | ''Is your name James Rivington?'' |
49351 | ''My lads,''he said,''why did you come to disturb an honest man in his government that never did any harm to you in his life? |
49351 | ''Why this emotion, sir?'' |
49351 | *"And can we deem it strange That from their planting such a branch should bloom As nations envy? |
49351 | ** What could have been more injudicious than holding such language to Washington, under the circumstances? |
49351 | 206theory of light? |
49351 | 223is your master?" |
49351 | After the doctor had announced his business, and Prescott had become calm, the general said,"Was not my treatment to Folger very uncivil?" |
49351 | Almost, the first words she uttered on my entrance were,"What are Cass''s prospects in New York?" |
49351 | And for what is this done? |
49351 | And how am I requited? |
49351 | And what a compliment does he pay to our understandings, when he recommends measures, in either alternative, impracticable in their nature? |
49351 | And what are we That hear the question of that voice sublime? |
49351 | And wherefore, for such a purpose, were the foundation- stones wrought into spheres, and the whole structure stuccoed within and without? |
49351 | And why? |
49351 | And would the tribes of New England permit the nation that had first given a welcome to the English to perish unavenged? |
49351 | And yet, bold babbler, what art thou to Him Who drowned the world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountains? |
49351 | As decadence is slow combustion, may not the heat evolved in the process produce the effects noticed? |
49351 | But how are they to be promoted? |
49351 | But how should they catch him? |
49351 | But in an American tax what do we do? |
49351 | But who are they to defend? |
49351 | But why this rigorous treatment? |
49351 | Can he be a friend to the army? |
49351 | Can he be a friend to this country? |
49351 | Can they ever forget the solemn promises there made, or be unfaithful to the pledge there sealed? |
49351 | Can you, then, consent to be the only sufferers by the Revolution, and, retiring from the field, grow old in poverty, wretchedness, and contempt? |
49351 | Canonchet, the chief sachem of the Narragansets, was the son of Miantonômoh; and could he forget his father''s wrongs? |
49351 | Could Britons seek of savages the same, Or deem it conquest thus the war to wage? |
49351 | Could Tryon hope to quench the patriot flame, Or make his deeds survive in glory''s page? |
49351 | Could any language written by an individual have a more opposite tendency? |
49351 | Did he desert his post or shrink from the charge?" |
49351 | Did we treat you in this manner when you were in the power of the Tryon county Committee? |
49351 | Do any of our historical antiquaries know by whose authority the alteration was made? |
49351 | Do n''t you consider how much the country is distressed by the war, and that your officers have not been better paid than yourselves? |
49351 | Do you ask, who is he? |
49351 | Do you intend to desert your officers, and to invite the enemy to follow you into the country? |
49351 | Do you know?" |
49351 | Do you not remember that you then agreed to remain neutral, and that upon that condition General Schuyler left you at liberty on your parole? |
49351 | Do you remember when we were consulted by General Schuyler, and you agreed to surrender your arms? |
49351 | Dr. Benjamin Rush, who formed a part of the general''s suite, earnestly asked,''A son of the Earl of Levin?'' |
49351 | Durfee''s"What Cheer?" |
49351 | Ford?" |
49351 | Forman,''said I,''do you call this a village? |
49351 | Goffe''s firmness alarmed the fencing- master, who exclaimed,"Who can you be? |
49351 | Has murder staind his hands with gore? |
49351 | Have you considered whether you have troops and ships sufficient to reduce the people of the whole American continent to your devotion? |
49351 | Have you no property, no parents, wives, or children? |
49351 | He came to America, and presented himself to the commander- in- chief He answered the inquiry of his excellency,"What do you seek here?" |
49351 | He immediately galloped to the encampment, and, in his uncouth, but earnest manner, thus addressed them:"My brave lads, where are you going? |
49351 | He left the room, and, calling his aid after him, asked, as they went out,"Did you ever hear so impudent a son of a b- h?" |
49351 | How could Shoemaker doubt it? |
49351 | In the foreground is a paper inscribed,"Shall they be obliged to maintain bishops that can not maintain themselves?" |
49351 | Is it not your own? |
49351 | Is there no man here? |
49351 | Johnson, Lady of Sir John, conveyed to Albany and kept as Hostage, 236.? |
49351 | Just then voices in the crowd behind Preston cried,"Why do n''t you fire? |
49351 | Let us turn back two centuries, and what do we behold from this lofty observatory? |
49351 | Lomonosov, a native Russian poet, thus refers to the sublime spectacle:"What fills with dazzling beams the illumined air? |
49351 | May not these names have been written on that occasion? |
49351 | Ogden, in reply to the commandant''s question,"Is there no way to spare Andre''s life?" |
49351 | On being told that one of them was unfortunate, he exclaimed,"What, has he misbehaved? |
49351 | On that representing Grenville, holding out a Stamp Act in his left hand:"YOUR Servant, Sirs; do you like my Figure? |
49351 | One bears the initials"G. R.,"George Rex or King; the rude form of an anchor, a mark peculiar to Great Britain, and placed upon her cannon- ball? |
49351 | Or taste the poison''d draught, to die? |
49351 | Or what are all the notes that ever rung From war''s vain trumpet, by thy thundering side? |
49351 | Other histories of our Revolution had been written, embellished, and read; what could be produced more attractive than they? |
49351 | Our wives, our children, our farms, and other property which we leave behind us? |
49351 | Pie had charge of the colonel''s horse, and frequently exclaimed,"What are we doing here? |
49351 | Rather, is he not an insidious foe? |
49351 | Said you not so? |
49351 | Say, is it just that I, who rule these bands, Should live on husks, like rakes in foreign lands? |
49351 | Say-- what is it? |
49351 | Shall Britons be such savages, that, when they can not spill the blood of enemies, they will shed that of each other?" |
49351 | She mourned not for the dead, for they were at rest; but little Frances, her lost darling, where was she? |
49351 | Smith, Adam, Author of? |
49351 | The English are but a handful, what has he to fear? |
49351 | The captain comprehended the silent allusion, and said,"Does that look like my nose? |
49351 | The colleagues whom he had assorted at the same boards stared at each other, and were obliged to ask,''Sir, your name?'' |
49351 | The colonel was sent for, and the captain, in a nasal tone, said,"Well, colonel, what d''ye want I should do?" |
49351 | The general was surprised, and said,"Sir, is not General Arnold here?" |
49351 | The light returned to the dim eyes of the dying hero, and he asked, with emotion,"Who runs?" |
49351 | The question arises, By whom was the inscription made? |
49351 | There can be no doubt of the purity of his intentions, but who can respect his judgment? |
49351 | They had seen something like this before, but when and where? |
49351 | They were delivered with emphasis, while he looked the officer, he says, full in the face:"Do I understand you, sir? |
49351 | This circumstance drew from Whittier his glorious poem,''The Prisoner for Debt, in which he exclaims,"What has the gray- hair''d prisoner done? |
49351 | To bring the object we seek nearer? |
49351 | We, your majesty''s Commons for Great Britain, give and grant to your majesty, what? |
49351 | Webb coolly and cowardly replied,"What do you think we should do here?" |
49351 | What do you think of a flag with a white ground, a tree in the middle, the motto''Appeal to Heaven?'' |
49351 | What else could the hill be called, under the circumstances, but Anthony''s Nose? |
49351 | What is your present situation there? |
49351 | What wakes the flames that light the firmament? |
49351 | Where our hero in glory is sleeping? |
49351 | Who can tell the heavy hours of woman? |
49351 | Who fill''d the church with faces meek A hundred years ago?" |
49351 | Who shall be the aggressor? |
49351 | Who shall be the conqueror? |
49351 | Who will call William? |
49351 | Who will strike?" |
49351 | Whose cause have you been fighting and suffering so long in? |
49351 | Why did n''t I know you yesterday?" |
49351 | Why did this body of men land at Fairfield at all? |
49351 | Why did you not take us prisoners yesterday, after Sir John ran off with the Indians and left us? |
49351 | Why do n''t we go on? |
49351 | Why do n''t you disperse, you rebels? |
49351 | Why do we stop here? |
49351 | Why, then, did not the boats proceed immediately to Albany? |
49351 | With such precious mementoes, how could she be other than a Democrat? |
49351 | Yea, what is all the riot man can make In his short life to thy unceasing roar? |
49351 | and are you familiar with the science of optics?" |
49351 | do you treat mo with the food of hogs?" |
49351 | dost thou aspire to happiness? |
49351 | from what quarter? |
49351 | our own property? |
49351 | pray, who is in fault, The one who begun, or resents the assault?'' |
49351 | said the general,"have your fathers been teaching you rebellion, and sent you to exhibit it here?" |
49351 | shall we never more seek out his grave, While fame o''er his memory is weeping?" |
49351 | the laws of refraction and reflection? |
49351 | what can this writer have in view by recommending such measures? |
49351 | what does he say? |
49351 | where is William Slocum?" |
49351 | why do n''t you fire?" |
5312 | And do not you know the sheep? |
5312 | And do you ever see him? |
5312 | And do you know the dingle- bells that grow near the edge of the wood? |
5312 | And how about the cockle- shells? |
5312 | And how did you know, sweetheart? |
5312 | And how long will you be gone, papa? |
5312 | And is it the weight of years that makes you sad? |
5312 | And what is that condition? |
5312 | And where are your sheep? |
5312 | And why is that? |
5312 | Are you becoming interested in politics, then; or is there some grievous breach of court etiquette which has attracted your attention? |
5312 | But what became of the magic collar? |
5312 | But what can I do? |
5312 | But what can you do? |
5312 | But where is your crook? |
5312 | But why did you stand on your head to do it? |
5312 | But why? |
5312 | Can I do anything to help you? |
5312 | Can I leave you alone while I go for the doctor, mamma? |
5312 | Can you sing? |
5312 | Can you tell In which of these houses the Queen may now dwell? 5312 Did you speak?" |
5312 | Do we tax the poor? |
5312 | Do you indeed love me, Nathalie? |
5312 | Do you think so? |
5312 | Do you, indeed? 5312 Good morning, Black Sheep,"said the boy;"why do you look so funny this morning?" |
5312 | Has anyone seen a little girl who has run away? |
5312 | Have you any money? |
5312 | Here, Isaac,he said to a farmer''s lad who chanced to pass by,"where is Little Boy Blue?" |
5312 | How am I to get out of here? |
5312 | How big was it? |
5312 | How came you in my cart? |
5312 | How can I put live birds in a pie? |
5312 | How do you know they are? |
5312 | How is Miss Muffet, Nurse? |
5312 | How long? |
5312 | How should I know? |
5312 | I could earn something, sir, could n''t I? |
5312 | If I grow three bags full the next time, may I have one bag for myself? |
5312 | In what way? |
5312 | Is it alive? |
5312 | Is n''t it dangerous for eggs to go about all by themselves? |
5312 | Is that the reason your eyes are so big? |
5312 | Is this your son, ma''am? |
5312 | Norwich? |
5312 | Of course; do not the sheep know you? |
5312 | Oh, papa,she answered,"why do you sing that nobody cares for you, when you know I love you so dearly?" |
5312 | Oh, that''s the idea, is it? |
5312 | Oh, you did, eh? 5312 Oh,"said Little Bo- Peep, in surprise,"do they wag their tails? |
5312 | Pussy- cat Mew, will you come back again? |
5312 | Pussy- cat, Pussy- cat, what did you there? |
5312 | So I see,she answered;"but did you bring my groceries?" |
5312 | That is fair enough,answered the alderman;"but in what way will you test his wit?" |
5312 | That was well done,said the mayor, coming back again;"but tell me, can you put my cart before my horse and take me to ride?" |
5312 | The people? 5312 Very good,"replied the judge;"now, then, where did you come from?" |
5312 | What are my officers for, but to serve me? |
5312 | What are they going to do with it? |
5312 | What are they? |
5312 | What are we to do? |
5312 | What are you doing here? |
5312 | What are you laughing at, sir? |
5312 | What are you trying to do? |
5312 | What business,she thought,"has a poor country cat To visit a city of madmen like that? |
5312 | What could I do with a sack of rye? |
5312 | What do those people who have n''t any sheep do for clothes? |
5312 | What do you suppose has become of their tails? |
5312 | What do you want with them? |
5312 | What does he know? |
5312 | What have you in the sack? |
5312 | What is it, my pet? |
5312 | What is it? |
5312 | What is it? |
5312 | What is it? |
5312 | What is your name, and where do you live? |
5312 | What is your name? |
5312 | What is your name? |
5312 | What little girl? |
5312 | What shall we do now? |
5312 | What shall we do? |
5312 | What think you, Borland? |
5312 | What''s a good place to visit down there? 5312 What''s the matter, little one?" |
5312 | What''s the matter? |
5312 | What''s the use of being in the country,she thought,"if I must act just as I did in the city? |
5312 | Where are you going, my lad? |
5312 | Where are you now? |
5312 | Where did you get that tail? |
5312 | Where did you get the little girl? |
5312 | Where does your mother live? |
5312 | Where is your home, bunny? |
5312 | Who are you? |
5312 | Why do you think so? |
5312 | Why not? |
5312 | Why should I keep a handful of rye? |
5312 | Why, what could you do with a bag of wool? |
5312 | Will you go and wake him? |
5312 | Will you really? |
5312 | You are surely mistaken, sir,said Solomon, with the gravity that comes from great wisdom,"these are our dog''s fore legs, are they not?" |
5312 | A good- looking woman answered his knock at the door, and he asked politely,"Is this the town of Norwich, madam?" |
5312 | And as none are so rich but there are those richer, how should we, in justice, determine which are the rich and which are the poor?" |
5312 | And did you not say that, God willing, when this happened you would come back to us?" |
5312 | And while he sobbed, a voice said to him,"What is the matter, little egg?" |
5312 | Are you the man who shot the duck here yesterday morning?" |
5312 | But he plucked up courage and said to the farmer,"Can you tell me the way to Norwich, sir?" |
5312 | But prithee, maid, Why thus your garden fill When ev''ry field the same flowers yield To pluck them as you will?" |
5312 | But tell me, Nathalie, are you willing to leave me?" |
5312 | But tell me, papa, what have the flowers to do with your coming home?" |
5312 | But what is amiss?" |
5312 | By and by the woman asked,"Why do you come out here to sew?" |
5312 | Ca n''t you go and shoot another? |
5312 | Can I do anything for you?" |
5312 | Can you not assist these poor beggars at once?" |
5312 | Do n''t you think so? |
5312 | Do you know the cowslips that grow in the pastures, Mary?" |
5312 | Do you know?" |
5312 | Do you now think your husband can not shoot?" |
5312 | Do you think the miller was angry? |
5312 | Have you any idea what you look like, all sheared down to your skin? |
5312 | He began to make his way carefully through the hay, and was getting along fairly well when he heard a voice say,"Where are you going?" |
5312 | How can I make my fortune with that?" |
5312 | How could he cut it, without any knife? |
5312 | How could he marry, without any wife? |
5312 | How did you get here?" |
5312 | How then could you make a fortune from it?" |
5312 | How would you like to have someone come along and see you, now that you are all head and legs?" |
5312 | How, let me ask you, sir, could you have married without any wife?" |
5312 | Is it not true, Your Majesty?" |
5312 | Is it true?" |
5312 | Is she ill?" |
5312 | Is this true?" |
5312 | Mrs. Muffet would say, at times,"By the way, Nurse, how is Miss Muffet getting along?" |
5312 | See here, Mary, how would you like a little ride with me on my nag?" |
5312 | She was beginning to cry again, when the same old woman she had before met came hobbling to her side and asked,"What are you doing with my cat tails?" |
5312 | So he thanked her and entered the house, and she asked,"Will you have it hot or cold, sir?" |
5312 | Solomon came to him one day and asked,"Tell me, sir, why has a man two eyes?" |
5312 | Still, she went to see Sophocles, and, dropping a penny upon his plate, she asked,"Tell me, O wise man, how shall I drive my husband to work?" |
5312 | Tell me, you rascal, where is the pig?" |
5312 | Then came a carter, and putting a piece of money in the hand of Pericles, he enquired,"Pray tell me of your wisdom what is wrong with my mare?" |
5312 | Then he said to her in rhyme( for it was a way of speaking the jolly Squire had),"Mistress Mary, so contrary, How does your garden grow? |
5312 | Then he said to his wife,"What does a drake look like, my love?" |
5312 | Upon what day will it please you to reign?" |
5312 | Well, how are you feeling, little one?" |
5312 | Well, what were you running for?" |
5312 | What are you doing with them?" |
5312 | What did he sing for? |
5312 | What do you mean? |
5312 | What have you to say in reply?" |
5312 | What is your name?" |
5312 | When he saw the sheep waiting for him he asked,"Black Sheep, Black Sheep, have you any wool?" |
5312 | When he was still a child Solomon confounded the schoolmaster by asking, one day,"Can you tell me, sir, why a cow drinks water from a brook?" |
5312 | When the farmer came into the field again the Black Sheep said to him,"Master, how many bags of wool did you cut from my back?" |
5312 | When the first beggar came before him the Prince asked,"Are you in need?" |
5312 | When the grandmother returned she asked,"Where is the bread for your supper?" |
5312 | Who are you?" |
5312 | Why do we tax the poor at all?" |
5312 | Why do you cry, And blind your eyes to knowing How dingle- bells and cockle- shells And cowslips all are growing?" |
5312 | Will you go?" |
5312 | [ Illustration: Jack Horner]"Where are you?" |
5312 | [ Illustration: Little Bun Rabbit] Little Bun Rabbit"Oh, Little Bun Rabbit, so soft and so shy, Say, what do you see with your big, round eye?" |
5312 | [ Illustration: Mistress Mary] Mistress Mary Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
5312 | [ Illustration: Pussy- cat Mew] Pussy- cat Mew"_ Pussy- cat, Pussy- cat, where do you go?" |
5312 | [ Illustration: The Black Sheep] The Black Sheep Black sheep, black sheep, have you any wool? |
5312 | [ Illustration: The Black Sheep]"What will they do with it, Black Sheep?" |
5312 | [ Illustration: Three Wise Men of Gotham]"Can not the priest tell?" |
5312 | are you hurt?" |
5312 | are you sure you can get them?" |
5312 | asked the Prince, anxiously,"have we done aright?" |
5312 | enquired Humpty;"do you belong in our nest?" |
5312 | have you never heard the story of the Man in the Moon? |
5312 | he said, as he dropped a piece of money upon a plate,"shall I win my lawsuit or not?" |
5312 | he said;"but say-- what do you people do to amuse yourselves?" |
5312 | how came you to think of putting live birds in the pie?" |
5312 | must I amuse you as well as myself? |
5312 | repeated her mother in surprise;"why do you wish a flower- garden, Mary?" |
5312 | repeated the Squire,"why do you wish to earn money?" |
5312 | replied Bo- Peep, in surprise;"what do you mean?" |
5312 | said the boy;"but who are the three bags for?" |
5312 | said the miller,"where on earth did you come from?" |
5312 | sneered the ram,"you like it, do you? |
47819 | ''Ah?'' |
47819 | ''And they were all amazed, and marvelled, saying one to another:''Behold, are not all these which speak, Galileans? |
47819 | ''And who is this who has such power over you?'' |
47819 | ''Back of me?'' |
47819 | ''Bucket? |
47819 | ''Bucket?'' |
47819 | ''But why does she cry out against you, for putting the black man upon her?'' |
47819 | ''Do I love her?'' |
47819 | ''Do I think of any one else, or care for any one else? |
47819 | ''Do n''t you think we''ve gained on her, in coming the last forty miles?'' |
47819 | ''Do n''t you_ know_ me?'' |
47819 | ''Find it out? |
47819 | ''Harry,''said he, after a pause,''Will you make me a promise?'' |
47819 | ''Has sweet little Kate been unkind? |
47819 | ''Have you observed her of late? |
47819 | ''He asks of the solitudes, where are they? |
47819 | ''How so?'' |
47819 | ''Is it so nominated in the bond?'' |
47819 | ''Is she in any danger? |
47819 | ''Pray, young woman,''said he, addressing himself to Patience;''what is the matter with Beautiful Hobbes?'' |
47819 | ''Short,''asked a gentleman, of one of these humble listeners,''how did you like the President''s speech?'' |
47819 | ''Six? |
47819 | ''There are six chairs here,''said he, addressing his clerk, in a stern tone;''where did they come from? |
47819 | ''WHAT is more ridiculous to a dandy than a philosopher, or to a philosopher than a dandy?'' |
47819 | ''Wake up; you know we must be merry sometimes; and when could there be a better opportunity than when that old fool Rust is away? |
47819 | ''Was ever nation like Sienna''s vain? |
47819 | ''Well, how_ much_, should you think?'' |
47819 | ''Well; oh,_ well_? |
47819 | ''Well?'' |
47819 | ''What do you think I gave for that?'' |
47819 | ''What of that? |
47819 | ''What shall I do? |
47819 | ''What''s that?'' |
47819 | ''Who''s there?'' |
47819 | ''Why, Wise, how did you find that out?'' |
47819 | ''You do n''t believe it, I suppose, father?'' |
47819 | *** ARE not the circumstances narrated in the following communication from a truly veracious correspondent,''very remarkable,''to say the least? |
47819 | *** ARE not these lines of MOTHERWELL very beautiful? |
47819 | --''_Avez vous faim?_''''Are you angry?--''Etes vous en colere?'' |
47819 | --''_Avez vous faim?_''''Are you angry?--''Etes vous en colere?'' |
47819 | --or as the mane of a bay horse?--or''as black as my hat?'' |
47819 | AN''where are ye gaun ye wee voyager, Wi''look sae fleyed or blate? |
47819 | After many ineffectual attempts, they gave over asking her to repeat the word; and the Justice asked her,''Who hurt her?'' |
47819 | An''where are ye gaun ye wee voyager, On sic an unco gate? |
47819 | And do you think that she will desert her father in his old age, and leave him to die alone?'' |
47819 | And even, while in his impious rapture, he thanks God, he still doubtingly asks,''Is it true; is it true?'' |
47819 | And finally, for we must stop somewhere, why are beauties''_ lovelier far in tears_?'' |
47819 | And how hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born? |
47819 | And many a snug possessor of a plum, Quitting his burrow on the''Ampstead road, With wife and trunks be flying all abroad? |
47819 | And why does she rest her pensive and pomatum''d brow upon her embroidered handkerchief?'' |
47819 | And would you know the reason? |
47819 | At last, Harson, in conclusion, said in an earnest tone:''Now tell me, Jacob, on your honor, do you love her?'' |
47819 | Beside, if the satire was''caviare to the GENERAL''of the''_ New- Mirror_,''how should it find a place in_ these_ pages? |
47819 | Can it be that he has been all this while scheming to rob me of her? |
47819 | Can their truth be_ doubted_ for a moment, however, by any intelligent reader? |
47819 | Could we say more? |
47819 | Did n''t you drive it about for a month, with the coat of arms of Mr. PAULDING, late Secretary of the Navy upon it?'' |
47819 | Did swollen eyes, bound with red, and nose pinkish in tinge at its extremity, ever improve the appearance of any mortal since the flood? |
47819 | Do n''t you see the sign,''No talkin''to the man at the hellum? |
47819 | Do you know he hinted to me that he thought you had an eye on Kate, and wanted to run off with her? |
47819 | Do you think we''re as dead as door- nails, d-- n you, and as deaf as stones? |
47819 | Does not this give that stupid expression which the French call''_ bouche béante_? |
47819 | Eh? |
47819 | First, then: Why are tears always called''pearly drops?'' |
47819 | From kindred manners, doctrines, men, and sects To learn a lesson of their own defects? |
47819 | Go with Somers? |
47819 | Had he done so? |
47819 | Had she ever refused an offer of marriage? |
47819 | Hammer the door down next time, will you? |
47819 | Has she told you that she loved Michael Rust? |
47819 | Have I not heard you and believed you? |
47819 | Have you noticed her drooping eye, her want of spirits, and failing strength?'' |
47819 | He had mounted to the wheel- house, and was asking the pilot:''What you doin''_ that_ for, Mister?--what_ good_ does''t do?'' |
47819 | His memorandum runs thus upon the card:''Are you''ungry?'' |
47819 | How is it_ now_? |
47819 | How is such and such a one? |
47819 | I asked him how that could be? |
47819 | I suppose you''re one of our social little dinner- party to- day?'' |
47819 | I was in my dotage; and you too, Kate, you listened and believed, did you not? |
47819 | Ill luck, ill luck?'' |
47819 | In utter despair I looked up to my informer, with a respect I had never bestowed upon tattered garments before, and asked:''Boy, what_ am_ I to do?'' |
47819 | Is Kate ill?'' |
47819 | Is any thing the matter with her?'' |
47819 | Is it Michael Rust?'' |
47819 | Is it absolutely necessary that it should always be a raven''s wing? |
47819 | Is it in rivers and in rocks to find Some new sensation for a barren mind? |
47819 | Is not Paulding the real Simon Pure of the democracy?'' |
47819 | Is there any authentic record of the personal condition of that afflicted bird, or of the causes which threw it into a decline? |
47819 | It is easy to distinguish the great men of the place;( what place has not its great men, on one scale or another?) |
47819 | It was a glorious conspiracy, was it not, Ned Somers? |
47819 | Johnson?'' |
47819 | Now what upon airth could ha''done it? |
47819 | Of the latter was_ Quid agis?_''What are you about there? |
47819 | Of the latter was_ Quid agis?_''What are you about there? |
47819 | On his name being mentioned, the President gave him a hearty shake of the hand, and asked him from what State he came? |
47819 | Or a crow''s wing, a black- bird''s wing? |
47819 | Or has old dad been crabbed? |
47819 | Or why not say,''Dark as the wool on negro''s poll?'' |
47819 | Or with rapt eye on cataracts to look? |
47819 | Rhoneland started up, looked suspiciously about the room, and said in a quick, husky voice:''Did I say it was Rust? |
47819 | Rhoneland?'' |
47819 | Shall this be? |
47819 | Shall we borrow of the prolific JAMES? |
47819 | She''s a noble girl, Harry, is she not? |
47819 | Should you not say''_ red_ cherry lips? |
47819 | Somebody asked Burrell which he liked best, Virginia or Washington? |
47819 | THINK you, my love, if ever fate Should cast a shadow o''er our bliss, That you or I could e''er forget In darkest hours our_ Good- night Kiss_? |
47819 | The dew- drops on its leaves are tears, That ask,''Am I so soon forgot?'' |
47819 | Then wherefore sail ye in this frail frail bark At sic an uncany hour? |
47819 | Then, why does the_ chevelure_ of dark- haired persons always resemble the''raven''s wing?'' |
47819 | They asked him what he felt? |
47819 | To mark how Albion''s little nook has grown To kiss the limits of the roasted zone? |
47819 | Was n''t that a good one, Ned? |
47819 | Was there ever a''sliding scale''for it, or such a thing as a''first- quality''article in its kind, before it became a synonym for_ nothing_? |
47819 | We have already asked who that''DICK''was, who wore such an''odd hat- band''that its memorial has been perpetuated even unto this day? |
47819 | What are you doing-- in the stern of the boat? |
47819 | What could we do against their numbers, and with so contracted a place for battle? |
47819 | What do you mean, boy? |
47819 | What do you mean? |
47819 | What is to become of our''_ areas_ and_ focus_,''of our altars and fires? |
47819 | What kind of success is that?'' |
47819 | What the DEVIL shall I do?'' |
47819 | What though I did all this? |
47819 | What would be the end of all this; what_ could_ be? |
47819 | What_ did_ he mean? |
47819 | What_ do_ you mean?'' |
47819 | What_ shall_ I do? |
47819 | When was the standard of value established for that intangible commodity of this particular artizan? |
47819 | When you say,''cherry lips,''do you particularize sufficiently? |
47819 | Where''s your flourishing head of hair? |
47819 | Who are they for?'' |
47819 | Who shall tell us they will not weep at the folly of all such as fancied Truth shone only in the contracted nook of their school, or sect, or coterie? |
47819 | Why are all necks, not bull- necks,''swan- like?'' |
47819 | Why are fingers always''taper?'' |
47819 | Why are handsome noses always''chiselled?'' |
47819 | Why are these cherry lips always slightly parted? |
47819 | Why from the counter and the club- room so Flock the spruce trader and the Bond- street beau? |
47819 | Why has it been handed down to us as the very CALVIN EDSON of its tribe? |
47819 | Why not his tail- feathers, occasionally, for the sake of variety? |
47819 | Why should the lordling[A] and the Marquis come? |
47819 | Why sits the lovely lady on the crimson sofa? |
47819 | Why so fleeting, answer, pray? |
47819 | Will you promise, Harry?'' |
47819 | Will you wait until you are thrust from it? |
47819 | Wo n''t your friend come?'' |
47819 | Would he have the goodness to''try again?'' |
47819 | Would not that definition apply better to drops of milk? |
47819 | Yet''it''s curious, is n''t it?'' |
47819 | You could not say that you have not read the poem which commences as follows,( if we rightly remember,)''could you, now?'' |
47819 | You will recollect you once asked me why old Major N---- called me sometimes''Captain Hardhead,''and sometimes''Captain Waghead?'' |
47819 | Your name is-- eh? |
47819 | _ Did_ he really think we should nibble at that hook? |
47819 | _ Go_,''muttered he, his mood changing, and his eyes beginning to flash;''go where? |
47819 | _ He_ told you that he loved you; and would make you his wife; did he not? |
47819 | _ You_, Kate, do n''t believe it?'' |
47819 | and the hollow echo answers, Where?'' |
47819 | and the way I shook and they shook, was a caution to abolitionists, I tell you?'' |
47819 | did you hear that noise? |
47819 | eh?'' |
47819 | ejaculated Rhoneland, in a faint voice, his cheek growing ghastly pale;''You know Michael Rust, do you?'' |
47819 | exclaimed our friend;''why, what has wrought such a change in your appearance? |
47819 | how are you, girl?'' |
47819 | inquired Harson, placing his hand on his shoulder;''Come, be frank with me, Jacob; who is it? |
47819 | muttered he, pressing his hands together,''Can it be that_ she_, my own little Kate, will desert me? |
47819 | replied the gude man;''do you s''pose GABRIEL is such an ass as to come_ on wheels_, in such good sleighing as this? |
47819 | replied the planter;''why, what do you mean? |
47819 | said Mr. Sludge,''would n''t he kick up a rumpus if he did but know what was going on here? |
47819 | said the President;''well, John, was there any blood upon it?'' |
47819 | tell me-- how? |
47819 | tell me-- when? |
47819 | tell me-- where? |
47819 | to steal into a man''s house, and, under the garb of friendship, to endeavor to wean away his child, and to carry her off? |
47819 | what could he mean? |
47819 | what''s put that bend in your back?'' |
47819 | where''s your flesh gone? |
47819 | whispered Tertullian;''do you hear voices? |
47819 | with Ned Somers? |
47819 | with Somers? |
47819 | you''re joking; but no-- you_ do n''t_ belong to that numerous family, though, do you? |
7495 | And how about the educated classes? 7495 Baptism a mere form?" |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Baptism a mere form? |
7495 | Do we still baptize in that way? |
7495 | For while one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos; are ye not carnal? |
7495 | For while one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos;_ are ye not carnal? 7495 Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
7495 | How, then,said the lawyer,"can you continue to believe in it?" |
7495 | WHAT MUST I DO TO BE SAVED? |
7495 | Well, now,said the lawyer,"do n''t you find a great many contradictions and difficulties you can not understand in the Bible?" |
7495 | What is the matter with this horse, anyway? |
7495 | Why,said the preacher,"do you see what I am doing with the bones of this fish? |
7495 | 12: 12)? |
7495 | 3:21),"Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? |
7495 | 6:3, 4, we read,"Or are ye ignorant that all we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? |
7495 | :"Is it lawful, in case of necessity, occasioned by sickness, to baptize an infant by pouring water on its head from a cup or the hands?" |
7495 | After I found my way back to Christ and to belief in the Word of God, the question naturally arose, which church shall I join, if any? |
7495 | And why did he not go"on his way rejoicing"before he"came up out of the water"? |
7495 | And why is it said,"They then that received his word were baptized"? |
7495 | And yet, after a century of effort, what do we see as the result? |
7495 | As we can not go everywhere at once, where shall we begin, and where shall we go next? |
7495 | But can that be said of true New Testament evangelism? |
7495 | But does this go to the bottom of the subject? |
7495 | But how did I discover the fallacy of rationalism? |
7495 | But is it Christ- like to do it? |
7495 | But is it not the case that the modern God- Father faith is generally a very weak and attenuated faith in a Providence, and nothing more? |
7495 | But what are the actual facts in the case? |
7495 | But what are these among so many? |
7495 | But you say, did not Jesus and the Apostles severely denounce sinners? |
7495 | But, my dear fellow, where does your consistency lead you to? |
7495 | But, you ask, how can good and learned people differ so in their beliefs? |
7495 | Common sense asks, Why? |
7495 | Do we forget how long it took us to come to the position that now seems so clear to us? |
7495 | Does it accomplish what it purposes to accomplish better than any other theory, and can that result be accomplished only by following the said theory? |
7495 | Does it always tell us what is right? |
7495 | Does it not matter what you believe, just so you are honest? |
7495 | Does not the Lord send his servants to- day with the same message to those who put off their obedience to him in baptism? |
7495 | Does not this show that Holy Spirit baptism was not to displace water baptism? |
7495 | Does the New Testament teach this babel of confusion or has it come from human inventions and additions? |
7495 | For when one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos; are ye not carnal?" |
7495 | Having considered the causes that lead to differences of opinion, how, in the light of these facts, should we treat those who differ from us? |
7495 | He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved"? |
7495 | I have summarized the situation as I see it as follows: ARE THESE THINGS TRUE? |
7495 | If properly instructed, will not all people be baptized as soon as they are willing to give heed unto the word of the Lord? |
7495 | If this is the high and holy calling of the church, is it a wonder that Christ so loved it as to give his life for it? |
7495 | Is Christ divided? |
7495 | Is ignorance an excuse? |
7495 | Is it a safe guide? |
7495 | Is it not perfectly clear that it would be partial and narrow? |
7495 | Is it safe as a guide? |
7495 | Is this left to chance, or is an order of procedure revealed in the New Testament? |
7495 | Is this true, and, if so, how far? |
7495 | L. L. Paine_( Congregational):"It may be honestly asked by some, Was immersion the primitive form of baptism? |
7495 | Love and compassion ask,_ Why?_ I believe we must find the answer chiefly in the failure to understand clearly the nature and functions of the mind. |
7495 | Or perhaps the more important question,"How can we discover what is truth?" |
7495 | Paul says,"Whereas there is among you jealousy and strife, are ye not carnal? |
7495 | The interests of humanity ask, Why? |
7495 | The question is, is it true to experience? |
7495 | Then, why did Christ walk eighty miles to be baptized of John, and insist that it was necessary for him to be baptized"to fulfil all righteousness"? |
7495 | Then, why is it said of the eunuch that when Philip"preached unto him Jesus,"he said,"Behold, here is water; what does hinder me to be baptized?"? |
7495 | Then, why is it said of the eunuch that when Philip"preached unto him Jesus,"he said,"Behold, here is water; what does hinder me to be baptized?"? |
7495 | Then, why is it said that"many of the Corinthians hearing believed, and were baptized"? |
7495 | Then, why was Lydia baptized as soon as she gave"heed unto the things which were spoken by Paul"? |
7495 | Then, why, in giving his commission to all gospel workers, did Christ say,"Go ye therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them"? |
7495 | Turning to Ingersoll, he said,"What do you think of that, Colonel?" |
7495 | We preach in season and out of season, but do we preach the Word of God as we ought? |
7495 | Well may we ask with Pilate,"What is truth?" |
7495 | What Should Be Our Attitude Toward Those Who Differ from Us? |
7495 | What about conscience? |
7495 | What about those who are willfully ignorant? |
7495 | What are its functions and limitations? |
7495 | What is its nature? |
7495 | What is the matter? |
7495 | What is the weakness of liberal and advanced theological thought? |
7495 | What is there in the nature of the mind that side- tracks the wisest and best in their effort to know the truth? |
7495 | Where in all history can you find twelve men more radically different mentally and temperamentally than the Apostles? |
7495 | Who expects parents to be perfectly impartial in their judgment when their own children are involved? |
7495 | Who is Luther? |
7495 | Why are the intelligent and consecrated hosts of Christ wasting three- fourths of their men and money through sectarian divisions? |
7495 | Why did Cotton Mather and other saintly, scholarly Christians martyr innocent saints as witches? |
7495 | Why did devout patriots of the North and South slaughter each other in cold blood? |
7495 | Why has conscience fought on both sides of every great historical conflict? |
7495 | Why is it that all of the thousands of worried and distressed souls do n''t come flocking to you? |
7495 | Why is it that the philosophers and thinkers do n''t come rushing in from all directions, to get from you the truths they have so long sought after? |
7495 | Why is it that the uneducated masses do not come to you and accept your simple doctrines which they can so easily understand? |
7495 | Why these ridiculous and absurd conclusions, despite the historical facts? |
7495 | Why were the scientific these s written at Harvard during forty years, all found out of date by Edward Everett Hale? |
7495 | Will not the same follow to- day if people will receive the Word of God without any subtractions? |
7495 | Will not the same follow to- day when people believe the whole gospel? |
7495 | Will not the same gospel, if preached in the same way, have the same effect to- day? |
7495 | Will not those who hear and believe in sincerity to- day also be baptized? |
7495 | Will you come and accept this salvation? |
7495 | Would it not be foolish for you to refuse to use the medicine because you can not conceive how it produces the cure? |
7495 | Would it not be irrational for me to refuse to use that medicine because I can not conceive how it effects the cure? |
7495 | Would we not put him down as a fool? |
7495 | _ Lutheran Catechism_, p. 208:"What is baptism?" |
7495 | _ Lutheran Catechism_, p. 216:"In what did this act( baptism) consist?" |
7495 | _ Was Paul crucified for you?_ or were ye baptized in( into) the name of Paul?" |
7495 | _ Was Paul crucified for you?_ or were ye baptized in( into) the name of Paul?" |
7495 | and how was I delivered from its mighty clutches by which it had dragged me from one pitfall to another so ruthlessly? |
7495 | and if our hearts are in perfect accord with his, will his concern not be our concern? |
7495 | arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord"? |
7495 | or those who have a seared conscience? |
7495 | or were you baptized in the name of Paul?" |
7495 | was Paul crucified for you? |
33624 | Ah, why,cries to his counselor keen A Nero of our present day,"Why was not born within_ my_ State A man so great?" |
33624 | And that? 33624 And this?" |
33624 | And when the ghost has vanished, who is it that stands before us? 33624 But have you ever spoken to her? |
33624 | But how about dusting the books and pictures? |
33624 | But what are dukes and viscounts to The happiness of all my crew? 33624 But what shall I do?" |
33624 | But who knows where your handkerchief is? |
33624 | But why did n''t you give them to me one at a time instead of all at once? |
33624 | But Ílya Ílyitch, little father[ bátiushka], what arrangements shall I make? |
33624 | Called you? 33624 Do n''t you know that moths breed in dust?" |
33624 | Eh-- eh-- eh-- that''s too short notice: to- morrow? 33624 Had n''t you better eat something, Afanasy Ivan''itch?" |
33624 | Hast thou been there already, little dear? |
33624 | Have your legs quite given out, that you ca n''t stand a minute? 33624 How can he be dead-- our witness, our intercessor, our mediator with God? |
33624 | How do you demonstrate that? |
33624 | How is it that other people do n''t have moths and bugs? |
33624 | How,cried I,"is that all you are to have for your two shillings? |
33624 | I do n''t know; perhaps it would be well, Pulkheria Ivan''na: by the way, what is there to eat? |
33624 | I sometimes go to the theatre or go out to dine: you might--"Do house- cleaning at night? |
33624 | Is it Mahomet,said he to Omar and the multitude,"or the God of Mahomet, whom you worship? |
33624 | Is it all ready for my bath? |
33624 | Is my bath ready? |
33624 | It is where you put it; how should I know anything about it? |
33624 | It must mean Italy,said Wilhelm:"where didst thou get the little song?" |
33624 | Know''st thou the hill, the bridge that hangs on cloud? 33624 My son, why thus to my arm dost cling?" |
33624 | O holy father,Alice said,"''twould grieve you, would it not, To discover that I was a most disreputable lot? |
33624 | Of course you have; but still you stay at home all the time: how can one begin to clean up when you are right here? 33624 Oh, massa, why you go away? |
33624 | Or perhaps you could eat some kisel? |
33624 | Ready? 33624 Says he,''Dear James, to murder me Were a foolish thing to do, For do n''t you see that you ca n''t cook_ me_, While I can-- and will-- cook_ you_?'' |
33624 | Shall I go and tell them to bring you some curd dumplings with berries, which I had set aside for you? |
33624 | That is what I expect,returned she;"but I think, my dear, we ought to appear there as decently as possible, for who knows what may happen?" |
33624 | The books and pictures? 33624 The house is not mine; how can we help being driven out of the place if they resort to force? |
33624 | Then only the cook and me was left, And the delicate question,''Which Of us two goes to the kettle?'' 33624 Then why dost thou go with him, sweet daughter of Juda?" |
33624 | Thursday only-- why? 33624 Was she not old?" |
33624 | Was there ever poet so trusted? |
33624 | Well now, Sophy, my child,said I,"and what sort of a husband are you to have?" |
33624 | Well then, what is this? |
33624 | Well then,said the latter finally,"suppose we grant you all this, what will you explain by it?" |
33624 | Well, is that anything to boast about? 33624 Well, my girls, how have you sped? |
33624 | Well, what did he say? |
33624 | Well, what of that? 33624 Well, why should n''t we put them off till to- morrow now?" |
33624 | What accounts? 33624 What ails thee, Mignon?" |
33624 | What appointment? |
33624 | What are you doing, Sister? |
33624 | What are you talking about? |
33624 | What could I do, Assar? 33624 What did he say? |
33624 | What do you mean--''ready''? |
33624 | What do you want? |
33624 | What is it you want? |
33624 | What is that you say? 33624 What is that?" |
33624 | What is the cause, alas,quod she,"My fader, that ye shulden be Dede and destruied in suche a wise?" |
33624 | What is the matter with you, Pulkheria Ivanovna? 33624 What is there?" |
33624 | What kind of a man am I? |
33624 | What letter? 33624 What shall we have to eat now, Afanasy Ivan''itch,--some wheat and suet cakes, or some patties with poppy- seeds, or some salted mushrooms?" |
33624 | What shall you do? 33624 What time is it?" |
33624 | Where are you going? 33624 Where are you going?" |
33624 | Where do they make any litter? 33624 Where is the handkerchief? |
33624 | Where, where are my children? |
33624 | Where,cried I,"where are my little ones?" |
33624 | Who is her master? |
33624 | Why are other people''s houses clean? |
33624 | Why did n''t you tell me it was ready? 33624 Why did you not get up?" |
33624 | Why do you object to my remaining on my knees? |
33624 | Why not compress them into one? |
33624 | Why, am I to blame that there are bugs on the wall? |
33624 | Will he be dead before night? |
33624 | You called me, did n''t you? |
33624 | You have nothing to say to me, and why should I waste my time standing here? |
33624 | You will save him, will you not? |
33624 | You will take care of it, will you? 33624 _"O father, dear father, and dost thou not hear What the elfin- king whispers so low in mine ear?" |
33624 | _O father, dear father, and dost thou not mark The elf- king''s daughters move by in the dark?" |
33624 | ''Tis there Our way runs: O my father, wilt thou go?" |
33624 | --"Father, dost thou not see the elfin- king? |
33624 | A LIFE''S WANDERING ANONYMOUS Know ye the flowery fields of the Cappadocian nation? |
33624 | A NAMELESS GRAVE PAULUS SILENTIARIUS My name, my country, what are they to thee? |
33624 | A prince by birth, rejoicing to be called to punish the usurper of his crown? |
33624 | A young hero panting for vengeance? |
33624 | After waiting a while, he sent for Pulkheria Ivanovna or went in search of her himself, and said,"What is there for me to eat, Pulkheria Ivan''na?" |
33624 | Ah, who will give us back the past? |
33624 | Alexander of Macedon was a hero, no doubt; but why smash the chairs? |
33624 | An Inspector? |
33624 | And has the Prince of Brazil''s religion been considered evidence of his connection with the enemy? |
33624 | And rise not, on us shining Friendly, the everlasting stars? |
33624 | And then he said to the third doughter,"How much lovest thou me?" |
33624 | And what shall we say of to- day as it flies? |
33624 | And why? |
33624 | And, glowing, young, and good, Most ignorantly thanked The slumberer above there? |
33624 | Anton Anton''itch, why is this? |
33624 | Arches not there the sky above us? |
33624 | As he was leaving the ward:--"Well?" |
33624 | Believest thou in God? |
33624 | Brush out all the corners every day?" |
33624 | But I suppose we are to have no more from that quarter?" |
33624 | But can your Ladyship favor me with a sight of them?" |
33624 | But how about the dust and the cobwebs on the walls?" |
33624 | But if the Catholic religion be this evidence of repugnance, is Protestantism the proof of affection to the Crown and government of England? |
33624 | But now old Age, with his stealing steps, Hath clawed me with his crutch: I stumbled over the door of a grave; Why leave they open such? |
33624 | But now when should we be able to do it? |
33624 | But tell me, should not the poet have furnished the insane maiden with another sort of songs? |
33624 | But who can set a guard to watch over kind words?" |
33624 | Ca n''t you do your best for your master?" |
33624 | Can Honor''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flattery soothe the dull, cold ear of Death? |
33624 | Can it be that I am not up yet nor had my bath? |
33624 | Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
33624 | Can you joy in bustling daytime,-- Day, when none can get his will? |
33624 | Carlyle''s Translation"Have you never,"said Jarno, taking him aside,"read one of Shakespeare''s plays?" |
33624 | Clearer and freer, who shall doubt? |
33624 | Could not one select some fragments out of melancholy ballads for this purpose? |
33624 | Did the faith of Denmark prevent the attack on Copenhagen? |
33624 | Do n''t you see I am worried? |
33624 | Do n''t you see I have entirely changed?" |
33624 | Do n''t you see? |
33624 | Do n''t you see?" |
33624 | Do we not understand from the very first what the mind of the good soft- hearted girl was busied with? |
33624 | Do you hear?" |
33624 | Do you speak like that to a gentleman of my station? |
33624 | Do you think I am secured? |
33624 | Do you think her pretty? |
33624 | Dost thou ask me How the vessel I reached? |
33624 | Dost thou believe that he is a great God?" |
33624 | Doth she entice him as well to the arbor? |
33624 | Dreamedst thou ever I should grow weary of living, And fly to the desert, Since not all our Pretty dream buds ripen? |
33624 | E''er understood by such as thou? |
33624 | FAUST AND MEPHISTOPHELES FAUST Canst thou, poor Devil, give me whatsoever? |
33624 | FAUST How so? |
33624 | FAUST Must we? |
33624 | FAUST Shall I outlive this misery? |
33624 | FAUST The same thing, in all places, All hearts that beat beneath the heavenly day-- Each in its language-- say; Then why not I in mine as well? |
33624 | Fond impious man, thinkest thou yon sanguine cloud, Raised by thy breath, has quenched the orb of day? |
33624 | For what? |
33624 | From whom did you win them? |
33624 | GESTA ROMANORUM What are the''Gesta Romanorum''? |
33624 | Has any one been despoiled of his goods? |
33624 | Hast thou not all thyself accomplished, Holy- glowing heart? |
33624 | Hast thou the miseries lightened Of the down- trodden? |
33624 | Hast thou the tears ever banished From the afflicted? |
33624 | Have I aspersed the reputation of a Mussulman? |
33624 | Have I not to manhood been molded By omnipotent Time, And by Fate everlasting, My lords and thine? |
33624 | Have we not already newspapers for every hour of the day? |
33624 | Have you ever looked at her? |
33624 | He contented himself with asking:--"Have you found it yet?" |
33624 | He follows? |
33624 | He says,"What would you have? |
33624 | Heard ye the din of battle bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse? |
33624 | How can he be pacified?" |
33624 | How comes it that thou dost not shrink from me?-- Say, dost thou know, my friend, whom thou mak''st free? |
33624 | How do_ you_ feel, Anton Anton''itch? |
33624 | How does it concern me? |
33624 | How long since this shop opened? |
33624 | How so? |
33624 | How was this? |
33624 | How would this minute suit? |
33624 | I delay to free her? |
33624 | I dread, once again to see her? |
33624 | I have reveled; who is uninitiated in revels? |
33624 | I hope you''ll say there''s nothing low- lived there? |
33624 | I tell every one frankly that I take bribes; but what sort of bribes? |
33624 | I was in love once; who has not been? |
33624 | If past, then why? |
33624 | If we ask,--for this, after all, is the capital question of criticism,--What has Goethe done to make us better? |
33624 | If we attend to the present condition and habits of these classes, do we not find their controversies subsisting in full vigor? |
33624 | In the third line, her tones became deeper and gloomier; the"Know''st thou it then?" |
33624 | In their weakness fallen at length, Hard it is to save them: Who can crush, by native strength, Vices that enslave them? |
33624 | In what relation stood Goethe to these great forces of the eighteenth century? |
33624 | Is it a border town-- is it, now? |
33624 | Is it from my countenance, my voice, my color, or my words, that you conceive me to be angry? |
33624 | Is the sable warrior fled? |
33624 | Is''t not soon enough when morning chime has rung? |
33624 | It is inquired by what right this is done?" |
33624 | It seemed to be his thought,"What kind of a sleeping- room would that be that had no bugs in it?" |
33624 | Know''st thou it then? |
33624 | Know''st thou it then? |
33624 | Know''st thou the house, its porch with pillars tall? |
33624 | LOVE''S IMMORTALITY STRATO( First Century A.D.) Who may know if a loved one passes the prime, while ever with him and never left alone? |
33624 | Lies not beneath us, firm, the earth? |
33624 | MARGARET Day? |
33624 | MARGARET How is''t with thy religion, pray? |
33624 | MARGARET Kiss me!--canst no longer do it? |
33624 | MARGARET Out yonder? |
33624 | MARGARET What rises up from the threshold here? |
33624 | MARGARET[_ throwing herself before him_] Art thou a man? |
33624 | MARGARET[_ turning to him_] And is it thou? |
33624 | May I ask: Is his religion the evidence of the warmth of his attachment to your alliance? |
33624 | Mirjam, if I go away wilt thou believe, and go on believing, that I go on God''s errand?" |
33624 | My friend, so short a time thou''rt missing, And hast unlearned thy kissing? |
33624 | My satin gown with the red stripes you must not put on me: a corpse needs no clothes; of what use are they to her? |
33624 | NON SINE DOLORE What, then, is Life,--what Death? |
33624 | Nay, I was mad; at whose prompting but a god''s? |
33624 | Now how is he going to get rid of me?" |
33624 | O meadows, wherefore vainly in your radiant garlands laugh ye? |
33624 | Of course it is praiseworthy to be thrifty in domestic affairs, and why should not the janitor be so too? |
33624 | On finishing her song for the second time, she stood silent for a moment, looked keenly at Wilhelm, and asked him,"_ Know''st_ thou the land?" |
33624 | Pandolfo,_ keeper of the gambling- house, comes in, rubbing his eyes sleepily__ Ridolfo_--Master Pandolfo, will you have coffee? |
33624 | Plutarch then replied with deliberate calmness:--"But why, rascal, do I now seem to you to be in anger? |
33624 | Reprinted by permission of Houghton, Mifflin& Co., publishers, Boston THE ELFIN- KING Who rides so late through the midnight blast? |
33624 | Say, are yon boisterous crew going thy comrades to be? |
33624 | See here, what next? |
33624 | Serlo looked at his sister and said,"Did I give thee a false picture of our friend? |
33624 | She turned and followed him; but the warrior on the other side of the brook called out,"What right hast thou to lead this maiden away?" |
33624 | Shortly after, he asked:--"What o''clock is it?" |
33624 | So it liked to this emperour to knowe which of his doughters loved him best; and then he said to the eldest doughter,"How much lovest thou me?" |
33624 | THE HARPER''S SONGS From''Wilhelm Meister''s Apprenticeship''"What notes are those without the wall, Across the portal sounding? |
33624 | THE SONNET What is a sonnet? |
33624 | Tell me, Livy, has the fortune- teller given thee a penny- worth?" |
33624 | Tell me, my dear, do n''t you think I did for my children there?" |
33624 | Tell me, what is it you want?" |
33624 | The All- enfolding, The All- upholding, Folds and upholds he not Thee, me, Himself? |
33624 | The Catholics are alone excepted; and for what reason? |
33624 | The King answered quickly,"What is that?" |
33624 | The King''s adviser looked at Assar and asked,"Hast thou offered up sacrifice to our gods?" |
33624 | The anguish of the dungeon, and the chain? |
33624 | The captive linnet which enthrall? |
33624 | The holy woman come to the door and asked what she would? |
33624 | The padre said,"Whatever have you been and gone and done?" |
33624 | The rooms do glitter, glitters bright the hall, And marble statues stand, and look each one: What''s this, poor child, to thee they''ve done? |
33624 | The swarm, that in thy noontide beam were born? |
33624 | The wives and daughters wear little short skirts, and when they walk they all lift up their legs like ducks-- where do they get any dirt? |
33624 | Then Pulkheria Ivanovna inquired,"Why do you groan, Afanasy Ivan''itch?" |
33624 | Then after a short pause:--"Have you noticed that the physiognomy of the great men of to- day is so rarely in keeping with their intellect? |
33624 | Then he came to the second, and said to her,"Doughter, how muche lovest thou me?" |
33624 | Then he said to Assar,"Thou saidst once that the God of Israel was a mighty God; could not_ he_ cure me of my disease?" |
33624 | Then spake he,"What were thy will I did thereto?" |
33624 | Then spake the Questioner: If''t were only this, Ah, who could face the abyss That plunges steep athwart each human breath? |
33624 | There''s an old story has the same refrain; Who bade them so construe it? |
33624 | Thou, surely, certainly? |
33624 | To- morrow( who can say?) |
33624 | Virtue, my dear Lady Blarney, virtue is worth any price; but where is that to be found?" |
33624 | Was it not a quaint expression to use? |
33624 | Was it not given to thee and me? |
33624 | Was it possible beauty like this to see, and not feel it? |
33624 | Well, why are you standing there? |
33624 | What art can wash her guilt away? |
33624 | What did you do with it?" |
33624 | What does he want in this holy spot? |
33624 | What good for us, this endlessly creating?-- What is created then annihilating? |
33624 | What have I done to thee? |
33624 | What have double meanings and lascivious insipidities to do in the mouth of such a noble- minded person?" |
33624 | What idle progeny succeed To chase the rolling circle''s speed, Or urge the flying ball? |
33624 | What is a sonnet? |
33624 | What is his employment? |
33624 | What is the use of wings if there is no air in which one can soar? |
33624 | What is this which engages the student of the metaphysic cell, who had gone through the four Faculties, and is now once again grown old? |
33624 | What is this? |
33624 | What more is needed?" |
33624 | What possesses you men? |
33624 | What says the Decalogue? |
33624 | What says the penal law? |
33624 | What then? |
33624 | What, whether proud or bare my pedigree? |
33624 | When hath no human face Turned earthward in despair, For that some horrid sin had stamped its image there? |
33624 | When hath not some great orb flashed into space The terror of its doom? |
33624 | When he did speak it was to ask,"Grant, how many wolves do you think there are in that pack?" |
33624 | Where now is all my pain? |
33624 | Where, on the earth''s green sod, Where, where in all the universe of God, Hath strife forever ceased? |
33624 | Wherefore so late didst thou remove the bandage, O Amor, Which thou hadst placed o''er mine eyes,--wherefore remove it so late? |
33624 | Whither should I flee? |
33624 | Who can it be so early?" |
33624 | Who dare express Him? |
33624 | Who does not know Heine,--or rather, who does not believe that he knows him? |
33624 | Who has done me this ill? |
33624 | Who helped me When I braved the Titans''insolence? |
33624 | Who may not satisfy to- day who satisfied yesterday? |
33624 | Who rescued me from death, From slavery? |
33624 | Whom befool not eye and lip, Breath and voice enchanting? |
33624 | Whose the foot that may not slip On the surface slanting? |
33624 | Why did the ways part so widely for Rousseau and for Goethe? |
33624 | Why do n''t you trust in God? |
33624 | Why do you bother me with it? |
33624 | Why have you not got the carpenter to mend it? |
33624 | Why is my heart so anxious, on thy breast? |
33624 | Why is the Inspector coming hither? |
33624 | Why read a page so twisted? |
33624 | Why should I fly? |
33624 | Why should not they do something as well as we? |
33624 | Why this rapture and unrest? |
33624 | Why, in fact, is the Inspector coming to us? |
33624 | Will you come and dine with me? |
33624 | Wilt be my father? |
33624 | Worked not those heavenly charms e''en on a mind dull as thine? |
33624 | Would thy father and thy brothers flee to the wilds of the mountains?" |
33624 | Would you recognize Lamartine if you saw him? |
33624 | You are calmer now, are you not? |
33624 | You are not ill?" |
33624 | You as my master talk strange and melancholy words, but how do dust and cobwebs concern you?" |
33624 | You will have him prayed for at once, wo n''t you?" |
33624 | You will take all my books, do you hear? |
33624 | You wonder why I have killed myself, do n''t you? |
33624 | [_ Aloud._] And how much has he lost? |
33624 | [_ Exit Trappolo._] Say, Ridolfo, what do you know of that dancer over there? |
33624 | [_ She springs to her feet: the fetters fall off._ Where is he? |
33624 | [_ Starts out._]_ Ridolfo_--And the coffee-- shall I charge it? |
33624 | [_ Takes out his eye- glass and looks._]_ Ridolfo_--What do you say? |
33624 | _ Chief_--How do I feel? |
33624 | _ Chief_--What''s got hold of him? |
33624 | _ Chief_[_ sighs_]--Why? |
33624 | _ Enter_ Postmaster_ Chief_---Well, how do you feel, Ivan Kusmitch? |
33624 | _ Fudge!_"My dear creature,"replied our peeress,"do you think I carry such things about me? |
33624 | _ Judge_--What do you mean by faults, Anton Anton''itch? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Cheated me? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Early? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Has no one appeared here at your café yet? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Have you seen Signor Eugenio? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--What''s the news, Ridolfo? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--What? |
33624 | _ Pandolfo_--Oh well, what does it matter? |
33624 | _ Postmaster_--How do I feel? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--And has Signor Eugenio been playing this past night? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--And how does it go? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--And whom else? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--Are they playing yet in the shop? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--Have you amused yourself playing too? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--I attend to my shop: if she has a back door, what is it to me? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--So early? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--What do you mean by that? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--What game? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--Where did you buy that watch? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--With whom is he playing? |
33624 | _ Superintendent_--And why? |
33624 | _ Superintendent_--What am I to do with him? |
33624 | _ Trappolo_--And it does n''t harm Signor Eugenio to make his affairs public? |
33624 | _ Trappolo_--Shan''t I warm over yesterday''s supply? |
33624 | _"Wilt thou go, bonny boy, wilt thou go with me? |
33624 | and art thou not mine?" |
33624 | and if he satisfy, what should befall him not to satisfy to- morrow? |
33624 | and that?" |
33624 | and what art thou? |
33624 | could not all Reprieve the tottering mansion from its fall? |
33624 | cried I, rushing through the flames, and bursting the door of the chamber in which they were confined;"where are my little ones?" |
33624 | cried he, raising her up and clasping her fast,--"my child, what ails thee?" |
33624 | cried he;"what ails thee?" |
33624 | cried she,"thou wilt not forsake me? |
33624 | he asked in innocent surprise:"was it I who invented them?" |
33624 | must no one write in the Italian language who has not been born in Tuscany?" |
33624 | said Ayesha, with the insolence of a blooming beauty:"has not God given you a better in her place?" |
33624 | she cried,"if thou art unhappy, what will become of Mignon?" |
33624 | to say? |
33624 | unto thee such power Over me could give? |
33624 | was n''t it lying there just now? |
33624 | what hast thou done? |
33624 | what is it now?" |
33624 | what money?" |
33624 | what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll? |
33624 | who would care to die From out these fields and hills, and this familiar sky; These firm, sure hands that compass us, this dear humanity? |
33624 | why should they know their fate, Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies? |
2385 | A GIMLET? |
2385 | ALL? |
2385 | And how many did you catch, pray? |
2385 | And suppose it should work you out of any carriage at all? |
2385 | And whose proverb is it, my Lady Superior? |
2385 | Are YOU going to wear them boots up the mountain? |
2385 | Are these fishes for sale? |
2385 | Asleep, I fancy? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | But could n''t you, somehow, glue on a pair of soles? 2385 But suppose I am burned up in my adventure?" |
2385 | Did n''t you tell the clerk you would not take his carriage? |
2385 | Did n''t you tell the other man you would take his? |
2385 | Did you catch any? |
2385 | Do you mean,I asked,"that the name of those flowers is wax- flowers?" |
2385 | Do you speak by the book, Omphale? |
2385 | Do you suppose he keeps any kind of boots? 2385 Do you wish me to give you a bit of advice?" |
2385 | Does my spoon taste as badly as yours? |
2385 | Duckings? 2385 Ever notice the difference between Vermont and New Hampshire sheep?" |
2385 | Fishes? |
2385 | Frenchmen I know, and Indians I know, but who are ye? |
2385 | Got''em here? |
2385 | Halicarnassus, one step further except over my lifeless body you do not go, until you tell me whether those are or are not wax- flowers? |
2385 | Have you cameo- pins? |
2385 | Have you ox- bows? |
2385 | Have you seen a brown veil lying about anywhere? |
2385 | Have you young apple trees? |
2385 | Here is a remarkably plump seed, my dear, wo n''t you have it? |
2385 | How can you turn a horse in this knitting- needle of a lane? |
2385 | How did you do it? |
2385 | How do they taste? |
2385 | How long will it be profitable to remain here? |
2385 | How many fishes? |
2385 | How many soldiers in a regiment are allowed to have wives? |
2385 | Indeed I can, ca n''t I, Halicarnassus? |
2385 | My spoon? |
2385 | No; wo n''t you? |
2385 | Now, then? |
2385 | Now, will you mend my shoes? |
2385 | O, do you? |
2385 | Oh that''s better still; would you make me a pair? |
2385 | Shall I? 2385 Trade off your ducks against my sheep, and call it even?" |
2385 | WE should n''t, should WE? 2385 Well,"I said, after he had swallowed a wassail- bowl of coffee, and showed no disposition to go on,"what did you do then?" |
2385 | Well? |
2385 | What DID you do? |
2385 | What about the fruit- knife? |
2385 | What do you mean? |
2385 | What do you suppose it meant? |
2385 | What do you suppose they did that for? |
2385 | What do you suppose this pump was put here for? |
2385 | What is the good of bathing, if you can not spoil anything? |
2385 | What is the news? |
2385 | What patois? |
2385 | When will he be back, if you please? |
2385 | When will your tools come? |
2385 | Where do you walk? |
2385 | Where have you been? |
2385 | Where? |
2385 | Which is the best? |
2385 | Who said it was? |
2385 | Why not? 2385 Why not?" |
2385 | Why should you kill them? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Wo n''t you tell? |
2385 | Yes, but--"Other a''n''t so bad, I suppose? |
2385 | You can, can you? |
2385 | You sent for me? |
2385 | A fiddle, is it? |
2385 | A gentle, fragile, soft- eyed woman, what could such a delicate flower do against the"thunder- storm of battle"? |
2385 | A good bird? |
2385 | A man called from a neighboring turnip- field,"Arter Jake?" |
2385 | A man? |
2385 | ARE there snakes? |
2385 | And do Nancie, Harriette, and Herr Driesbach like it any less? |
2385 | And how could I take proper care of so many? |
2385 | And how could they all bathe? |
2385 | And if you can not get your good things in the lump, are you going to refuse them altogether? |
2385 | And is the discussion of this thing a violation of the rites of hospitality? |
2385 | And shall one detect the false or recognize the true by the minute- hand? |
2385 | And what daring of man is this to scorn his smiling valleys and adventure up into these realms of storm? |
2385 | And what, let me ask just here, is the meaning of the small waists that girls are cramming their lives into? |
2385 | Another voice, as audible, asks,"Which''ll you bet on?" |
2385 | Are nuns expected to be any more dead to the world than priests? |
2385 | Are the people in the moon staring through an eclipse of the Sun? |
2385 | Are there clouded lives that will find a little sunshine; pent- up souls that will catch a breath of blooms in my rambling record? |
2385 | Are there lips that will relax their tightness; eyes that will lose for a moment the shadow of remembered pain? |
2385 | Are you toying with the tangles of her hair in the bright sea- foam? |
2385 | Are you wooing her with honeyed words on the bloody soil of Virginia? |
2385 | Because their narrowness can not take in the contingencies that threaten peace, are they blessed above all others? |
2385 | But could anything be more characteristic of a certain phase of the manners of our great and glorious country? |
2385 | But how many such women do you suppose there are in your village? |
2385 | But if it is so disheartening to me, who am only a passive listener, what must be the agonies of the dramatis personae? |
2385 | But is it really any worse? |
2385 | But since no one accused or even suspected you, why could you not have been less aggressive and more sympathetic in your assertions? |
2385 | But what do you know of what was in Beethoven''s soul? |
2385 | But what have you done with these women? |
2385 | But what is the good of saying all this, if a woman can not help herself? |
2385 | But what is well? |
2385 | But why set down a weight at one end of the lever because there is a power at the other? |
2385 | But you have no sooner turned a corner than-- where are they? |
2385 | Ca n''t you see with your own eyes?" |
2385 | Can I tell for the eyes that made"a sunshine in the shady place"? |
2385 | Can it be anything but painful to see young girls exhibiting the hardihood of the"professional"without the extenuating necessity? |
2385 | Can no hand lead her gently another way? |
2385 | Can no voice warn her of the black shadow that lies in ambuscade? |
2385 | Chancel and window, altar, and arches and aisles and treasures,--is there anything else? |
2385 | Children are naturally healthy and simple; why should they be spoiled? |
2385 | Could he tell me where I might find one? |
2385 | Could n''t you borrow a gimlet or something from the neighbors?" |
2385 | Could n''t you borrow an awl?" |
2385 | Did I say that it was amusing? |
2385 | Did any one ever read them before? |
2385 | Did he, a second Ulysses, tie up all opposing winds in that cambric pocket- handkerchief? |
2385 | Did n''t I catch eight cod- fishes in the Atlantic Ocean, last summer? |
2385 | Did we spring up startled pygmies, or girded giants? |
2385 | Did you never see it? |
2385 | Do I LOOK like a rough- hewn, unseasoned backwoodsman? |
2385 | Do I not know too well their strength, and their virtue which is their strength? |
2385 | Do boys take so naturally to the amenities of life, that they can safely dispense with the conditions of amenity? |
2385 | Do n''t you know Kossuth says,''Nothing is difficult to him who wills''?" |
2385 | Do n''t you think they will do?" |
2385 | Do not these wise men know that the thinkers and doers of the earth, in overwhelming majority, have been creed men? |
2385 | Do you know of any shoemakers anywhere about?" |
2385 | Do you not believe my story? |
2385 | Do you remember a little girl who, a few years ago, became famous for her wonderful performance on the violin? |
2385 | Do you take shelter from the fervid noon under the cypresses of Monte Mario? |
2385 | Do you think snakes could bite through them?" |
2385 | Does he look at his little feet and hands with a sigh for the joys that once loitered there but are now forever gone? |
2385 | Does he not feel that it trenches somewhat on his dignity? |
2385 | Does he not rather feel a little ashamed, when you remind him of those days? |
2385 | Does not the same narrowness cut them off from the bright certainty that underlies all doubts and fears? |
2385 | Does she fear to breast our bristling bayonets? |
2385 | Does the College belong to a Senior Class, or to the State? |
2385 | English gold, English steel, English pluck, stand today as always; but English integrity, English staunchness, English love, where are they? |
2385 | For how long? |
2385 | From what dungeons of gloom emerging shall they renew their elemental strife? |
2385 | From what? |
2385 | Girls, I find a great deal of fault with you, do I not? |
2385 | Got a job?" |
2385 | Had society charms for her, and in the social circle and the festive throng were her chief delights? |
2385 | Harvard is beloved of her sons: would she be any less beloved if she were also beautiful to outside barbarians? |
2385 | Has he not rather made a great gain? |
2385 | Has he suffered a loss? |
2385 | Has it any right to privacy? |
2385 | Has she drunk Nepenthe in the orange- groves? |
2385 | Has she lost her way among the narrow, interminable defiles of your crooked old city streets? |
2385 | Have I the air of never having read a newspaper? |
2385 | Have the many donations been given, and the appropriations been made, for the pleasure or even profit of any one class, or for the whole Commonwealth? |
2385 | Have the students self- poise enough to refrain from these festive expenses without suffering mortification? |
2385 | Have they virtue enough to refrain from them with the certainty of incurring such suffering? |
2385 | Have you fallen in love with her-- on the Potomac, O soldiers? |
2385 | He tints it with gay lines of green and pink and rose, and puts it in the confectioner''s glass windows, where you buy-- what? |
2385 | Hills on hills and Alps on Alps arise, and who shall mount the ultimate peak till all the world shall say,"Here reigns the Excellence"? |
2385 | How can I compare notes with him as to the sunshine and the trees and the curtain and views of life? |
2385 | How can I respond to his enthusiasms? |
2385 | How can his feeble eye detect the quiver of a world? |
2385 | How can his slender strength weigh the mountains in scales, and the bills in a balance? |
2385 | How can you, Papa and Messrs. Cardinals, be expected to understand what is good for a girl? |
2385 | How dare a man stand up solemnly before God and his fellows with a lie in his right hand? |
2385 | How dare men so presume on womanly sufferance? |
2385 | How did I go to my concert? |
2385 | How did his toilette stand the ascent? |
2385 | How many are there?" |
2385 | How will she escape the sunken rocks, the treacherous quicksands, the ravening whirlpools, the black and dark night? |
2385 | I am bewildered, and I say, helplessly,"What shall I admire and be a la mode?" |
2385 | I can supply seed and water and conch- shells, but what do I know of finchy loves and hopes? |
2385 | I do n''t mean, would have committed such discourtesy to a woman? |
2385 | I had given him a new and shining cage, a green curtain, a sunny window; but of what avail are these to a desolate heart? |
2385 | I have a veil, a beautiful-- HAVE, did I say? |
2385 | I look at her sometimes, when we have been sitting together a while, and say, with steadfast gaze,"Cat- soul, what are you? |
2385 | I look out upon the gray degraded fields left naked of the snow, and inwardly ask, Can these dry bones live again? |
2385 | I reciprocated his frankness with an engaging smile, and asked, in a confidential tone,"Do you suppose he would mend a shoe for me?" |
2385 | I was not thinking of the cent, but I had promised myself a feast; and what is a feast, susceptible of enumeration? |
2385 | I wonder how long before she will reappear? |
2385 | I wonder when circus- people sleep, or do they not sleep at all, but keep up a perpetual ground and lofty tumbling? |
2385 | If I had said,"Halicarnassus, will you fetch my trunk down?" |
2385 | If I had wanted breakfast- caps, should n''t I have asked for breakfast- caps? |
2385 | If a cigar would enfoul the purity of a woman, does it not of a man? |
2385 | If he is rich, they say, Why does he not make a career? |
2385 | If the latter, shall we not lay aside every weight, and this besetting sin of despondency, and run with patience the race set before us? |
2385 | If the woman''s head must be shorn and shaven, why not the man''s? |
2385 | If they are poor, their neighbors say, Why does he not learn a trade? |
2385 | In what secret place, in what dungeon of darkness and despair, in what chains of torpidity and oblivion, have you hidden away their souls? |
2385 | In? |
2385 | Instead of this pleasant conjugal chit- chat, what has he? |
2385 | Is a subject that is brought before Congress improper to be brought before the public in a magazine? |
2385 | Is it Love that watches at the masthead? |
2385 | Is it Wisdom that stands at the helm? |
2385 | Is it a strictly private affair? |
2385 | Is it because we are in high latitudes that the river and the country look so high? |
2385 | Is it begun? |
2385 | Is it begun? |
2385 | Is it begun? |
2385 | Is it indeed so? |
2385 | Is it less extravagant for a man to tickle his nose, than for a woman to tickle her palate? |
2385 | Is it not fitter that associations should adorn, than that they should conceal? |
2385 | Is it the rage of Tasso''s madness that burns in your uplifted eyes? |
2385 | Is not the grandeur of the sacrifice its offset? |
2385 | Is she chasing golden apples under the magnolias? |
2385 | Is she crouching down Caribbean shores, terror- stricken and pallid? |
2385 | Is she floating on a lotus- leaf in Florida lagoons? |
2385 | Is she stifled by the smoke of powder? |
2385 | Is she tranced by your glittering sword- shine in ransomed Tennessee? |
2385 | Is that man successful who trades on his country''s necessities? |
2385 | Is that private? |
2385 | Is the sculpture thus significant? |
2385 | Is the world grown so old and stricken in years, that, like King David, it gets no heat? |
2385 | Is there a patent innocence of eye- teeth in my demeanor? |
2385 | Is there no help? |
2385 | Is this manhood? |
2385 | Is this manliness? |
2385 | Is this success? |
2385 | Is this the advantage which the nineteenth century claims over its predecessors? |
2385 | Is this the best production which we have a right to expect? |
2385 | Is this the flower of all the ages,--earth''s last, best gift to heaven? |
2385 | Is this the race that our institutions engender? |
2385 | Is this the result which Christianity and civilization combine to offer? |
2385 | Is this? |
2385 | Is this?" |
2385 | It is true, that all this may be for their good, but what of that? |
2385 | Knowing you, and from you, all, do I not know what girls can be? |
2385 | Leaving the pigs and papooses, we will go to-- which of the nunneries? |
2385 | Little old croaker, what are you Yang- ing for? |
2385 | Low as I sank with the rest, though, I do believe I held out the longest: but what can one frail pebble do against a river? |
2385 | May I not say that I consider feasting a possible danger, and the dancing a certain evil, and assign my reasons for these opinions? |
2385 | Men and women of America, will you fail? |
2385 | Mothers, would you keep your sons? |
2385 | Music is one of the eternities: why should not its accessories be? |
2385 | My cue is to turn into the Irishman''s echo, which always returned for his"How d''ye do?" |
2385 | No voice, Madame Morlot? |
2385 | Now do you mean to tell me that any man would have been guilty of such a thing? |
2385 | Now, then, how shall your theory and practice be harmonized? |
2385 | O happy Walden wood and woodland lake, did you thrill through all your luminous aisles and all your listening shores for the man that wandered there? |
2385 | Of course not; but would a man ever do it to a man? |
2385 | Only that? |
2385 | Or do the Boston people take their breakfast at one o''clock in the morning? |
2385 | Or do they yield to selfishness, and gratify their own vanity, weakness, self- indulgence, and love of pleasure, at whatever cost to their parents? |
2385 | Or is she frightened by the thunders of the cannonade sounding from shore to shore, and wakening the wild echoes? |
2385 | Or is there such a state of public opinion and usage in College, that this custom is equally honored in the breach and in the observance? |
2385 | Poison? |
2385 | Regard? |
2385 | See our brave soldiers returning from the wars-- Heaven''s blessing rest upon them!--grand, but are they not gruff? |
2385 | Shall the cause go by default? |
2385 | Shall we fail? |
2385 | So everything is for the good of grown- up people; but does that make us contented? |
2385 | Sweet summer sky, bending above us soft and saintly, beyond your blue depths is there not Heaven? |
2385 | Talkers are everywhere, but where are the men that say things? |
2385 | Taxes, representation, what things are these to come between two hearts? |
2385 | The Gray? |
2385 | The baggage- master, in anguish of soul, trots out his subordinates, one after another,--"Is this the man that wheeled the trunk away? |
2385 | The present happiness is clouded for them by no shadowy possibility; but for this small indemnity shall we offset the glory of our manly years? |
2385 | The rapids are bad for traffic, but charming for travellers; and what is a little revenue more or less, to a sensation? |
2385 | Then I should like to know why they must make such frights of themselves, while priests go about like Christians? |
2385 | They will have to plunge into the world full soon enough; why should the world be plunged into them? |
2385 | This is a new car, do n''t you see? |
2385 | To be sure, I suppose the cat might be educationally mauled into letting him alone; but why should I beat the beast for simply acting after her kind? |
2385 | To be sure, he had not promised to mend them; but I had faith in him, and how did it turn out? |
2385 | To what end? |
2385 | Up among the northern hills, yonder towards the sunset, sits the owner, sorrowful, weeping, wailing"? |
2385 | Was I not veiled with the beautiful hair, and blinded with the lily''s white splendor? |
2385 | Was a carriage procurable? |
2385 | Was it a female bird? |
2385 | Was it a puerile anger, or a manly indignation? |
2385 | Was she devoted to literary pursuits? |
2385 | Was that a childish outburst of excitement, or the glow of an aroused principle? |
2385 | Were these lives failures? |
2385 | What DID she do? |
2385 | What I wish to know is, how did he get along? |
2385 | What are these sleety fogs about? |
2385 | What are they, Halicarnassus? |
2385 | What can atone for a lost childhood? |
2385 | What can be given in recompense for the ethereal, spontaneous, sharply defined, new, delicious sensations of a sheltered, untainted, opening life? |
2385 | What can mothers be thinking of to abuse their children so? |
2385 | What can she do about it? |
2385 | What connection was there between my question and his answer? |
2385 | What does this piece say to you? |
2385 | What fear can master that overpowering hope? |
2385 | What field was there for any further inquiry? |
2385 | What good do dinner- party Sundays and travelling Sundays and novel- reading Sundays do? |
2385 | What had I to do with breakfast- caps? |
2385 | What if it did rain? |
2385 | What if the astronomers made a mistake in their calculations, and the almanacs are wrong, and the eclipse shall not come off? |
2385 | What is a pen- scratch to a ravine? |
2385 | What is it that I see, with tearful tenderness and a nameless pain at the heart? |
2385 | What is it? |
2385 | What is the result? |
2385 | What is the use of having a Sabbath- day, a rest- day, if Mondays and Tuesdays are to be making continual raids upon it? |
2385 | What kind of a Faithful Forever is this? |
2385 | What new presence quivered in every listening harebell and every fearful windflower? |
2385 | What of it? |
2385 | What remains of my journey, for me, for you? |
2385 | What satisfaction is there in proving that she is far below where she ought to be, if inexorable circumstance prevent her from climbing higher? |
2385 | What shall avenge them for their spretae injuria formae? |
2385 | What shall be the sign of their awaking to darken the earth with their missiles and deafen the skies with their thunder? |
2385 | What sympathy have I to offer in his joyous or sorrowful moods? |
2385 | What was to be done? |
2385 | What were they? |
2385 | When he passed from his toes to his toys, did he do it mournfully? |
2385 | When shall greatness of soul stand forth, if not in evil times? |
2385 | Whence come you? |
2385 | Where are the Trollopes? |
2385 | Where are the electric people who thrill a whole circle with sudden vitality? |
2385 | Where are the flinty people whose contact strikes fire? |
2385 | Where are the people that can be listened to and quoted? |
2385 | Where are the seers, the prophets, the Magi, who shall unfold for us the secrets of the sky and the seas, and the mystery of human hearts? |
2385 | Where are we? |
2385 | Where are you? |
2385 | Where is Basil Hall? |
2385 | Where is Dickens? |
2385 | Where is the June? |
2385 | Where is the pertinence of that, if you do not wish to go? |
2385 | Where is there a city, or a town, or a village, in which are no bickerings, no jealousies, no angers, no petty or swollen spites? |
2385 | Where was I? |
2385 | Which is worse? |
2385 | Which now is the higher art, the sculptor''s or the mantua- maker''s? |
2385 | Whither go you?" |
2385 | Who caught them? |
2385 | Who does not know that the private history of families with the ordinary allowance of brains is a record of recurring internecine warfare? |
2385 | Who does not know that the soul may starve in splendor? |
2385 | Who ever heard of the mother of a young and increasing family living in an atmosphere of peace, not to say pleasure, above conflicts and storms? |
2385 | Who faithfully renders, who even thoroughly knows his idea? |
2385 | Who grasps his conception? |
2385 | Who shall lack faith in man''s redemption, when every year the earth is redeemed by unseen hands, and death is lost in resurrection? |
2385 | Why are the women to be set up as targets, while the men may pass unnoticed and unknown? |
2385 | Why do I linger among the mountains? |
2385 | Why is it less impure for a man to saturate his hair, his breath and clothing, with vile, stale odors, than for a woman? |
2385 | Why is it more noble for a man to be the slave of an appetite or a habit, than for a woman? |
2385 | Why loiters, where lingers, the beautiful, calm- breathing June? |
2385 | Why not wait until, in the natural course of things, lever comes to an obstacle, and then let power bear down with all its might to remove it? |
2385 | Why not? |
2385 | Why should a discord disturb the eye, when only concords delight the ear? |
2385 | Why, I pray to know, as the first inquiry suggested by Class- Day, why is it that a boys''school should be placed beyond the pale of civilization? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Will any live over again a pleasant past and look more cheerily into a lowering future for these wayward words of mine? |
2385 | Will our vigilance to detect treachery and our perseverance to punish it hold out? |
2385 | Will you fail the world in this fateful hour by your faint- heartedness? |
2385 | Will you fail yourself; and put the knife to your own throat? |
2385 | Will you meet queenly Marguerite with myrtle wreath and myrtle fragrance, as she wanders through the chestnut vales? |
2385 | Will you sleep tonight between the colonnades under the golden moon of Napoli? |
2385 | Wives, would you hold back your husbands? |
2385 | Would dry wood be able to hold its own against a raging fire for half an hour? |
2385 | Would it be strange? |
2385 | Would it not be stranger if it were not so? |
2385 | Would you loiter to your inheritance? |
2385 | Yet, if it is true, how account for the tight- lacing among women who are in a position to be just as intelligent as the doctor and the sculptor are? |
2385 | Yet, on the other hand, what does he not gain? |
2385 | You do n''t go to a show; but if the church and the people and the minister are all a show, what can you do about it? |
2385 | You object to this? |
2385 | You see I have worn mine out, and what am I to do?" |
2385 | and if he does do it, how dare a poet or a novelist step up and glorify him in it? |
2385 | and pray when is this famous affair to come off?" |
2385 | and what did I want of it? |
2385 | and would not the other one be better? |
2385 | eh?" |
2385 | ejaculates Halicarnassus, with the voice of a giant;"how many fishes have you caught?" |
2385 | for what? |
2385 | have you seen them,--a princely pair, sore weary in your mountain- land, but regal still, through all their travel- stain? |
2385 | he would have asked me what trunk? |
2385 | how many?" |
2385 | is that all?" |
2385 | or did Auster and Eurus and Notus and Africus vex his fastidious soul? |
2385 | or, Why does he not stick to his trade? |
2385 | to look on with friendly interest, without cynicism or concealed malice, at the preparations in which they do not join? |
2385 | to those fierce wild men, what is love, or loveliness? |
2385 | was it not the glorious moment of that dishonored life? |
2385 | yawning;"who does?" |
44450 | And what next--so the listeners ask--"what was the next step made?" |
44450 | And you, O disciple dearly loved, what of you and your brethren? |
44450 | Do ye now believe? 44450 How much is that man worth?" |
44450 | Master, where dwellest thou? |
44450 | What think ye of the Christ? |
44450 | Whom seek ye? |
44450 | ''Have I not chosen you twelve, and yet one of you is a devil?'' |
44450 | ''Will ye also go away?'' |
44450 | A man may disrobe; what more can be done? |
44450 | A really earnest, humble consecration to God? |
44450 | Alexander, CÃ ¦ sar, Charlemagne, and myself founded great empires; but upon what did the creations of our genius depend? |
44450 | And Charles Wesley''s melancholy is the most attractive in the world-- Oh, when shall we sweetly move? |
44450 | And do you really think that the world will ever be converted in that way? |
44450 | And he saith,"But who say ye that I am?" |
44450 | And once again, in the haste of the resurrection morning, what was the moment and what was the scene which turned his despair into belief? |
44450 | And so what is faith? |
44450 | And they say, What have we got to do now? |
44450 | And they-- they hardly knew what to say-- only they must see Him, must go with Him; and they stammered out:"Rabbi, where dwellest thou?" |
44450 | And what are the rest of us doing? |
44450 | And what did our Lord Himself say to St. Peter about his fall? |
44450 | And what does all this teach us? |
44450 | And what is the meaning of that sacrifice, if it be not to teach us that God counts no price too great to pay for the redemption of the human soul? |
44450 | And what next did they learn? |
44450 | And what, oh, what shall I do?" |
44450 | And yet what has it done but make known to us a universe infinitely more wonderful and sublime than men had ever dreamed of? |
44450 | And, then, how shall it be restored? |
44450 | Are we not under the strongest possible obligations to account for Jesus Christ? |
44450 | Are you musing in your heart which of them may be your guide and master, which is the Christ? |
44450 | Are you not of more value than many sparrows?" |
44450 | Are you yet at the beginning, looking wistfully, with hungry eyes, after a hundred gallant human heroes who point you this way and that? |
44450 | But have we gotten rid entirely of the premise on which it rested? |
44450 | But how can we account for the perfection of His humanity, if we deny the reality of His divinity? |
44450 | But is not this far too often accompanied by a revolt from all dogmatic truth? |
44450 | But what does follow? |
44450 | But what is evangelization? |
44450 | But what is it to"believe in Christ?" |
44450 | But, dear friends, am I right in saying that this frame is a Christian frame? |
44450 | Can He whose life they tell be Himself no more than a mere man?... |
44450 | Can he be a man capable, not only of acting for himself, but capable, by that subtle and magical influence, of arousing the activity of others? |
44450 | Can it be that writings at once so sublime and so simple are the work of men? |
44450 | Can we demand a fairer world than God will make? |
44450 | Can we do that? |
44450 | Can we imagine better than God can do? |
44450 | Can we then wonder at all forms of opposition meeting us? |
44450 | Certainly, but which is the fact, that or this? |
44450 | Christ came to cast fire on earth, and what does He desire but that it be kindled? |
44450 | David fell-- deep as man can fall; but what does he say in that great fifty- first Psalm, in which he confesses his sin? |
44450 | Did the medieval Church never regret the act by which it drove forth the Waldenses into schism? |
44450 | Did you ever hear a satisfactory definition of laughter? |
44450 | Do they wear too dark a hue at times? |
44450 | Do you believe it? |
44450 | Do you believe it?" |
44450 | Do you know what the word"bless"means, what it was derived from? |
44450 | Do you remember the story of the portrait of Dante which is painted upon the walls of Bargello, at Florence? |
44450 | Do you say, What can I do, because the light round me is like unto darkness? |
44450 | Do you say, What is the use of fighting, for where I stand we have barely held our own? |
44450 | Do you think walking up to the cannon''s mouth would have been difficult to that man? |
44450 | Does he possess the third? |
44450 | Does it seem that the perfect life for the individual, and for the race, is too sublime, that it is a distant and unattainable ideal? |
44450 | Does not the Scripture itself go even further? |
44450 | Does not the commercial view of life still prevail in civilized society? |
44450 | Does the difficulty lie in the event or in the method of approaching it? |
44450 | Does the religion of Christ, the absolute and abiding faith, need the defense of concealment, or of sophistical apology, or of lies? |
44450 | Does there not come a time when we feel that the power, as it were, of things has forsaken us? |
44450 | Facts? |
44450 | God made His minister a flame of fire in the dark and cold, else could Christ have conquered? |
44450 | Has He not been working in the saints who have reminded the world of God? |
44450 | Has a man faith in the Lord Jesus Christ who simply does not disbelieve in him? |
44450 | Has it slipt into the water? |
44450 | Has our Church never regretted the day when it looked askance at the work of John Wesley? |
44450 | Has the ax- head gone? |
44450 | Has the splendid hope of Christ been falsified? |
44450 | Have there been no grounds for optimism? |
44450 | Have ye each made this yet sufficiently a matter of prayer, of self- denial, of deep, faithful trusting all to God? |
44450 | Have you any right to expect that it should be converted in that way? |
44450 | Have you ever thought how St. Paul was actually driven to use the awful language of the passion when he described his own life? |
44450 | Have you met your tempter yet? |
44450 | Have you never seen a group of evil- doers deliberately set themselves to ruin a newcomer, scoffing at his innocence and enticing him to their orgies? |
44450 | Have you never seen it? |
44450 | Have you read the memoir of Brainerd? |
44450 | He claimed to be God, and if His claim be not true, how can he be good? |
44450 | He knows his malady; now how shall he be cured of it? |
44450 | He said,"Was Paul crucified for you?" |
44450 | How came He to be the contemporary of all the ages? |
44450 | How came He to emancipate Himself from the sectarianism and sectionalism of His country and century? |
44450 | How can it be restored? |
44450 | How did such ideas come into the human mind? |
44450 | How do young people begin, most of them? |
44450 | How does the Gethsemane come? |
44450 | How far have you come in this pathway of faith? |
44450 | How have our liberties been secured? |
44450 | How long shall there be this suspense, as that of early dawn ere the sunshine fills the twilight? |
44450 | How much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | How shall we account for the height to which that stream rose? |
44450 | How, then, can you explain faith? |
44450 | How, then, will it be received by those into whose hand is placed the responsibility of its guidance? |
44450 | I may not deny that what the gospel says is true, but is that believing? |
44450 | I put then the question with the_ utmost_ directness,"What think ye of Christ?" |
44450 | I think an hour is the longest that anybody could bear it--"Could ye not watch with me one hour?" |
44450 | If that source were simply human, how can we account for the superhuman height which it reached? |
44450 | If we could ascend to heaven to- day and scan the ranks of the blest, should we not find multitudes among them who were once sunk low as man can fall? |
44450 | If we have no great masters, how shall we hope to have eager and loving disciples? |
44450 | If we leave half the race in ignorance, how shall we hope to lift the other half into the light of truth and love? |
44450 | If you wanted to make a man laugh, would you attempt to define laughter to him? |
44450 | If, then, we accept this view of life, what answer can we give to the question, how much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | In the event, or, perhaps, in the mental or moral constitution of the people who contemplate it? |
44450 | Invest it, and then what do you do? |
44450 | Is he a man, in fact, who can make his influence felt among the men of his day? |
44450 | Is he in touch with his time? |
44450 | Is it advancement? |
44450 | Is it conceivable that human error shall prevail against God''s truth? |
44450 | Is it long to wait, hard to fight, difficult to keep up the spirit during the discouragements that beset all missionary life? |
44450 | Is it merely the pursuit of happiness? |
44450 | Is it not rather a book of life, of literature, full of symbols and metaphors and poetry? |
44450 | Is it possible to look on the great, eager, yearning, doubting, and suffering life of man, and not to feel infinite desire to be of help? |
44450 | Is it promotion? |
44450 | Is not He the standard of humanity now, and is not He its Redeemer? |
44450 | Is not that conceivable? |
44450 | Is not that possible? |
44450 | Is not theology, like the other sciences, bound to accept facts? |
44450 | Is the Bible itself written with the rigid exactness of a mathematical treatise? |
44450 | Is this wise, and is it well? |
44450 | It appeared so, but was it so? |
44450 | Left? |
44450 | Mark how towers herald the approach to the towns and cities, and ask what they stand there for? |
44450 | My brethren, where do you stand? |
44450 | My brothers, if a few men can honestly say this to us in the future, will it not be better than Greek and Roman fame? |
44450 | My friend, what sort of a life are you living? |
44450 | Nay, Lord, to whom shall we go? |
44450 | Nevertheless, to the unsaved no question is more bewildering than this:"What shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?" |
44450 | Not only cunning casts in clay: Let science prove we are, and then What matters science unto men, At least to me? |
44450 | Now do you not think you can see how it is that the eternal Son shed His blood in Gethsemane, and offered Himself immaculate to God on Calvary? |
44450 | Now, as they journeyed southward through CÃ ¦ sarea Philippi, He asked them,"Who do men say that I am?" |
44450 | Now, what is it that should follow when we have parted with our life and lived our Gethsemane; what should be the effect upon our lives? |
44450 | O death, where is thy sting?" |
44450 | O loving and divine John, the Evangelist, what thinkest thou of the Christ? |
44450 | Oh, when shall our souls be at rest? |
44450 | Or had each its own due place at least in hastening the coming of the kingdom, and in determining when the fulness of time had arrived? |
44450 | Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
44450 | Shall we dread the results of historical research? |
44450 | So soon made happy? |
44450 | Suppose, then, that we come to Him with this question: How much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | The fiery moment arrives; do we stand; do we fall? |
44450 | The people who looked at the mob of Jerusalem, or the man who saw the coming generations? |
44450 | There is more of courage and manhood needed for them than for walking up to the cannon''s mouth? |
44450 | This brings us to the matter in hand: What shall I do to be saved? |
44450 | Tho all men forsake thee yet will not I; and in spite of all, I believe, and am sure that thou art the Christ, the holy one of God?" |
44450 | To die? |
44450 | To send Bibles, to deliver the message to everybody? |
44450 | To suffer? |
44450 | To the jailer of Philippi who, in sudden conviction, was moved to cry,"What shall I do?" |
44450 | To whom can I go? |
44450 | Was he not right? |
44450 | Was it the reaction of detecting the quiet tokens of deliberate purpose there, where all had seemed to him a very chaos of confusion? |
44450 | Was it the sudden sense that struck him of order and seemliness as of a thing premeditated, intended? |
44450 | We must learn to look upon ourselves and our fellow men purely from a business point of view and to ask only: What can this man make? |
44450 | Were not the Greek philosophers right in thinking that our ideals are eternal, and are kept with God? |
44450 | Were they then never to rise into the joy of clear and entire belief? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What book has been so misunderstood, and misinterpreted, even by honest and enlightened minds, even by theologians themselves? |
44450 | What did He mean by that? |
44450 | What did he mean by that? |
44450 | What did he notice? |
44450 | What does Paul mean when he talks about being justified? |
44450 | What hope is there of genuine progress, in the religious life especially, if we leave her uneducated? |
44450 | What is faith? |
44450 | What is faith? |
44450 | What is love? |
44450 | What is the purpose of life? |
44450 | What is there to fear? |
44450 | What is thy testimony? |
44450 | What is thy testimony? |
44450 | What more have I got left? |
44450 | What other answer can be given by one who judges everything by a money standard? |
44450 | What sayst Thou of Thyself? |
44450 | What shall be done about it? |
44450 | What shall we say of him who opens a haunt of temptation, sets out his snares and deliberately deals out death by the dram? |
44450 | What thinkest thou, O Channing, of Jesus Christ? |
44450 | What thinkest thou, O Herder, illustrious German thinker, broad scholar, and exquisite genius, of Jesus, the Christ? |
44450 | What was it that he saw and felt? |
44450 | What was it that so startled him? |
44450 | What was there in the peasant conditions of His family life to produce the uniqueness of His manhood? |
44450 | When men ask us, Are the doctrines of Christianity dead; are they played out? |
44450 | Whence do all light and all love come? |
44450 | Where did the imagination of the prophets and apostles catch fire? |
44450 | Where do you go to find the origin of the great principle of civil liberty? |
44450 | Where is the spring of the prayers and aspirations of the saints? |
44450 | Which is nearer to the truth, the Christ of the sorrowful way or the Christ at God''s right hand? |
44450 | Who can say? |
44450 | Who is He? |
44450 | Who is right? |
44450 | Who is there that has ever been brave enough to accept such a salutation without a whisper of protest, without a shadow of a scruple? |
44450 | Who is this strange visitant-- so quiet, so silent, so unobserved? |
44450 | Who shall deliver us from this spirit of bitterness? |
44450 | Who shall lead us out of this heavy, fetid air of the lazar- house and the morgue? |
44450 | Who shall separate us from Christ''s love? |
44450 | Who will have it? |
44450 | Who would not court a new- made grave rather than risk the perils of survivorship? |
44450 | Why could that little jet of blood and water never pass out of his sight? |
44450 | Why credible to the one, but incredible to the other? |
44450 | Why need you and I seek to disprove what no man has ever yet proved or will prove? |
44450 | Why not again with Christ as Captain? |
44450 | Why not always, why not everywhere? |
44450 | Why pay so great a price? |
44450 | Why pay so great a price? |
44450 | Why should it haunt him sixty years after, as still his heart wonders over the mysterious witness of the water and the blood? |
44450 | Why? |
44450 | Will He not continue to work till all men come to the stature of perfection? |
44450 | Will it be said to any of you? |
44450 | Will you fail as others failed me?" |
44450 | Yet had prayer no part in the plan of the Incarnation? |
44450 | You remember, in the story of the Garden of Eden, where the tree which represented temptation stood? |
44450 | and he begins to raise the question- the only question he thinks of after that-- What shall I do for them? |
44450 | could, I ask, all these be fruitless and in vain? |
44450 | how much can I get out of this man''s labor? |
44450 | how much has that man made? |
44450 | how much will that man pay for my services? |
44450 | is there anything which a man can fear ten times more than the fire that never shall be quenched? |
44450 | or How shall I become a Christian? |
44450 | why not? |
40686 | ''But how shall I contend with man, to whom thou hast granted two guardian angels, and who has received thy revelation? |
40686 | ''But how would that have been possible? |
40686 | ''But sawest thou no hell? |
40686 | ''But what are the Little Horn''s Eyes? |
40686 | ''But who were those glorious ones thou sawest in Paradise? |
40686 | ''Can he delight himself in the Almighty?'' |
40686 | ''Can this be true? |
40686 | ''Do you regret my victory?'' |
40686 | ''Hast thou ever deigned to cast a glance at the oppressed, who, sighing under his burden, consoles himself with the hope of an hereafter? |
40686 | ''He that''Shall there be evil in a city committeth sin is of the devil; and the Lord hath not done it?'' |
40686 | ''How can I be happy in heaven,''said a tender- hearted lady to her clerical adviser,''when I must see others in hell?'' |
40686 | ''How can thy kingdom ever come, While the fair angels howl below? |
40686 | ''How do you know he has got a long nose?'' |
40686 | ''How shall I quench my thirst? |
40686 | ''If the bottled moonshine beactually substance? |
40686 | ''Mary Walcot, have you seen a white man? |
40686 | ''Sawest thou the fairest of earth- born ladies-- Beatrice? |
40686 | ''Tell me, holy father,''said Evervinus to St. Bernard, concerning the Albigenses,''how is this? |
40686 | ''The Devil: Does he Exist, and what does he Do?'' |
40686 | ''Thinkest thou, then, thy own compassion deeper than the mercy of Ormuzd? |
40686 | ''Thou shalt not Ahab?... |
40686 | ''What are you going to do when you get to the top?'' |
40686 | ''What do they all do?'' |
40686 | ''What do you take this lady to be?'' |
40686 | ''What is my watchword? |
40686 | ''What shall be my food? |
40686 | ''What shall occupy my leisure hours? |
40686 | ''Who among us shall dwell with the Devouring Fire?'' |
40686 | ''Who among us shall dwell with the Everlasting Burnings? |
40686 | ''Who but regrets a check in rivalry of wit?'' |
40686 | ''Why hard? |
40686 | ''Why is it,''pleads the worshipper,''that you wish to destroy one who always praises you? |
40686 | ''Why not God kill Debbil?'' |
40686 | ''Why shall I toil?'' |
40686 | ''Why,''was the reply,''go to Ghilghit, unless it be to work in the gardens?'' |
40686 | ( A truly Elihuic or''contemptible''answer to Job''s sensible words,''Why is light given to a man whose way is hid?'' |
40686 | ( Why seekest thou thus) to irritate me with blasphemies? |
40686 | ); and Agnes Sampson called the Devil to her in the shape of a dog by saying,''Elva( Elf? |
40686 | ); another raised a tempest to impede the king''s voyage to Denmark by casting into the sea a cat, and crying Hola( Hela? |
40686 | 15,''What concord hath Christ with Belial?'' |
40686 | Abigail Williams, also one of the accusers of Goody, was asked,''Does she bring the book to you? |
40686 | All these shall say unto thee, Art thou also become weak as we? |
40686 | Am I a sea- monster-- and we imagine Job looking at his wasted limbs-- that the Almighty must take precautions and send spies against me? |
40686 | Amid his heartbroken people-- who cry,''Where are the gods? |
40686 | And Jehovah said, Wherewith? |
40686 | And does she not propound her riddles to us? |
40686 | And here we may consult the holy Tree of Travancore again? |
40686 | And now learned travellers go about in many lands saying,''Saw ye my beloved?'' |
40686 | And what can be Zeus''doom but everlasting rule? |
40686 | And what hast thou seen there? |
40686 | Are the Shah and his happy fellow- inspectors of tortures really fiends? |
40686 | Art thou become like unto us? |
40686 | Azru, in deep grief at the separation, cried,''Why remain at Doyur, unless it be to grind corn?'' |
40686 | Beautifully bedecked they approached him, and Raka said,''Lord, fearest thou not death?'' |
40686 | But how am I to get it? |
40686 | But how could the Devil, having no trace of perfection in him, exist at all? |
40686 | But how did these mighty princes and warriors become demon huntsmen? |
40686 | But how much wiser are we of Christendom than the Hindus? |
40686 | But the thunder of his power who can understand? |
40686 | But what could Darius have done''by the grace of Ahriman''? |
40686 | But what else does he receive? |
40686 | But what if we were all to become like that? |
40686 | But what is the Holy Ghost-- what is its office? |
40686 | But what moral force preserved them? |
40686 | But what shall be said of the educated who profess to believe it? |
40686 | But who is the leaf- crowned figure, without mask, on the right hand? |
40686 | But who may these be? |
40686 | But why not? |
40686 | But, Hodge, had he no horns to push? |
40686 | Can they tolerate this?'' |
40686 | Can this be thy lady Beatrice? |
40686 | Child- eyes beheld all that the Erl- king promised, in Goethe''s ballad-- Wilt thou go, bonny boy? |
40686 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
40686 | Cyprian having argued the existence and supremacy of God, the Devil says,''How can I impugn so clear a consequence?'' |
40686 | Death? |
40686 | Demonology would ask, Why dogs? |
40686 | Did he who made the lamb make thee? |
40686 | Did not Milton describe Freedom as''a mountain nymph?'' |
40686 | Did you ever know a man with a long nose who was good?'' |
40686 | Do they think there are no more dragons to be slain? |
40686 | Does he not bend himself up and down to the right hand and to the left, like unto the serpent? |
40686 | Dost thou know thyself? |
40686 | Eh? |
40686 | Eliphaz repeats the question put by the Accuser in heaven--''Was not thy fear of God thy hope?'' |
40686 | Fear not these ferocious beasts; why should he whom Ormuzd preserves fear the enmity of the whole world?'' |
40686 | First of all Job( the Troubled) asks-- Why? |
40686 | For me this mountain mass rests nobly dumb; I ask not whence it is, nor why''tis come? |
40686 | God said unto him( Iblis), What hindered thee from worshipping Adam, since I commanded thee? |
40686 | Had it not crawled previously? |
40686 | Had those''gods''up there never struck children? |
40686 | Harischandra, what is this? |
40686 | Hast thou compared the wants and the vices of his nature with those which he owes to society and prevailing corruption? |
40686 | Hast thou distinguished between that which is offspring of the pure impulses of his heart, and that which flows from an imagination corrupted by art? |
40686 | Hast thou ever Lightened the sorrows of the heavy laden? |
40686 | Hast thou ever considered his nature? |
40686 | Hast thou ever examined it, and separated from it its foreign elements? |
40686 | Hast thou observed him in his natural state, where each of his undisguised expressions mirrors forth his inmost soul? |
40686 | Have we not priests in England still fostering the belief that the baptized child goes attended by a white spirit, the unbaptized by a dark one? |
40686 | How and when? |
40686 | How are we to understand this dance of Death, and the further legend of her tossing dead bodies into the air for amusement? |
40686 | How couldst thou, the most corrupt of thy race, have discovered the pure one, since thou hadst not even the capacity to suspect his existence? |
40686 | How did he do it? |
40686 | How did these fleecy white cloud- phantoms become demonised? |
40686 | How many poor peasant girls must have had such dreams as they looked up from their drudgery to the brilliant chateaux? |
40686 | How much of the theosophic speculation of our time is the mere artificial conservation of that darkness? |
40686 | How passed this( mental) cave- dweller even amid the upper splendours and vastnesses of his unlit world? |
40686 | How shall he advance if he know not the Spirit of discontent? |
40686 | How shall man learn truth if he know not the Spirit that denies? |
40686 | How would a Parsi explain the curse on a snake which condemned it to crawl? |
40686 | I asked,''Who, then, made the world?'' |
40686 | I near him came, and spoke--''Art thou,''I said,''indeed the Evil One? |
40686 | I reverence thee? |
40686 | I said that I was very sorry to hear it;''but what had her death to do with the spears being stuck around so?'' |
40686 | I then said,''Jemmy, what is the meaning of your spears being stuck in a circle round you?'' |
40686 | I''ll levy thine attendance: Why waste so vainly thy resplendence? |
40686 | If God were only a man, things might be different; but as it is,''what he desireth that he doeth,''and''who can turn him?'' |
40686 | If this was true before the word Christianity had been formed, or the system it names, what was the case afterwards? |
40686 | In what distant deeps or skies Burned that fire within thine eyes? |
40686 | Is Zeus, then, less powerful than they? |
40686 | Is it because God was afraid of your greatness? |
40686 | Is it derived by inheritance from its fierce ancestors of the jungle? |
40686 | Is it indeed so that all the sages and poets of the world are now in equal rank whether or not they have been sealed as members of Christ? |
40686 | Is it the sunbeam that defines to the strongest creature its habitat? |
40686 | It asked, If the Lord be not in the hurricane, the earthquake, the volcanic flame, who is therein? |
40686 | It was a tremendous statement of the question-- If a man die, shall he live again? |
40686 | Jehovah answered,''Have you done the same that Abraham did, who recognised me from his childhood and went into Chaldean fire for love of me? |
40686 | Of each man she asks daily, in mild voice, yet with a terrible significance,''Knowest thou the meaning of this Day? |
40686 | On her he turned and said,''Who art thou, that ever movest beside me, thou that art monstrous beyond all that I have seen on earth?'' |
40686 | On what wings dared he aspire? |
40686 | Only a penny? |
40686 | Pins are the last offerings at the Worm''s Well;''wishes''its last prayers; but where go now the coins and the prayers? |
40686 | Remember ye not that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things? |
40686 | Saw ye never fryer Rushe Painted on cloth, with a side long cowe''s tayle And crooked cloven feet, and many a hooked nayle? |
40686 | Shall I make spirits fetch me what I please, Resolve me of all ambiguities, Perform what desperate enterprise I will? |
40686 | She refused, and said,''In the name of God, what art thou?'' |
40686 | Such is the seeming situation, but is it the reality? |
40686 | Tell me, if we still are standing, Or if further we''re ascending? |
40686 | That very good? |
40686 | The fine chain that binds ferocity,--is it the love that can tame all creatures? |
40686 | The natives bore his rule with resignation, for what could they effect against a monarch at whose command even magic aids were placed? |
40686 | The rose and poppy are her flowers; for where Is he not found, O Lilith, whom shed scent And soft- shed kisses and soft sleep shall snare? |
40686 | The woman, having finished her bath, cried out in great anger,''What thief has been here in broad day? |
40686 | Their Allah or Elohim they heard say,--''Why howlest thou to me? |
40686 | Then Mara challenged him,''Tell me now, where is the man that can bear witness for thee?'' |
40686 | They would be shocked if told that they had burned great men, and would surely answer,''Men? |
40686 | This World means something to the capable; Why needs he through Eternity to wend? |
40686 | This that is glorious in his apparel, Travelling in the greatness of his strength? |
40686 | Thou ever stretch thy hand to still the tears Of the perplexed in spirit? |
40686 | Thus we read:--''Abigail Williams, did you see a company at Mr. Parris''s house eat and drink? |
40686 | To her child''s inquiry,''What sort of beetle is this I found wriggling in the sand?'' |
40686 | To her he said,''Who art thou, so fair beyond all whom I have seen in the land of the living?'' |
40686 | To what will they aspire, those students moving so light- hearted amid the dead dragons and satans of an extinct world? |
40686 | Was anything seen? |
40686 | Was it an old sin?'' |
40686 | Was it first suggested by its horrible human- like sleep- murdering caterwaulings at night? |
40686 | Was it for me, Satan, to whom thou hast chosen to become a mentor, to point them out to thee? |
40686 | Was it not Almighty Time, and ever- during Fate-- My lords and thine-- that shaped and fashioned me Into the MAN I am? |
40686 | What advocate can he command? |
40686 | What can a man do but pray and acknowledge his sinfulness? |
40686 | What chief of mortals is there who has never told a lie-- who has never swerved from the course of justice?'' |
40686 | What did these good fairies do? |
40686 | What explanation can be given of the evil repute of our household friend the Cat? |
40686 | What has become of that one? |
40686 | What if he had seen death as an eternal sleep? |
40686 | What is created still must fall, And fairest still we frailest call; Will not Christ''s blood avail for all? |
40686 | What is the difference between St. Wolfram''s God and King Radbot''s Devil? |
40686 | What is the meaning of the curse on the Serpent that it should for ever crawl thereafter? |
40686 | What is the remedy? |
40686 | What is, your theory? |
40686 | What matters it when death comes? |
40686 | What news? |
40686 | What sort of man was he? |
40686 | What the hand dared seize the fire? |
40686 | What then controls human passion and selfishness? |
40686 | What was it? |
40686 | What was seen on this strongly- authenticated occasion? |
40686 | What will she say if she sees him promoted a step higher,--nay, perhaps, meets him in heaven?'' |
40686 | What would she have you do with it? |
40686 | When the stars threw down their spears And water heaven with their tears, Did he smile his work to see? |
40686 | When will they see in any stone mirror the real shape of a double- tongued Culture-- one fork intoning litanies, another whispering contempt of them? |
40686 | Where is Michael, the special advocate of Israel? |
40686 | Where, O Rudra, is that gracious hand of thine, which is healing and comforting? |
40686 | Where? |
40686 | Wherefore art thou red in thine apparel, And thy garments like him that treadeth the wine- vat? |
40686 | Wherefore, like a coward, dost thou for ever pip and whimper, and go cowering and trembling? |
40686 | Wherefore? |
40686 | Who art thou? |
40686 | Who baptized them? |
40686 | Who built it? |
40686 | Who can carve there the wrongs that await their powers of redress? |
40686 | Who can face them? |
40686 | Who can set before them, with all its baseness, the true emblem of pious fraud? |
40686 | Who gave me succour Against the Titans in their tyrannous might? |
40686 | Who go to Paradise? |
40686 | Who is this that cometh from Edom, In dyed garments from Bozrah? |
40686 | Who rescued me from death-- from slavery? |
40686 | Who, then, is the guide of Necessity? |
40686 | Whose mind is not led astray by the thickly clustering moonbeams?'' |
40686 | Why administer the rod which enlightens as to the anger but not its cause, or as to the way of amend?) |
40686 | Why are you afflicted? |
40686 | Why can not this one and all others be cast out? |
40686 | Why did they starve and scourge their bodies, and roll them in thorns? |
40686 | Why did we pass by the mansions of the good and the just? |
40686 | Why not punish the Devil instead of threatening poor wretches whom he deceives?'' |
40686 | Why shall I for his favour serve, Bend to him in such vassalage? |
40686 | Why should mankind make thee a jest, When thou canst show a face like this? |
40686 | Why should that particular Tree-- of a species common in the district and not usually very large-- have grown so huge? |
40686 | Why shouldst thou regard the seed of Abraham before us?'' |
40686 | Why slay the slain? |
40686 | Why then need we apologise for the Fijians? |
40686 | Why twelve? |
40686 | Why was the Living banished thither, companionless, conscious? |
40686 | Why was the Serpent slipped into the Ark or coffer and hid behind veils? |
40686 | Why was the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil forbidden? |
40686 | Why, if there is no Devil; nay, unless the Devil is your God?'' |
40686 | Why, when its fruit was tasted, should the Tree of Life have been for the first time forbidden and jealously guarded? |
40686 | Why? |
40686 | Will you not deliver the Bráhman? |
40686 | [ 45] Is this a survival? |
40686 | [ 88] But what shall be said of the Goat? |
40686 | burning bright In the forests of the night; What immortal hand or eye Framed thy fearful symmetry? |
40686 | dare you disobey me? |
40686 | do I see thee again? |
40686 | dost thou remember When we in early days Blended our blood together? |
40686 | gargouille, dragon), anything but carved imprecations? |
40686 | he cried,''is it thus you repay my benefits? |
40686 | intrude ye thus into my presence? |
40686 | knowest thou that none of these save that last holy one-- whom methinks thou namest too lightly among men-- were baptized? |
40686 | no dire punishments? |
40686 | or has it simply suffered from a theological curse on the cats said to draw the chariots of the goddesses of Beauty? |
40686 | or was it merely demonised because of its uncanny and shaggy appearance? |
40686 | they asked,''Have you ever seen him?'' |
40686 | what has led thee to depart from the Prince of thy gods? |
40686 | what is the sum- total of the worst that lies before thee? |
40686 | what, are you going to slaughter this poor woman? |
40686 | whence comest, and with what message freighted? |
40686 | why not bulls? |
40686 | wilt thou go with me? |
5436 | And do you know I rather like this indifferentism? 5436 And do you think he could have done this,"asked Berkley;"if Saint Wolfgang had not helped him?" |
5436 | And have not forgotten--"The old castle? 5436 And is Uhland always so soothing and spiritual?" |
5436 | And sawest thou on the turrets The King and his royal bride? 5436 And this you think should be forgiven?" |
5436 | And what do you Germans consider the prominent characteristics of his genius? |
5436 | And what do you think of Eckermann? |
5436 | And what do you think of Heidelberg and the old castle up there? |
5436 | And what is the image in your fancy? 5436 And which of them shall I read to you? |
5436 | And who are they? |
5436 | And who has not? |
5436 | And who says we do n''t? |
5436 | And why need one always explain? 5436 Bless me, child, what ails you?" |
5436 | But are you sure the case is utterly hopeless? |
5436 | But are you sure, that this is no hallucination? 5436 But does it not often offend you to hear people speaking of Art and Nature as opposite and discordant things? |
5436 | But is there no ghost, no haunted chamber in the old castle? |
5436 | But whom have we here? |
5436 | By the way,interrupted the Baron,"did you ever read Hoffmann''s beautiful story of Master Martin, the Cooper of Nuremberg? |
5436 | Can you make old traditions? |
5436 | Did you ever see him? |
5436 | Do you not remember the marble bust at Rome? 5436 He is a poet, then, as well as a philosopher?" |
5436 | He strides away indignantly, like one of Ossian''s ghosts? |
5436 | How do you know? |
5436 | How, then, can she give soirées? |
5436 | In the Black Forest, by all means? 5436 Is an honest musician to be tormented with music, as I have been to- day, and am so often tormented? |
5436 | Is she beautiful? |
5436 | Is that from Shakspere? |
5436 | Led they not forth in rapture A beauteous maiden there? 5436 Pray, Mr. Flemming, what do you think of that Rembrandt?" |
5436 | Shall we go in, Flemming? |
5436 | The winds and the waves of ocean, Had they a merry chime? 5436 Then how can you linger here so long? |
5436 | Well, this afternoon I devote to you; for to- morrow we part once more, and who knows when we shall meet again? |
5436 | What are you doing here, Von Kleist? |
5436 | What books have we here for afternoon reading? |
5436 | What do you mean by that? |
5436 | What is her name? |
5436 | What young lady with the soft voice? |
5436 | Where have you been since? |
5436 | Who is this? |
5436 | Why do you say summer- time and not summer? |
5436 | Why have I been born with all these warm affections,--these ardent longings after what is good, if they lead only to sorrow and disappointment? 5436 Why quote the songs of that witty and licentious age? |
5436 | Why such haste? 5436 Yet what binds us, friend to friend, But that soul with soul can blend? |
5436 | You do not like the waltz? |
5436 | ''Why so dull and mute, young sinner; Pr''ythee why so mute? |
5436 | ''Why so wan and pale, fond lover; Pr''ythee why so pale? |
5436 | --Do you not see a resemblance? |
5436 | --he says,"How is the Man in the Custom- House?" |
5436 | After all,--what is she? |
5436 | And if it never comes, what matters it? |
5436 | And smokes the Fox tobacco? |
5436 | And smokes the Fox tobacco? |
5436 | And smokes the Fox tobacco? |
5436 | And smokes the leathery Fox tobacco? |
5436 | And the golden crown of pride? |
5436 | And the wave of their crimson mantles? |
5436 | And thou, reader, dost thou know what a hero is? |
5436 | And was it indeed so? |
5436 | Are not the morning shadows of life as deep and broad as those of its evening? |
5436 | Are not, then, the sorrows of childhood as dark as those of age? |
5436 | Are they not higher and holier than the stars? |
5436 | Are they not more to me than all things else?" |
5436 | Are you certain, that you have been chosen by Heaven for this great work?" |
5436 | But after all, what are these but the decorations and painted scenery in the great theatre of human life? |
5436 | But do you really believe, that this is a portrait of Homer?" |
5436 | But if, byincidents, you mean events in the history of the human mind,( and why not?) |
5436 | But is it possible you have never been at Chamouni? |
5436 | But pray tell me, who was that young lady, with the soft voice?" |
5436 | But where sleeps the dust of his rival and foe, sweet Master Bartholomew Rainbow?" |
5436 | But which of Hoffmann''s works is it, that you have in your hand?" |
5436 | But would it then have been Romanesque? |
5436 | By the way, did you ever read that brilliant Italian dithyrambic, Redi''s Bacchus in Tuscany? |
5436 | Can such a simple result spring only from the long and intricate process of experience? |
5436 | Did it ever occur to you that he was in some points like Ben Franklin? |
5436 | Did it not recall, think ye, the lake of Thun? |
5436 | Did not Pan captivate the chaste Diana? |
5436 | Did not Titania love Nick Bottom, with his ass''s head? |
5436 | Did we not tell you so? |
5436 | Did you ever read the ballad of Veit Weber, the shoe- maker, on this subject? |
5436 | Did you never have the misfortune to live in a community, where a difficulty in the parish seemed to announce the end of the world? |
5436 | Did you never hear of the Christ of Andernach?" |
5436 | Did you observe what a loud, sharp voice she has?" |
5436 | Didst thou hear, from those lofty chambers, The harp and the minstrel''s rhyme?" |
5436 | Do n''t you think that beautiful?" |
5436 | Do they not move, Hyperion- like on high? |
5436 | Do you know she has nearly ruined your character in town? |
5436 | Do you not think the Frau Kranich has a very beautiful leather?" |
5436 | Do you recollect it?" |
5436 | Do you remember Sir John Suckling''s Song? |
5436 | Do you think the fishes, that heard the sermon of St. Anthony, were any better than thosewho did not? |
5436 | Flemming read;"Hast thou seen that lordly castle, That Castle by the Sea? |
5436 | For what is Time? |
5436 | Has it not all turned out just as we said? |
5436 | Has not their presence been sweeter to me than flowers? |
5436 | Have you ever been in love? |
5436 | Have you no better consolation to offer me? |
5436 | Have you not heard funeral psalms from the chauntry? |
5436 | Have you read Menzel''s attack upon him?" |
5436 | Have you read any thing of his? |
5436 | Have you real talent,--real feeling for art? |
5436 | Here, or in the Black Forest?" |
5436 | How canst thou rejoice? |
5436 | How do you like that?" |
5436 | How do you like that?" |
5436 | How does the Frau Mama? |
5436 | How does the Frau Mama? |
5436 | How does the Frau Mama? |
5436 | How does the Herr Papa? |
5436 | How does the Herr Papa? |
5436 | How does the Herr Papa? |
5436 | How does the Herr Rector? |
5436 | How does the Herr Rector? |
5436 | How does the Herr Rector? |
5436 | How does the Mamsell S � ur? |
5436 | How does the Mamsell S � ur? |
5436 | How does the Mamsell S � ur? |
5436 | How does the leathery Frau Mama? |
5436 | How does the leathery Herr Papa? |
5436 | How does the leathery Herr Rector? |
5436 | How does the leathery Mamsell S � ur? |
5436 | How is the Man in the Custom- House?" |
5436 | I wonder what mischief she is hatching now? |
5436 | If not this, then tell me what it is?" |
5436 | In John Lyly''s Endymion, Sir Topas is made to say;"Dost thou know what a Poet is? |
5436 | In solitudeor in society? |
5436 | Into the Silent Land? |
5436 | Is he a favorite author of yours?" |
5436 | Is it like this?" |
5436 | Is it not so?" |
5436 | Is it you? |
5436 | Is not that a beautiful poem?" |
5436 | Is that the meaning?" |
5436 | It is entitled,` Whither?'' |
5436 | It was born in the night, and died this morning early?" |
5436 | Leave me, I wish to be alone?" |
5436 | Otherwise, who would feed the undying lamp of thought? |
5436 | Pr''ythee why so mute? |
5436 | Pr''ythee why so pale? |
5436 | Pray what is the matter? |
5436 | Pray, does anybody live up there now- a- days?" |
5436 | Resplendent as the morning sun, Beaming with golden hair?" |
5436 | Shall I read it?" |
5436 | Tell me, do not these men in all ages and in all places, emblazon with bright colors the armorial bearings of their country? |
5436 | Tell me, my friend, have you no faith in this?" |
5436 | Tell me, my soul, why art thou restless? |
5436 | That''s your sunrise on the Righi, is it? |
5436 | The idea is beautiful, is it not?" |
5436 | This is surely a head of Homer?" |
5436 | Were they not, likewise, sons of Heaven and Earth? |
5436 | What are they but the coarse materials of the poet''s song? |
5436 | What brings the leathery postilion? |
5436 | What brings the postilion? |
5436 | What brings the postilion? |
5436 | What brings the postilion? |
5436 | What comes there from the hill? |
5436 | What comes there from the hill? |
5436 | What comes there from the hill? |
5436 | What comes there from the leathery hill? |
5436 | What could so disturb the studies of this melancholy wight? |
5436 | What do you say of my Latin?" |
5436 | What do you think of that?" |
5436 | What do you think of the shoe- maker poets that came after them,--with their guilds and singing- schools? |
5436 | What had she done, to be so tempted in her weakness, and perish? |
5436 | What is the use of giving way to sadness in this beautiful world?" |
5436 | What think you of that?" |
5436 | What would you say, were you to see him sitting on a sofa with his arms round your wife?" |
5436 | When did you ever hear me breathe a whisper against her?" |
5436 | When he communicated his thoughts to the Baron, the only answer he received was;"After all, what is the use of so much preaching? |
5436 | Whence came this holy calm, this long- desired tranquillity? |
5436 | Where are then the bright fancies, that, amid the great stillness of the night, arise like stars in the firmament of our souls? |
5436 | Where are you taking the gentleman?" |
5436 | Where do they hide themselves in such storms? |
5436 | Where will you have the scene? |
5436 | Who is she? |
5436 | Who translated it?" |
5436 | Who was this Callot?" |
5436 | Why didst thou suffer her gentle affections to lead her thus astray?" |
5436 | Why does he stop at the little village of Capellen? |
5436 | Why dost thou look forward to the future with such strong desire? |
5436 | Why have I not made these sage reflections, this wise resolve, sooner? |
5436 | Why is thy foot so bloody? |
5436 | Why reason with thunder- showers? |
5436 | Why should he not be allowed to copy in words what painters and sculptors copy in colors and in marble?" |
5436 | Why so wan and pale, fond lover? |
5436 | Why would you preach to the wind? |
5436 | Will, if looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail? |
5436 | Will, if speaking well ca n''t win her, Saying nothing do''t? |
5436 | Would you hang one of those in your hall? |
5436 | Yet what cares he? |
5436 | You have been at Baden- Baden? |
5436 | You say she afterwards married Achim von Arnim?" |
5436 | ` Is this the way I was going? |
5436 | ` What do I say of a murmur? |
5436 | a kind of rhymed Ben Franklin? |
5436 | at what firesides dry their feathery cloaks? |
5436 | do you know the story of the Liebenstein?" |
5436 | how canst thou mourn? |
5436 | or to know one of the benefactors of the human race, in the very` storm and pressure period''of his indiscreet enthusiasm? |
5436 | said Flemming to the old sexton;"who is this, that stands here so solemnly in marble, and seems to be keeping guard over the dead men below?" |
5436 | screamed a youth, whose face was hot and flushed with supper and with beer;"Brander, I say? |
508 | And did you also hear them? |
508 | And did you really see him at the Province House? |
508 | And do you feel it then, at last? |
508 | And shall not the youth''s hair be cut? |
508 | And the cost, Peter, eh? |
508 | And who is there by this green pool that can bring thee news from the ends of the earth? |
508 | And yet,whispered Alice Vane,"may not such fables have a moral? |
508 | Are we grown old again, so soon? |
508 | Are you mad, old man? |
508 | Are you sure it is our parson? |
508 | But did Ponce De Leon ever find it? |
508 | But how if he wakes? |
508 | But what has good Parson Hooper got upon his face? |
508 | But what if the world will not believe that it is the type of an innocent sorrow? |
508 | But what is the meaning of it all? |
508 | But who were the three that preceded him? |
508 | But will ye lead him in the path which his parents have trodden? |
508 | But would it be possible,inquired her cousin,"to restore this dark picture to its pristine hues?" |
508 | Call you this liberty of conscience? |
508 | Can ye teach him the enlightened faith which his father has died for, and for which I, even I, am soon to become an unworthy martyr? 508 Couldst thou have thought there were such merry times in a madhouse?" |
508 | Did not my great- granduncle, Peter Goldthwaite, who died seventy years ago, and whose namesake I am, leave treasure enough to build twenty such? |
508 | Did you never hear of the''Fountain of Youth?'' |
508 | Dighton,demanded the general,"what means this foolery? |
508 | Do we not all spring from an evil root? 508 Dost thou desire nothing brighter than gold that thou wouldst transmute all this ethereal lustre into such dross as thou wallowest in already? |
508 | Edith, sweet Lady of the May,whispered he reproachfully,"is yon wreath of roses a garland to hang above our graves, that you look so sad? |
508 | For Heaven''s sake, what is the matter? |
508 | Friend Tobias,inquired the old man, compassionately,"hast thou found no comfort in these many blessed passages of Scripture?" |
508 | Had not you better let me take the job? |
508 | Halloo, driver!--Take a passenger? |
508 | Have you a mother, dear child? |
508 | Have you torn the house down enough to heat the teakettle? |
508 | Hide it under thy cloak, sayest thou? 508 How dare you stay the march of King James''s Governor?" |
508 | How many stripes for the priest? |
508 | I am a woman, I am but a woman; will He try me above my strength? |
508 | I say, Peter,cried Mr. Brown again,"what the devil are you about there, that I hear such a racket whenever I pass by? |
508 | If I hide my face for sorrow, there is cause enough,he merely replied;"and if I cover it for secret sin, what mortal might not do the same?" |
508 | In the devil''s name what is this? |
508 | Is he one whom the wilderness folk have ravished from some Christian mother? |
508 | Is it known, my dear uncle,inquired she,"what this old picture once represented? |
508 | Is it to the Lord''s house that you come to pour forth the foulness of your heart and the inspiration of the devil? 508 Is the man thinking what he will do when he is a widower?" |
508 | Mercy on us, Mr. Peter, are you quarrelling with the Old Scratch? |
508 | Mistress Dudley, why are you loitering here? |
508 | Mr. Peter,remarked Tabitha,"must the wine be drunk before the money is found?" |
508 | Must he share the stripes of his fellows? |
508 | My dear old friends,repeated Dr. Heidegger,"may I reckon on your aid in performing an exceedingly curious experiment?" |
508 | My poor boy, are you so feeble? |
508 | See you not, he is some old round- headed dignitary, who hath lain asleep these thirty years, and knows nothing o''the change of times? 508 Shall I tell the secrets of yours? |
508 | Shall we go on? |
508 | Shall we not waken him? |
508 | Stern man,cried the May Lord,"how can I move thee? |
508 | Tell me, man of cold heart, what has God done to me? 508 Then you are going towards Vermont?" |
508 | To what purpose? |
508 | Valiant captain,quoth Peter Palfrey, the Ancient of the band,"what order shall be taken with the prisoners?" |
508 | Was every door in the land shut against you, my child, that you have wandered to this unhallowed spot? |
508 | What castle hall hast thou to hang it in? |
508 | What does this old fellow here? |
508 | What grievous affliction hath befallen you,she earnestly inquired,"that you should thus darken your eyes forever?" |
508 | What hast thou to do with conscience, thou knave? |
508 | What is here? 508 What is it, mother?" |
508 | What is that to the purpose? |
508 | What is the coroner''s verdict? 508 What matters his miserable life, when none of us are sure of twelve hours''breath? |
508 | What means the Bedlamite by this freak? |
508 | What means this blaze of light? 508 What new jest has your Excellency in hand?" |
508 | What pale and bright- eyed little boy is this, Tobias? |
508 | What thing art thou? |
508 | What worthies are these? |
508 | What''s here? |
508 | When did you taste food last? |
508 | Whence did he come? 508 Where has this mad fellow stolen that sacramental vessel?" |
508 | Where is the Lady Eleanore? |
508 | Where is your Great Humbug? |
508 | Who is this gray patriarch? |
508 | Who is this insolent young fellow? |
508 | Who is this venerable brother? |
508 | Whose voice hast thou stolen for thy murmurs and miserable petitions, as if Lady Eleanore could be conscious of mortal infirmity? 508 Why do I waste words on the fellow?" |
508 | Why do you haunt me thus? |
508 | Why do you look back? |
508 | Why do you seek her now? 508 Why do you tremble at me alone?" |
508 | Why had that young man a stain of blood upon his ruff? |
508 | Will not your Excellency order out the guard? |
508 | Wilt thou still worship the destroyer and surround her image with fantasies the more magnificent, the more evil she has wrought? 508 Would your Excellency inquire further into the mystery of the pageant?" |
508 | Wouldst thou hear more? |
508 | Wretched lunatic, what do you seek here? |
508 | You positively refuse to let me have this crazy old house, and the land under and adjoining, at the price named? |
508 | Young man, what is your purpose? |
508 | And did she dwell there in utter loneliness? |
508 | And thou, to whom I committed my child, how hast thou fulfilled thy trust? |
508 | And what is Time, to the married of Eternity?" |
508 | And what news from Boston?" |
508 | And what speak ye of James? |
508 | And who was the Gray Champion? |
508 | And wilt thou sink beneath an affliction which happens alike to them that have their portion here below, and to them that lay up treasure in heaven? |
508 | Are the murderers apprehended? |
508 | Are we not all in darkness till the light doth shine upon us? |
508 | Are you ready for the lifting of the veil that shuts in time from eternity?" |
508 | As we went on--""Have I not borne all this; and have I murmured?" |
508 | But did the dead man laugh? |
508 | But think ye, Christian men, that these abominations may be suffered without a sword drawn? |
508 | But what think ye now? |
508 | But what was the wild throng that stood hand in hand about the Maypole? |
508 | But where is the Lady Eleanore?" |
508 | But where was the Gray Champion? |
508 | But why had she returned to him, when their cold hearts shrank from each other''s embrace? |
508 | But, finding David asleep by the spring, one of the rogues whispered to his fellow,"Hist!--Do you see that bundle under his head?" |
508 | But, how is he to attain his ends? |
508 | Can it be that nobody caught sight of him? |
508 | Could Mr. Hooper be fearful of her glance, that he so hastily caught back the black veil? |
508 | Did he seek to hide it from the dread Being whom he was addressing? |
508 | Did his broken spirit feel, at that dread hour, the tremendous burden of a People''s curse? |
508 | Do you not feel it so?" |
508 | Doth he stand here among this multitude of people? |
508 | Doubtless you know their purport?" |
508 | Had the changes of a lifetime been crowded into so brief a space, and were they now four aged people, sitting with their old friend, Dr. Heidegger? |
508 | Hath He cast me down, never to rise again? |
508 | Hath He crushed my very heart in his hand? |
508 | Have men avoided me, and women shown no pity, and children screamed and fled, only for my black veil? |
508 | Have not I resolved within myself that the whole earth contains no fitter ornament for the great hall of my ancestral castle? |
508 | Have you been hanged or not?" |
508 | He often paused, with his axe uplifted in the air, and said to himself,--"Peter Goldthwaite, did you never strike this blow before?" |
508 | Heap of diseased mortality, why lurkest thou in my lady''s chamber?" |
508 | Honestly now, Doctor, have you not stirred up the sober brains of some of your countrymen to enact a scene in our masquerade?" |
508 | How came it in your mind too?" |
508 | How does our worthy Governor Winthrop? |
508 | How goes it, friend Peter?" |
508 | How mean you, good sir, to enjoy the prize which you have been seeking, the Lord knows how long, among the Crystal Hills?" |
508 | How shall the widow''s horror be represented? |
508 | How, then, came the doomed victim here? |
508 | If not sunshine, what can it be?" |
508 | If the murder had not been committed till Tuesday night, who was the prophet that had foretold it, in all its circumstances, on Tuesday morning? |
508 | Is Mr. Higginbotham''s niece come out of her fainting fits? |
508 | Is not the kindred of a common fate a closer tie than that of birth? |
508 | Not a soul would ask,''Who was he? |
508 | Now think ye that I would have done this grievous wrong to my soul, body, reputation, and estate, without a reasonable chance of profit?" |
508 | Now what should an old woman wish for, when she can go but a step or two before she comes to her grave? |
508 | Now, would you deem it possible that this rose of half a century could ever bloom again?" |
508 | PETER GOLDTHWAITE''S TREASURE"And so, Peter, you wo n''t even consider of the business?" |
508 | Peter?" |
508 | Possibly, could it be made visible, it might prove a masterpiece of some great artist-- else, why has it so long held such a conspicuous place?" |
508 | Shall I put these feelings into words?" |
508 | Shall thy silken bridegroom suffer thy share of the penalty, besides his own?" |
508 | Shall we waken him?" |
508 | Supposing the legend true, can this be other than the once proud Lady Eleanore? |
508 | Take heart, child, and tell me what is your name and where is your home?" |
508 | The boy has been baptized in blood; will ye keep the mark fresh and ruddy upon his forehead?" |
508 | Was it an illusion? |
508 | Was it delusion? |
508 | Was it not for liberty to worship God according to our conscience?" |
508 | Was it not for the enjoyment of our civil rights? |
508 | Was the old fellow actually murdered two or three nights ago, by an Irishman and a nigger?" |
508 | What does old Esther''s joy portend?" |
508 | What has she to do with weddings? |
508 | What have we to do with England?" |
508 | What have we to do with this mitred prelate,--with this crowned king? |
508 | What heart could resist him? |
508 | What is his purpose? |
508 | What is the mystery in my heart?" |
508 | What is there for me but your decay and death? |
508 | What made him hide it so snug, Tabby?" |
508 | What other shelter is there for old Esther Dudley, save the Province House or the grave?" |
508 | What say you again?" |
508 | What sayest thou, maid? |
508 | What says our friend in the bear skin? |
508 | What sort of a man was Wakefield? |
508 | What then, in sober earnest, were the delusive treasures of the chest? |
508 | What to me is the outcry of a mob, in this remote province of the realm? |
508 | What''s the latest news at Parker''s Falls?" |
508 | What, but the mystery which it obscurely typifies, has made this piece of crape so awful? |
508 | Wherefore have all other adventurers sought the prize in vain but that I might win it, and make it a symbol of the glories of our lofty line? |
508 | Wherefore have we come hither to set up our own tombstones in a wilderness? |
508 | Wherefore, I say again, have we sought this country of a rugged soil and wintry sky? |
508 | Whither did the wanderer go?'' |
508 | Who but the fiend, and his bond slaves, the crew of Merry Mount, had thus disturbed them? |
508 | Who can this old man be?" |
508 | Who has not heard their name? |
508 | Who knows but I may take a glimpse at myself, and see whether all''s right?" |
508 | Who shall enslave us here? |
508 | Who so worthy to be the final victim as herself?" |
508 | Whose was the agony of that death moment? |
508 | Why, at least, did no smile of welcome brighten upon his face? |
508 | Will she die? |
508 | Would you go to the sole home that is left you? |
508 | Would you have me wait till the mob shall sack the Province House, as they did my private mansion? |
508 | You are repairing the old house, I suppose,--making a new one of it, eh?" |
508 | art thou come to bear a valiant testimony as in former years? |
508 | asked Dr. Heidegger,"which Ponce De Leon, the Spanish adventurer, went in search of two or three centuries ago?" |
508 | cried he, with tremulous rapture,"how shall I endure the effulgence? |
508 | exclaimed the affrighted minister,"with what horrible crime upon your soul are you now passing to the judgment?" |
508 | exclaimed the old man,"art thou come to this darkened land again? |
508 | muttered Sir William Howe to a gentleman beside him;"a procession of the regicide judges of King Charles the martyr?" |
508 | muttered the old woman, with such a heart- broken expression that the tears gushed from the stranger''s eyes"Have I bidden a traitor welcome? |
508 | observed the elder from Harvard,"hath she not likewise a gift to declare her sentiments?" |
508 | or,"Peter, what need of tearing the whole house down? |
508 | said Colonel Killigrew, who believed not a word of the doctor''s story;"and what may be the effect of this fluid on the human frame?" |
508 | whither are you going? |
508 | without a shot fired? |
508 | without blood spilt, yea, on the very stairs of the pulpit? |
48190 | Ai n''t it now? |
48190 | And are they so dreadfully wicked? |
48190 | And he swore? |
48190 | And was n''t you running to look at him? |
48190 | And you were there? |
48190 | Are you speaking of_ Miss_ Cushing, sir? |
48190 | But did Hiel stay so late, Nabby? |
48190 | But did you really go clear back? |
48190 | But you know----"LET ME ALONE, ca n''t ye? |
48190 | But, Nabby, what is a''lumination? |
48190 | But, of course, you will go home at noon and ask your mother, and of course she''ll let you; wo n''t she, girls? |
48190 | But_ is n''t_ it Christmas? |
48190 | Dear me, what is he? |
48190 | Did that bonnet cost a great deal? |
48190 | Do n''t you feel a little better? |
48190 | Do they? |
48190 | Do you know, Hiel? |
48190 | Do you think she cared much? |
48190 | Do you think, Mamma, that Judge Gridley will be there? |
48190 | Do you think_ he believes_ that? |
48190 | Does she not think we are Christians? |
48190 | Father, what makes you feel so bad? |
48190 | Ha, my little Dolly, are you out to- day? |
48190 | He did, did he? 48190 How long did it take to do the whole thing?" |
48190 | How long since you''ve been so grand? 48190 How many times must I tell you, Dolly, that Spring is never to be fed at the table?" |
48190 | How wide was the place to be crossed? |
48190 | I believe, however, your husband preaches that we must''use the means,''does n''t he? 48190 I did n''t say he did n''t, did I?" |
48190 | I wonder who that is? |
48190 | I_ hev_ let him-- how was I goin''to help it? |
48190 | Is it so? |
48190 | Is n''t there an Episcopal church in your town? |
48190 | Is that the way with Nabby? |
48190 | It seems to me,said Dolly,"that it would have been better not to have the snakes, and then people would n''t be bit at all-- wouldn''t it?" |
48190 | Know him? 48190 Mother,"said he in an awe- struck tone, bending over his wife,"do n''t you know me?" |
48190 | Nabby, if I should ask papa, and he_ should_ say I might go, would you take me? |
48190 | Not going to vote with the Democrats, Higgins? 48190 Of course_ he_ wo n''t when he''s a minister, so what''s the use of worryin''? |
48190 | Oh no, they''ll only fire powder, of course,said Bill majestically,"do n''t you know that?" |
48190 | Oh, Mamma, there''s going to be a party at General Lewis''s-- Bessie''s party-- and the girls are all going, and may n''t I go? |
48190 | Oh, Mis''Persis,said Dolly, after a pause of awe and horror,"what is rattlesnake- weed?" |
48190 | Oh, Nabby, are you going? |
48190 | Oh, Nabby, wo n''t you take me? 48190 Oh, boys, are you going?" |
48190 | Oh, land o''Goshen, Dolly, what do you mind them boys for? |
48190 | Oh,said Dolly, who irrepressibly was following her brothers into the throng,"they wo n''t_ really_ shoot anybody, will they?" |
48190 | Please, sir,said Will, who, with distended eyes, had been listening,"what did the British say when they found out?" |
48190 | Poor little Presbyterian-- and did she say so? |
48190 | Red, did you say? |
48190 | Saying to Dolly? |
48190 | So this is my niece Dolly, is it? |
48190 | That air''s what you call Reason, is''t? |
48190 | Then you do n''t think Bessie''s father is a bad man? |
48190 | Then you feel resigned, do n''t you? |
48190 | Then you''ve no thoughts of signing off? |
48190 | There? 48190 Thet''s what they call''em, do they? |
48190 | To Dr. Cushing''s, Ma''am? |
48190 | Waitin''for me to come along? |
48190 | Wal, ai n''t your mother gettin''better? |
48190 | Wal, did ye see old Zeph a- gettin''up and a- settin''down in the wrong place, and tryin''to manage his prayer- book? |
48190 | Wal, did you see? |
48190 | Wal, it was considerable for Uncle Sol to do-- wa''n''t it? |
48190 | Wal, what would ye hev me-- like a girl, or a dog, or what? |
48190 | Wal, what''s his father think of his bein''here? |
48190 | Wal, yis,_''tis_ putty,said Hiel, looking around with an air of candid allowance,"but who''s going to pay for it all? |
48190 | Was the dress made up? |
48190 | Well, and what do you think of it? |
48190 | Well, of course, what should she be? |
48190 | Well, what do you think Higgins has been saying to me about her? |
48190 | Well, what do you think? |
48190 | Well, who''s ben a contendin''with the Lord? |
48190 | What color was it? |
48190 | What do you mean, child? |
48190 | What in the world are you crying for, Dolly? |
48190 | What is Christmas, Nabby? |
48190 | What is she thinking of, with those great eyes of hers? |
48190 | What is_ that_ for? |
48190 | What upon earth got you out of bed this time of night? 48190 What ye doin''there?" |
48190 | What''s all this about? |
48190 | What, Hiel? |
48190 | What? 48190 Where were you, and how did it happen?" |
48190 | Who is the rector of the Episcopal church? |
48190 | Who said I did? |
48190 | Who''s ben a murmurin? 48190 Whose business is it what I do Sundays? |
48190 | Why do n''t you talk to him, Papa? |
48190 | Why should he? |
48190 | Why should we tremble to convey Their bodies to the tomb? 48190 Why, Zeph Higgins ai n''t''Piscopal, is he?" |
48190 | Why, my little Puss,he said, lifting her in his lap and twining her curls round his finger,"what do you want to know that for?" |
48190 | Why, that''s just the way it was when they crossed the Red Sea,said Dolly, eagerly;"was n''t it, Papa?" |
48190 | Why, what''s he mad about? |
48190 | Wonder if that air buildin''s paid fer? 48190 Yes, but what would she think of me, when I am in Boston, if I should go off to some other church than hers?" |
48190 | Yes, indeed, poor child, she went away crying; but what could I do about it? 48190 You do n''t suppose he would dare to kiss you again, Nabby?" |
48190 | You have no doubt whatever that the General was a religious man? |
48190 | You know this''ere minister they''ve got here? |
48190 | You thought I liked Hiel? |
48190 | You will believe it? |
48190 | You will trust Him? |
48190 | You''ll get well soon, wo n''t you? |
48190 | Zephaniah Higgins,she said,"air you crazy? |
48190 | A fire in the house o''God? |
48190 | After an interval of serious reflection, she asked:"But, if any of them should talk to me, then I may talk to them; may I?" |
48190 | After standing thinking for a minute or two she resumed:"But, Nabby,_ why_ do n''t my papa like it? |
48190 | An illumination might do very well to open a church, but there were many who said"to what purpose is this waste?" |
48190 | And I heard you was a settin''up with Nabby Higgins the other evening; was you?" |
48190 | And now, my dear old fellow, I see you shake your head and say, What is to come of all this? |
48190 | And then arose the solemn warble of the old funeral hymn:"Why should we mourn departing friends Or shake at death''s alarms? |
48190 | But does it not seem astonishing that a military man, going through the terrible scenes that he did, should never have been tempted to profanity? |
48190 | But when Almiry Ann, and Lucindy Jane, and Lucretia, and Nabby are all to be encountered at one time, what is a discreet young man to do? |
48190 | Can it be?" |
48190 | Did he die for him?" |
48190 | Did he?" |
48190 | Did it kill her?" |
48190 | Did n''t I tell you not to come home this noon?" |
48190 | Do n''t we_ work_ for our money, and ai n''t it_ ourn_? |
48190 | Do n''t ye know the nine o''clock bell''s jest rung?" |
48190 | Do n''t you know that Christ loves you?" |
48190 | Do n''t you think it would be just the best thing in the world for Dolly to make this visit to Boston?" |
48190 | Do n''t you think it''s a shame, Nabby, that the big boys will laugh at me so and call me names and wo n''t tell me anything?" |
48190 | Do they think nobody''s to have silk gowns and Leg''orn bonnets but them? |
48190 | Do you suppose I ca n''t keep that fellow in order? |
48190 | Do you want to kill your wife? |
48190 | Dolly asked herself should she too ever be so happy-- she, poor little Dolly; if she went up to the beautiful gate, would they let her in? |
48190 | Dolly reflected on this precept gravely, and then said:"Do n''t they speak to any one except when they are spoken to?" |
48190 | Dolly reflected silently on this for some minutes, and then said,"Papa, do you suppose Christ loves him? |
48190 | Fire? |
48190 | Folks all well in Boston, I s''pose?" |
48190 | Had she done wrong? |
48190 | Hain''t ye heard that Zeph''s signed off two months ago, and goin''in strong for the''Piscopals?" |
48190 | Her father and mother would certainly go there; and they would surely want her too: could n''t she go in with them? |
48190 | How come she out this time o''night? |
48190 | How could it be that such good people were Democrats? |
48190 | How did Mother ever keep so quiet and always be so pleasant? |
48190 | How did it happen? |
48190 | How often in our experience do we meet a man brave enough, when once fully committed, to turn a square corner and say"I was wrong"? |
48190 | I should n''t''a''thought Zeph''d''a''done that for any meetin''?" |
48190 | I?" |
48190 | If the salt have lost its savor wherewith shall it be salted? |
48190 | If we Christians lived as high as we ought, if we lived up to our professions, would there be any sinners unconverted? |
48190 | If we love our sister, shall we not rejoice because she has gone to the Father? |
48190 | In the simple Puritan days, while they had before their eyes the query of Sacred Writ,"Can a maid forget her ornaments?" |
48190 | Is it like powder?" |
48190 | Is it our covetousness? |
48190 | Is it our hard feeling against a brother? |
48190 | Is it our pride? |
48190 | Is n''t it pleasant to find relations that one can like and esteem so much? |
48190 | Is there anything that we know to be wrong that we refuse to make right-- anything that we know belongs to God that we are withholding? |
48190 | Is there no place Left for repentance? |
48190 | Love might redeem them; but who can love them? |
48190 | Oh, is it possible? |
48190 | People often, in looking on this couple, shook their heads and said,"How_ could_ that woman ever have married that man?" |
48190 | S''pose there''d be no objections to takin''my mother''long with ye?" |
48190 | Sha''n''t I, Nabby?" |
48190 | Tell Ike Bissel there to h''ist his pole a leetle higher; he do n''t reach them air top candles; what''s the feller thinkin''of? |
48190 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
48190 | There now, what do you think of that?" |
48190 | They wanted the control of the State, and if rabid, drinking, irreligious men would give it to them, why not use them after their kind? |
48190 | Want to ride? |
48190 | Was there a tree he could not climb-- a chestnut, or walnut, or butternut, however exalted in fastnesses of the rock, that he could not shake down? |
48190 | Well, it was a terribly anxious night for Washington; for what had we to expect, next day? |
48190 | What could any of them do without her? |
48190 | What could he do without her? |
48190 | What do you think of all these things?" |
48190 | What had she done? |
48190 | What is a volcano? |
48190 | What should I want to look at_ him_ for? |
48190 | What was the matter with his head? |
48190 | What was this dreadful thing that had happened or was going to happen? |
48190 | What''s the difference? |
48190 | What_ did_ the doctor say? |
48190 | Where had they been? |
48190 | Who can read the awful mysteries of a single soul? |
48190 | Who shall interpret what is meant by the sweet jargon of robin and oriole and bobolink, with their endless reiterations? |
48190 | Who''s a better right, I should like to know? |
48190 | Who? |
48190 | Why do n''t you speak?" |
48190 | Why hast thou then broken down her hedges so that all that pass by the way do pluck her? |
48190 | Why not? |
48190 | Wonder now ef them air boards is firm? |
48190 | Would there be time enough to explore the woody hills beyond Poganuc River before sundown? |
48190 | Yet, who shall say? |
48190 | You remember Cousin Jane Davies, that married John Dunbar and went over to England? |
48190 | _"And was n''t you running to look at him?" |
48190 | ai n''t you afraid of snakes?" |
48190 | and ai n''t we just as good as they be? |
48190 | and why do n''t we have a''lumination in our meeting- house?" |
48190 | and would they let her go? |
48190 | did n''t I tell ye what would happen when Dolly went to Boston? |
48190 | he said, coming out one morning,"where''s my stockings? |
48190 | none for pardon left? |
48190 | what are you here for? |
48190 | what d''ye say_ hope_ for? |
48190 | what did the doctor say? |
36678 | ''You ca n''t come that, old man,''I repeated;''I could tell you in the streets of Jerusalem in the night; what are you about, old feller? 36678 ''You do n''t say so, though, do you?'' |
36678 | Ai n''t goin''to bleed to death? |
36678 | Ai n''t that la'', Squire Longbow? |
36678 | And did n''t know nothin'', ha? |
36678 | And do n''t the plaintiff know more about his rights than all the witnesses in the world? |
36678 | And how, in all created airth, would you punish such a person for perjury? 36678 And so they really built a dam?" |
36678 | And so you do n''t use the old''Franklin''stove any more? |
36678 | And that large farm you live on, Mrs. Brown, is_ the_ spot you first settled? 36678 And was n''t old Sally Beadle, Charity Beadle''s grandmother?" |
36678 | And what then? |
36678 | Any turkeys or chickens? |
36678 | Any- thing- wrong? 36678 Any_ what_?" |
36678 | Anything else? |
36678 | Anything, Seth, about Filkins''character? |
36678 | Are they good pay? |
36678 | Are you well, Aunt Sonora, to- day? |
36678 | Beaver here? |
36678 | But have you heard_ Beadle say_ anything about Filkins''character? |
36678 | But let us know what this city is called? |
36678 | But what did she say about_ Philista Filkins_? |
36678 | But what have children to do with a principle of law? |
36678 | But what have you heard her say about Philista Filkins? |
36678 | But what supports it? |
36678 | But what? |
36678 | But you got through all safe? |
36678 | Can it be possible? |
36678 | Can you secure them? |
36678 | Cook_ eggs_? |
36678 | Did he catch that feller who ow''d him and run''d away? |
36678 | Did n''t old Zeb Flummer marry old Sally Beadle? |
36678 | Did she roll and tumble much? |
36678 | Did she say she warn''t no better than she ought to be? |
36678 | Did she? 36678 Do n''t eat grass, do they?" |
36678 | Do n''t you never have the blues, and get sorter obstrep''rous? |
36678 | Do they eat up men and women? |
36678 | Do you think they will come back again, Venison? |
36678 | Does Whistle& Sharp live hereabouts? |
36678 | Ever been in state- prison? |
36678 | Ever heard Beadle say anything about Filkins? |
36678 | Goin''on? |
36678 | Got anything for''em or agin''em? |
36678 | Hain''t form''d_ nor_''spressed any? |
36678 | Hain''t had the rheumatiz, nor shakin''ager, nor any of that buzzing in your head? |
36678 | Hain''t said that Turtle was a jackass for pushin''on this''ere suit? |
36678 | Hain''t said that you hop''d the old maid would come out hunk? |
36678 | Hain''t thought he was? |
36678 | Has he got_ claws_? |
36678 | Has she any children? |
36678 | He did n''t put''em_ in_ his butes,said Mrs. Swipes;"how could they come out on''em?" |
36678 | How can he get it out? |
36678 | How did she rest last night? |
36678 | How did you catch''em? |
36678 | How do they ketch''em?--how do they ketch''em? |
36678 | How long have you been attackted? |
36678 | How long? |
36678 | How many States are there in the Union? |
36678 | How much is the debt? |
36678 | How, in the world, did you manage to get through the country twenty years ago? |
36678 | How? |
36678 | I say, mister,stammered the Squire, again rising,"are them''are raal ribbons?" |
36678 | In my_ beaver_ hat? |
36678 | Inter the_ airth_? |
36678 | Is Lavinny at school this winter? |
36678 | Is her fever brok''t onto her? |
36678 | Jes so,replied Bates;"and where was that?" |
36678 | Know Filkins and Beadle? |
36678 | Know Miss Beadle? |
36678 | Know''em? 36678 Marry? |
36678 | Marry? 36678 Mr. Buzzle_baum_,"exclaimed Ike,"you a juryman in this case?" |
36678 | Mr. Tumbleton,exclaimed Ike,"form''d or''spressed any''pinion in this case?" |
36678 | Mrs. Brown, have you lived long in this country? |
36678 | Much on your mind, Squire, now? |
36678 | Now do n''t you think-- and have n''t you_ said_, that Turtle was a jackass for pushin''on this suit? |
36678 | Now what do you''spose I know about Filkins''character? 36678 Now, feller citizens, what''s the reason you hain''t got any more money? |
36678 | Now,exclaimed Ike, pushing his fee in his vest pocket,"who''s the woman?" |
36678 | Old Zeb? 36678 On where?" |
36678 | Puddleford against itself, both residents-- a woman and two children against a man? |
36678 | Sir? |
36678 | Sleep well, last night? |
36678 | So, this your man? 36678 Sot up at her house any?" |
36678 | Sot up_ where_? |
36678 | Spoken of in Holy Writ? |
36678 | Squire Longbow,said Ike,"arn''t it rather on- parliamentary to be speaking when you hain''t got no secretary to take things down?" |
36678 | Stranger,said Ike,"travelled long in these ere parts?" |
36678 | The man says''what of it?'' 36678 To turn a_ what_?" |
36678 | Turtle,exclaimed Swipes, at last, breaking the solitude--"is that man goin''to die?" |
36678 | Very likely,said I;"but is Puddleford law all made for widows, babies, and residents?" |
36678 | Wal,''bout that,said Strickett-- our applicant called his name Izabel Strickett--"''bout that, why, it''s where the battle was fit, warn''t it?" |
36678 | Warn''t I sworn, or was''t you? 36678 Was n''t old Zeb Flummer your grandfather?" |
36678 | Washes? 36678 Well, Venison,"said I,"how long have you been around in these parts?" |
36678 | Well, what of it? |
36678 | Well, whose business is that, if it is? |
36678 | Well,said I,"about those trees that they cleared off?" |
36678 | What are principles to folks in a new country? 36678 What became of Molly?" |
36678 | What became of the woman? |
36678 | What did you do when you first arrived here? |
36678 | What do you want me to say she said? 36678 What does the soil want_ tilling_ for? |
36678 | What hain''t she? 36678 What has she done?" |
36678 | What is she growlin''about, then? |
36678 | What is the man a- goin''-ter to do? |
36678 | What is the matter with Squire Longbow''s woman? |
36678 | What now? |
36678 | What on airth does anybody want to till the soil for? |
36678 | What''s that you say? |
36678 | What,said Uncle Ben,"is the old stage company entirely broken up?" |
36678 | When was the deed executed? |
36678 | Where did you eat and sleep? |
36678 | Where has he gone? |
36678 | Where''s Bates, and the Colonel, and Bulliphant, and the other Puddlefordians?'' 36678 Where''s Bunker Hill?" |
36678 | Where''s Spain? |
36678 | Where''s Turkey? |
36678 | Where''s the honey? |
36678 | Where? |
36678 | Which side? 36678 Who answers for Charity Beadle?" |
36678 | Who did the fightin''there? |
36678 | Why do n''t all the blackbirds go into one flock, Venison? |
36678 | Why do n''t they climb it? |
36678 | Why, did n''t you know I was old enough to be your grandmother? 36678 Why, in the name of old Babylon, do n''t you marry?" |
36678 | Why, on to the next place? |
36678 | Why, what a nice caliker you''re got on, Mrs. Brown; was it one- and- three or one- and- six? |
36678 | Will they sting? |
36678 | Wo n''t it, though? |
36678 | You do know the''oman then? |
36678 | You hear_ that_, do n''t you, gentle_men_? 36678 You live up on Poverty Common-- don''t you?" |
36678 | You want me to_ answer_, do you? 36678 Young?" |
36678 | _ Claws!_exclaimed the keeper, looking astonished;"the great-- African lion-- got claws? |
36678 | _ Did_ sign it? |
36678 | _ Flum_ what? |
36678 | _ Sni_-ping? |
36678 | _ Sni_-ping? |
36678 | _ What''s_ a lie? |
36678 | _ Who_ says that''s a lie? |
36678 | _ Your_ name is Flummer? |
36678 | ''But,''said I,''who are you, if I am not John Smith? |
36678 | ''How much was the rifle worth?'' |
36678 | ''Simple, too, is n''t it?'' |
36678 | ( What physician ever did?) |
36678 | ("Was anybody killed?" |
36678 | --sittin''up with the defendant_ nights_ a- courtin''her, and then wants to know what of it? |
36678 | A''n''t that true, Luke Smith?" |
36678 | Ai n''t there enough to eat, and drink, and wear, growing nat''ral in the woods? |
36678 | All his wants were supplied, and what did he care about the possessions of his neighbors? |
36678 | And Jim said--""When-- in thunder--_was_ it?" |
36678 | And to whom will the posterity of Puddleford be more indebted? |
36678 | Any more questions, ladies and gentlemen?" |
36678 | Any more questions? |
36678 | Any more questions?" |
36678 | Any- thing- wrong?" |
36678 | Are not the extremes equally ridiculous? |
36678 | Ay, whose? |
36678 | Because the Jesuits did not till the earth, and sow, and reap, and swell the commerce of the world: but did n''t they sow? |
36678 | Bird?" |
36678 | Brown?" |
36678 | But do you know, reader, that Longbow, and Turtle, and I do not know how many more, trace their blood directly back to the Pilgrims? |
36678 | But the treble-- what shall I say of_ it_? |
36678 | But what has all this to do with Puddleford? |
36678 | But where was Venison? |
36678 | But who killed her? |
36678 | But who knows anything about the sciences in Puddleford? |
36678 | But why speak of individual cases? |
36678 | Buzzlebaum?" |
36678 | Did n''t she, Philist_y_?" |
36678 | Did n''t you know that? |
36678 | Did n''t you tell old Soper, if she warn''t so old and rusty- like, you''d strike, hit or miss? |
36678 | Do n''t it make your head swim, to think on''t? |
36678 | Do n''t it_ burn_, mister? |
36678 | Do n''t the bees have their queen?" |
36678 | Do n''t you want some help? |
36678 | Do they sleep on the wings of the wind, or hide themselves in a scroll of snow? |
36678 | Do they_ sing_?" |
36678 | Do you not agree with me, that Puddleford had its blessings? |
36678 | Do you not think so? |
36678 | Does not poverty often"bring healing on its wings"? |
36678 | Ever talk of marryin''the''oman, hey?" |
36678 | Five were jist as good in this case, as six;''cause if five could n''t agree, how could six?''" |
36678 | For what purpose was this winged mystery sent upon the earth? |
36678 | Furi_a_tion alive, why do n''t you speak? |
36678 | Hain''t you heer''d him blow his horn, away in the sky, as he led''em on up the rivers and takes? |
36678 | Have you a little plug by- yer jest now, as I have n''t had a chew sin''morning, as it may help a feller some?" |
36678 | Have you never heard of_ this_, gentlemen? |
36678 | He would like jist to know what a company would be good for, on a field- er battle, that could n''t turn an angle? |
36678 | He would"jest like to know how they could carry around a salt- water animal on land?" |
36678 | Higgins, with an affected pleasantry, asked Turtle"how long it was since he run''d away from the State of New York, for debt?" |
36678 | How can they be otherwise? |
36678 | How could I help loving him? |
36678 | How is it in a new country? |
36678 | How is it that these little singing harps live on amid such dreary scenes? |
36678 | How many have been girded and helmeted in her halls? |
36678 | How many, reader? |
36678 | How was it, how is it made up? |
36678 | How, in all created natur, do you s''pose a woman can get dinner? |
36678 | I said_ three_--but were there not more? |
36678 | If confidence will sustain a bank, ought not confidence to sustain Squire Longbow? |
36678 | If it warn''t opodildoc?" |
36678 | Inhabitants only? |
36678 | Is his song for the present or the past? |
36678 | Is it strange that I felt sober? |
36678 | Is not this fame? |
36678 | Is not this something? |
36678 | It looked like a hand reached out from eternity; but_ whose_ hand? |
36678 | It''s a king that leads the ducks in their flight, ai n''t it? |
36678 | Jefferson asked the little man"whether the Federalists or Democrats were in power?" |
36678 | Keeper?" |
36678 | Keeper?" |
36678 | Longbow?" |
36678 | May not something be learned in the very contrast which is thus afforded? |
36678 | Mr. Bates wanted to know what"a jungle was, while he was about his lion story?" |
36678 | Mrs. Bird asked the Squire what the lions ate? |
36678 | Of what force a labored pulpit disquisition? |
36678 | Of what importance is a nice theological distinction with them? |
36678 | Old Gulick''s boy broke that are glass just out of sheer dev''ltry, and you s''pose this ere school_ de_-strict is a- goin''to pay for''t? |
36678 | One generation rides over another, like waves over waves, and"no such miserable interrogatory,"as Where has it gone? |
36678 | Order being restored, Mrs. Bird wanted to know why the lion"had n''t got any_ har_?" |
36678 | Puddleford does, and fails to do, a great many things, just like the"rest of mankind,"and yet who knows and cares anything about Puddleford? |
36678 | Puddleford fame, say you? |
36678 | Seth''s fees were paid him, at last, and the question was again put, if he heard"Beadle say anything else?" |
36678 | Shall we ever forget her? |
36678 | Starve a child? |
36678 | Stumbled? |
36678 | The songs of a people stir them up to revolution-- and what are they but the glowing language of the associations of the soul? |
36678 | The woods were filled with beast and bird, warn''t they? |
36678 | These are your friends, I suppose?" |
36678 | They breed every spring in great numbers; but how, when, and where do they die? |
36678 | Those old airs, that used to echo among the mountains of New England-- where are they? |
36678 | To the eighth point, as follows,--"''Got inter a passion?'' |
36678 | Try it again? |
36678 | Tumbleton?" |
36678 | Turtle asked the Squire"if a hat would not do to collect votes?" |
36678 | Turtle rose, and inquired,"What he put on his head? |
36678 | Turtle where his wife was? |
36678 | Turtle''s office?" |
36678 | Turtle, how can you think so? |
36678 | Turtle?" |
36678 | Turtle?" |
36678 | Uncle Ben asked Jefferson if he would''not like to move up to the fire and warm his feet?'' |
36678 | Warn''t the airth made right in the first place? |
36678 | Was it a summer chime of bells that tolled the sunlight into the temple?--the forest clock, that opened and shut the hours? |
36678 | Were they equipped for the beauty and glory of the world, or their own? |
36678 | Were you not appointed by Polk, Secretary of the Interior, and did I not put a word in his ear favorable to you?'' |
36678 | What alchemist wrought those magical colors? |
36678 | What are residents to non- residents? |
36678 | What are snow birds? |
36678 | What are they? |
36678 | What armies of scholars have walked forth into the battle of life from her cloisters? |
36678 | What becomes of the rest? |
36678 | What brush touched those rich and delicate wings? |
36678 | What but Saxon blood, and Saxon spirit, could have accomplished so much? |
36678 | What can the old man be dreaming about? |
36678 | What cathedral like this, with its living pillars-- its dome of sun, and moon, and stars? |
36678 | What constitutes a man?--a nation? |
36678 | What do you s''pose these ere staterts was passed for? |
36678 | What do you s''pose you was''lected for? |
36678 | What do you say?" |
36678 | What has law got ter do with a widder and two children out here? |
36678 | What if an attempt should be made to build up such a society in a new country? |
36678 | What if he did drink? |
36678 | What is Bannockburn to a savage? |
36678 | What makes''em flockin''around us to- day, and soarin''around in companies, if they do n''t understand each other? |
36678 | What of it? |
36678 | What shall I say of the theology of Puddleford? |
36678 | What shall a feller do?" |
36678 | What son of New England does not look back upon her with pride? |
36678 | What to a Scotchman? |
36678 | What to the Puddlefordians were the refinements of religious exercises? |
36678 | What were this little band of red men, thought I, but so many autumn leaves? |
36678 | What woman was to be placed at the head of society in Puddleford? |
36678 | What, sir?" |
36678 | When she became composed, Ike inquired if"she knew Charity Beadle?" |
36678 | When? |
36678 | Where are his fires now? |
36678 | Where are your children now?" |
36678 | Where did that little piece of melody come from? |
36678 | Where do they live? |
36678 | Where does the merchant creditor find his western customer of last year? |
36678 | Where is the spot where her footsteps are not imprinted, her cheering voice heard? |
36678 | Where was she the day before? |
36678 | Where would we begin? |
36678 | Where''s that?'' |
36678 | Who built it? |
36678 | Who cares?" |
36678 | Who does not love the quail? |
36678 | Who ever saw a pigeon trifle or frolic, or put on airs? |
36678 | Who has not been impressed with this truth? |
36678 | Who is there that could do Bigelow''s work better than he? |
36678 | Who is there that will ever toil and sweat more hours in his Master''s vineyard? |
36678 | Who put on those gorgeous uniforms? |
36678 | Who was to be the next Mrs. Longbow? |
36678 | Who was to have the honor of presiding at the Squire''s table? |
36678 | Who would n''t? |
36678 | Why the animal has n''t got any hair? |
36678 | Why the animal has n''t got any hair? |
36678 | Why was civil and religious liberty planted, amid December snows, upon her inhospitable coast? |
36678 | Why was it committed to her rugged elements of Nature, if not to harden the men, and strengthen and preserve principles? |
36678 | Why, maybe, you do n''t know, Mr. Pettifogger, that there are folks in state''s prison_ now_ for lying in a court of justice?" |
36678 | Why? |
36678 | Wife and children-- how many? |
36678 | Will the gentleman show the bill for the benefit of all? |
36678 | Would n''t he be a pretty man to try this case?" |
36678 | You do n''t expect_ ue_ will carry home a_ tree_, do you?" |
36678 | _ I_ talk about it myself, and"( the same man rose again, and ask''d Wiggins if he would"vote agin licker?" |
36678 | _ Who_ died? |
36678 | _ who''s_ the widow? |
36678 | and streams and lakes were scattered everywhere? |
36678 | and the whole face of natur covered with grass and wild fruits? |
36678 | and what else does anybody want, stranger?" |
36678 | and who can lecter? |
36678 | exclaimed Aunt Sonora, her knitting- needles rattling with surprise,"how_ did_ she get out-- got into the stars?" |
36678 | exclaimed Ike, rising on his feet, a little enraged,"do you know anything about what Charity Beadle said about Philista Filkins? |
36678 | exclaimed Longbow,"what comes of the rest on''em?" |
36678 | exclaimed Turtle;"how do they catch''em, then?" |
36678 | exclaimed the Squire,"the_ rattles_--what is that?" |
36678 | he continued, as he reached out his finger towards Luke, whose daily conversation was a string of oaths;"a''n''t that true? |
36678 | is put; but What did it do?--What has it left behind? |
36678 | or How did it go? |
36678 | repeated Strickett--"Spain? |
36678 | said Bates, turning the subject of conversation,"do you ever hunt?" |
36678 | she exclaimed involuntarily to those around her, starting back, as she saw the bars of a cage in the distance,--"are them bars iron?" |
36678 | what are they?" |
36678 | what can he do? |
36678 | what does he know? |
36678 | what in the name of massy sakes are you about? |
36678 | what is he? |
36678 | what is_ sni_-ping?" |
36678 | where is it?" |
36678 | where?" |
36678 | which side?" |
36678 | who''s afraid of a justice of the peace?" |
36678 | you_ will_ be keerful, now wo n''t you?'' |
6423 | ''And was your mistress unkind to you?'' 6423 ''Was he unkind to you?'' |
6423 | ''Were you a slave?'' 6423 And who are you?'' |
6423 | Art thou from the snowy zone Of a mountain- summit blown, Or the blossom of a dream, Fashioned in the foamy stream? |
6423 | Brer Rabbit say,''How come de fleas on you ai n''t skeer''d un you? 6423 Do you think me the child of circumstances?" |
6423 | Dost thou love life? |
6423 | Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea? 6423 Will you not tolerate,"he asks,"one or two solitary voices in the land, speaking for thoughts not marketable or perishable?" |
6423 | ''Where are you going, and what do you wish?'' |
6423 | ( Begin with the line on p. 105,"A child said,_ What is the Grass?_"),_ Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking_, pp. |
6423 | ..."Why stand we here idle? |
6423 | After hearing one of Emerson''s lectures, James Russell Lowell wrote,"Were we enthusiasts? |
6423 | As Holmes stepped on the platform, they called,"Did he come in the One- Hoss Shay?" |
6423 | Ask''d her what sum she would give me, if she should die first?" |
6423 | Can you find any point of similarity between his work and_ The Legend of Sleepy Hollow_? |
6423 | Compare his style with Addison''s and with Goldsmith''s in_ The Vicar of Wakefield._ Why does Cooper deserve to rank as an original American author? |
6423 | Could this poem have been written by one reared in the middle West? |
6423 | Did Pocahontas actually rescue Captain Smith? |
6423 | Do these poets belong to the classic or the romantic school? |
6423 | Do we to- day read them chiefly for this purpose or for other reasons? |
6423 | Do you feel like reading any of his poems a second time or repeating parts of them? |
6423 | Do you find a genuine romantic element in Drake''s_ Culprit Fay_? |
6423 | Does Hayne or Timrod love nature more for herself alone? |
6423 | Does he belong to the school of Poe or Hawthorne? |
6423 | Does he employ humor in his serious criticism? |
6423 | Does he reveal his characters in a plain, matter- of- fact manner, or by means of subtle touches and unexpected revelations? |
6423 | Does he seem to you to be a romancer or a narrator of a plain unvarnished tale? |
6423 | Her reply has become classic:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
6423 | How could we sin that had not been, or how is his sin our, Without consent, which to prevent we never had the pow''r?''" |
6423 | How does his account of the Indians( p. 18 of this text) compare with modern accounts? |
6423 | How does his use of the romantic element differ from Irving''s? |
6423 | How is the humorous effect secured? |
6423 | How should you define"local color"in terms of the work of each of these writers? |
6423 | In A Fable for Critics( 1848), Lowell asks:--"... O leather- clad Fox? |
6423 | In Bryant''s_ The Poet_, what noteworthy poetical ideals do you find? |
6423 | In Lowell''s critical essays, what unusual turns of thought do you find to challenge your attention? |
6423 | In Whittier''s poem, what group of lines descriptive of(_ a_) nature, and(_ b_) of inmates of the household pleases you most? |
6423 | In general, do you think that the romantic or the realistic school has the truer conception of the mission and art of fiction? |
6423 | In order to hold the attention of an average audience, should you select for reading one of Irving''s, Hawthorne''s, or Poe''s short stories? |
6423 | In the orations of Otis, Patrick Henry, and Samuel Adams, what do you find to account for their influence? |
6423 | In the presentation of what scenes does Craddock excel? |
6423 | In the selection from_ The Yemassee_( Mims and Payne) are there any qualities which Poe indicates for a short story? |
6423 | In what does his special power consist? |
6423 | In what does the humor of each consist? |
6423 | In what part of this_ Act_ and under what circumstances does he mention"the still- vex''d Bermoothes"? |
6423 | In what particulars does he remind you of Cooper? |
6423 | In what parts of the South are the scenes of the stories of Cable, Page, Allen, and Craddock chiefly laid? |
6423 | In what respects does this differ from the practice of the romantic school? |
6423 | In what sense is he a historian? |
6423 | In what ways are his writings still useful to humanity? |
6423 | In_ Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking_, what lines best show his lyric gift? |
6423 | In_ The Courtship of Miles Standish_, which incidents or pictures of the life of the Pilgrims appeal most strongly to you? |
6423 | Is Irving a romantic writer? |
6423 | Is Simms dramatic? |
6423 | Is brevity or prolixity a quality of these early narrators? |
6423 | Is he apparently a novice, or somewhat skilled in writing prose? |
6423 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
6423 | Is the individuality of the characters strongly marked or are they more frequently general types? |
6423 | Is the length of his poems in accordance with Poe''s dictum? |
6423 | Loved the wood- rose, and left it on its stalk?" |
6423 | Lowell remarks acutely:"Did they say he was disconnected? |
6423 | My Captain!_ differ in form from the other poems indicated for reading? |
6423 | Of all Bryant''s poems indicated for reading, which do you prefer? |
6423 | Of what is he the interpreter? |
6423 | On August 12, he asks:--"Is it a praiseworthy matter that I have spent five golden months in providing food for cows and horses? |
6423 | POETRY.--In the selections read from Dwight, Barlow, and Trumbull, what general characteristics impress you? |
6423 | PROSE.--Why is it said that Mrs. Stowe showed a knowledge of psychological values? |
6423 | QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS Is Captain John Smith more remarkable for chronicling what passed before his senses or for explaining what he saw? |
6423 | QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS What are some of the chief qualities in the poetry of"The Croakers"? |
6423 | QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS Why does Oxford University display on its walls_ The Gettysburg Address_ of Lincoln? |
6423 | SOUTHERN AUTHORS ALSOP, GEORGE( 1638-? |
6423 | Should he send the letter or forfeit human respect and his soul? |
6423 | Should you use the same principle in selecting one of these stories for a friend to read quietly by himself? |
6423 | So were the stars... And were_ they_ not knit together by a higher logic than our mere sense could master?" |
6423 | The English critic''s query,"Who reads an American book?" |
6423 | The boys divined the reason, and were cruel enough to call out,"Whose turn is it to wear the coat to- day?" |
6423 | The first entry in his_ American Note- Books_ after this transforming event is:--"And what is there to write about? |
6423 | The masters of the new eastern school of fiction took a different view, and asked,"Is our matter absolutely true to life?" |
6423 | The question is raised, Can the soul be developed and strengthened by sin? |
6423 | The question may well be asked,"How did Lincoln, who had less than one year''s schooling, learn the secret of such speech?" |
6423 | The"united grace and pride of her movement was inspiring, but-- what shall we say?--feline? |
6423 | This school did not ask,"Is the matter interesting or exciting?" |
6423 | Thoreau merely replied,"Why are you_ not_ here?" |
6423 | To what must an orator owe his power? |
6423 | To what voices does he specially listen in his poem,_ I Hear America Singing_? |
6423 | WALT WHITMAN.--How did his early life prepare him to be the poet of democracy? |
6423 | Was he a classicist or a romanticist( p. 219)? |
6423 | What English influences are manifest? |
6423 | What English prose written before 1640 is superior to the work of these three men? |
6423 | What advance in prose narrative do you find in Beverly and Byrd? |
6423 | What are Webster''s chief characteristics? |
6423 | What are its general qualities? |
6423 | What are some of the Calvinistic tenets expounded in Wigglesworth''s_ Day of Doom?_ Choose the best two short selections of colonial poetry. |
6423 | What are some of the characteristics of her mountain people? |
6423 | What are some of the most useful suggestions and records of experience to be found in Franklin''s_ Autobiography_? |
6423 | What are some of the qualifications of a good diarist? |
6423 | What are some of the qualities of Franklin''s style? |
6423 | What are some of the strong situations in_ The Choir Invisible_? |
6423 | What are some special characteristics of his short stories? |
6423 | What are the finest thoughts in_ A Forest Hymn_? |
6423 | What are the most prominent qualities of Brer Rabbit? |
6423 | What are the most striking points of dissimilarity? |
6423 | What are the most striking qualities of his verse? |
6423 | What blemishes have you actually noticed in Cooper? |
6423 | What books helped mold his style? |
6423 | What characteristic of a famous English prose writer of the nineteenth century is noticeable in Ward''s essay on fashions? |
6423 | What characteristics of Virginia life do the stories of Page reveal? |
6423 | What difference do you notice in the realistic method and in the style of Howells and of James? |
6423 | What do these qualities indicate in the readers of contemporary New York? |
6423 | What do these suggest in regard to Bryant''s early training and the cast of his mind? |
6423 | What do you find most attractive in him as a story- teller? |
6423 | What does he introduce to give an American color to his work? |
6423 | What effect does the natural setting have on his scenes? |
6423 | What especially satisfactory pages have you found? |
6423 | What impression does Allen''s_ King Solomon of Kentucky_ make on you? |
6423 | What in Cawein''s verse would indicate that he wrote his poems out of doors? |
6423 | What individual objects stand out most strongly and poetically? |
6423 | What is Hawthorne''s special aim in_ The Snow Image_ and_ The Gentle Boy_? |
6423 | What is a farm but a mute gospel? |
6423 | What is his chosen field? |
6423 | What is his view of the freedom of the will? |
6423 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
6423 | What is remarkable about Jefferson''s power of expression? |
6423 | What is the chief source of your pleasure in reading him? |
6423 | What is the final result of Brer Fox''s trick in_ The Wonderful Tar Baby Story_? |
6423 | What is the realistic theory advanced by Howells? |
6423 | What is the reason for such a steady increase in Thoreau''s popularity? |
6423 | What is the secret of her success in so employing a little realistic incident as to hold the reader''s attention? |
6423 | What is the secret of the attractiveness of the stories of Joel Chandler Harris? |
6423 | What is the subject matter of most of his poems? |
6423 | What is the subject of Lanier''s best verse? |
6423 | What is the underlying motive to be worked out in_ The House of the Seven Gables_? |
6423 | What lines in Bryant''s_ Thanatopsis_ are the keynote of the entire poem? |
6423 | What lines please you most for their humor, references to rural life, optimism, kindly spirit, and pathos? |
6423 | What might be omitted without great damage to the poem? |
6423 | What parts of_ Hiawatha_ do you consider the best? |
6423 | What passages in_ Walden_ please you most? |
6423 | What passages show him to be a great moral teacher? |
6423 | What period of our development do Bret Harte''s stories illustrate? |
6423 | What phases of western development does he describe? |
6423 | What qualities do you notice in his style? |
6423 | What qualities give special charm to sketches like_ The Old Manse_ and the_ Introduction_ to_ The Scarlet Letter_? |
6423 | What qualities in Freneau''s lyrics show a distinct advance in American poetry? |
6423 | What qualities in his verse impress you most? |
6423 | What remarkable feature do you notice about their local color? |
6423 | What resemblances and differences can you find between the animal stories of Harris and Kipling? |
6423 | What says it of stagnant pools, and reeds, and damp night fogs? |
6423 | What special characteristics of Uncle Remus are revealed in these tales? |
6423 | What special qualities characterize the work of Mary Wilkins Freeman? |
6423 | What specially impresses you about Mark Twain''s style? |
6423 | What specific references in Cawein''s nature poems please you most? |
6423 | What transcendental qualities does Emerson''s prose show? |
6423 | What was Thoreau''s object in going to Walden? |
6423 | What was his mission? |
6423 | What was the general type of American fiction preceding him? |
6423 | What was the subject of each? |
6423 | What was the underlying purpose in writing_ The Biglow Papers_ and_ One- Hoss Shay_? |
6423 | What were the chief causes of the influence of_ Uncle Tom''s Cabin_? |
6423 | What would they have? |
6423 | When he asks,"Who shall stand godfather at the christening of the wild apples?" |
6423 | When he was imprisoned because of non- payment, Emerson visited him and asked,"Why are you here, Henry?" |
6423 | Where shall we turn for a more incisive statement of the Puritan''s attitude toward pleasure? |
6423 | Which of Mark Twain''s works are most valuable to the student of American literature and history? |
6423 | Which of Whitman''s references to nature do you consider the most poetic? |
6423 | Which of his poems indicated for reading do you prefer? |
6423 | Which of his references to nature do you like best? |
6423 | Which of his short stories do you like best? |
6423 | Which of these do you find in the_ Diary_ of Samuel Sewall? |
6423 | Which one of our great short story writers has the most humor,--Irving, Hawthorne, Poe, or Harte? |
6423 | Which one of them do you enjoy the most? |
6423 | Who before him made use of the Indian in literature? |
6423 | Who does not like Krinken? |
6423 | Who does not wish to complete this story to find out what became of the children? |
6423 | Who, for instance, will admit that he does not like the story of_ Wynken, Blynken, and Nod_? |
6423 | Why are Brown''s romances called"Gothic"? |
6423 | Why are Cable''s stories called romantic? |
6423 | Why could fine poetry not be reasonably expected in early Virginia and New England? |
6423 | Why does he retain his preeminence among American orators? |
6423 | Why does it not make us dislike the Dutch? |
6423 | Why does the negro select him for his hero? |
6423 | Why have_ Rip Van Winkle_ and_ The Legend of Sleepy Hollow_ been such general favorites? |
6423 | Why is Eugene Field called the poet- laureate of children? |
6423 | Why is he said to belong to the school of Cervantes? |
6423 | Why is he so widely popular? |
6423 | Why is it desirable that each school should hold the other in check? |
6423 | Why is it especially important for Americans to know something of their writings? |
6423 | Why is it said that the Ten Commandments reign supreme in Hawthorne''s world of fiction? |
6423 | Why is the_ Declaration of Independence_ likened to the old battle songs of the Anglo- Saxon race? |
6423 | Why is this_ History_ an original work? |
6423 | _ Can Such Things Be? |
6423 | _ The Lady or the Tiger?__ The Late Mrs. Null_,_ The Casting away of Mrs. Leeks and Mrs. Aleshine_,_ The Hundredth Man_. |
6423 | but,"Is it true to life?" |
33027 | And Miss Pole? |
33027 | And Mrs. Forrester, of course? |
33027 | And hast thou found a lover Where clover and violets blow? 33027 And if he asks news of-- Mademoiselle Gypsy?" |
33027 | And if you do not succeed? 33027 And pray, sir, what does that mean?" |
33027 | And what do you think of them? |
33027 | And who asks the author to introduce all this philosophy? |
33027 | And you are David Marshall''s daughter? |
33027 | And you have written to him? |
33027 | And your father is well? 33027 Are n''t they famously good?" |
33027 | Asters? |
33027 | At any rate, you know where the Oratory is? |
33027 | Bringas? 33027 But am I to look at my watch? |
33027 | But how could I work upon a business like this, when there was no trace, no mark, no sign, no conviction,--nothing, nothing? |
33027 | But tell us, then, what the book is about? |
33027 | But the choir of the Oratory? 33027 But then, patron,"continued Fanferlot, working out the idea,"you have made the little girl confess, although Madame Alexandre failed? |
33027 | Can you account for this? |
33027 | Could n''t you have transplanted it? |
33027 | Dear Christians,he said,"how is it in our days with''peace on earth''? |
33027 | Did you ever have a private secretary? |
33027 | Did you not say it was midnight? |
33027 | Die? 33027 Dine with us to- morrow?" |
33027 | Do you hear how the French spirit spreads and increases in power? 33027 Do you hear that, pastor?" |
33027 | Do you hear, pastor? |
33027 | Do you know him? |
33027 | Do you know how to drive a carriage and take care of a horse? |
33027 | Do you like my posies? |
33027 | Do you look like him-- like your father? |
33027 | Do you mean, then, that you are not going to send us forward at all? |
33027 | Do you see, father? |
33027 | Do you think I shall fly, then? |
33027 | Do you? 33027 Do?" |
33027 | Earthly fame,he said.--"But which of two is better for you,--the Master, or the servant? |
33027 | Excuse me, but what brings you here? |
33027 | Had Spain, perchance, a''constitution''when she was the foremost nation in the world? |
33027 | Had you appointed a meeting? |
33027 | Has he told you to do so? 33027 Has magic been at work here?" |
33027 | Have you read,asked Boulmier,"the notice of Courajod?" |
33027 | Have you read,said Boulmier,"the article by Tamisey de Larroque in the Revue des Questions Historiques?" |
33027 | Have you seen any numbers of''The Pickwick Papers''? |
33027 | Have you seen him again since that night? |
33027 | Her former occupation considered, could Miss Matty excuse the liberty? |
33027 | How can they say that nature Has nothing made in vain; Why then, beneath the water, Should hideous rocks remain? 33027 How does it strike you?" |
33027 | How does that strike your inland eyes? |
33027 | How long is it to last? |
33027 | How was The Rambler published, ma''am? |
33027 | Humble- minded? 33027 I''ll have Miss Peters-- but do n''t you find it a little warm here? |
33027 | I''m going down to the south side: would you like to go? |
33027 | Is my aunt at home? |
33027 | Is n''t it a gem? |
33027 | Is n''t it just too quaintly ugly for anything? |
33027 | Is not the master ashamed to let his poor apprentice push him along like that? |
33027 | Is that all? |
33027 | Is that your coat there? |
33027 | Jimmy? 33027 Make yourself easy, patron: now, where shall I report?" |
33027 | May I beg you to come as near half- past six to my little dwelling as possible, Miss Matilda? 33027 Me?" |
33027 | Miss Marshall? |
33027 | Mrs. Jamieson is coming, I think you said? |
33027 | No, but--? 33027 No, sir,"said Foote quickly:"do you?" |
33027 | No? |
33027 | O patron,he stammered,"you know that too? |
33027 | Of course he does not believe in God? |
33027 | Oh came you by yon water- side? 33027 Oh, must he die?" |
33027 | Or will it be a gold one, with diamonds around the edge? |
33027 | Really-- David Marshall''s daughter? |
33027 | Sacristan,--he? 33027 See here,"said Mrs. Bates, suddenly,"are you the woman who read about the''Decadence of the Renaissance Forms''at the last Fortnightly?" |
33027 | Shall I,says he,"of tender age, In this important care engage? |
33027 | The merchant robbed of pleasure Sees tempests in despair; But what''s the loss of treasure, To losing of my dear? 33027 The wall- paper?" |
33027 | Then-- but is it already midnight?... |
33027 | This man-- has he written to you? |
33027 | Three men-- don''t you see them? 33027 Twelve months are gone and over, And nine long tedious days; Why didst thou, venturous lover, Why didst thou trust the seas? |
33027 | Vile? |
33027 | Wait, wait,she said;"André will soon return, and I will tell him that I have need of-- How much did you lose?" |
33027 | Was it a large amount? |
33027 | Well, if it should be so,said Foote,"what reason have they to complain of so short a journey?" |
33027 | What are these tears about? |
33027 | What are you, unknown creature? 33027 What do you fear?" |
33027 | What do you suppose happened to me last winter? |
33027 | What do you think? 33027 What do you want with me? |
33027 | What does a woman of fifty- five want to be taking music lessons for? |
33027 | What for? 33027 What has the theatre to do with moralizing? |
33027 | What have you done? |
33027 | What is it? |
33027 | What is this? 33027 What time is it?" |
33027 | What,she said,"Prosper a thief?" |
33027 | When? |
33027 | Where is the archbishop? |
33027 | Where is the thingamajig, anyway? |
33027 | Where the deuce,says Foote,"can it be gone to?" |
33027 | Where? |
33027 | Where? |
33027 | Who cares? 33027 Why do n''t you sleep?" |
33027 | Why not? 33027 Why not?" |
33027 | Why, am I not good? 33027 Why, do you bury your attorneys here?" |
33027 | Why, patron, you ask me that-- an old rider of the Bouthor Circus? |
33027 | Why, what is the matter with you? |
33027 | Would n''t you like to see the rest of the rooms before you go up? |
33027 | Yes, to be sure we do; how else? |
33027 | Yes,replied Gélis,"it is full of things....""Have you read,"said Boulmier,"the''Tableau des Abbayes Bénédictines en 1600,''by Sylvestre Bonnard?" |
33027 | You are posted on these things, then? |
33027 | You have been studying the case, master? |
33027 | You have read the new novel''Virginia,''that the people have waited so long for? |
33027 | You here, my man? |
33027 | You know the stairs called the Cáceres Staircase? |
33027 | You want proof? 33027 You will lay the realm under interdict, then, and excommunicate the whole of us?" |
33027 | ''Why so?'' |
33027 | ***** Now who this merry roundel Hath sung with such renown? |
33027 | --"O Lord, what shall I do?" |
33027 | --"What, Lloyd with an L?" |
33027 | --"Who are they?" |
33027 | --_Froebel._] FROISSART( 1337- 1410?) |
33027 | A deep feeling of the universal brotherhood of man,--what is it but a true sense of our close filial union with God? |
33027 | A voice cried,"Where is the traitor? |
33027 | Ah, was it not Bedewed with tears? |
33027 | All my decorations, then-- you think them corrupt and degraded?" |
33027 | Am I not your mother? |
33027 | Am I sure that I have not myself already suffered this great loss? |
33027 | And after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
33027 | And again, were idleness, willfulness, selfishness, etc., etc., natural dispositions? |
33027 | And could you perhaps lend me your stick for a moment?" |
33027 | And finally--""Well, what-- finally?" |
33027 | And have we now forgotten that powerful Friend? |
33027 | And how is he, anyway? |
33027 | And how shall I then sweetly sing That thus am marréd with mourning? |
33027 | And how stands the case in France? |
33027 | And if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid? |
33027 | And if they go from home, their reason is equally cogent:"What does it signify how we dress here, where nobody knows us?" |
33027 | And in this comprehension is there not involved a certain degree of comprehension of all things else? |
33027 | And when the French King saw these four knights return again, he tarried till they came to him and said,"Sirs, what tidings?" |
33027 | And why will you forsake the Master for the servant, the Lord for the slave?" |
33027 | And yet-- does it not strike you, too, that this scene is not altogether bad?" |
33027 | And you are living in the same old place? |
33027 | Answer me-- when did you receive letters from that man?" |
33027 | Are we? |
33027 | Are you ready in the case of the cow? |
33027 | Bringas? |
33027 | But come, child, not to lose time, have you carefully conned those instructions I gave you? |
33027 | But do not the Abbé de la Roche and the Abbé Morellet visit her?" |
33027 | But in what respects will this answer to the lawyer himself? |
33027 | But shall I let M. Patrigent see that I suspect another than the banker or the cashier?" |
33027 | But was it so? |
33027 | But what good would it do? |
33027 | But what will fame be to an ephemera who no longer exists? |
33027 | But when a person has no soul at all, how, I pray you, can such attuning be then possible? |
33027 | But where shall I find allies and helpers if not in women, who as mothers and teachers may put my idea in execution? |
33027 | But wherefore such pride In your swift airy ride? |
33027 | But why should I mention_ me_, when you have so much higher a promise in the Commandments, that such conduct will recommend you to the favor of God? |
33027 | But why such haste? |
33027 | But with what had it been made? |
33027 | Can I such matchless sleight withstand? |
33027 | Can any behold,''Mid the housings of gold In the stables of kings, dyes half so splendid As those on the brindled hide of yon wild animal blended? |
33027 | Can history or sight a traitor be? |
33027 | Can this slow bungler cheat your sight? |
33027 | Can thy good deeds in former times Outweigh the balance of thy crimes? |
33027 | Can we answer for that before our Lord and God?" |
33027 | Copyright 1895, by D. Appleton& Co. What shall we learn from our yearning look into the heart of the flower and the eye of the child? |
33027 | Dares he with me dispute the prize? |
33027 | Did he make a real contribution to historical knowledge? |
33027 | Did not the memory of me haunt you and deprive your nights of sleep? |
33027 | Did they approve of his purpose? |
33027 | Did they deem the enterprise within his power? |
33027 | Do you care anything for Louis Quinze?" |
33027 | Do you imagine that it was chance which gave me the secret word and opened the box?" |
33027 | Do you know the''Java March''?" |
33027 | Do you know what a calash is? |
33027 | Do you know, is it too late?" |
33027 | Do you lack confidence in me? |
33027 | Do you remember that mark which you observed on the side of the copper? |
33027 | Do you see how wholly these''freedom politics,''as they are called, are held up and impregnated with this godless spirit of revolt? |
33027 | Do you see that, pastor? |
33027 | Do you see the spirit of revolt, pastor? |
33027 | Do you think a heavy beard and a blouse sufficient to evade detection? |
33027 | Do you understand?" |
33027 | Do you wish me to prove that you have told everything to the examining magistrate, as was your duty? |
33027 | EMANUEL VON GEIBEL 1815- 1884 6248 See''st Thou the Sea? |
33027 | FROM''WHAT D''YE CALL IT?'' |
33027 | Fitzurse went on,"We bring you the commands of the King beyond the sea; will you hear us in public or in private?" |
33027 | For God''s sake, what is this?" |
33027 | For by love''s heat must love be governed? |
33027 | For what will become of me, if you avoid and reject me? |
33027 | HOW TO BE A LAWYER From''The Lame Lover''_ Enter_ Jack_ Serjeant_--So, Jack, anybody at chambers to- day? |
33027 | Has n''t your father ever spoken of me? |
33027 | Have I ever reproached you?" |
33027 | Have I not from my side, from which runs out my soul, Made a spring gush to slake men''s thirst? |
33027 | Have n''t you given me your last jewel?" |
33027 | Have we not read worse books than that?''" |
33027 | Have you also the secret word?" |
33027 | Have you any red- silk umbrellas in London? |
33027 | Have you lost your senses?" |
33027 | Have you made one progressive step since you began this case? |
33027 | Have you not been forced to deny my birth? |
33027 | He produced a tragi- comi- pastoral farce called''What D''ye Call It?'' |
33027 | He turned politely to a solitary wanderer who was passing that way:"Would you kindly tell me in what part of the town we are? |
33027 | How am I to find out when a quarter of an hour has passed?" |
33027 | How are we to mark them off one from the other? |
33027 | How can people who are so clever and capable in practical things ever be such insolent tom- fools in social things? |
33027 | How can such miserable sinners as we are, entertain so much pride as to conceit that every offense against our imagined honor merits death? |
33027 | How come he to thy hands? |
33027 | How could a fleet be raised, how could the sailors be gathered together, how could they be taught, within a year''s space, to cope with such an enemy? |
33027 | How could any young man capable of bearing arms, Froebel says, become a teacher of children whose Fatherland he had refused to defend? |
33027 | How did it come about? |
33027 | How far did you follow the empty cab?" |
33027 | How is it that parents are so blind and deaf, when they profess to be so eager to work for the welfare, the health, and peace of their children? |
33027 | How many points are the great object of practice? |
33027 | How much does it please me to have two great big formal beds of gladiolus and foliage in the front yard, one on each side of the steps? |
33027 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
33027 | How then do we define the nation which is, if there is no special reason to the contrary, to fix the limits of a government? |
33027 | I really took you for a gentleman who--""Well, sir,"said the other,"and am I not a gentleman?" |
33027 | I suppose you know your way to the fountain?" |
33027 | If I woo my lady- love, Will she be denying? |
33027 | In the name of God, holy man, were it not better that we never shared a gift so mysterious?" |
33027 | Is he humble- minded, do you mean?" |
33027 | Is it not thus also with our lives? |
33027 | Is not everything in those plays strange, startling, exceptional, wonderful, and surprising? |
33027 | Is not that a matter of every- day occurrence?" |
33027 | Is that the idea?" |
33027 | Is there anything new in the newspapers?" |
33027 | Is this, then, he so famed for sleight? |
33027 | It seems to me that there ought to--""David Marshall?" |
33027 | It was his cast of mind, his point of view; and the questions which alone concern us in any estimate of his work are: Did he do it well? |
33027 | It''s little, but it''s good: there could n''t be anything more like him, could there? |
33027 | JOHN FORD( 1586-?) |
33027 | Lloyd?" |
33027 | Martinmas wind, when wilt thou blaw And shake the green leaves off the tree? |
33027 | Must not such a retrospect unveil the truth? |
33027 | Must not the beauty of the unveiled truth allure him to Divine doing, Divine living? |
33027 | Nothing? |
33027 | O gentle Death, when wilt thou come? |
33027 | O say, why seek ye other lands? |
33027 | Oh wherefore should I busk my head? |
33027 | Or came you by yon meadow green? |
33027 | Or on this big sprawling thing?" |
33027 | Or saw you my sweet Willy?" |
33027 | Or wherefore should I kame my hair? |
33027 | Peggy, what have you brought us?" |
33027 | Pietro had brought Francis up in a princely fashion: why should he not behave as a prince? |
33027 | Poor mother, have I not taken everything from you? |
33027 | Pray what is there in this scene in the least remarkable, or pathetic, or historical?" |
33027 | Pu''d you the rose or lily? |
33027 | Queer about the English, is n''t it? |
33027 | Raoul, frightened, asked if she had gone mad? |
33027 | SEE''ST THOU THE SEA? |
33027 | Say, then, will you attend us to the King''s presence, and there answer for yourself? |
33027 | See''st thou the sea? |
33027 | Shall it be? |
33027 | Shall we never cease to stamp human nature, even in childhood, like coins? |
33027 | She spoke first:--"May I take shelter here?" |
33027 | She stopped him:--"What will you do with the key, Raoul? |
33027 | Should one be silent at such things? |
33027 | Should one look quietly on while this evil spirit eats itself in among the people? |
33027 | So you call this a play, Gabrielito? |
33027 | Society had done nothing for them-- why should they do anything for society? |
33027 | THE SICK MAN AND THE ANGEL From the''Fables''Is there no hope? |
33027 | The daughters, the poor dear angels, they read it and say,''Dear me, is that anything? |
33027 | The men forbid the women to read the book, and the women forbid their daughters--""And so they all read it together?" |
33027 | The question which Freiligrath asks the emigrants in his early poem of that name,--''O say, why seek ye other lands?'' |
33027 | The roofs down there must be those of the Hall of Columns and the outer stairway, are they not? |
33027 | The student of medicine, after glancing at the title of the book that Boulmier held in his hand, exclaimed:--"What!--you read Michelet-- you?" |
33027 | Their dress is very independent of fashion: as they observe,"What does it signify how we dress here at Cranford, where everybody knows us?" |
33027 | Then he recognizes''free thought''; and what then?" |
33027 | Then the King answered quickly and said,"Wherefore? |
33027 | Then the King said,"Is my son dead, or hurt, or on the earth felled?" |
33027 | Then will you swear that you will wait until to- morrow?" |
33027 | Then, my dear child, why not have said so in the first place, without lugging in everybody and everything else you could think of? |
33027 | This is the outward fact; what is the truth which through this fact is dimly hinted to the prophetic mind? |
33027 | This was the cause of numerous punishments: but what to me were_ pensums_? |
33027 | To gain the last end, what are the best means to be used? |
33027 | To learn to comprehend nature in the child,--is not that to comprehend one''s own nature and the nature of mankind? |
33027 | To the poet, bending thoughtful over his lyre, The crowd also said:--Dreamer, of what use art thou? |
33027 | Was Becket a martyr, or was he justly executed as a traitor to his sovereign? |
33027 | Was M. Lecoq really in anger? |
33027 | Was he not set to watch over word and teaching, but not to be a judge in the world''s disputes? |
33027 | Was it not to profane the house of God and the holy office, to drag the struggle and strife of the day into it? |
33027 | Well, is that very remarkable? |
33027 | Well, who would look better in such a role than I, or who has earned a better right to play it? |
33027 | Were they ready themselves to help him to the uttermost to recover his right? |
33027 | Were we no longer actual owners, then? |
33027 | What answer but one was possible? |
33027 | What are its merits and defects? |
33027 | What can happen of any interest in a village inn? |
33027 | What could they do if they were there? |
33027 | What do I care for orchids and American beauties, and all those other expensive things under glass? |
33027 | What does he want with me? |
33027 | What does it all mean? |
33027 | What had she been doing? |
33027 | What has happened to you?" |
33027 | What have you to show?" |
33027 | What is its value? |
33027 | What is the matter with you? |
33027 | What is time to the poet? |
33027 | What madness is this?" |
33027 | What now avails all my toil and labor in amassing honey- dew on this leaf, which I can not live to enjoy? |
33027 | What now? |
33027 | What occasion was there for you to go after these men and exasperate them with your bitter speeches? |
33027 | What seest thou now? |
33027 | What shall I do, dear friend? |
33027 | What then is the use of that word?" |
33027 | What think you of the odd half of a pair of scissors? |
33027 | What widow or what orphan prays To crown thy life with length of days? |
33027 | What would you advise us to?" |
33027 | When, then, did the England in which we still live and move have its beginning? |
33027 | Where and how could M. Lecoq have gathered them? |
33027 | Where and how did these mariners learn their trade? |
33027 | Where are the red men of the rolling plains? |
33027 | Where are we to draw the broad line, if any line is to be drawn, between the present and the past? |
33027 | Where did these ships come from? |
33027 | Where is Thomas Becket?" |
33027 | Who are you, sir?" |
33027 | Who can explain the intimacy of these two men of such different ages? |
33027 | Who knows how long my good resolutions will last? |
33027 | Who knows where my deplorable character may lead me?" |
33027 | Why are you not on your way home?" |
33027 | Why cast out order with no thought of care? |
33027 | Why do you look at me in that way? |
33027 | Why not? |
33027 | Why? |
33027 | Will not these heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
33027 | Wilt bind the king of the cloudy sands? |
33027 | Would a balance make discovery less easy?" |
33027 | Would not every soul at the Judgment Day be demanded at his hands? |
33027 | You did n''t notice it?" |
33027 | You know then why she left''The Grand- Archange''; why she did not wait for M. Louis de Clameran; and why she bought calico dresses for herself?" |
33027 | You know, of course, that I_ was_ a school- teacher? |
33027 | You?" |
33027 | _ Amethus_-- How did the rivals part? |
33027 | _ Dawbeny_-- Whither speeds his boldness? |
33027 | _ Jack_--But then how comes the note to remain in plaintiff''s possession? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- Oh, let him range: The player''s on the stage still;''tis his part: He does but act.--What followed? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- So brave? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- So? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- Was ever so much impudence in forgery? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--And prithee, why so? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--Praying for an equal partition of plunder? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--Secondly? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--The second? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--What followed upon? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--What, the affair of the note? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--Which are they? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--_Three_ witnesses ready, you say? |
33027 | ai n''t that glory? |
33027 | ai n''t that success? |
33027 | but the dove- cotes?" |
33027 | ca n''t somebody help them?" |
33027 | did he so? |
33027 | for in politics, what can laws do without morals? |
33027 | has he commanded you to do that?" |
33027 | has he counseled you to do that? |
33027 | he cried;"do you know where the key is?" |
33027 | one of my boys humble- minded? |
33027 | or do we imagine we no longer need its assistance? |
33027 | or should one, like a disciple of God, lift up the sword of the Word and the Spirit against this poisonous basilisk? |
33027 | over all leaping, In shame are you sleeping? |
33027 | replied the pale figure,"will you not then look upon me once more? |
33027 | said he;"will you make the King out to be a traitor, then? |
33027 | said the other in amazement;"what becomes of him?" |
33027 | said the other much surprised,"how do you manage?" |
33027 | she said:"why did n''t you come sooner? |
33027 | the French spirit, which has always been one and the same with rationalism and revolution?" |
33027 | the Sick Man whines: Who knows as yet what Heaven designs? |
33027 | thought I,"can you endure this last shock?" |
33027 | to what has my periodical repentance amounted? |
33027 | what''s thy troubled motion To that within my breast? |
33027 | where are we now? |
33027 | why do you look at me in that way? |
33027 | wilt thou bind him fast with a chain? |
33027 | you were to blame To infringe the liberty of houses sacred; Dare we be irreligious? |
9594 | But are you happy in your present condition? |
9594 | Do you compare our Prayer Book to Nebuchadnezzar''s image? |
9594 | Dost thou not see how the jackdaws flock about it? |
9594 | Hast thou anything against me? |
9594 | Have you a good master? |
9594 | How much like thine are human dools, Their sweet wee bairns laid I''the mools? 9594 It may be so,"said Roberts,"but what becomes of such as hang honest men?" |
9594 | John,asked Priest Evans, the Bishop''s kinsman,"is your house free to entertain such men as we are?" |
9594 | No,said Roberts;"but what sort of religion was that which you were afraid to venture your throats for?" |
9594 | Then,said Roberts,"whose hands made your Prayer Book? |
9594 | What do you call it? |
9594 | What do you lie in jail for? |
9594 | What reason,asked the Bishop,"do you give for this?" |
9594 | What right, I demand,said an American orator some years ago,"have the children of Africa to a homestead in the white man''s country?" |
9594 | What works of Mr. Baxter shall I read? |
9594 | What works of Mr. Baxter shall I read? |
9594 | What would you have us do? |
9594 | What''s that to me? |
9594 | Who was he? |
9594 | Whom do you call caterpillars? |
9594 | Will no one pity me? |
9594 | Will you,said Hopkins,"consent to his liberation, if he really desires it?" |
9594 | Would you have had Oliver cut our throats? |
9594 | Would you not be more happy if you were free? |
9594 | Wouldst see A man I''the clouds, and hear him speak to thee? |
9594 | And had we them not without bloodshed or violence to the social compact? |
9594 | And if he was not sent, who required it at his hands? |
9594 | And who, looking back to the green spots in his childish experiences, does not bless the good Tinker of Elstow? |
9594 | And why has the far South not read and believed before this? |
9594 | And with this case of atrocious injustice to Ireland placed before the reformers of Great Britain, what assistance, what sympathy, do we receive? |
9594 | Are we in a worse condition than Israel was when the sea was before them, the mountains on either side, and the Egyptians behind, pursuing them?" |
9594 | But is this the end? |
9594 | But quickly after, I began to think,''How if one of the bells should fall?'' |
9594 | But then it came in my head,''How if the steeple itself should fall?'' |
9594 | But what are wishes? |
9594 | But who is Daniel O''Connell? |
9594 | But who is Daniel O''Connell? |
9594 | Can the same be said of the free? |
9594 | Can they make nothing of our Thanksgiving, that annual gathering of long- severed friends? |
9594 | Can we not look with him? |
9594 | Did she not owe to him, under God, the salvation of body and mind? |
9594 | Do they find nothing to their purpose in our apple- bees, buskings, berry- pickings, summer picnics, and winter sleigh- rides? |
9594 | Do you say that drunken old Man was better than Mr. Bull? |
9594 | Does the Yankee leap into life, shrewd, hard, and speculating, armed, like Pallas, for a struggle with fortune? |
9594 | Had he not also fallen among thieves, like Little- faith? |
9594 | Had she not seen the cloud of his habitual sadness broken by gleams of sunny warmth and cheerfulness, as they conversed together? |
9594 | Has God''s universe no wider limits than the circle of the blue wall which shuts in our nestling- place? |
9594 | Has not the time of''Cedant arma togae''come for us and the other nations of the earth?" |
9594 | Hath He begun to break our bonds and deliver us, and shall we now distrust Him? |
9594 | Have they, then, no claim to an equal participation in the blessings which have grown out of the national independence for which they fought? |
9594 | Have we not had within my memory two great political revolutions? |
9594 | He defended himself in a long and eloquent address, which concluded in the following manly strain:--"What, then, has been my crime? |
9594 | He gives the following ludicrous definition of Congress:--"But what is Congress? |
9594 | He loved humanity,--shall it be less kind to him than Nature? |
9594 | He then carefully awakened his companion, who, starting up, forgetful of the cause of his disturbance, asked aloud,"What do you want?" |
9594 | How long shall such appeals, from such sources, be wasted upon us? |
9594 | How shall we account for this marked tendency in the literature of a shrewd, practical people? |
9594 | In the Name of God, says he, which way shall we go to seek them? |
9594 | In the mean time, where is our"Master Milton"? |
9594 | Is it well to put a human''young one''here to die of hunger, thirst, and nakedness, or else be preserved as a pauper? |
9594 | Is not the command, even to him,"Arise and flee, for thy life"? |
9594 | Is there nothing available in our peculiarities of climate, scenery, customs, and political institutions? |
9594 | Is this fair earth but a poor- house by creation and intent? |
9594 | It is now the year 1665; is not the pestilence in London? |
9594 | Now, who dares quote from the_ Herald of Freedom_?" |
9594 | Perhaps he had as little thanks for his labor as thou hast for thine; and I would willingly know who sent thee to baptize?" |
9594 | Pertinent were the queries of Eliphaz the Temanite,"Shall a man utter vain knowledge, and fill his belly with the east wind? |
9594 | Shall he reason with unprofitable talk, or with speeches wherewith he can do no good?" |
9594 | Shall man cast a nettle on that mound? |
9594 | Shall our baleful example enslave the world? |
9594 | Shall the bigotry of sect, and creed, and profession, drive its condemnatory stake into his grave? |
9594 | Shall the tree of democracy, which our fathers intended for"the healing of the nations,"be to them like the fabled upas, blighting all around it? |
9594 | Shall we, in view of these things, call back young, generous spirits just entering upon the perilous pathway? |
9594 | She was greatly excited, and exclaimed, as she laid down the book,"Why can not I write a novel?" |
9594 | Sin abounds without; but is his own heart pure? |
9594 | Surely not the slaveholder? |
9594 | Through their means, the slave power may gain a temporary triumph; but may not the very baseness of the treachery arouse the Northern heart? |
9594 | True, the world''s garden has become a desert and needs renovation; but is his own little nook weedless? |
9594 | Was he not her truest and most faithful friend, entering with lively interest into all her joys and sorrows? |
9594 | We say an attempt, for who will say it has succeeded? |
9594 | We subjoin a few specimens, taken almost at random from the book before us:--"A thunder- storm,--what can match it for eloquence and poetry? |
9594 | Well, what''s the result? |
9594 | What avail your abstract theories, your hopeless virginity of democracy, sacred from the violence of meanings? |
9594 | What can of pleasure him prevent Who lath the Fountain of Content?" |
9594 | What field of all the civil war, Where his were not the deepest scar? |
9594 | What manner of Cattle are they? |
9594 | What may not others fear, If thus he crowns each year? |
9594 | What may not, then, our isle presume, While Victory his crest does plume? |
9594 | What power had he to inspire that tender sentiment, the appropriate offspring only of youth, and health, and beauty? |
9594 | What savage heart could be sae hardy As wound thy breast? |
9594 | What signifies? |
9594 | What then? |
9594 | What, then, shall we make the God of the whole world? |
9594 | Where is the man who would have his tenets drubbed into him by the clubs of ruffians, or hold his conscience at the dictation of a mob?" |
9594 | While smiting down the giants and dragons which beset the outward world, are there no evil guests sitting by his own hearth- stone? |
9594 | Who better than himself could describe the condition of Despondency, and his daughter Much- afraid, in the dungeon of Doubting Castle? |
9594 | Who does not feel the pathos and inconsolable regret which dictated the following paragraph? |
9594 | Who feels contempt for O''Connell? |
9594 | Who has not read Pilgrim''s Progress? |
9594 | Who has not, in childhood, followed the wandering Christian on his way to the Celestial City? |
9594 | Who is your Minister now? |
9594 | Who scoff at Quakerism over the Journal of George Fox? |
9594 | Who shall now sneer at Puritanism, with the Defence of Unlicensed Printing before him? |
9594 | Who shall say that we have not all the essentials of the poetry of human life and simple nature, of the hearth and the farm- field? |
9594 | Who shall sink the shaft and thrust in the sickle? |
9594 | Who was Richardus Baxter? |
9594 | Why ca n''t I have you come and see me? |
9594 | Why should a patriot of such a fancy for nature immure himself in the cells of the city, and forego such an inviting and so broad a landscape? |
9594 | cried the Bishop,"do such men as you find fault with the laws?" |
9594 | cried the good woman,"when honest John is going to be sent to prison? |
9594 | does the reader ask? |
9594 | were they born to run such a gauntlet after the means of life? |
9586 | A common coat now serves for both, The hat''s no more a fixture; And which was wet and which was dry, Who knows in such a mixture? 9586 And where now, Bayard, will thy footsteps tend?" |
9586 | Arise,he said,"why look behind, When hope is all before, And patient hand and willing mind, Your loss may yet restore? |
9586 | God left men free of choice, as when His Eden- trees were planted; Because they chose amiss, should I Deny the gift He granted? 9586 I walked by my own light; but when The ways of faith divided, Was I to force unwilling feet To tread the path that I did? |
9586 | I yield The point without another word; Who ever yet a case appealed Where beauty''s judgment had been heard? 9586 Why dig you here?" |
9586 | Why, murmuring, mourn that he, whose power Was lent to Party over- long, Heard the still whisper at the hour He set his foot on Party wrong? 9586 Will nevermore for me the seasons run Their round, and will the sun Of ardent summers yet to come forget For me to rise and set?" |
9586 | Wouldst know him now? 9586 A LAMENTThe parted spirit, Knoweth it not our sorrow? |
9586 | A shadow in the land of thought? |
9586 | Above the wrecks that strewed the mournful past, Was the long dream of ages true at last? |
9586 | And feel, when with thee, that thy footsteps trod An everlasting road? |
9586 | And some have gone the unknown way, And some await the call to rest; Who knoweth whether it is best For those who went or those who stay? |
9586 | And take Cotton Mather in place of George Fox? |
9586 | And thy now unheeded message Burn in the hearts of men? |
9586 | And who could blame the generous weakness Which, only to thyself unjust, So overprized the worth of others, And dwarfed thy own with self- distrust? |
9586 | And who his manly locks would shave, And quench the eyes of common sense, To share the noisy recompense That mocked the shorn and blinded slave? |
9586 | Answereth not Its blessing to our tears?" |
9586 | As Galahad pure, as Merlin sage, What worthier knight was found To grace in Arthur''s golden age The fabled Table Round? |
9586 | But be the prying vision veiled, And let the seeking lips be dumb, Where even seraph eyes have failed Shall mortal blindness seek to come? |
9586 | But who his human heart has laid To Nature''s bosom nearer? |
9586 | Could I a singing- bird forbid? |
9586 | Could it succeed? |
9586 | Deny the wind- stirred leaf? |
9586 | Did I not watch from them the light Of sunset on my towers in Spain, And see, far off, uploom in sight The Fortunate Isles I might not gain? |
9586 | Did Love make sign from rose blown bowers, And gold from Eldorado''s hills? |
9586 | Did land winds blow from jasmine flowers, Where Youth the ageless Fountain fills? |
9586 | Did sudden lift of fog reveal Arcadia''s vales of song and spring, And did I pass, with grazing keel, The rocks whereon the sirens sing? |
9586 | Did we not witness in the life of thee Immortal prophecy? |
9586 | Do the elements subtle reflections give? |
9586 | Does he not know our feet are treading The earth hard down on Slavery''s grave? |
9586 | Fore- doomed to song she seemed to me I queried not with destiny I knew the trial and the need, Yet, all the more, I said, God speed? |
9586 | Forest- kaiser, lord o''the hills? |
9586 | Go to burning church- candles, and chanting in choir, And on the old meeting- house stick up a spire? |
9586 | Had we not Our own, to question and asperse The worth we doubted or forgot Until beside his hearse? |
9586 | Have I not drifted hard upon The unmapped regions lost to man, The cloud- pitched tents of Prester John, The palace domes of Kubla Khan? |
9586 | Hear''st thou, O of little faith, What to thee the mountain saith, What is whispered by the trees? |
9586 | His laurels fresh from song and lay, Romance, art, science, rich in all, And young of heart, how dare we say We keep his seventieth festival? |
9586 | His state- craft was the Golden Rule, His right of vote a sacred trust; Clear, over threat and ridicule, All heard his challenge:"Is it just?" |
9586 | How is it with him? |
9586 | How should he know the blindfold lad From one of Vulcan''s forge- boys?" |
9586 | If, in the thronged and noisy mart, The Muses found their son, Could any say his tuneful art A duty left undone? |
9586 | If, then, a fervent wish for thee The gracious heavens will heed from me, What should, dear heart, its burden be? |
9586 | In Orient warmth and brightness, did that morn O''er Nain and Nazareth, when the Christ was born, Break fairer than our own? |
9586 | In that pale sky and sere, snow- waiting earth, What sign was there of the immortal birth? |
9586 | In the mind''s gallery Wilt thou not always see Dim phantoms beckon thee O''er that old track again? |
9586 | Is the Unseen with sight at odds? |
9586 | Is there, then, no death for a word once spoken? |
9586 | Is''t fancy that he watches still His Providence plantations? |
9586 | Knight who on the birchen tree Carved his savage heraldry? |
9586 | Life was risked for Michael''s shrine; Shall not wealth be staked for thine? |
9586 | Make our preachers war- chaplains? |
9586 | Must I rate man less Than dog or ass, in holy selfishness? |
9586 | Nature''s pity more than God''s? |
9586 | No incense which the Orient burns Is sweeter than our hillside ferns; What tropic splendor can outvie Our autumn woods, our sunset sky? |
9586 | Now that thou hast gone away, What is left of one to say Who was open as the day? |
9586 | O State so passing rich before, Who now shall doubt thy highest claim? |
9586 | O dwellers in the stately towns, What come ye out to see? |
9586 | Of them-- of thee-- remains there naught But sorrow in the mourner''s breast? |
9586 | Oh, as from each and all Will there not voices call Evermore back again? |
9586 | Oh, thy gentle smile of greeting Who again shall see? |
9586 | Or sighs for dainties far away, Beside the bounteous board of home? |
9586 | Over what pleasant fields of Heaven Dawns the sweet sunrise of his smile? |
9586 | Priest o''the pine- wood temples dim, Prophet, sage, or wizard grim? |
9586 | Proud was he? |
9586 | Rebuke The music of the forest brook? |
9586 | Said I not well that Bayards And Sidneys still are here?" |
9586 | Shall it be of Boston said She is shamed by Marblehead? |
9586 | Shall we fawn round the priestcraft that glutted the shears, And festooned the stocks with our grandfathers''ears? |
9586 | Should not the o''erworn thresher pause, And hold to light his golden grain? |
9586 | Should the heart closer shut as the bonnet grows prim, And the face grow in length as the hat grows in brim? |
9586 | Stateliest forest patriarch, Grand in robes of skin and bark, What sepulchral mysteries, What weird funeral- rites, were his? |
9586 | Still on the lips of all we question The finger of God''s silence lies; Will the lost hands in ours be folded? |
9586 | Strong- minded is she? |
9586 | Talk of Woolman''s unsoundness? |
9586 | Than Pipe- stave hill Arcadia''s mountain- view? |
9586 | That, in our crowning exultations, We miss the charm his presence gave? |
9586 | The Traveller mused:"Your Manisees Is fairy- land: off Narragansett shore Who ever saw the isle or heard its name before? |
9586 | The forms of which the poets told, The fair benignities of old, Were doubtless such as you; What more than Artichoke the rill Of Helicon? |
9586 | The sighing of a shaken reed,-- What can I more than meekly plead The greatness of our common need? |
9586 | The white flash of a sea- bird''s wing, Or gleam of slanting sail? |
9586 | Their gross unconsciousness survive Thy godlike energy of thought? |
9586 | This common earth, this common sky, This water flowing free? |
9586 | Thy latest care for man,--thy last Of earthly thought a prayer,-- Oh, who thy mantle, backward cast, Is worthy now to wear? |
9586 | To ring him in and out again, Who wants the public crier''s bell? |
9586 | To see the angel in one''s way, Who wants to play the ass''s part,-- Bear on his back the wizard Art, And in his service speak or bray? |
9586 | Too quiet seemed the man to ride The winged Hippogriff Reform; Was his a voice from side to side To pierce the tumult of the storm? |
9586 | Was any wronged By that assured self- estimate? |
9586 | Was he not just? |
9586 | Was never a deed but left its token Written on tables never broken? |
9586 | What cares the unconventioned wood For pass- words of the town? |
9586 | What cheer hath he? |
9586 | What could I other than I did? |
9586 | What dust upon the spirit lies? |
9586 | What flecks the outer gray beyond The sundown''s golden trail? |
9586 | What hear the ears that death has sealed? |
9586 | What herald of the One? |
9586 | What if he felt the natural pride Of power in noble use, too true With thin humilities to hide The work he did, the lore he knew? |
9586 | What is there to gloss or shun? |
9586 | What makes thee in the haunts of home A wonder and a sign? |
9586 | What matters our label, so truth be our aim? |
9586 | What saith the herald of the Lord? |
9586 | What sharp wail, what drear lament, Back scared wolf and eagle sent? |
9586 | What strange shore or chartless sea Holds the awful mystery? |
9586 | What though red- handed Violence With secret Fraud combine? |
9586 | What to shut eyes has God revealed? |
9586 | What undreamed beauty passing show Requites the loss of all we know? |
9586 | What weary doom of baffled quest, Thou sad sea- ghost, is thine? |
9586 | What wilt thou give for thy church so fair?" |
9586 | What wouldst thou have me see for thee?" |
9586 | When she makes up her jewels, what cares yon good town For the Baptist of Wayland, the Quaker of Brown? |
9586 | Where be now these silent hosts? |
9586 | Where is the victory of the grave? |
9586 | Where lingers he this weary while? |
9586 | Where the camping- ground of ghosts? |
9586 | Where the spectral conscripts led To the white tents of the dead? |
9586 | Where waves had pity, could ye not spare? |
9586 | While, meet for no good work, the vine May yet its worthless branches twine, Who knoweth not that with thee fell A great man in our Israel? |
9586 | Who amidst the solemn meeting Gaze again on thee? |
9586 | Who envies him who feeds on air The icy splendor of his seat? |
9586 | Who in a house of glass would dwell, With curious eyes at every pane? |
9586 | Who murmurs at his lot to- day? |
9586 | Who scorns his native fruit and bloom? |
9586 | Who shall be Freedom''s mouthpiece? |
9586 | Who shall give Her welcoming cheer to the great fugitive? |
9586 | Who shall give to thee and me Freeholds in futurity? |
9586 | Who shall offer youth and beauty On the wasting shrine Of a stern and lofty duty, With a faith like thine? |
9586 | Who shall receive him? |
9586 | Who shall work for us as well The antiquarian''s miracle? |
9586 | Who sweetened toil like him, or paid To love a tribute dearer? |
9586 | Who that Titan cromlech fills? |
9586 | Who to seeming life recall Teacher grave and pupil small? |
9586 | Who when peril gathers o''er us, Wear so calm a brow? |
9586 | Who, with evil men before us, So serene as thou? |
9586 | Why dream of lands of gold and pearl, Of loving knight and lady, When farmer boy and barefoot girl Were wandering there already? |
9586 | Why mount the pillory of a book, Or barter comfort for a name? |
9586 | Why on this spring air comes no whisper From him to tell us all is well? |
9586 | Why search the wide world everywhere For Eden''s unknown ground? |
9586 | Why to our flower- time comes no token Of lily and of asphodel? |
9586 | Will death change me so That I shall sit among the lazy saints, Turning a deaf ear to the sore complaints Of souls that suffer? |
9586 | Will the shut eyelids ever rise? |
9586 | as there, Hast thou none to do and dare? |
9586 | as with moist eye I look up from this page of thine, Is it a dream that thou art nigh, Thy mild face gazing into mine? |
9586 | asked the passer- by;"Is there gold or silver the road so nigh?" |
9586 | count Penn heterodox? |
9586 | darest thou lay A hand on Elliott''s bier? |
9586 | quote Scripture to take The hunted slave back, for Onesimus''sake? |
9586 | quoth Esbern,"is that your game? |
9586 | who would not rather hear The songs to Love and Friendship sung Than those which move the stranger''s tongue, And feed his unselected ear? |
8503 | Do you know that Lessing will probably marry Reiske''s widow and come to Dresden in place of Hagedorn? 8503 Does one write, then, for the sake of being always in the right? |
8503 | In Life''s small things be resolute and great To keep thy muscles trained: know''st thou when Fate Thy measure takes? 8503 Is that your own hare, or a wig?" |
8503 | Must not one often act thoughtlessly, if one would provoke Fortune to do something for him? |
8503 | What care I to live in plenty,he asks gayly,"if I only live?" |
8503 | What do you apprehend, then, from me? 8503 What does your Lordship think of the words drudg''d, disturb''d, rebuk''d, fledg''d, and a thousand others?" |
8503 | [ 149] If the age was what Herr Stahr represents it to have been, where is the great merit of Lessing? 8503 ''And, prithee, what has Mogusius done to deserve so great a favor?'' 8503 And does not Sophocles make Ajax in his despair quibble upon his own name quite in the Shakespearian fashion, under similar circumstances? 8503 And how did the Demon, a mere spiritual essence, contrive himself a body? 8503 And many other things which in Ribley[ Ripley?] 8503 And what is simpler than this way? 8503 And what is the source of this sensibility, if it be not an instinctive perception of the incongruous and disproportionate? 8503 And where the players printed from manuscript, is it likely to have been that of the author? 8503 And why not? 8503 And why_ temple- haunting_, unless because it suggests sanctuary? 8503 And yet what do we not owe it? 8503 And yet who has so succeeded in imitating him as to remind us of him by even so much as the gait of a single verse? 8503 Are ghosts, then, as incapable of invention as dramatic authors? 8503 Because continuity is a merit in some kinds of writing, shall we refuse ourselves to the authentic charm of Montaigne''s want of it? 8503 But if we acquit Parris, what shall we say of the demoniacal girls? 8503 But intolerant of what? 8503 But is there the least filament of truth in it? 8503 But was it possible for a man to change not only his skin but his nature? 8503 But what are they doing now? 8503 But what is the fate of a poet who owns the quarry, but can not build the poem? 8503 But what is the good of complaining? |
8503 | But what need of words? |
8503 | But who can say precisely where consciousness ceases and a kind of automatic movement begins, the result of over- excitement? |
8503 | But who has ever read the_ Achilleis_, correct in all_ un_essential particulars as it probably is? |
8503 | Can anything be more absurd than flames born to order? |
8503 | Can this be said of any other modern? |
8503 | Could any of his oracles have foretold this? |
8503 | Could children be born of these devilish amours? |
8503 | Could the same experiment have been tried with these verses upon Dryden, can any one doubt that his counsel would have been the same? |
8503 | Could the sinful heart of man always suppress the wish that a Gustavus might arise to do judgment on the Bores of Rhode Island? |
8503 | Could we tolerate tragedy in rhymed alexandrines, instead of blank verse? |
8503 | Did Goethe wish to work up a Greek theme? |
8503 | Did Rousseau, then, lead a life of this quality? |
8503 | Did a man''s cow die suddenly, or his horse fall lame? |
8503 | Did one of those writers of controversial quartos, heavy as the stone of Diomed, feel a pain in the small of his back? |
8503 | Did you ever yet measure your everlasting self, the length of your life, the breadth of your love, the depth of your wisdom& the height of your light? |
8503 | Does Burns drink? |
8503 | Does any one still doubt that men may be changed into beasts? |
8503 | Does not a whole book of criticism lie in these nine words?" |
8503 | For it was perfectly well known that there were witches,( does not God''s law say expressly,"Suffer not a_ witch_ to live?") |
8503 | Has his influence on our literature, but especially on our poetry, been on the whole for good or evil? |
8503 | Have we forgotten Montaigne''s votive offerings at the shrine of Loreto? |
8503 | Have we not, in these days, heard of"Sherman''s boys"? |
8503 | Have you an illustrated Bible of the last century? |
8503 | He doubts Ophelia, and asks her,"Are you honest?" |
8503 | His"leviathans afloat"he_ lifted_ from the"Annus Mirabilis"; but in what court could Dryden sue? |
8503 | How could he save his credit more cheaply than by pronouncing it witchcraft, and turning it over to the parson to be exorcised? |
8503 | How could sane men have been deceived by such nursery- tales? |
8503 | How did Dryden, who says nearly the same thing, succeed in his attempt at the French manner? |
8503 | I answered with a smile,''My dear sir, you do n''t call Rousseau bad company; do you really think_ him_ a bad man?'' |
8503 | If Hagedorn were pleased, what mattered it to Horace? |
8503 | If he had little Latin and less Greek, might he not have had enough of both for every practical purpose on this side pedantry? |
8503 | If not, how explain the charm with which he dominates in all tongues, even under the disenchantment of translation? |
8503 | If sounding words are not of our growth and manufacture, who shall hinder me to import them from a foreign country? |
8503 | If youth and good spirits could put such life into a dead stick once, why not age and evil spirits now? |
8503 | In the judgment of a liberal like Mr. Moore, were not the errors of a lord excusable? |
8503 | Irai me je noier ou pendre? |
8503 | Is Death no more? |
8503 | Is French reality precisely our reality? |
8503 | Is it not curious, that there should have been a_ balneum Mariae_ at New London two hundred years ago? |
8503 | Is it not enough, then, to be a great prose- writer? |
8503 | Is this Dryden, or Sternhold, or Shadwell, those Toms who made him say that"dulness was fatal to the name of Tom"? |
8503 | Is what he proposes reasonable and comprehensible? |
8503 | La Bruyère, no doubt, expresses the average of opinion:"Que penser de la magie et du sortilége? |
8503 | Leser, wie gefall ich dir? |
8503 | Leser, wie gefällst du mir? |
8503 | Must all these aged sires in one funeral Expire? |
8503 | Nay, may we not say that great character is as rare a thing as great genius, if it be not even a nobler form of it? |
8503 | Nowhere, then? |
8503 | Of course they could, said one party; are there not plenty of cases in authentic history? |
8503 | One is tempted to ask, Were there no attorneys, then, in the place he came from, of whom he might have taken advice beforehand? |
8503 | Productive criticism is a great deal more difficult; it asks, What did the author propose to himself? |
8503 | Que si un cuerpo noble, vivo, Con potencias y razon Y con alma no se tema, ¿ Quien cuerpos muertos temió?" |
8503 | Shakespeare, Goethe, Burns,--what have their biographies to do with us? |
8503 | Shall this subtract from the debt we owe him? |
8503 | She was asked if she ever had any pleasure in his company? |
8503 | Suppose we should tax the Elgin marbles with being too Greek? |
8503 | Take this( from"Oedipus") as a proof of it:--"The gods are just, But how can finite measure infinite? |
8503 | The genius of the poet will tell him what word to use( else what use in his being poet at all? |
8503 | Was Parris equally sincere? |
8503 | Was a doctor at a loss about a case? |
8503 | Was he an inspired idiot,_ vôtre bizarre Shakespeare_? |
8503 | Was he the unconscious agent of his own superstition, or did he take advantage of the superstition of others for purposes of his own? |
8503 | Was he, then, a great poet? |
8503 | Was not even mighty Caesar''s last thought of his drapery? |
8503 | Was there no harvest of the ear for him whose eye had stocked its garners so full as wellnigh to forestall all after- comers? |
8503 | We can not help asking what business have paper money and political economy and geognosy here? |
8503 | Were they too earnest in the strife to save their souls alive? |
8503 | What English reader would know what"You are intriguing me"means, on page 228? |
8503 | What English- speaking man, except Boswell, could have arrived at Weimar, as Goethe did, in that absurd_ Werthermontirung_? |
8503 | What gave and secures for him this singular eminence? |
8503 | What has he told us of himself? |
8503 | What is that which some call_ land_, but a fine coat faced with green? |
8503 | What wonder that Dryden should have been substituted for Davenant as the butt of the"Rehearsal,"and that the parody should have had such a run? |
8503 | What, then, is the value of the first folio as an authority? |
8503 | Who has never felt an almost irresistible temptation, and seemingly not self- originated, to let himself go? |
8503 | Who was the father of Romulus and Remus? |
8503 | Woul''t drink up eysil? |
8503 | Woul''t weep? |
8503 | Yet were they not volumes, after all, and able to stand on their own edges beside the immortals, if nothing more? |
8503 | a simple rustic, warbling his_ native_ wood- notes wild, in other words, insensible to the benefits of culture? |
8503 | a vast, irregular genius? |
8503 | all die in one so young, so small?" |
8503 | and how far has he succeeded in carrying it out?" |
8503 | eat a crocodile?" |
8503 | in short, as we Yankees say,"to speak out in meeting"? |
8503 | nay, not so very long ago, of Merlin? |
8503 | of Calderon even, with his tropical warmth and vigor of production? |
8503 | of robust Corneille? |
8503 | of tender Racine? |
8503 | or the_ sea_, but a waistcoat of water- tabby? |
8503 | or when she''ll say to thee,''I find thee worthy, do this thing for me''?" |
8503 | to let his mind gallop and kick and curvet and roll like a horse turned loose? |
8503 | will the aspiring blood of Lancaster Sink in the ground? |
8503 | woul''t fast? |
8503 | woul''t fight? |
8503 | woul''t tear thyself? |
41189 | ''D I be likely to stop in- doors and let the house where I''ve lived fifty years burn over my head? |
41189 | Alone? |
41189 | And did nothing especial happen on the voyage? |
41189 | And his daughter; what became of her? |
41189 | And pray what do I care if you do n''t? |
41189 | And you? |
41189 | And you? |
41189 | Anything more? |
41189 | Are we really quarrelling? |
41189 | Are you going to give up? |
41189 | Are you ready? |
41189 | Are you to be there, too? 41189 Besides,"Columbine continued, after a moment''s pause, her glance still downcast,"why should n''t you stay? |
41189 | But how in the world did you know? |
41189 | But how long has he been dead? |
41189 | But suppose I have n''t remembered anything more? |
41189 | But the old sexton,--Joe Grimwet,--is he gone? |
41189 | But what could I do? |
41189 | But who am I? |
41189 | But why suppose so many tormenting things? |
41189 | But you are not going down to ditch alone? |
41189 | But you, Delia? |
41189 | But, do n''t you see? |
41189 | But,Farnsworth said at length, a new idea seizing him,"but the-- our child, Delia? |
41189 | But,he repeated with an insistence that would not be denied,"but--""Well?" |
41189 | Columbine? |
41189 | Dinah,he asked,"has not your mistress risen?" |
41189 | Do I ever give up? 41189 Do it?" |
41189 | Do n''t you care for me? |
41189 | Do n''t you find this rather hard work, my good woman? |
41189 | Do n''t you get tired of the sameness? |
41189 | Do you always do this work? |
41189 | Do you think I''m so bound up in Nat Granton that I ca n''t get on without him? 41189 Great Master,"the stranger greeted him,"will you receive an embassy to congratulate you on your nuptials?" |
41189 | How did you know? 41189 I am always willing you should do whatever pleaseth you best,"he answered, smiling upon her;"but why do you mean to shut me out from your sorrow? |
41189 | I have never doubted that you love me,he answered, gathering her into his arms;"how else could it be that you could have made me so utterly happy?" |
41189 | I should like nothing so much as--"As what? |
41189 | Is n''t Mr. Howard playing remarkably well to- day? 41189 Is n''t it a lovely day? |
41189 | Is n''t it a queer notion to have a woman for a sexton? |
41189 | Is she here still? |
41189 | It is n''t so strange a name, is it? |
41189 | Look in my eyes,she said;"why dost thou turn away? |
41189 | My dear Miss Tarrart,she exclaims, as she comes upon a wintry young lady of advanced stages of maturity,"how do you do? |
41189 | Never change it? 41189 Oh, George,"she whispered, in an agony of apprehension,"can I do it? |
41189 | Oh, are you to be there? 41189 Oh, how do you do, Mr. Drummond? |
41189 | Oh, how do you do, Mr. Lasceet? 41189 Oh, when she had that she always sang moony songs, and after that--""Well?" |
41189 | Or would she be out at work? |
41189 | Should I find her at home at this time? |
41189 | So you are not going to play with Bradford, after all? |
41189 | So you knew Delia Grimwet? |
41189 | Sure? 41189 That they have n''t burnt over for thirty years?" |
41189 | Victor,Jean cried, in a voice intense but low,"what has happened? |
41189 | We have had such a strange winter; do n''t you think so, Mr. Lasceet? 41189 Well?" |
41189 | Well? |
41189 | Were you enjoying the sweets of victory? |
41189 | Were you in Rome year before last? |
41189 | What in the world has happened to bring you to this desperate frame of mind? |
41189 | What is it? 41189 What is it? |
41189 | What shall I do if Mr. Howard beats him? |
41189 | What was there so frightful about her guitar? |
41189 | What will you bet me I lose? |
41189 | What''s come to ye, Dele? |
41189 | What''s got into her? |
41189 | What? |
41189 | What? |
41189 | When was you here before? 41189 When ye goin''to put the box in Widder Pettigrove''s grave?" |
41189 | Where are the men? |
41189 | Where are you going with that spade? |
41189 | Where? |
41189 | Who are you? |
41189 | Who are you? |
41189 | Why did you not tell me? |
41189 | Why do n''t you come and see me, Miss Tarrart? 41189 Why do you always insist on quarrelling with me?" |
41189 | Why not have it the 17th? |
41189 | Why should n''t I be? |
41189 | Why should there be? |
41189 | Why, Columbine, what are you here for? 41189 Why, Susie Throgmorton, is it really you? |
41189 | Why, how do you do? |
41189 | Will she do it? |
41189 | Will somebody make a motion? |
41189 | Will you marry me, Betty? |
41189 | Will you play with me? |
41189 | Yes, but how is one to know when it is coming? |
41189 | Yes,she repeated; and then, with a yet more puzzled air, she turned to Mr. Lane to ask,"Is this mind- reading?" |
41189 | Yes? |
41189 | Yes? |
41189 | You and Mr. Bradford, you mean? |
41189 | You came from New York on the morning train on Wednesday, the fifteenth-- no, the sixteenth of last April, did you not? |
41189 | And by the way, am I to be allowed to be present at this great tournament in which you are to cover yourself and your sex with glory?" |
41189 | And of all that, what comes? |
41189 | And, besides, suppose your beautiful theory, that my memory acts as it does because the impressions of youth are strongest, is not true? |
41189 | Are clubs trumps? |
41189 | Are you a witch?" |
41189 | Are you going?" |
41189 | Are you ready?" |
41189 | At length the day came when he said feebly:--"Where am I?" |
41189 | Besides, if she should chance to die alone, who would tell the bees? |
41189 | But why should I say all this rigmarole to you? |
41189 | Ca n''t I take it back? |
41189 | Ca n''t we get somebody else? |
41189 | Ca n''t you draw again? |
41189 | Clubs? |
41189 | Could she wear ear- rings? |
41189 | Did I tell you what he said to Kate West at the Westons''tea? |
41189 | Did he accept it so easily? |
41189 | Did you ever hear anything more absurd? |
41189 | Did you ever think of it?" |
41189 | Did you ever_ hear_ such impertinence? |
41189 | Did you know that you could make mince- pies without meat? |
41189 | Do I understand that you are engaged? |
41189 | Do n''t you see everybody is whispering and counting? |
41189 | Do you know which way Mrs. Fruffles is? |
41189 | Do you realize what a fascinating position you are in? |
41189 | Do you remember that dowdy gown of green plush and mauve tulle she wore to Kate West''s german? |
41189 | Do you remember the time we tried to play Sixty- six on the Bar Harbor boat, Miss Vaughn? |
41189 | Do you suppose she wore her hat with the orange plumes? |
41189 | Do you think that iron- bound trunk will hold them all?" |
41189 | Do you want me to be left out of his will? |
41189 | E._ How can you make fun? |
41189 | E._ Was n''t it wonderful for baby to sleep through it all? |
41189 | E._ You do n''t suppose there is anything the matter with him? |
41189 | E._(_ scornfully_) Pieces of what? |
41189 | E._(_ with calm but cutting irony_) At three o''clock in the morning? |
41189 | E._(_ with less good humor than might be desired_) Eh? |
41189 | Else how should we know each other again? |
41189 | Granton?" |
41189 | Had we reached the second jungle?" |
41189 | Has he, really? |
41189 | Has it made you ill? |
41189 | Hast thou not been a good boy; hast thou not loved the good God?" |
41189 | Have I made a misdeal? |
41189 | How did Ethel Mott find out about the letters? |
41189 | How do you do, dear Mrs. Gray? |
41189 | How do you do, nephew? |
41189 | How is everybody at home? |
41189 | I hope you do n''t mind seeing her?" |
41189 | I want to know if fourth best has anything to do with playing fourth hand? |
41189 | Indeed, what measure has a man of the sorrow of any woman? |
41189 | Is it yes? |
41189 | Is there no dependence to be put on what you say? |
41189 | It is really like a Roman winter; do n''t you think so?" |
41189 | It is so like a Roman winter, do n''t you think?" |
41189 | Jones?" |
41189 | Jones?" |
41189 | Jones?" |
41189 | Jones?" |
41189 | Let me see, what should it be like?" |
41189 | Lommel?" |
41189 | MY DEAR MR. GRAY,--Can you drop into my office to- morrow about noon? |
41189 | Miss Peltonville and Arthur Chester tête- à- tête._]_ She._ Why did you follow us to Cuba? |
41189 | Noise? |
41189 | Oh, did I tell you that Tom Jones has invited Sophia Weston to go to the opera Saturday night? |
41189 | Oh, did you know we are going to have a whist figure at Janet Graham''s german, Mr. Talbot? |
41189 | Oh, why did you have to quarrel with him just now? |
41189 | One is apt to lose his head otherwise; and how can he judge of the value of his passion without having had a good deal of experience? |
41189 | Ought I to have played one of those? |
41189 | P._ Oh, they''re all well; you seem to be having a party, nephew? |
41189 | Partner, ca n''t you trump that? |
41189 | Shall you walk, or call a carriage? |
41189 | Should we have found it possible to be so frank with one another had we been merely strangers? |
41189 | T._ Are you out? |
41189 | T._ But what does Maria expect us to do about it? |
41189 | T._ But you said-- Why, ca n''t you go over Colonel Graham''s nine- spot? |
41189 | T._ Diamonds? |
41189 | T._ Is it my lead? |
41189 | T._ May I have the honor, Mrs. Brown? |
41189 | T._ Mr. Thompson, is it kind to speak so of my most particular friend? |
41189 | T._ My dear, what shall we do now? |
41189 | T._ Oh, who wants to play the stiff club rules? |
41189 | T._ Sylvanus, do you know how many people there are in this room? |
41189 | T._ Well, what of it? |
41189 | That is one thing about you that attracted me, do you know? |
41189 | That was your suit, was n''t it? |
41189 | The boy?" |
41189 | The doubt does not trouble me, so why should I take pains to dispel it? |
41189 | The more I was argued with, the more I believed myself a martyr, and my husband--_ He._ Your husband? |
41189 | The one made of gray corduroy? |
41189 | The storm does not fright you?" |
41189 | Turn Uncle Sylvanus out of the house? |
41189 | V._ Did you ever play Stop? |
41189 | V._ Do you put your trumps at one end of your hand, Colonel Graham? |
41189 | V._ Have hearts been led? |
41189 | V._ No, diamonds suits me, and of course you ca n''t change it now; can she, Colonel Graham? |
41189 | V._ Oh, is it my lead? |
41189 | V._ Shall I put on a small one or a high one, Colonel Graham? |
41189 | V._ Was n''t that right? |
41189 | V._ You ca n''t do that; can she, Colonel Graham? |
41189 | Was n''t I named for him, and have n''t I always been his favorite? |
41189 | Was n''t that clever? |
41189 | Was that right, Colonel Graham? |
41189 | Was there nothing in which he might have acknowledged himself wrong,--nothing with which he should reproach himself? |
41189 | We have found it possible to be frank in masks; why not out of them? |
41189 | What a splendid volley? |
41189 | What have I done?" |
41189 | What have you done, then, worthy of admiration? |
41189 | What have you ever done to make me admire you? |
41189 | What have you got to do?" |
41189 | What horrible mockery confronted him? |
41189 | What is one among so many? |
41189 | What is the matter? |
41189 | What man ever appreciated the woe of the woman he betrays? |
41189 | What was it? |
41189 | What were words to this woman, pallid and worn before her time with privation, anguish, and unwomanly toil? |
41189 | When do you go abroad? |
41189 | Where did I leave off? |
41189 | Where did you get your idea?" |
41189 | Where is Pierre?" |
41189 | Who sent you the other version?" |
41189 | Who took that? |
41189 | Who wants them? |
41189 | Why may we not be useful to each other? |
41189 | Why should I marry you? |
41189 | Why were n''t you at the Wentworths''last night, Mr. Talbot? |
41189 | Why? |
41189 | Will he be here by twelve?" |
41189 | Will you be my wife, Columbine?" |
41189 | Will you not give me another turn? |
41189 | Will you sit down? |
41189 | Wo n''t he beat me? |
41189 | Wo n''t that be fun? |
41189 | Would you ask Jack about the orange feathers? |
41189 | You always lead from your long suit, do n''t you? |
41189 | You do n''t speak from experience, though, do you? |
41189 | You do not suffer?" |
41189 | You wo n''t send me away? |
41189 | _ A._ And you''ll wear diamonds? |
41189 | _ A._ How are you going to wear it? |
41189 | _ A._ Is n''t it? |
41189 | _ A._ Is n''t that rather gorgeous? |
41189 | _ A._ Not really? |
41189 | _ A._ Oh, do tell me; what are you going to wear? |
41189 | _ A._ To tell you? |
41189 | _ A._ What are you going to wear to- night? |
41189 | _ A._ What were they like? |
41189 | _ A._ Would n''t that be striking? |
41189 | _ A._ You know that tailor- made gown she wears? |
41189 | _ A._ You wo n''t repeat it? |
41189 | _ A._(_ pausing as they reach the door_) Is that the boa you had Christmas? |
41189 | _ Do_ you suppose Jack will be there? |
41189 | _ F._ About him and Sophia? |
41189 | _ F._ Do n''t you think your gown ought to be made just like my black one? |
41189 | _ F._ Do you suppose he knows it? |
41189 | _ F._ Do you suppose she really knew, or only guessed? |
41189 | _ F._ Do you think so? |
41189 | _ F._ I shall see you to- morrow? |
41189 | _ F._ In one week? |
41189 | _ F._ Is n''t it amazing? |
41189 | _ F._ Like? |
41189 | _ F._ No; what in the world did he say? |
41189 | _ F._ Two letters? |
41189 | _ F._ Why, Alice Langley, do you mean it? |
41189 | _ F._ Will you do it? |
41189 | _ F._ Yes; did n''t she look_ per_-fectly hideous? |
41189 | _ F._ Yes; is n''t it lovely? |
41189 | _ F.__ Do_ you suppose he is in earnest, after all? |
41189 | _ He._ And in Britany? |
41189 | _ He._ And you can resist music with such a sound of the sea in it? |
41189 | _ He._ And your husband? |
41189 | _ He._ But I see no--_ She._ No ring? |
41189 | _ He._ But if we were? |
41189 | _ He._ But is his justice never tempered by mercy? |
41189 | _ He._ But what has that to do with following you? |
41189 | _ He._ But your husband? |
41189 | _ He._ Did you learn that, also, in Britany? |
41189 | _ He._ Do you know what a tremendously hot day it is? |
41189 | _ He._ Do you mean to make my ideas standards by which to try him? |
41189 | _ He._ Do? |
41189 | _ He._ Had you? |
41189 | _ He._ Have I? |
41189 | _ He._ Heartless? |
41189 | _ He._ Is the sea so solemn to you, then? |
41189 | _ He._ My wife? |
41189 | _ He._ Really? |
41189 | _ He._ What is that? |
41189 | _ He._ What, with the certainty of your consenting to marry me? |
41189 | _ He._ Who told you I was here? |
41189 | _ He._ Why do you start? |
41189 | _ He._ Why should I be-- at a ball? |
41189 | _ He._ Why? |
41189 | _ He._ You look for an ideal man, then? |
41189 | _ Miss V._ Oh, are they? |
41189 | _ Miss V._ Oh, did I? |
41189 | _ Miss V._ Oh, which was the last card? |
41189 | _ Miss V._ What was led? |
41189 | _ Miss V._ Whose lead is it now? |
41189 | _ Miss V._ Why, did I take the last trick? |
41189 | _ She._ Am I to understand that amusement is your idea of love? |
41189 | _ She._ And Annie Cleaves? |
41189 | _ She._ And why? |
41189 | _ She._ And your wife? |
41189 | _ She._ But tell me soberly,--you are a man,--what could my husband have done? |
41189 | _ She._ But what then? |
41189 | _ She._ But what--_ He._ What? |
41189 | _ She._ Do you speak the truth so seldom, then? |
41189 | _ She._ For what? |
41189 | _ She._ How can I tell what took place in his heart? |
41189 | _ She._ Is that in the bargain? |
41189 | _ She._ It is three years, too, since I--_ He._ Who are you? |
41189 | _ She._ So that is the secret of my amusing you, is it? |
41189 | _ She._ So you advertise yourself as a marrying man? |
41189 | _ She._ Then you decline to tell me? |
41189 | _ She._ Then you propose a platonic friendship? |
41189 | _ She._ Then-- for we came to be amused-- why are we here? |
41189 | _ She._ What else can a man do when his wife casts him off? |
41189 | _ She._ What particular thing had she been playing to rouse you to that point of enthusiasm? |
41189 | _ She._ What would you have done if I had accepted you? |
41189 | _ She._ Where is she, then? |
41189 | _ She._ Why? |
41189 | _ She._ Will you be serious? |
41189 | _ She._ Yes; and how? |
41189 | _ She._ Yes? |
41189 | _ She._ Your love was, perhaps, never distinguished by meekness? |
41189 | eh? |
41189 | how do you do, Jane? |
41189 | is it so terrible?" |
41189 | shouted Tom, hoarsely, as she approached;"do n''t you see how the sparks are flying about? |
41189 | what is that? |
41189 | what were you going to tell me? |
41189 | you do n''t suppose the reason he sleeps so soundly is because he''s sick? |
8947 | ''_ Qui hi_?'' 8947 And did you never see her again?" |
8947 | And the terms? |
8947 | And who was he? |
8947 | And your name? |
8947 | Art thou that Virgil and that fountain, then, which pours abroad so rich a stream of speech? 8947 Art thou, then, that Virgil and that fountain which pours abroad so rich a stream of speech? |
8947 | But do you rank M.---- with Rachel as a dramatic artist? |
8947 | But if Maria should compel me, what should I do? |
8947 | But is there nothing in thy track To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day? |
8947 | But when will he be in? 8947 But, Monsieur, how can I when I have not money? |
8947 | Eh? |
8947 | From any particular spirit? |
8947 | Have you ever known this spirit on this earth? |
8947 | Have you said all that you''ve got to say? |
8947 | Is there any use to her in grace? |
8947 | Is there anything more? |
8947 | Note, hey? 8947 Now, Laura,"asked Mrs. Jaynes, in a quiet tone,"when can you be ready to be married?" |
8947 | She related to me things----But,he added, after a pause, and suddenly changing his manner,"why occupy ourselves with these follies? |
8947 | Sold it? |
8947 | The spirit medium? |
8947 | What is the price of the entire consignment? |
8947 | What sort of communication do you want?--a written one? |
8947 | When shall the wedding be? |
8947 | Why should I bring her innocence? |
8947 | Why should I give her beauty? |
8947 | Why, what''s the matter, child? |
8947 | Will the particular spirit he desires to speak with communicate? |
8947 | Will this spirit communicate in writing with this gentleman? |
8947 | Will you seat yourself at the table, Mr. Linley,said the medium,"and place your hands upon it?" |
8947 | You have not the money? 8947 _ Ka munkta_, Bearer?--What is it, my gentle Karlee?" |
8947 | ***** WHO PAID FOR THE PRIMA DONNA? |
8947 | --"And is there nothing yet unsaid Before the change appears? |
8947 | ----Who was that person that was so abused some time since for saying that in the conflict of two races our sympathies naturally go with the higher? |
8947 | --Karlee, who is at the gate?" |
8947 | Addressing himself to the chief among them, Mr. Schulemberg asked the pertinent question,--"Is M. M.---- in?" |
8947 | After all, what was the life of a hide peddling Jew, in comparison with the interests of science? |
8947 | And I, turning to the Sea of all knowledge, said: What says this? |
8947 | And to whom, pray? |
8947 | And what is erudition without the power to correct errors by appealing to Nature, to arrange methodically, to use wisely? |
8947 | And when?" |
8947 | And who are they that made it?" |
8947 | And who are they that made it?" |
8947 | And who shall challenge her? |
8947 | And you do not mean to pay me according to agreement?" |
8947 | Aninula was there,--but what could have happened? |
8947 | But first answer me two or three simple questions,''yes''or''no,''--will you, dear?" |
8947 | But how was she to see him? |
8947 | But of what account was all that? |
8947 | But what else could she do than solicit his aid? |
8947 | But what good could Tira do? |
8947 | But what is the Imagination? |
8947 | But what now? |
8947 | Could Tira get a place for her? |
8947 | Could she get a place? |
8947 | Darwin had it, and something of what is called genius with it; but where is now the"Zoönomia"? |
8947 | Do you know her, Karlee?" |
8947 | Do you perceive that fact in the style of his salutation? |
8947 | For it was unlucky enough, I believe,--was it not?" |
8947 | Had she a lover, or a husband? |
8947 | Have you not heard that I have made-- what you call it?--failure, yesterday? |
8947 | Her''yes,''in such a case, is only good for herself; it ca n''t make you any man''s wife.--What shall you do? |
8947 | How could he have obtained this treasure? |
8947 | How does the little animal--_le renard_--name himself in the Latin?" |
8947 | How is that difficulty to be surmounted? |
8947 | How now? |
8947 | How to do this, and afterwards escape myself? |
8947 | I beg your pardon,--did you make a remark?--Oh,_ what mountains_? |
8947 | I cried,"poring over the miniature of some fair lady? |
8947 | I inquired,"and what had he to do with it?" |
8947 | I ispeak Master so Master know?" |
8947 | I should like to know if all story- tellers do not do this? |
8947 | I.--Am I destined to accomplish this great task? |
8947 | I.--Can the microscope be brought to perfection? |
8947 | I.--Will great discoveries result from the use of such a lens? |
8947 | If traces of two persons drinking had been found in the room, the question naturally would have arisen, Who was the second? |
8947 | If you should transfer the amount of your reading day by day in the newspaper to the standard authors,--but who dare speak of such a thing? |
8947 | Is he making collections for some great purpose of study? |
8947 | Is it not, that, like dress, or manners, they should facilitate, and not impede the business of life? |
8947 | Is it tellable?" |
8947 | Is it worth the trial? |
8947 | Is that so?" |
8947 | Is there any geography in these things? |
8947 | It goes without saying that it has not my credence.--But why are we here,_ mon ami_? |
8947 | Linley?" |
8947 | Master und- istand i- me? |
8947 | Not being able to do anything himself, however, what does he urge upon the wise and patriotic State legislatures? |
8947 | Or who can overestimate the images with which he has enriched the minds of men, and which pass like bullion in the currency of all nations? |
8947 | Pink paper,--scented with sandal- wood, pah!--embossed, too, with cornucopias in the corners,--seal motto,_ Qui hi?_("Who waits?") |
8947 | Pink paper,--scented with sandal- wood, pah!--embossed, too, with cornucopias in the corners,--seal motto,_ Qui hi?_("Who waits?") |
8947 | Shall a pig delay him? |
8947 | Shall a pig impede him? |
8947 | She then continued,"Will the spirits communicate with this gentleman?" |
8947 | The study of the_ How?_ in Nature, or the simple observation of phenomena, is often used as an opiate to quiet the higher faculties. |
8947 | Then I to the Sea of all wisdom turned, and said: What sayeth this and what replies that other fire? |
8947 | There is no heartfelt interest in all this on his part; it gives him no pleasure; how, then, should it please the spectator? |
8947 | To understand, then, the kind of influence he exerts, we have simply to inquire, What kind of man is Mr. Spurgeon? |
8947 | To what race did Spartacus belong? |
8947 | Under these pledges and promises, what has been the performance? |
8947 | Upon what principle, then, can the President assert so dictatorially as he does, that the Federal Government is concluded from action? |
8947 | WHENCE? |
8947 | WHITHER? |
8947 | WHY? |
8947 | Was it merely some inanimate substance, held in suspense in the attenuated atmosphere of the globule? |
8947 | We have shown that the rain is an immediate cause of wind; but how is the rain itself produced? |
8947 | What am I to think? |
8947 | What are you bothering about, with your''boxes,''''boxes,''nothing but''boxes''? |
8947 | What can be the meaning of this outburst? |
8947 | What cared I, if I had waded to the portal of this wonder through another''s blood? |
8947 | What caused this sudden disappearance? |
8947 | What could she do? |
8947 | What could she do? |
8947 | What could she tell her? |
8947 | What have I done? |
8947 | What if this spiritualism should be really a great fact? |
8947 | What is it that we really care for in the building of our houses? |
8947 | What is this? |
8947 | What made the popularity of"Jane Eyre,"but that a central question was answered in some sort? |
8947 | What matters the reef, or the rain, or the squall? |
8947 | What may that be? |
8947 | What more probable than that among his ancestors were Greeks? |
8947 | What say you?" |
8947 | What shall I do? |
8947 | What to do?" |
8947 | What was it that afflicted the sylph? |
8947 | What would her schoolmates say? |
8947 | Where does he live? |
8947 | Where were the vermeil blooms, the liquid expressive eyes, the harmonious limbs of Animula? |
8947 | Whither so fast with the spanking Arabs and the Simpkin?--to the garden- house?" |
8947 | Who shall bid her move on? |
8947 | Why can not the Federal Government do anything in the premises? |
8947 | Why did they bring him home, Bright jewel set in lead? |
8947 | Why should not young men be educated on this book? |
8947 | Wilt thou die of the bitter fire, or wilt thou turn beggar- maid? |
8947 | Wilt thou take up this trade?" |
8947 | Without thee, what were life? |
8947 | Yet who in Boston has time for that? |
8947 | You do not mean to deny that you agreed to pay cash for the goods?" |
8947 | You''ll never be guilty of the folly again, at any rate, of supposing that girls can be married, in spite of themselves, by cruel sisters; eh, Laura?" |
8947 | and what replies yon other light? |
8947 | and would her hero despise a girl that worked for a livelihood? |
8947 | are there no travellers with clothes on?" |
8947 | cried the Fairy Rose;"all eyes will be dazzled with the Spark; who will know on what form it shines?" |
8947 | demanded the creditor;"what do you mean by the impossible? |
8947 | do we not all know you were a born Allia, ten years before that date?" |
8947 | from whom? |
8947 | or shall she live and burn slowly to her death, with the unquenchable fire of the Spark?" |
8947 | or was it an animal endowed with vitality and motion? |
8947 | persisted the consignee,"and why have they not been paid?" |
8947 | reiterated Mr. Schulemberg, regardless of the rules of etiquette,"Sold it? |
8947 | said Mrs. Jaynes;"what are you crying for?" |
8947 | the Spark galls thee?" |
8947 | was this the great enchantress that had drawn monarchs at her chariot- wheels? |
8947 | what occurs? |
8947 | what shall I do?" |
8947 | what shall I do?" |
40147 | ''Government-- government? 40147 A traveling- cap drawn over his eyes?" |
40147 | And Macdonald? |
40147 | And have you nothing, then, to say in her favor? |
40147 | And in what way has he accomplished this? |
40147 | And is_ amount_ of any consequence to your friend? |
40147 | And pray, Catherine,he asked, trying to talk calmly,"why should we not meet again? |
40147 | And the old woman? 40147 And the pocket- book?" |
40147 | And they have complied? |
40147 | And thy cousin? |
40147 | And what do you want a groom at all for? 40147 And what the plague are you all doing here?" |
40147 | And where does Levi Samuel live? |
40147 | And who is, sir? |
40147 | And why should you not love me, Paul? |
40147 | And why would it not be right? 40147 Any relation to M. le Breton''s fair correspondent Fidèle, I wonder?" |
40147 | Are they banditti? |
40147 | Are you indeed? 40147 Are you not Albert''s affianced wife?" |
40147 | But I do not go yet for some hours, and we shall meet again below before I leave; why not defer good- by till then? |
40147 | But how did he fly it? 40147 But how did you contrive to get it fixed so quickly, my kind, good boy?" |
40147 | But must you go to sea again? |
40147 | But pray, where is the gold you mean to pay us with? |
40147 | But the expedition will sail, general? |
40147 | But thou wilt not? |
40147 | But what do you mean to do? |
40147 | But you are frightened, also, a little, are you not-- with all your courage, or what made you shake so then? |
40147 | But, Annie, dear,said her brother,"why should you talk thus earnestly to me? |
40147 | Can the Brest fleet sail? |
40147 | Can you make no allowance for the manner in which she has been brought up? 40147 Captain,"cried the Citizen Gracchus,"what is the meaning of this? |
40147 | Could he fly it,or rather,"could he see John fly it-- really out of doors and in the air?" |
40147 | D''ye know what the diggins the Squire did it for, Gaffer Solomons? |
40147 | Did you ever hear,said a friend once to me,"a real true ghost story, one you might depend upon?" |
40147 | Did you put up at the Post, grandfather? |
40147 | Did your father teach you? |
40147 | Do n''t I? |
40147 | Do n''t you know? 40147 Do you know,"said the mother, laying her hand on the head of the eldest boy, a fine, rosy- looking fellow,"what name this has? |
40147 | Do you really credit this? |
40147 | From whom came, then, these scraps of perfumed note- paper I have found in his desk, I wonder? |
40147 | Gammon, Bill-- ain''t we round the Cape? 40147 Had he a cloak on?" |
40147 | Had you fallen into a den of thieves, or were you among honest people? 40147 Have they told you it was a holiday- party that we had planned? |
40147 | Have you brought any money? |
40147 | He has lost a son? |
40147 | How can you, sir, a stranger to us, volunteer so large a sum, which we may never be in a position to repay? |
40147 | How did you learn so much? |
40147 | How many line- of- battle ships have they? |
40147 | I frightened? |
40147 | I suppose you mean your father? 40147 Is Grouchy coming?" |
40147 | Is he going to stay all night? |
40147 | Is it possible,said he,"that you have not heard of them? |
40147 | Is that the law also with respect to bills of exchange? |
40147 | Is the expedition so nearly ready, sir? |
40147 | It would seem as if he had a foreknowledge of what my little statue contained? |
40147 | John,he cried, as the door opened,"do n''t you think we could fly Harry''s kite out of the broken pane?" |
40147 | My poor girl,said a kind voice,"are you ill? |
40147 | No female relative or acquaintance has n''t he? |
40147 | Not, marm? |
40147 | Now, tell us, boy, what number of the Gardes are to be of our party? |
40147 | Oh dear, dear, what_ shall_ I do? |
40147 | Qu''est ce qu''il y a donc? |
40147 | Quite gone, mamma, and Francie not quite well? |
40147 | Richter was killed in a duel--"And Macdonald? |
40147 | Stop-- you see those stocks-- eh? 40147 Tell me about him, mother, and about his going away? |
40147 | That''s right,cried the Squire,"in half- an- hour, eh? |
40147 | The geography of the country-- what knowledge have you on that subject? |
40147 | Then he was not so_ very_ poor? |
40147 | Then why should I not be a friend so far? |
40147 | Very true, sir,replied Sullivan,"we can do so, but with what success? |
40147 | Was it not grand? 40147 Well, that''s right enough: and how much discount do you charge?" |
40147 | What could she be thinking of? |
40147 | What do you want us to do, sir? |
40147 | What for, when it beant the season? 40147 What for?" |
40147 | What is it, Jem?--what''s the matter? |
40147 | What is the lady''s name? |
40147 | What mean you,asked I,"by the Wahr- wolves?" |
40147 | What of Hardy? |
40147 | What on earth would you do, then? |
40147 | What sort of a boy is he? |
40147 | What the deuce do you know about Mr. Egerton? 40147 What''s the artillery force?" |
40147 | Where am I to drive you to? |
40147 | Where are they stationed? |
40147 | Where away? |
40147 | Where is he, then? 40147 Where is he?" |
40147 | Where was it? |
40147 | Where''s Kilmaine? |
40147 | Where-- what was it? 40147 Where?--how? |
40147 | Where?--who? |
40147 | Who and what is he? |
40147 | Who is the particular? |
40147 | Who peopled all the city streets A hundred years ago? 40147 Whose bag is that, Timms?" |
40147 | Why? |
40147 | Yes; but at what rentals? 40147 You are an American?" |
40147 | You are quite a stranger here? |
40147 | You are well acquainted with the language, I believe? |
40147 | You do n''t mean_ him_, surely? |
40147 | You have never seen it? |
40147 | You then hate the English, Maurice? |
40147 | _ Did you fall on purpose?_said he. |
40147 | ''And what if I be?'' |
40147 | ''And which is the way?'' |
40147 | ''But why all this secresy?'' |
40147 | ''But why,''resumed he, in a sharp, quick way--''why must we all sleep in one room?'' |
40147 | ''Laurenberg, your gayety is oppressive,''interrupted Macdonald;''why sing that song? |
40147 | ''Oh, nonsense,''said the other;''pray, how do you know it?'' |
40147 | ''That is your grandmother, I suppose?'' |
40147 | ''We should perhaps be burdensome to you,''said he, addressing the girl:''how far is it to the nearest inn?'' |
40147 | ''Where is it?'' |
40147 | ''Why do you lay them all with the head to the middle of the room?'' |
40147 | ''You remember what the girl said about the way to Arnstadt?'' |
40147 | ''You two live alone in this large house?'' |
40147 | A fine head-- very like Dante''s-- but what is beauty?" |
40147 | A silence of a minute or two succeeded, and then Levasseur said,"You are, of course, prepared for business?" |
40147 | About noon, Laurenberg said,''Come, brothers, do you not find this road tiresome? |
40147 | All I can say to these rigid disciplinarians is,"Every man has his favorite sin: whist was Parson Dale''s!--ladies and gentlemen, what is yours?" |
40147 | Am I not obliged to scour the country in the darkest night_ to bring sheep to your fold_?'' |
40147 | An interesting creature, is not he?" |
40147 | And if those who have, like you, still covet more what wonder if those who have nothing, covet something? |
40147 | And then more villas and palings; and then a village: when would they stop, those endless houses? |
40147 | And to whose guidance and care did you owe your early training, for I see you have not been neglected?" |
40147 | Are you afraid of tumbling off the pony?" |
40147 | Are you aware of the causes which induced him to leave his native country?" |
40147 | At length Justus, whose emotions were yet as summer clouds, inquired of his grandfather,"And your other comrades in the Thuringian Forest affair?" |
40147 | At length he said,"And now you are about to devote your acquirements and energy to this new expedition?" |
40147 | But had you not better walk in? |
40147 | But has any one ever told you his fate, Justus?" |
40147 | But how was I to decipher the writing? |
40147 | But no, he must be dead, or he would have written: Many die in the swamps and from fever, do n''t they, sir?" |
40147 | But pray, who and what is this Randal Leslie, that you look so discomposed, Squire?" |
40147 | But was I to be the instrument of his deliverance? |
40147 | But what was it she felt then, so warm and sticky, trickling down her arm? |
40147 | But when such qualities rise, or become metamorphosed, to meet the exigencies of life, how do we recognize them? |
40147 | But where was I? |
40147 | But where was I? |
40147 | But who shall describe the excitement of a chase at sea? |
40147 | But why do we stand talking here? |
40147 | CAPTAIN BARNABAS.--"Will you cut for your partner, ma''am?" |
40147 | Ca n''t you show me how poor Harry used to fly it?" |
40147 | Can you do no work? |
40147 | Can you tell me with certainty that a sergeant''s guard is on the way hither?" |
40147 | Could her prayers alter that? |
40147 | DALE.--"Pugs? |
40147 | Dale?" |
40147 | Did they say it was a junketing we were bent upon?" |
40147 | Did you not always teach me that His hand would keep me, and hold me, even in the uttermost parts of the sea?" |
40147 | Do n''t you see the scarlet berries, the food of winter for the little birds?" |
40147 | Do n''t you think it would be a very happy thing for both, if Jemima and Signor Riccabocca could be brought together?" |
40147 | Do you know, mother?" |
40147 | Do you not believe that the expedition will sail?" |
40147 | Do you remember the other day an old gentleman stopping and asking some questions about the coat of arms I was painting?" |
40147 | Does it need so long a prolegomenon to excuse thee, poor Parson Dale, for turning up that ace of spades with so triumphant a smile at thy partner? |
40147 | FRANK.--"Eh, mother?" |
40147 | FRANK.--"Why do n''t they mix with the county?" |
40147 | Fear, of course, was the only motive she employed; for how could our still carnal understandings be affected with love to God? |
40147 | Frank,"( here the Parson raised his voice),"I suppose you wanted to call on young Leslie, as you were studying the county map so attentively?" |
40147 | Go home, will ye? |
40147 | Greeting the assembled officers with a smile, he asked how the wind was? |
40147 | Had he somebody to meet? |
40147 | Had it not been decided from all eternity? |
40147 | Have you never had a dim presentiment of approaching evil? |
40147 | Have you no son-- no daughter-- no grandchildren? |
40147 | He dashes toward us-- what can save us? |
40147 | He nestled in closer to his mother''s side; and still looking up, but with more thoughtful eyes, he said,"Mamma, is the summer_ quite_ gone?" |
40147 | He took the book, and casting his eyes hastily over it, exclaimed,"Why, what''s this lad? |
40147 | How are these mysteries to be explained? |
40147 | How could he know so well? |
40147 | How d''ye do, my little man?" |
40147 | How do you do, Papa Godard?" |
40147 | I suppose you had reason to be grateful to him? |
40147 | I then asked him to what intent he had left the notes with the young lady? |
40147 | If any damage be done, it is to you I shall look; d''ye understand? |
40147 | If it is not marriage, however, that calls her away, but bad health; if she goes home unwell, or is carried to the infirmary-- what then? |
40147 | In thunder, and storm, and garments rolled in blood? |
40147 | In whose division are you?" |
40147 | Is it not a pleasure to explore an unknown country, and go on without knowing where you will come to? |
40147 | Is n''t that the signal to heave short on the anchors? |
40147 | Is that the same wine? |
40147 | Is there a regiment, a battalion, a company? |
40147 | It sets one thinking, does it not? |
40147 | Leslie?" |
40147 | MISS JEMIMA, half pettishly, half coaxingly.--"Why is he interesting? |
40147 | MISS JEMIMA, hesitatingly.--"Do you think so?" |
40147 | MISS JEMIMA.--"Very true; what is it indeed? |
40147 | MRS. HAZELDEAN to Miss Jemima.--"Is that the note you were to write for me?" |
40147 | Mackaye?'' |
40147 | My mother often said that the room was''too small for a Christian to sleep in, but where could she get a better?'' |
40147 | My wife is dead: wilt thou be too proud to take charge of my household?" |
40147 | Not to know that they first set the example, by getting the army and navy clothes made by contractors, and taking the lowest tenders? |
40147 | Now, tell me, sir, have I misplaced my love? |
40147 | Now, what do you think of all that? |
40147 | Or like the dew on the mown grass, and the clear shining of the sunlight after April rain?" |
40147 | Or was the strong intellect really clouded? |
40147 | PARSON, slapping his cards on the table in despair:"Are we playing at whist, or are we not?" |
40147 | PARSON.--"What''s what?" |
40147 | Pray, what do you think of the Squire''s tenant at the Casino, Signor Riccabocca? |
40147 | Profligate too? |
40147 | Rickeybockey?" |
40147 | SQUIRE, who has been listening to Frank''s inquiries with a musing air:"Why do you want to know the distance to Rood Hall?" |
40147 | Saunders?" |
40147 | Shall I ever be a good workman, mother?" |
40147 | Still mademoiselle, or are you madam by this time? |
40147 | Still, should the clerk recognize me? |
40147 | Tell me, therefore, in what condition are the people at this moment, as regards poverty?" |
40147 | That beautiful book, Frank-- hold up your head, my love-- what did you get it for?" |
40147 | That the enterprise contained every element of success, then, who could doubt? |
40147 | The CAPTAIN, putting down the cards to cut.--"You''ve got hold of that passage about Botham Hall, page 706, eh?" |
40147 | The SQUIRE, with a little embarrassment in his voice:"Pray, Frank, what do you know of Randal Leslie?" |
40147 | The question that most concerned me was, how was I to extricate myself from this dilemma? |
40147 | The young sometimes left the world before the old, unnatural as it seemed; what if she should die? |
40147 | Then what brought you here, boy?" |
40147 | Then why make us all sleep in one room? |
40147 | Then, in the second place, have you any wine?'' |
40147 | There was another pause before she answered, with passionate energy, and grasping his arm tightly:"And is this all you have to say? |
40147 | There, Mrs Dale, you hear me?" |
40147 | They look something like now, do n''t they, Harry? |
40147 | This warning cooled Mr. Hazeldean; and muttering,"Why the deuce did you set me off?" |
40147 | This, indeed, looked like magic-- one of Houdin''s sleight- of- hand performances-- for what could interrupt its progress? |
40147 | To turn back, and declare I would not travel in such a night, with so strange a person, or to proceed on my journey? |
40147 | Was I to be put to all this inconvenience in order to favor the escape of an assassin? |
40147 | Was he insane, or was he bent upon an errand perfectly rational, although for the present wrapped in the most impenetrable mystery? |
40147 | Was not Jemima''s fortune about £4000?" |
40147 | Was not_ that_ awful?" |
40147 | Well, Master Dale, what do you say to that?" |
40147 | Well, sir,"said he, turning abruptly toward me,"how many battalions of the''Guides''are completed?" |
40147 | Were there not cheap houses even at the West- end, which had saved several thousands a year merely by reducing their workmen''s wages? |
40147 | Were you all robbed and murdered before morning, or were you not?" |
40147 | What can the torments that they tell us of, hereafter, be to this?" |
40147 | What could the man do there at that hour of the night? |
40147 | What did my employer mean by imposing such a task upon me? |
40147 | What do ye ken aboot the Pacific? |
40147 | What do you here, so far from your home and friends?" |
40147 | What does he give, and how does he dispose of them?" |
40147 | What does that blue light mean, Girard?" |
40147 | What ha''you got in your willainous little fist, there?" |
40147 | What is it that makes a chase of any kind so exciting? |
40147 | What is there in the character we have drawn to account for the shock the whole family receives? |
40147 | What more needs be said? |
40147 | What sort of a creature is it?" |
40147 | What!--trumps, Barney? |
40147 | What, are we covetous, too? |
40147 | When the man had finished, I said to him,"How was the gentleman dressed?" |
40147 | When will such things cease? |
40147 | When will that day come, and how? |
40147 | When--""And Richter?" |
40147 | Where is my Sam? |
40147 | Where was I? |
40147 | Where was I?" |
40147 | Where was I?" |
40147 | Which was the best course to adopt? |
40147 | Whither was I to drive? |
40147 | Who and what was my companion? |
40147 | Who fill''d the church with faces meek A hundred years ago?" |
40147 | Who is your friend?" |
40147 | Whom ought I to ask, Mrs. Dale? |
40147 | Why conceal his face in so unaccountable a manner? |
40147 | Why is he interesting?" |
40147 | Why should he invest himself with such a mystery? |
40147 | Why should he not get rich as fast as he could? |
40147 | Why should he pay his men two shillings where the government paid them one? |
40147 | Why should he remain in the minority? |
40147 | Why should he stick to the old, slow- going, honorable trade? |
40147 | Why so? |
40147 | Why was he to be robbing his family of comforts to pay for their extravagance? |
40147 | Why, may I ask?" |
40147 | Why, who knows but there may be an adventure before us? |
40147 | Will you be advised? |
40147 | Will you come up and play a rubber, Dale? |
40147 | Yes? |
40147 | Yet who are more superstitious than sailors, from the admiral down to the cabin boy? |
40147 | You a tailor, and not know that government are the very authors of this system? |
40147 | You are an English Jew I perceive?" |
40147 | You seem tired, gentlemen; have you come far?'' |
40147 | You went there?" |
40147 | Your father was then an Emigrà ©?" |
40147 | _ Pres._--And who was he? |
40147 | _ Pres._--Can''t you sell something-- little cakes-- bonbons? |
40147 | _ Pres._--Robespierre!--why what did you know of him? |
40147 | _ President._--Now, my good woman, what have you to say for yourself? |
40147 | and do n''t you know that''s just where the Flying Dutchman never could get to?" |
40147 | and, then, where is the capital?" |
40147 | cried Justus, rising suddenly on his elbow;"stupid, did you say, grandfather?" |
40147 | cried Paul, passionately,"why spoke you not two years ago? |
40147 | cried he, stamping his foot passionately; then suddenly checking his anger, he asked,"How many are there coming to join this expedition? |
40147 | he cried, in anguish,"what has happened? |
40147 | how is it? |
40147 | interrupted Catherine;"your sister calls; why does she come here now? |
40147 | interrupted the other,''what better are you yourself? |
40147 | or, may she never change from what you represent her?" |
40147 | pardon, citizen, I recognize thee now; but why didst thou not knock? |
40147 | replied the dauntless woman,"I frightened; and what at? |
40147 | said Godard,"thou ownest this, then?" |
40147 | said I;"and could you suspect a companion of so incredible a propensity?" |
40147 | said the right- hand man, glowering on Lenny malignantly,"you are the pattern boy of the village, are you? |
40147 | something to see or obtain? |
40147 | the old grandmother?" |
40147 | trump my diamond?" |
40147 | turn robbers?'' |
40147 | what noise is that?" |
40147 | when? |
40147 | you are not sorry to come home, are you?" |
18907 | ''Can such anger dwell in celestial souls?'' 18907 After such a generous offer, who would n''t be tempted?" |
18907 | Agreed, we are all ready to listen; but who shall tell the tale? |
18907 | Alice, are you not almost tired of this game? |
18907 | Alice, why was he like a_ sigh_? |
18907 | All? 18907 Amy, are you not almost roasted in that hot corner of the chimney?" |
18907 | Amy, why was he like a_ cat_? |
18907 | And Daucus-- was he a carrot? |
18907 | And can not I make you happy? |
18907 | And how is it about the verses, Amy? |
18907 | And is it really the wonderful Rose of Hesperus which you seek? |
18907 | And may I really go? 18907 And may she not sleep with me to- night, mother?" |
18907 | And now,said Amy,"are n''t you all tired of potentates? |
18907 | And shall I falsify my motto? |
18907 | And who is the poet that has immortalized Sydney''s sister, in the following lines? 18907 And who was the good aunt?" |
18907 | And you, Amy? |
18907 | And you, Amy? |
18907 | And you, Ellen? |
18907 | And you, George? |
18907 | And you, Gertrude? |
18907 | And you, Harry? |
18907 | And you, Harry? |
18907 | And you, Louis? |
18907 | And you, Sister Ellen? |
18907 | And, Louis, how do you make him like a_ flower_? |
18907 | And, uncle, is not the custom of hanging up the stocking derived from Germany? |
18907 | And, when we notice these coincidences, is it not an argument for a superintending Providence? |
18907 | Animal, vegetable, or mineral? |
18907 | Anna,said Tom,"how do you like it? |
18907 | Are not these kings near relatives of''the good grandmother?'' |
18907 | Are you quite sure? |
18907 | Are you sure that you have not embellished it? |
18907 | Are you sure there was no cheating? |
18907 | Are you sure, Mary,said Mrs. Wyndham, laughing,"that you are not taking any liberties with my name?" |
18907 | Aunt Lucy, how was he like a_ fire_? |
18907 | Aunt Lucy, what shall be our story to- night? |
18907 | Before or after the year 1500? |
18907 | Bright Fairy Queen, shall mortal dare On beauty gaze beyond compare; Shall one of earth unpunish''d see The mazes of your revelry? 18907 But do you think him as ancient as he pretends to be?" |
18907 | But how long have you known him? |
18907 | But how to break the meshes? 18907 But is n''t this rather silly-- all this about love and marriage?" |
18907 | But meanwhile, what about Willing, and the very mixed accounts of Stewart& Gamble? 18907 But perhaps some of you can tell me who her very lovely mother was?" |
18907 | But pray, why not? |
18907 | But what about that ghost? |
18907 | But what are you putting into it? 18907 But what can you mean, Uncle? |
18907 | But what''s the moral of your story? |
18907 | But, Cousin Mary, what''s your improvement? 18907 But, my child, you must have a home; why are you out on such a stormy night?" |
18907 | But, uncle, do you not know that I have an idea? 18907 But, uncle,"said Charlie Bolton,"could n''t you put off Sunday as Dean Swift, or somebody or other, put off the eclipse? |
18907 | Can it be, that the vile rabble dare to think of revolt-- against_ me_? 18907 Can you tell us where that piece of wisdom may be found?" |
18907 | Charlie, are you fond of mince- pie? |
18907 | Charlie, are you tired from your long walk this morning? |
18907 | Charlie, why was he like a_ vine_? |
18907 | Cornelia, have you finished your crochet purse? |
18907 | Cornelia, why was President Taylor like a_ sunset_? |
18907 | Cousin Mary, did n''t you enjoy the clear- up to- day? |
18907 | Did I not tell you that he would never predict aught but evil of me? |
18907 | Did he live about a thousand years before the Christian era? |
18907 | Did this bird live in ancient or modern times-- before or after the Christian era? |
18907 | Did you ever see a sweeter, gentler countenance? |
18907 | Did you not hear the plunge into the sea? 18907 Did you say, father, that Eclipse would go over the_ moon_? |
18907 | Do n''t know his name, do n''t you? 18907 Do you feel any thing?" |
18907 | Do you feel much better? |
18907 | Do you know how to play''Consequences?'' |
18907 | Do you love her? |
18907 | Do you love her? |
18907 | Do you perceive the smell of smoke? 18907 Do you remember the anecdote about Frederic the Great, of Prussia?" |
18907 | Do you see any thing in it? |
18907 | Do you think they can be the banditti they talk of? |
18907 | Do you, who are fresh from school, remember the names of the four generals and kingdoms who succeeded him? |
18907 | Does she love you? |
18907 | Does she love you? |
18907 | Does this ancient bird belong to the goose, duck, chicken, peacock, or turkey tribe? |
18907 | Ellen, why was he like an_ umbrella_? |
18907 | Even so, Charlie: now, what have you got to say for yourself? |
18907 | George, how did he resemble_ cream_? |
18907 | George, you are so fond of skating, do n''t you hope to enjoy the sport to- morrow? |
18907 | Gertrude, do n''t you think_ the mice will play_ to- night? |
18907 | Gertrude, how did he resemble the_ Alps_? |
18907 | Had it any thing to do with Columbus? |
18907 | Had your brother no family, sir? 18907 Harry, how did you make him out like a_ laugh_?" |
18907 | Has not any one wit enough to think of a game at which we can all assist? |
18907 | How can I possibly please the taste of both? |
18907 | How can people live in the city,they exclaimed,"when such a free and happy life is before them? |
18907 | How could he wish to leave such a charming place, where there was every thing that was lovely on earth? |
18907 | How could you, when you are stone- blind? 18907 How do those lines of Milton run, Ellen, in L''Allegro? |
18907 | How do you like it, John? |
18907 | How do you prefer it, Charlie? |
18907 | How does he resemble a_ carpet_? |
18907 | How does he resemble_ Cousin Mary_? |
18907 | How is he like a_ lion_? |
18907 | How is he like a_ tree_? |
18907 | How is that played? 18907 How is that? |
18907 | How long have you been in his service? |
18907 | How many servants will you keep? |
18907 | How much is the lady worth? |
18907 | How soon does this auspicious match come off? 18907 How then do you account for my finding myself on top of my bed, and dressed? |
18907 | How would you like Bible stories? |
18907 | I am glad to see that she makes herself so useful; is she any relation to you? |
18907 | I apprenticed my daughter to a dry- goods store, and the first thing she sold was ten yards of L."Lace? |
18907 | I apprenticed my daughter to a milliner, and the first thing she sold was a yard of R. R."Red ribbon? |
18907 | I apprenticed my son to a cabinet- maker, and the first thing he sold was a S."Sofa? |
18907 | I apprenticed my son to a grocer, and the first thing he sold was a B. of R."Box of raisins? |
18907 | I never heard of it,replied Cornelia;"how do you play it?" |
18907 | I''ll take charge of her; have you got her ticket? |
18907 | I''m sure I''m very sorry; what are you going to do with me, sir? |
18907 | I? 18907 I? |
18907 | In New York, is he? 18907 In its natural or prepared state?" |
18907 | In its natural or prepared state? |
18907 | Is all the power, and the grandeur, and the wisdom, and the beauty you see in Fairy Land, insufficient to satisfy that foolish heart of yours? 18907 Is any gentleman here willing to take charge of this little girl?" |
18907 | Is it Punch? |
18907 | Is it a German wine, highly prized by connoisseurs? |
18907 | Is it a bean? |
18907 | Is it a collection of sheep? |
18907 | Is it a common weed, and also the place where ships are built? |
18907 | Is it a large receptacle used in the brewery and tannery? |
18907 | Is it a manly covering for the head? |
18907 | Is it a part of a tree, a shrub, a vine, or is it of the grass kind? |
18907 | Is it a rap at the door? |
18907 | Is it a very gentle slap, indicative of love? |
18907 | Is it an article of infants''clothing? |
18907 | Is it an important part of woman''s attire? |
18907 | Is it an ornamental way of dressing the hair? |
18907 | Is it biped or quadruped, fish, flesh, fowl, or insect? |
18907 | Is it one of the wooden pieces of which blinds are composed? |
18907 | Is it out yet? |
18907 | Is it possible it was only an hour ago? 18907 Is it possible you have not read the Arabian Nights? |
18907 | Is it possible? |
18907 | Is it that covering for the head occasionally worn by young misses, and also a frequent quality of their conversation? |
18907 | Is it that sly animal of the tiger species which is domesticated by man, and delights to steal the cream and to torture poor little mice? |
18907 | Is it that word sometimes applied to a disagreeable child? |
18907 | Is it that word, which followed by head, shows what we all are, for not guessing it sooner? |
18907 | Is it the opposite of leanness? |
18907 | Is it the root, stem, leaf, flower, or fruit? |
18907 | Is it the species you think of, or one individual of it? |
18907 | Is it the thing that brokers buy and sell? |
18907 | Is it the whole, or only a part of the plant? |
18907 | Is it used for food? |
18907 | Is it used for the table? |
18907 | Is she pretty? |
18907 | Is that all? |
18907 | Is that you, Russell? |
18907 | Is there any thing else in the jar? |
18907 | Is this fruit pulpy like the grape, or mealy like the bean? |
18907 | It ca n''t be a tree-- how do you like it, Mary? |
18907 | It could not be, Charlie!--how could it? |
18907 | Job''s turkey? |
18907 | John, how many miles did you walk to- day? |
18907 | John, why was he like a_ brick_? |
18907 | Just from college, is n''t he? |
18907 | Let us see-- California? 18907 Linen? |
18907 | Lucy, do you see it, dear I do you see the moon getting dark? |
18907 | Man, monkey, or bird? |
18907 | May I go now, and play, pretty lady? 18907 Much obliged; what was that?" |
18907 | My little girl, what are you doing out of doors on a night like this? 18907 No one else; but what on earth are you doing with such a heap of trunks? |
18907 | No: do you all give it up? |
18907 | No; and I declare I have no more than half a dollar with me-- can you advance the money? 18907 No_ what_?" |
18907 | Not even the ice- bath at the pond, George? |
18907 | Now tell us whose speech gave you the first impression of being Milton? |
18907 | Now, I apprenticed my son to a hardware man, and the first thing he sold was a P. of S."Pair of skates? |
18907 | O, I forgot; but if Clara lays the uneasy spirit of Don Pedro, then will you not remove here? |
18907 | Oh dear, what_ shall_ I do? 18907 Oh, sir, if you ca n''t find my uncle, wo n''t you send me on to Boston again? |
18907 | Optics, is it? 18907 Pray, tell us the name of your rival?" |
18907 | Pray, what can be the difference between Joan of Arc and Noah''s ark? |
18907 | Prayer- book? 18907 Pretty well, with your coal- black eyes and hooked nose: but what is that notion?" |
18907 | Quadruped or biped, fish, snake, or insect? |
18907 | Rudolph, would you like to play at soap- bubbles? |
18907 | Shall I call next week? |
18907 | Shall I make a sailor''s knot, or how shall I fix it? |
18907 | Shall we be so ungrateful, because a glimpse of the earthly paradise has been vouchsafed us, as to sink into idle, repining dreamers? 18907 Simply this-- if he had not, what would have become of my story, I''d like to know? |
18907 | Steam engines and locomotives? |
18907 | The_ horse_? 18907 Then why will you not take me to my uncle? |
18907 | Then you will not buy my lead? |
18907 | Then, how does Anna make him resemble a_ tear_? |
18907 | Then, why is he like_ ink_? |
18907 | There appears, then, to be no prosecution in this case? 18907 There are many funny stories told of him,"answered Mr. Wyndham;"which is the one you refer to?" |
18907 | To bury them at seven, and dig them out at seventeen; how do you like it? |
18907 | Tom, do you like to ask questions? |
18907 | Tom, why was he like a_ cow_? |
18907 | Was it Columbus''egg? |
18907 | Was it very thin? |
18907 | Was it''rare Ben Jonson?'' |
18907 | Was this bean an ancient or modern one? |
18907 | We''ll see: does it belong to the animal, vegetable, mineral, or spiritual kingdoms? |
18907 | Well, am I right in my explanation? |
18907 | What can it be? |
18907 | What clergyman will marry you? |
18907 | What do people think,said Charlie,"about my waking up my daughter, instead of taking the trouble to write down my poetry myself?" |
18907 | What do you make of this? 18907 What do you say to''Who can he be?" |
18907 | What do you say, Gertrude? |
18907 | What do you think was the reason? |
18907 | What game shall we play to- night? |
18907 | What has father got? |
18907 | What is her height? |
18907 | What is that? 18907 What is the color of her hair?" |
18907 | What is the gentleman''s name, can you tell me? |
18907 | What is the matter, my little Ellen? |
18907 | What is your preference, George? |
18907 | What means this riotous assembly? |
18907 | What say you, John? |
18907 | What sort of a story will you have? |
18907 | What time is it-- before or after the Christian era? |
18907 | What''s to be done with her when we get to New York? |
18907 | When do you like it, Alice? |
18907 | When do you like it, Anna? |
18907 | When do you like it, Mary? |
18907 | When do you prefer it, Charlie? |
18907 | When is it in a passion? |
18907 | When was it? |
18907 | When will my trunks come? |
18907 | Where did this interesting event take place? |
18907 | Where does she live? |
18907 | Where will you live? |
18907 | Which of us has a hole in her stocking? |
18907 | Which of us is the old maid of the company? |
18907 | Who but Chaucer? |
18907 | Who comes down last to breakfast? |
18907 | Who is the prettiest person present? |
18907 | Who is to be bridesmaid at this happy wedding? |
18907 | Who is your sympathizing confidante? |
18907 | Who loves mince- pie the best? |
18907 | Who shall be appointed to tell the story to- night? |
18907 | Who will wait upon her? |
18907 | Who''s afraid? 18907 Whom will you marry?" |
18907 | Why are pens, ink, and paper like the fixed stars? |
18907 | Why is Trusty like_ paper_? |
18907 | Why is he like a_ bed_? |
18907 | Why is he like a_ table_? |
18907 | Why is he like_ Aunt Lucy_? |
18907 | Why is it that in all Bibles some words are put in Italics? 18907 Why must they go? |
18907 | Why should you want to go? 18907 Wild or tame?" |
18907 | Will he be satisfied upon this point to- morrow? |
18907 | Will the spirit condescend to signify, in writing, in what way he shall act to obtain this end? |
18907 | Will you be so kind as to take me with you? |
18907 | Will you take this man to be your lawful husband? |
18907 | Will you walk into my parlor? |
18907 | Wo n''t we get there a little sooner than we came? |
18907 | Yes, actually; and if only some such process could be applied to children, would it not save trouble? |
18907 | Yes-- but from whom did you take the idea? 18907 Yes: how could she help it?" |
18907 | You do? 18907 You recognize this countenance?" |
18907 | You remember your speech, at least-- eh, Will? |
18907 | You think not, Ellen? 18907 You will not? |
18907 | ''And did you know his family?'' |
18907 | ''Do I, indeed? |
18907 | ''Have you indeed, Miss Caterina? |
18907 | --"How do you like it?" |
18907 | A blue ribbon, worn upon his arm, shows that he has not enlisted himself among the admirers of the Lady Clotilda: in whose honor can he wear it? |
18907 | Amy, will you buy any lead?" |
18907 | And he said,''Who shall persuade the Lord of Israel to go up against Ramoth- Gilead to his destruction?'' |
18907 | And how do you make out these purple marks?" |
18907 | And how had they been kept? |
18907 | And may Bruno, and Saladin, and old Fritz come too?" |
18907 | And my papa and mamma, and dear little Bertha, can they live here too? |
18907 | And now, shall we not vary the scene by having a story?" |
18907 | And shall he go, unscath''d, away? |
18907 | And the father? |
18907 | And was the memory of the past blotted out from her mind? |
18907 | And what became of the imperious Clotilda? |
18907 | And what did they do then? |
18907 | And when he is a man, and has become under my teaching a perfect specimen of what a man should be, what then? |
18907 | And who was her brave preserver? |
18907 | And why not? |
18907 | Animal, vegetable, mineral, or spiritual?" |
18907 | Are you boys made of different stuff from us, I want to know?" |
18907 | Are you such an eternal fool as to think I''ll pay your passage again? |
18907 | At last, out of patience, he burst forth:''Tell me, did n''t he break his leg?'' |
18907 | Before, did I say? |
18907 | Brown? |
18907 | But do you know any one of that name, Alice? |
18907 | But how dare to reveal their affection? |
18907 | But is it true?" |
18907 | But what cavalier is this, with closed vizor, whose head towers above the rest like the cedar of Lebanon above all the trees of the forest? |
18907 | But what could be wished for beyond? |
18907 | But what do George and John say?" |
18907 | But what shall we do? |
18907 | But who altered it? |
18907 | But who are these two other Asiatics, as they appear by their dress, fashioned in Oriental magnificence? |
18907 | But who was she?" |
18907 | But who was the selfish queen, unwilling to have her noblest subject exalted beyond her control?" |
18907 | But why should you weep? |
18907 | But would she not, herself, merely add another to his list of slaves? |
18907 | But, meantime, what was to be done for Mrs. Norton? |
18907 | By the way, what have you found in your slippers?'' |
18907 | Cats? |
18907 | Charlie, to whom did you make your first offer?" |
18907 | Could he do less than soothe her fluttered nerves, guide her horse, and make himself as agreeable as possible? |
18907 | Could she do less than feel ardently grateful, and manifest it in every look and accent? |
18907 | Could you alter that, Will?" |
18907 | Cousin Alice, how do you like it?" |
18907 | Cousin Mary, are you too much engaged with your book to help us poor souls?" |
18907 | Dear father, will you not give up your offices at court, and live henceforth at Alcantra?" |
18907 | Did I say without a pilot? |
18907 | Did not animal magnetism, containing so many things which could not be explained away, plainly prove it? |
18907 | Did they fight?" |
18907 | Do n''t you see that Ellen is ready to begin?" |
18907 | Do you give it up?" |
18907 | Do you know, I thought I was in Fairy Land? |
18907 | Do you not love me?" |
18907 | Do you not see, comrades, how she resembles her mother, Ellen Buckingham? |
18907 | Do you remember the story of Dr. Samuel Johnson, when writing his''Lives of the Poets''?" |
18907 | Do you see any other moral?" |
18907 | Do you see that big fellow, how he shines in the sun, and shows all the colors of the rainbow? |
18907 | Does no one have compassion upon him? |
18907 | Don Alphonso, however, was not quite such a bloody- minded tyrant as Don Pedro: how could he be, as he was one of our ancestors? |
18907 | Enraged at her insolence, her enemy, looking up, asked,"Who in the palace is on my side?" |
18907 | For hearest thou not the subdued sound of horses''hoofs scattering the snow? |
18907 | Full of awe as he was, the little man still wished to gratify his curiosity as to the manner of his kinsman''s death: could that be done? |
18907 | Go to my own dear, sweet mamma? |
18907 | Have none a plea to offer for his pardon? |
18907 | Have they any particular mode of training?" |
18907 | Have you any objection to being my servant, Ned?" |
18907 | Have you ever rubbed a cat''s fur the wrong way, in the dark?" |
18907 | Have you not well considered the matter?" |
18907 | Have you the direction?" |
18907 | He is not one of those who hold the creed of impious Cain,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
18907 | He remarked,''Do you like the last style of bonnets, Madam?'' |
18907 | Horrified, the little girl ran up to Smith:"these are my things,"she said;"how dare you put them into the shop?" |
18907 | How came he there? |
18907 | How can she please you all?" |
18907 | How can they prefer brick and stone to the everlasting hills, the soft green turf, and the majestic forests? |
18907 | How could that be?" |
18907 | How do you like my plan?" |
18907 | How do you think I could pass for a Jew?" |
18907 | How long since?" |
18907 | How shall we manage it though, my fine fellow?" |
18907 | How stood they in their accounts? |
18907 | How to retrieve himself? |
18907 | How would you like that?" |
18907 | I apprenticed my daughter to a dressmaker, and the first thing she made was a V. M.""Velvet mantilla?" |
18907 | I apprenticed my son to a carpenter, and the first thing he sold was a T.""A table?" |
18907 | I apprenticed my son to a tinman, and the first thing he sold was a N. G.""Nutmeg- grater?" |
18907 | I call it''Who can he be?''" |
18907 | I have a thousand pretty things I want to teach you: do you not wish to learn them?" |
18907 | I hope so indeed; for do you know, my dears,"said Mrs. Wyndham,"that it is past eleven o''clock? |
18907 | I must use the words of that sensible''Coon, who has earned immortality by meeting his death like a philosopher--''Is that you, Captain Scott?'' |
18907 | I remember the question was once put to him,''What is the Latin name of the earth?'' |
18907 | I shall not forget that passage, uncle, as long as I live: who wrote it?" |
18907 | In asking the girls, I merely reverse the questions:''From whom did you receive your first offer?'' |
18907 | In five minutes, the farmer returned, having concluded his bargain; but where was his cart, and horse, and load of wood? |
18907 | In the morning, when the Professor was ready for his usual ride, where was his horse? |
18907 | Indeed, what woman should be ignorant of them, if she wishes to be helpful to herself and useful to others? |
18907 | Is any one too grave and too wise to approve of such conduct? |
18907 | Is it the western sun, tinted by the colored glass of the bay- window, or is it the ruddy hickory fire? |
18907 | Is it wonderful that Don Fernando escorted her to the gate of the castle? |
18907 | Is it wonderful, that Rudolph was the idol of his parents, the favorite of his playmates, and the cherished darling of the whole castle? |
18907 | Is n''t it fine?" |
18907 | Is n''t it right and proper for the boys to take their equal share?" |
18907 | Just then, young Rudolph, brave and fair, Perceived my urgent need; He risk''d his life in saving mine-- And shall that kind heart bleed?" |
18907 | Magdalena clasped her father''s hand:"O, may we not always live here?" |
18907 | Mary, will you be kind enough to read it?" |
18907 | May I be allowed a word in private?" |
18907 | Norton?" |
18907 | Now will you let me fly a kite?" |
18907 | Now, do you understand about oxygen and nitrogen, which chiefly make up the atmospheric air?" |
18907 | Now, who can be this poet, warrior, and king?" |
18907 | One of the games this evening was"What is my thought like?" |
18907 | Secluded within his palace, with many rivals to counteract her, would she not gather thorns, as well as blossoms, in the Flowery Land? |
18907 | Shall I attempt to describe the grief of the child, deprived of all she loved? |
18907 | Shall I lap my soul in indolent ease while the work of life is before me? |
18907 | Shall I let him return to earth? |
18907 | Shall we allow the visions of fancy, or the charms of nature, to steal away our hearts from human sympathy? |
18907 | Surely, it can not be Mr. Roscoe, the retired merchant, who is so prominent for his benevolence and liberality?" |
18907 | Surely, you do not believe in ghosts? |
18907 | THE GATHERING.--CHRISTMAS EVE.--CONSEQUENCES.--HOW DO YOU LIKE IT? |
18907 | The arrows of the Almighty have pierced us-- shall we any longer strive against our Maker? |
18907 | The medium asked,"Whether the inquirer should recover his rights, and obtain a copy of the deed?" |
18907 | Their town was, indeed, admirably fortified; but since Tyre, the Queen of the Sea, had been subdued, how could they hope to escape? |
18907 | They continually received-- did they also dispense the goodness of God? |
18907 | They owed debts to their Maker and Redeemer, and to their fellow- men: how had they paid them? |
18907 | They would kill me if they thought I had betrayed them;--will you protect me?" |
18907 | Tom, do n''t you hope we''ll have a story to- night?" |
18907 | Was all deception, illusion? |
18907 | Was he ever to be alone, consumed by vain longings for affection he was destined never to receive? |
18907 | Was it Hood?" |
18907 | Was there nothing real, naught to satisfy the heart? |
18907 | Was your_ spook_ polite enough to bring your lamp, as well as yourself, into your room?" |
18907 | We ca n''t play to- day, and a fellow like me does n''t want to read the whole time: what on earth can we do? |
18907 | What could have put the notion into your head that I was ill?" |
18907 | What do you think of our turning astrologers?" |
18907 | What have you to answer, Cornelia?" |
18907 | What is the meaning of that?" |
18907 | What is this I hold in my hand?" |
18907 | What relationship was there between them?" |
18907 | What shall they do next? |
18907 | What was there upon earth to revive the spirit of the little orphan, so utterly deserted, so ready to perish? |
18907 | What was to be done? |
18907 | What words can describe the sights of beauty that awaited him? |
18907 | What, madam, is the reason of this change of purpose? |
18907 | What, meantime, had been Malcom''s lot? |
18907 | What, meantime, had been her fate? |
18907 | When Cornelia entered, Mary said to her:"Does your majesty feel very sore from your fall?" |
18907 | When that year had begun, what resolutions of improvement had been formed, what vows of greater fidelity had been made? |
18907 | Who are the most immoral of manufacturers? |
18907 | Who can he be?" |
18907 | Who can he be?" |
18907 | Who can he be?" |
18907 | Who can he be?" |
18907 | Who let that cat out of the bag?" |
18907 | Who was the true prophet, and who the false?" |
18907 | Who would stoop to be a duchess, when the diadem of an empress was placed at her disposal? |
18907 | Why are you not at home with your father and mother?" |
18907 | Why is it that this desirable accomplishment, which promotes so much the happiness of the home circle, is not more cultivated? |
18907 | Why is the clock the most humble of all things?" |
18907 | Why not? |
18907 | Will she, can she accept him? |
18907 | Will you be the lead- merchant?" |
18907 | With ardent gratitude and passionate love and admiration, Rudolph embraced the beautiful Queen, and said,"Is this really true? |
18907 | Would she accept from him an annuity, which, after all, was only a small return for her kindness to his brother''s child?" |
18907 | Would you like to try it?" |
18907 | Would you run off, Amy, if he were?" |
18907 | You are not so weak?" |
18907 | You do n''t think I am going to keep you without receiving board, do you?" |
18907 | You see this jar? |
18907 | allow me to ask, reverend sir, or venerable madam, as the case may be, how many centuries are pressing their weight upon your silver locks? |
18907 | and is this splendid place to be my own home?" |
18907 | and when, for the first time, the young heir followed him to the chase, who so happy as he? |
18907 | are you not almost perished?" |
18907 | asked the monarch:"that magic flower hitherto unplucked by mortals? |
18907 | do you mean our tell- tale faces?" |
18907 | exclaimed Barrington,"how do you stand it? |
18907 | felt by young as well as old-- how, in trouble, could we dispense with it? |
18907 | has a friend arrived?" |
18907 | is that all the thanks I get for the pains I have taken to make a man of you?" |
18907 | mourn, and weep, and give herself up to melancholy? |
18907 | no wife or child?" |
18907 | or had it fallen upon hard, unfeeling hearts, which it could not penetrate? |
18907 | said his sister Ellen,"you do n''t really think the dinner the best part of the day?" |
18907 | shall we tell her of our hopes?" |
18907 | sons of*** and****, do you say? |
18907 | the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof?'' |
18907 | were you, really, such a_ green_ child as that?" |
18907 | what do you mean, child?" |
18907 | what words can describe them? |
18907 | why, can that be true?" |
18907 | with so many little ones, could you take another?" |
18907 | would not our hearts sink under their load? |
18907 | would not our spirits be crushed within us? |
9599 | Are there not other great interests? |
9599 | Do you not believe in the Devil? |
9599 | Down the chill street, which winds in gloomiest shade, What marks betray yon solitary maid? 9599 How does it happen,"inquires an able writer,"that whenever duty is named we begin to hear of the weakness of human nature? |
9599 | I believe in God,was the reply;"do n''t you?" |
9599 | Is not this the fast that I have chosen? 9599 Is this thy mane, my fearless Surtur, That streams against my breast? |
9599 | Man giveth up the ghost, and where is he? |
9599 | Man giveth up the ghost; and where is he? |
9599 | The existence of slavery among us, though not at all to be objected to our Southern brethren as a fault,etc? |
9599 | What is religion? |
9599 | When one saith, Moses meant as I do,''and another saith,''Nay, but as I do,''I ask, more reverently,''Why not rather as both, if both be true? |
9599 | Who is he? |
9599 | Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
9599 | --But why talk of amelioration? |
9599 | Above all, has his infant child forfeited its unalienable right? |
9599 | Amelioration of what? |
9599 | And how many shopkeepers are there anywhere that would be over scrupulous in questioning a customer with a full purse?" |
9599 | And if the slave- trade has become thus odious, what must be the fate, erelong, of its parent, slavery? |
9599 | And pray how has it been with the white race, for whom our philosopher claims the divine prerogative of enslaving? |
9599 | And should not decided action follow our deep convictions of the wrong of slavery? |
9599 | And was not this a warning from Heaven? |
9599 | And what does this prove? |
9599 | And what has been the consequence of this general belief in the evil of human servitude? |
9599 | And what is this system which we are thus protecting and upholding? |
9599 | And why should it not exult? |
9599 | Are those the Normes that beckon onward As if to Odin''s board, Where by the hands of warriors nightly The sparkling mead is poured? |
9599 | Are we to be denied even the right of a slave, the right to murmur? |
9599 | But stay who are these emigrants, these missionaries? |
9599 | But what avails her beauty? |
9599 | Can it be possible that our fathers felt this state necessity strong upon them? |
9599 | Can such hollow sympathy reach the broken of heart, and does the blessing of those who are ready to perish answer it? |
9599 | Can you find any excuse for them in the nature of the human mind, everywhere maddened by injury and conciliated by kindness? |
9599 | Did the slaves baptize their freedom in blood? |
9599 | Did they fight like unchained desperadoes because they had been made free? |
9599 | Did they murder their emancipators? |
9599 | Do they afford a reasonable protext for your fierce denunciations of your Northern brethren? |
9599 | Do you find them in the emancipation of the South American Republics? |
9599 | Does either embrace anything false, fanatical, or unconstitutional? |
9599 | Does history, ancient or modern, justify your fears? |
9599 | Does it become such a one to rave against the West India negro''s incapacity for self- civilization? |
9599 | Does it hold back the lash from the slave, or sweeten his bitter bread? |
9599 | Does there exist even in Virginia any law limiting the punishment of a slave? |
9599 | During those years of sinful compromise the crime of man- robbery less atrocious than at present? |
9599 | For what is slavery, after all, but fear,--fear, forcing mind and body into unnatural action? |
9599 | Freemen, Christians, lovers of truth and justice Why stand ye idle? |
9599 | Gentlemen, is not this true? |
9599 | Had he not, in a moment of mad frenzy of which his memory made no record, actually murdered some one? |
9599 | Has it decreased the number of its victims? |
9599 | Has it sapped the foundations of the infamous system? |
9599 | Has man husbanded well the good gifts of God, and are they nevertheless passing from him, by a process of deterioration over which he has no control? |
9599 | Has the negro committed such offence? |
9599 | Have I no desire to support myself in expensive customs, because my acquaintances live in such customs? |
9599 | Have none of my fellow- creatures an equitable right to any part which is called mine? |
9599 | Have our own peculiar warnings gone by unheeded,--the frequent slave insurrections of the South? |
9599 | Have the gifts and possessions received by me from others been conveyed in a way free from all unrighteousness? |
9599 | Have the people reflected upon the cause of this silence? |
9599 | He that planted the ear, shall He not hear? |
9599 | He who formed the eye, shall He not see?" |
9599 | How did Toussaint succeed? |
9599 | How faithful, yet, withal, how full of kindness, were his rebukes of those who refused labor its just reward, and ground the faces of the poor? |
9599 | How far am I in thought, word, custom, responsible for this? |
9599 | In Hayti? |
9599 | In the partial experiments of some of the West India Islands? |
9599 | In what exigency has he been found wanting? |
9599 | Is all this in the ordinary course of nature? |
9599 | Is not this offering a reward for perjury? |
9599 | Is the rapid increase of a population of slaves in itself no evil? |
9599 | Is this a remedy? |
9599 | Is this thy neck, that curve of moonlight Which Helva''s hand caressed? |
9599 | Let her and Falsehood grapple; whoever knew her to be put to the worst in a free and open encounter?" |
9599 | Nay, is it not his duty to be merry, by main force if necessary? |
9599 | Need I refer to the many revolts of the Roman and Grecian slaves, the bloody insurrection of Etruria, the horrible servile wars of Sicily and Capua? |
9599 | Occasionally, in Considerations on the Keeping of? |
9599 | Of what use to the district of Plymouth( which he there represented) was the standing army of the United States? |
9599 | Once more we repeat the solemn inquiry which has been already made in our columns,"Is the Bible to enslave the world?" |
9599 | Or, to come down to later times, to France in the fourteenth century, Germany in the sixteenth, to Malta in the last? |
9599 | Out of the depths of burdened and weary hearts comes up the agonizing inquiry,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
9599 | Palliating the evil, hiding the evil, voting for the evil, do we not participate in it? |
9599 | Shall we denounce the slave- holders of the states, while we retain our slavery in the District of Columbia? |
9599 | That ark must fall; that idol must be cast down; what, then, will be the fate of their supporters? |
9599 | The truths of the gospel, its voice of warning and exhortation, will be denounced as incendiary? |
9599 | To loose the bands of wickedness; to undo the heavy burdens and let the oppressed go free, and that ye break every yoke?" |
9599 | To what remedy, then, can the friends of humanity betake themselves but to that of emancipation? |
9599 | True; but will you point out instances of masters suffering the penalty of that law for the murder of their slaves? |
9599 | Was not his evil finger manifested in the contumacious heresy of Roger Williams? |
9599 | Were not the good St. Pierre, and Fenelon, and Howard, and Clarkson visionaries also? |
9599 | Were the Puritans themselves the men to cast stones at the Quakers and Baptists? |
9599 | What are their qualifications? |
9599 | What but a few months ago arrayed in arms a state against the Union, and the Union against a state? |
9599 | What has it done for amelioration? |
9599 | What has made desolate and sterile one of the loveliest regions of the whole earth? |
9599 | What in fact was the occupation of the army? |
9599 | What is slavery? |
9599 | What is the moral suggested by this record? |
9599 | What legislative act of public utility for the last eighteen years has lacked his encouragement? |
9599 | What shook the pillars of the Union when the Missouri question was agitated? |
9599 | What was John Woolman, to the wise and prudent of his day, but an amiable enthusiast? |
9599 | What, then, is our duty? |
9599 | What, to those of our own, is such an angel of mercy as Dorothea Dix? |
9599 | When, where, did justice to the injured waken their hate and vengeance? |
9599 | When, where, did love and kindness and sympathy irritate and madden the persecuted, the broken- hearted, the foully wronged? |
9599 | Where, then, will be the pride, the beauty, and the chivalry of the South? |
9599 | Who does not feel the power of this simple picture of the old man in the last- mentioned poem? |
9599 | Why are we thus willing to believe a lie? |
9599 | Why do n''t you throw off your Quaker coats as I do mine, and show yourselves as you are?" |
9599 | Why not let well enough alone? |
9599 | Why tinker creeds, constitutions, and laws, and disturb the good old- fashioned order of things in church and state? |
9599 | Why, then, should not even the doctor have his fun? |
9599 | Why, then, should we stretch out our hands towards our Southern brethren, and like the Pharisee thank God we are not like them? |
9599 | Will the evidence of your own Jefferson, on this point, be admissible? |
9599 | Will you, gentlemen, will the able editors of the United States Telegraph and the Columbian Telescope, explain? |
9599 | Yet is there not another side to the picture? |
9599 | perhaps you will ask,"do you expect to overthrow our whole slave system at once? |
9599 | shall we heed the unrighteous prohibition? |
9599 | to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free?" |
9599 | to turn loose to- day two millions of negroes?" |
26282 | ''Are you very ill?'' 26282 ''What ails her?'' |
26282 | A child? |
26282 | A yellow bird? |
26282 | Adelpha, do you forget that she is a player? |
26282 | Alice, are you afraid of the witches, which seem to disturb Mr. Parris and Cotton Mather? |
26282 | And alone? |
26282 | And do not you? |
26282 | And does Cora know of this? |
26282 | And have you done everything? |
26282 | And her mother? |
26282 | And how you planned for a glorious future? |
26282 | And my child? |
26282 | And what do you expect now? |
26282 | And what was it, pray? |
26282 | And who is Cora Waters? |
26282 | And will he wait until it has ended? |
26282 | And you followed him? |
26282 | And you will not give her up? |
26282 | And your mother? |
26282 | Another visitor? 26282 Are there witches now?" |
26282 | Are they friends? |
26282 | Are you John Louder? |
26282 | Are you a Protestant? |
26282 | Are you he whom I found by the brook, wounded and dying? |
26282 | Are you hungry? |
26282 | Are you mad? |
26282 | Are you not happy with me? |
26282 | Are you not my father? |
26282 | Are you willing to help us? |
26282 | Are your plans formed? |
26282 | Arrest me? 26282 But Cora-- can I see her?" |
26282 | But who hurt you next? |
26282 | Can I go? |
26282 | Can it be that you intend to spare my life? |
26282 | Can we catch witches? |
26282 | Can you ask me if I believe my own eyes and my own ears? |
26282 | Can you do it? |
26282 | Can you make your way to those houses? |
26282 | Can you not be more, Charles? |
26282 | Can you ride? |
26282 | Can you suspect that such news will be welcome tidings in this home? |
26282 | Certainly, Pete, why not? 26282 Charles Stevens, do you seek death?" |
26282 | Charles Stevens, have you ever thought that, after all, this, too, may be a delusion? 26282 Charles Stevens, what say you, now that your eyes have witnessed these abominations?" |
26282 | Charles, Charles, is it you? |
26282 | Charles, Charles, why persecutest thou me? 26282 Charles, can you really think your case so serious?" |
26282 | Charles, it is you? 26282 Charles, was not Mr. Parris here the other morning?" |
26282 | Charles, were you with her when it happened? |
26282 | Charles, why did you not tarry in the west? |
26282 | Charles, why have you and your mother grievously opposed me? |
26282 | Charles, why say you that? |
26282 | Charles, why seek to deceive me in that way, when I know full well that what I tell you is surely truth? 26282 Charles, you see the soldiers of Governor Andros at the State- house?" |
26282 | Concerning the pardon? |
26282 | Cora, are you tired of me? 26282 Cora, do n''t you think there is some mystery about those brothers, which you do not understand?" |
26282 | Cora, it is I, are you afraid of me? |
26282 | Cora, may it not be dangerous so far on the frontier? |
26282 | Cora, what strange mystery surrounds your life? |
26282 | Could you hear what it said? |
26282 | D''ye suppose we is brudders? |
26282 | Did he want to take you away with him? |
26282 | Did she die in England? |
26282 | Did they come here together? |
26282 | Did you anticipate this accusation? |
26282 | Did you comfort her? |
26282 | Did you know the witch? |
26282 | Did you never hear of the pinnace? |
26282 | Did you see the party of witches at Deacon Ingersol''s? |
26282 | Did you sign it, John? |
26282 | Did you suffer from Rebecca Nurse again? |
26282 | Did you? |
26282 | Do I seem sad? |
26282 | Do n''t you know me, Hattie Stevens? 26282 Do n''t you remember aught of your mother?" |
26282 | Do you belong here? |
26282 | Do you bid me hope? |
26282 | Do you ever talk with her about England? |
26282 | Do you go with us? |
26282 | Do you intend to live always thus alone? |
26282 | Do you know any one in England to whom your child could be sent? |
26282 | Do you know her relatives? |
26282 | Do you know that Mr. Parris hath begun to cry out against some of the people? |
26282 | Do you know the writing? |
26282 | Do you know they are in prison? |
26282 | Do you know whether she be living or dead? |
26282 | Do you know who I am? |
26282 | Do you love her? |
26282 | Do you mean the Indians? |
26282 | Do you not see her? 26282 Do you remember seeing her?" |
26282 | Do you suppose danger is over? |
26282 | Do you want to go away, Cora? |
26282 | Do you? |
26282 | Does he never talk of her? |
26282 | Dream, was it? |
26282 | England is your birth- place? |
26282 | Ere long I must we d, and which of the twain shall it be? 26282 Father, father, why do n''t you speak?" |
26282 | Father, have you heard anything more? |
26282 | For what charge? |
26282 | For what? |
26282 | George Waters, where are you going with me? |
26282 | George, you believed me guilty when you abandoned me at Edinburgh? |
26282 | George,she said with a smile,"you will let me talk with you now?" |
26282 | Has she always lived in New York? |
26282 | Has she never mentioned her mother''s name? |
26282 | Has the slave been sold? |
26282 | Has your father ever told you about her? |
26282 | Hath not your mother told you of it? |
26282 | Have I offended you, Cora? |
26282 | Have you a mother? |
26282 | Have you any friends in England? |
26282 | Have you been long here? |
26282 | Have you but just come? |
26282 | Have you ever had any personal experience? |
26282 | Have you got it? |
26282 | Have you lived a long while in this town? |
26282 | Have you never asked about her? |
26282 | Have you never asked him about her? |
26282 | Have you never learned the fate of your husband, Sarah? |
26282 | Have you no friends or relatives in England? |
26282 | Have you no hope of escaping? |
26282 | Have you relatives in Boston? |
26282 | Have you relatives in Virginia? |
26282 | Have you seen a white man? |
26282 | Ho, Charles Stevens, where were you last Lord''s Day? |
26282 | How are the afflicted children? |
26282 | How can I help myself? 26282 How can you be so calm, knowing all as you do?" |
26282 | How could she get to the edge, when it is round? |
26282 | How could you have heard it? |
26282 | How have you been, John? |
26282 | How long have you known Adelpha? |
26282 | How long since he left? |
26282 | How many were there? |
26282 | How much did you give for him? |
26282 | How would you, pray? |
26282 | How? |
26282 | I do not; but what sin follows being the child of a player, or being even a player? 26282 Is Charles Stevens in?" |
26282 | Is Rebecca Nurse your enemy? |
26282 | Is it wrong for a young maid such as I to keep their company? |
26282 | Is one Robert Stevens? |
26282 | Is that true, Tituba? |
26282 | Is the child a slave? |
26282 | Is your father going to take you away? |
26282 | Is your father''s brother with him? |
26282 | John Kembal, have you, too, gone mad over this delusion of witchcraft? |
26282 | John Louder, wherefore came you so early, when I thought you had gone to stalk the deer and would not come before morning? |
26282 | May I see her? |
26282 | May I? |
26282 | Mother, do you ever talk with Cora? |
26282 | Mother, has any one been here since we left? |
26282 | Mother, how can he injure me? |
26282 | Mr. Parris, may we not be mistaken in what constitutes the service of the Master? |
26282 | My mother? |
26282 | No, Bradley, have you? |
26282 | Nor do you believe in the infallibility of the pope? |
26282 | Nor have you seen any one from there? |
26282 | Not even in self defence? |
26282 | Oh, Charles, what shall we do? |
26282 | Perhaps you have been one all along? |
26282 | Pray what do you mean? |
26282 | Pray, how came it about? |
26282 | Prythee, what are you doing? |
26282 | Ridden twenty leagues? |
26282 | Sarah Williams, what are you doing here? |
26282 | Sarah Williams, where have you been, that we have seen nothing of you for a fortnight? |
26282 | Sarah, have you not heard from your husband? |
26282 | So I perceive, and why should he trail us? |
26282 | So you have turned atheist? |
26282 | Spoken like a philosopher,she answered;"but, Charles, if you see evil in the future, why not all go away?" |
26282 | Surely I never did him harm, and why doth he assail me so cruelly? |
26282 | Then of what do you accuse her? |
26282 | Then wherefore is it here? |
26282 | Then wherefore not give him the ball, which he hath guarded from the deer? |
26282 | Then why do you avoid me? 26282 Then, pray, how could they learn of it save by the merest accident? |
26282 | To whom can you trace your troubles? |
26282 | Verily, we have; yet what profits it to us, Samuel Gray, when our guns fail to carry the ball to the place? 26282 Was I missed?" |
26282 | Was there not progress from Melendez to Roger Williams? 26282 Watching the sunset, are you?" |
26282 | Well, Bradley, what have you seen among them? |
26282 | Well, Thomas, have you looked over the lot? |
26282 | Well, why is we bofe called George? |
26282 | Well? |
26282 | Well? |
26282 | Were they both players? |
26282 | Were you going to take action for their rescue? |
26282 | What am your name? |
26282 | What answer does he make? |
26282 | What are his plans? |
26282 | What are they? |
26282 | What are you going to do now? |
26282 | What are you going to do with him? |
26282 | What are you going to do with it? |
26282 | What book was it? |
26282 | What book? |
26282 | What book? |
26282 | What did Mr. Parris say of you on last Lord''s day, Cora? |
26282 | What did he mean? |
26282 | What did she do to you? |
26282 | What did she do? |
26282 | What did this Goody Nurse do? |
26282 | What do you intend doing, uncle? 26282 What do you mean, uncle?" |
26282 | What do you mean? |
26282 | What do you want with Moll and the cart? |
26282 | What does she do? |
26282 | What does this mean? |
26282 | What harm has she done you? |
26282 | What has happened, Adelpha? |
26282 | What has happened? |
26282 | What hath she done? |
26282 | What have you heard, Sarah? |
26282 | What have you seen, Alice? |
26282 | What have you seen, John Kembal? |
26282 | What have you to say in extenuation of your conduct hitherto? |
26282 | What have you to say to this evidence? |
26282 | What is it? |
26282 | What is the matter, Sarah? |
26282 | What is the matter? |
26282 | What lights? |
26282 | What mean you, Sarah Williams? |
26282 | What mean you? |
26282 | What should we do if a witch were to catch us, Tituba? |
26282 | What sort of a man was he? |
26282 | What think you of it, Charles? |
26282 | What was it? |
26282 | What was it? |
26282 | What was she riding? |
26282 | What were you doing before you entered the duke''s army? |
26282 | What will they do with him? |
26282 | What will you do with the maid? |
26282 | What would become of your flowers? |
26282 | What would you consent to do to save your life? |
26282 | What would you say? |
26282 | What, Cora? |
26282 | When do you expect your father? |
26282 | When was it? |
26282 | When was it? |
26282 | When was it? |
26282 | When will he return? |
26282 | When will you act? |
26282 | When? |
26282 | When? |
26282 | When? |
26282 | When? |
26282 | When? |
26282 | Where are you going to take me? |
26282 | Where did she take hold of you? |
26282 | Where did you live before your father enlisted in the army of Monmouth? |
26282 | Where does he live? |
26282 | Where have you been since you were here, Harry? |
26282 | Where is Cora''s father? |
26282 | Where is he now, and what has been his fate? |
26282 | Where is he? |
26282 | Where is she, mother? |
26282 | Where is she? |
26282 | Where should we go? |
26282 | Where was she taken? |
26282 | Where would you go? |
26282 | Where? |
26282 | Where? |
26282 | Where? |
26282 | Wherefore do you laugh, unregenerated youth? |
26282 | Wherefore not? |
26282 | Wherefore would you have had me come an hour sooner? |
26282 | Wherefore would you? |
26282 | Which of the twain is it? |
26282 | Whither shall I go? |
26282 | Who are you? |
26282 | Who are you? |
26282 | Who do you see? |
26282 | Who hath told you? |
26282 | Who is he? |
26282 | Who is that woman? |
26282 | Who of you has the charter? |
26282 | Who said I was murdered? |
26282 | Who told you? |
26282 | Who was it? |
26282 | Who was there? |
26282 | Who will care for her there? |
26282 | Who? |
26282 | Who? |
26282 | Who? |
26282 | Who? |
26282 | Whom do you accuse? |
26282 | Whom does he threaten? |
26282 | Whom have you seen? |
26282 | Why are they your enemies? |
26282 | Why did he come? |
26282 | Why did you not call upon the name of God, and she would have gone? |
26282 | Why did you return to Salem? |
26282 | Why do you endure it? |
26282 | Why do you sit here, sir? |
26282 | Why do you torment me? |
26282 | Why not eat that before you go? |
26282 | Why not? 26282 Why not? |
26282 | Why not? |
26282 | Why not? |
26282 | Why should I not? |
26282 | Why should that alarm us? 26282 Why should we?" |
26282 | Why, Cora? |
26282 | Why? |
26282 | Woman, what mean you? |
26282 | Would you believe your eyes, young sceptic? |
26282 | Would you have a Catholic king? |
26282 | Yes, why not? |
26282 | Yes; but what more? |
26282 | You are Charles Stevens? |
26282 | You did once? 26282 You do not believe in the transubstantiation of the body and blood of Christ into the bread and wine of the Sacrament?" |
26282 | You do yet? |
26282 | You have been in the forest to- day? |
26282 | You have? 26282 You live at Salem?" |
26282 | You not believe in witches? |
26282 | Your father was captured at the battle of Sedgemore, was he not? |
26282 | Your parents are in Boston, are they not? |
26282 | ''Can you tell me where to find my lover?'' |
26282 | ''Do any of you doubt that the imps of darkness are in your presence? |
26282 | ''Have not I chosen you twelve,''--such was his text,--''and one of you is a devil?'' |
26282 | ''Who are you?'' |
26282 | 189"Which of the twain shall it be?" |
26282 | Abigail Williams was called to the stand and asked:"Abigail Williams, did you see a company at Mr. Parris''house eat and drink?" |
26282 | After the captain had taken two or three turns across the room, he paused and asked:"What is the assembly doing?" |
26282 | And he still assails Goody Nurse?" |
26282 | And your mother?" |
26282 | Are not all these but a blasphemous imitation of certain things recorded about our Saviour, or his prophets, or the saints in the kingdom of God?" |
26282 | Are these the misunderstood doctrines of total depravity?" |
26282 | Are you not afraid of what is coming upon you? |
26282 | Are you not ashamed, a woman of your profession, to afflict a poor creature so? |
26282 | Are you wholly given up to the evil one?" |
26282 | As Charles was about to leave the house, his mother asked:"Have you heard that Adelpha Leisler from New York is coming?" |
26282 | As Charles wended his way homeward, he pondered over the strange words of Sarah Williams, and asked himself:"What does she mean?" |
26282 | As they walked up the hill toward the house, the woman continued to ply Cora with questions:"Are you a native of America?" |
26282 | At last, becoming calmer, he said, in his deep sepulchral voice:"Charles, you do not like me?" |
26282 | At this moment, Cora, who had followed behind them and overheard their strange words, came forward and asked:"Father, what do you mean?" |
26282 | Can a man we d two? |
26282 | Can you deny such evidences as this?" |
26282 | Charles Stevens smiled and answered:"You do not expect me to be a coward?" |
26282 | Charles Stevens was a little amazed at the manner of the minister and asked:"Is your business with me?" |
26282 | Charles, why will you not denounce the child of that player?" |
26282 | Did Charles Stevens write to you?" |
26282 | Did not your shape come at me last night?" |
26282 | Did she bear up well under her great afflictions?" |
26282 | Did she, in her heart, entertain hatred for Adelpha? |
26282 | Did you see a witch?" |
26282 | Do n''t you remember how, in your boyhood, you looked forward with pleasure to the time when you would be a man?" |
26282 | Do they really paint?" |
26282 | Do you deny the word of God? |
26282 | Do you hear?" |
26282 | Do you hear?" |
26282 | Do you know what it is to die? |
26282 | Do you not remember some time ago a stranger was at your house, who mysteriously disappeared?" |
26282 | Do you not see they are taking your prisoners away?" |
26282 | Do you think me one of Satan''s imps?" |
26282 | Do you understand?" |
26282 | Doan ye nebber see a black man in de night?" |
26282 | Does he continue to denounce you?" |
26282 | Everybody running into the street was asking:"What has happened? |
26282 | Filled with wonder, Charles Stevens turned his eyes upon Cora, whose face expressed blank amazement, and asked:"What does this mean?" |
26282 | For a few moments, she stood looking about and then came directly to Cora and asked:"Young maid, do you live in this town?" |
26282 | George Waters cut the deer- skin thongs which bound him to the tree and, in a whisper, asked:"Can you walk?" |
26282 | George, whose soul seemed stirred with some deep emotions, asked:"Harry, while in England, in Stockton, did you see her?" |
26282 | Had she won him only to lose him? |
26282 | Have I not been kind to you?" |
26282 | Have I not been turned into a beast and ridden through thorns and briars at night and awoke to find myself in bed?" |
26282 | Have not the scales of infidelity fallen from your eyes? |
26282 | Have you been hurt?" |
26282 | Have you counted the cost of a leap in the dark?" |
26282 | He again conferred with his mother, and when she had heard all he had to tell, she was constrained to ask:"Who are they?" |
26282 | He pressed his hand to his side, as if suffering intolerable anguish, and murmured:"Will I find shelter there?" |
26282 | He sought to console her and, to change her mind to a more cheerful subject, asked:"Where is your father?" |
26282 | His passion choked him to silence at first; but as soon as he partially recovered his self- possession, he demanded:"Where is the charter?" |
26282 | How could he do otherwise, for there could be no harm in walking with the pastor? |
26282 | I am still young and fair, and wherefore not choose me?" |
26282 | I demanded why not? |
26282 | I thank my God, Samuel Parris, that I can, with the prophets of old, say, O, grave, where is thy victory?" |
26282 | Is it me you want to see?" |
26282 | Is not the way so plain that a wayfaring man, though a fool, can not err therein?" |
26282 | Looking out at the entry door, I saw the same woman, in the same garb again, and I said,''In God''s name, what do you come for?'' |
26282 | Magistrate.--"But what do you think of them?" |
26282 | Magistrate.--"Don''t you think they are bewitched?" |
26282 | Magistrate.--"If it be not your master, how comes your appearance to hurt these?" |
26282 | Magistrate.--"Well, what have you done toward this?" |
26282 | Many were there greeting relatives and friends; but she had no friend or relative, and what were all those people to her? |
26282 | Martin.--"How do I know? |
26282 | Next morning, Charles asked the stranger:"Are you not the man who came here in 1684, wounded?" |
26282 | Parris?" |
26282 | Parris?" |
26282 | Parris?" |
26282 | Parris?" |
26282 | Prince?" |
26282 | Prythee, what ails you, friend?" |
26282 | Prythee, what ails you, friend?"] |
26282 | Robert brought him food with his own hands and, as he ate, asked:"Do you want to see Cora?" |
26282 | She rose and, turning her white face to him, said:"Charles Stevens, which of the twain do you love best?" |
26282 | She sat upon me, grinning at me, and she said:"''Would ye speak if ye could?'' |
26282 | She started to her feet and asked:"Charles, who is that lovely, but shy young girl, whom I see hurrying along the path?" |
26282 | She was overwhelmed with hope and confusion for some moments; then, with a faltering voice, she asked:"Did you wish to see me?" |
26282 | Some time after, Bishop asked me if my father would grind her grist for her? |
26282 | Stoughton, 330 George Waters cut two stout sticks for crutches, 353"Charles Stevens, do you seek death?" |
26282 | Tell me that child is a witch? |
26282 | That the Bible may be only the uninspired work of man, and that there may be no beyond-- no God, save in nature?" |
26282 | The examining magistrates asked Bly:"Have you ever been transformed by the prisoner?" |
26282 | The great question which appeals to the heart of every Englishman to- day is, shall it be a Protestant or a Catholic?" |
26282 | The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed to- day, Had he thy reason, would he skip and play? |
26282 | The magistrate asked him:"John, who hurt you?" |
26282 | The negro clapped his hands, patted his foot on the floor and cried aloud:"Doan yer see um, Marster? |
26282 | The new charter was so liberal in all its provisions, that when he asked the question:"Shall we accept the new constitution or adhere to the old one?" |
26282 | The passionate minister glared at the youth for a moment and said:"Charles, do you deny that she is the child of a player?" |
26282 | The pastor, the visitor, and the wife exchanged significant glances, and the father asked:"Where did you see her?" |
26282 | The wanderer turned his sad and handsome face to the youth and asked:"Can you take us to shelter?" |
26282 | The woman asked:"Can you direct me to a house of public entertainment?" |
26282 | Their master----"Magistrate.--"Their master? |
26282 | Then he went to her side and asked:"Why are you so sad to- day?" |
26282 | Then the examining magistrate turned to the old, infirm and unfortunate prisoner, and asked:"What do you say, Goody Nurse, to these things?" |
26282 | Was any one else present? |
26282 | Was he drowned at sea, killed by the Indians, or murdered by the pirates?" |
26282 | Was he to be snatched from her side at the very moment that she found him her own? |
26282 | Waters again became thoughtful, and Robert asked:"Are you going to slay him?" |
26282 | Waters here?" |
26282 | Waters, do you know that your own daughter is one of the accused?" |
26282 | Waters, would you not be justified in killing him?" |
26282 | What answer could she make? |
26282 | What can you want here?" |
26282 | What do you want here?" |
26282 | What harm have they ever done you, that you, as a Christian man, might not forgive them?" |
26282 | What has gone amiss?" |
26282 | What has made him sad?" |
26282 | What hurt did I ever do you in my life? |
26282 | What is their causing cattle to run mad and perish? |
26282 | What is their making of the afflicted rise with a touch of their hand? |
26282 | What is their striking down with a fierce look? |
26282 | What is their transportation through the air? |
26282 | What is their travelling in spirit, while their body is cast into a trance? |
26282 | What is your name?" |
26282 | What strange spell was this which possessed her? |
26282 | What strange things have been transpiring since I left?" |
26282 | What was his object this lovely morn? |
26282 | What were their quarrels to him? |
26282 | When George Waters went out of the room, he was met by his daughter, Cora, who asked:"Father, who is she-- the woman in black?" |
26282 | When they were seated on the bank, Charles asked:"Cora, are you still persecuted by Mr. Parris? |
26282 | When will she come?" |
26282 | Where did they come from? |
26282 | Where is he? |
26282 | Where is your father?" |
26282 | Which of the two doth he love most? |
26282 | Who can it be?" |
26282 | Who hurt you? |
26282 | Who said I was dead?" |
26282 | Who, under such circumstances, would dare to be skeptical, or refuse to believe the confessors? |
26282 | Whom do you think is their master?" |
26282 | Whose son is he?" |
26282 | Why did they fly at our approach?" |
26282 | Why didst thou cast me into this place, where I would meet him, only to suffer? |
26282 | Why have you not told me of her before?" |
26282 | Why need he fear Mr. Parris? |
26282 | Why need one blame Spain for the infamous inquisition, when the early churches of Protestantism did fully as bad? |
26282 | Will you accompany me?" |
26282 | Will you fight them?" |
26282 | Will you trust me with old Moll and the cart to- night?" |
26282 | Will your father, as governor of New York, be disturbed?" |
26282 | With a gasping sob, she said:"But that other-- that awful thing?" |
26282 | Without answering his question, she asked:"What do you think of Goody Nurse and her sisters, Goody Cloyse and Goody Easty?" |
26282 | Wo n''t you let me go with you?" |
26282 | Would you deny the power of God?" |
26282 | You have sent no message?" |
26282 | You were not at Church last Lord''s day?" |
26282 | [ Illustration:"Charles Stevens, do you seek death?"] |
26282 | [ Illustration:"Which of the twain shall it be?"] |
26282 | and from his own lips?" |
26282 | and is this the road our ancestors had to travel in their pilgrimage in quest of freedom and Christianity? |
26282 | do you know they have been cried out upon?" |
26282 | doan yer see um, chillun?" |
26282 | from Cortez and Pizarro to William Penn? |
26282 | prythee, what ails you, friend?" |
26282 | some one from a grotto near by answered,''Ever?'' |
26282 | what offence have I done that I should be arrested by the king''s officers?" |
26282 | what were they doing?" |
26282 | where are you?" |
26282 | why will you speak so falsely? |
26282 | wilt thou save me from the wrath of these misguided people?" |
45756 | And what do your country children read? |
45756 | How did the Romans tell the time of day? |
45756 | Mister, do you buy the books here? |
45756 | Was there not very probably an extensive system of sale of duplicates? 45756 Will you buy one that I want?" |
45756 | ( 2) What remedies would you suggest to meet these difficulties? |
45756 | ( 3) Would you incorporate these suggestions in the laws of your state or in the charters of your cities? |
45756 | ***** And what as to the buildings in which these libraries are housed? |
45756 | ***** If we agree to omit fairy stories and folk tales and most juveniles what is the extent of short story literature? |
45756 | = Anatomy.= Why refer to Glands and not to Liver, the biggest gland in the body? |
45756 | A natural preliminary inquiry presents itself: Is reference work in all its phases adequately performed already? |
45756 | A personal question you can put to yourself is"What sort of mental lights have I? |
45756 | Again, how far abroad shall we go? |
45756 | And have we analyzed what these opportunities should be? |
45756 | And if librarians are so concerned, are they-- are we-- using the most effective methods to advance that part of our task? |
45756 | And is advertising the library just the same thing as advertising the books? |
45756 | And is consistency so absolutely necessary or desirable? |
45756 | And may I say what is my own ideal? |
45756 | And what is the reason? |
45756 | Are any persons of a higher grade than clerical attendant doing any of the above kinds of work, and why? |
45756 | Are my switches in perfect working order, or are my circuits crossed, and fuses melted so that my mind is in semi or complete darkness?" |
45756 | Are our libraries today manned by such assistants? |
45756 | Are there textile, steel or wood industries? |
45756 | Are they four candle power or thirty- two Tungsten? |
45756 | Are they good or bad? |
45756 | Are those of your assistants who write the titles occupied with this all day, or do they change regularly to some other kind of work? |
45756 | Are we not asking of the library schools what no other profession expects from its special schools? |
45756 | Are we not laboring patiently to classify our novels by subjects? |
45756 | Are we supplying the right books? |
45756 | Are you not in the valley of the Loire? |
45756 | At A. L. A. headquarters? |
45756 | At some library center like Boston, New York, Philadelphia or St. Louis? |
45756 | At the Library of Congress or under the auspices of some active state library commission? |
45756 | But could a course be planned that would fit candidates for such positions? |
45756 | But creating the reading habit-- well, is that quite the same thing? |
45756 | But do they always go the whole distance? |
45756 | But has he learned how to use the library? |
45756 | But has not the heaping of instruction upon enforced passivity led to an atrophy of the love of constructive creative labor? |
45756 | But is not this going far enough? |
45756 | But the wail of the professor provokes the question: Where do all the scholars and thinkers of the world come from? |
45756 | But when we pause to ask,"What do they read?" |
45756 | But who can frame a code of rules or formulate principles through which consistency in subject headings may be attained? |
45756 | Ca n''t you see the frowning front of Chinon, the gracious facade of Asay- le- Rideau, the lacelike stairway of Blois, the massive turrets of Amboise? |
45756 | Can it be that the library profession is the only one in which a systematic progression is not generally demanded? |
45756 | Can not the courses be simplified somewhat to permit this? |
45756 | Can they not co- operate with the American library association in presenting the claims and rewards of librarianship to young men in the universities? |
45756 | Catalog in loose- leaf form on something the same principle as Nelson''s Cyclopedia? |
45756 | Collation To include paging? |
45756 | Could it not be done that way? |
45756 | Debates also are an important feature of the history recitation:"Which contributed most to civilization, the Greeks or the Romans?" |
45756 | Detective or amorous? |
45756 | Did he talk about grammar? |
45756 | Do we get our bankers from business colleges, or the managers and presidents of our railroads from schools of engineering? |
45756 | Do we need an index? |
45756 | Do we perchance throw them into one great group and call them the public as distinguished from librarians? |
45756 | Do you doubt it? |
45756 | Do you remember that Miss Kelso said that we should be able to produce evidence in the way of results for the value of our work? |
45756 | Do you think the same kind of pictures come into the mind of the Frenchman as come into the mind of the German? |
45756 | Do you think the same sort of pictures are in the mind of the Englishman as are in the mind of the American? |
45756 | Do your clothes represent your individual taste? |
45756 | Does he not miss it now? |
45756 | Does it not rest with the library to teach persistently, systematically, and by every practicable means, how and where to find what to read? |
45756 | Does the community anywhere concern itself to give such opportunities? |
45756 | Dr. BOSTWICK: May I say just a word from the standpoint of one who is interested in the product of the library school, as making use of that product? |
45756 | Dreams? |
45756 | Drury, F. K. W.,"Do we need a short story index?" |
45756 | Finally, how are the library and business to co- operate for their mutual advantage? |
45756 | For book selection, a well nigh perfect technique has been established, but is technique enough? |
45756 | For if this is the day of the index, is it any less that of the short story? |
45756 | For these is not the library responsible? |
45756 | Had you thought about that? |
45756 | Handy, D. N.,"Library as a business asset; when and how?" |
45756 | Handy, to put your suggestion in the form of a motion now or later? |
45756 | Have books any compelling power over those who merely come into their presence, unless such people love the books or at least wish to read them? |
45756 | Have we any right to expect a library school to provide more than a small part of that experience and environment? |
45756 | Have we looked well to his necessary book qualifications and to his continued opportunities for improvement while serving the library? |
45756 | Have we not then three distinct classes of publications which can be indexed with profit? |
45756 | Have you any way of knowing? |
45756 | Have you ever been disappointed in reading a story? |
45756 | Have you ever seen a short story reviewed? |
45756 | Have you not often wished to know if it were a"good"one or"worth while"before you began it? |
45756 | Here we have the citizen at our mercy, why not see what we can do with him to help the cause of universal education? |
45756 | How and under what conditions did the early collegiate and monastic bodies part with these? |
45756 | How are they determined? |
45756 | How are we doing this? |
45756 | How are we to determine who is destined for administrative work and who for work of another sort? |
45756 | How can that co- operation be brought about? |
45756 | How can we share our treasures with a public that too often fails to appreciate its need for them? |
45756 | How can we tell about these short stories? |
45756 | How conserve their strength, well- being and joy? |
45756 | How could you have done it? |
45756 | How create the"leaven''d and preparà © d choice?" |
45756 | How do you find in which volume of Kipling is printed"Thrawn Janet"or his"Man who would be king?" |
45756 | How does he go about it? |
45756 | How far does any of this machinery go in advertising books as to their subject and scope, as the program has it? |
45756 | How inclusive shall our list be made? |
45756 | How leave him free to choose in a wide field? |
45756 | How many Americans of native stock? |
45756 | How many children of foreign born parents? |
45756 | How many copies of"The necklace"can you supply? |
45756 | How many library assistants really do read books for the joy of it? |
45756 | How many of the news- stand best sellers shall be admitted? |
45756 | How many of these are occupied with the actual writing of the titles? |
45756 | How many persons between the grades of head of department and clerical attendants are connected with your cataloging force? |
45756 | How many residents of foreign birth? |
45756 | How may the public library best meet the needs of these people, so many and so diverse? |
45756 | How may we coöperate in all this work by supplying the necessary books? |
45756 | How may we give others the practical knowledge that is needed by them in their varied occupations and activities? |
45756 | How much of that mental imagery have you secured as a result of your own first hand experience? |
45756 | How much of that mental imagery represents original thinking? |
45756 | How much of that psychic panorama have you received ready- made from the society to which you belong? |
45756 | How recent then shall we make our list? |
45756 | How shall such publicity as will give this knowledge of it be given? |
45756 | How shall we bring to the knowledge of the people information relating to this great work? |
45756 | How show, how make known the attraction and stored power of books? |
45756 | How would lawyers get on but for their monopoly of archaic forms of speech? |
45756 | If a central reference bureau is to be established, what form shall it take? |
45756 | If it is, then why have we not profited more by what we already know? |
45756 | If the colleges claim that there are few among their students who have any real knowledge of books, should not we count the failure partly ours? |
45756 | If the library commanded respect would it not receive funds? |
45756 | Imprint? |
45756 | In face of all this, where does the library of today stand? |
45756 | In how many grades are these divided? |
45756 | In how many has this joy been killed; in how many has it never been created? |
45756 | Indeed, have you not often refrained from reading one for fear of wasting your time? |
45756 | Is he not better that he finds for himself in the book what feeds his mind? |
45756 | Is it better to enter under Chemistry, Physiological, or Physiological chemistry? |
45756 | Is it enough to turn a man loose in a roomful of books, all beckoning to him and standing in rows expectant to be chosen, like children in a game? |
45756 | Is it not needed? |
45756 | Is it not possible, in a small way at least, to cultivate their taste and give them some desire to read what is worth while? |
45756 | Is n''t it as good a story as ever Anthony Hope or as ever George Barr McCutcheon wrote? |
45756 | Is not the value of Granger immensely increased by the topical index? |
45756 | Is not this the day of the index? |
45756 | Is the library, then, a business asset? |
45756 | Is the library, too, becoming materialized? |
45756 | Is the stream going steadily on, or is it rather like a babbling brook, making a pleasant murmur but with little power? |
45756 | Is there a science of administration which can be taught? |
45756 | Is there any relation between this dearth of idealism and the reading habits of the nation? |
45756 | It might be more soul- satisfying to me to hand out to my chicken boy books that minister to more attenuated needs-- but what about the boy? |
45756 | It runs--"... Have you laid the foundation of a great public library in California? |
45756 | May I ask Mr. R. R. Bowker, whom I see in the box, to reply for the audience? |
45756 | May I tell you what my thinking has been? |
45756 | May not the library expect good measure of publicity from the reputation it has for real accomplishment? |
45756 | Moreover, what is the use of cramming them down his throat when you can squirt them into him with a psychological hypodermic? |
45756 | Most of them have been written about for librarians; why ca n''t we have them written about now for the general public? |
45756 | Mr HANDY: Will it be in order now to take up the matter of special education for the special training of library assistants? |
45756 | Must we read every one to find out? |
45756 | My problem is the much more practical: What part of the work of a library staff is meant when cataloging is spoken of in an annual report? |
45756 | Newspapers, periodicals, novels, the popular books of the hour-- yes, but how many of the books of all time? |
45756 | Next on the program was Mr. A. G. S. JOSEPHSON''S query WHAT IS CATALOGING? |
45756 | Not books? |
45756 | Now of what value will this course be in providing teaching experience to the normal student? |
45756 | Now what will the earning power of this special reference library be? |
45756 | Now, does the need exist for librarians who are trained to teach? |
45756 | Now, how does the librarian advertise? |
45756 | Of course Canadian wood means the wood of the maple and how does that wonderful close fiber come into being? |
45756 | Or because Botany, Structural, is preferable to Structural botany, should we use Physics, Agricultural, instead of Agricultural physics? |
45756 | Or shall they be aliens and only admitted when really anglicized? |
45756 | Or shall we stay within the circle of the Readers''Guide and the Magazine subject index? |
45756 | Precisely what significance do you give to''life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?''" |
45756 | Psychological or mysterious? |
45756 | Shall it be attached to some institution already in operation or exist independently? |
45756 | Shall the Saturday Evening Post and the two Sunday magazines be indexed? |
45756 | Shall the short stories in foreign tongues fraternize with their English cousins? |
45756 | Shall we anticipate the Get- rich- quick Wallingford tale announced for next month? |
45756 | Shall we double star the 100 best and star the 500 next? |
45756 | Shall we then describe what we have in mind when we speak of the library that may become a business asset? |
45756 | Shaw, R. K.,"Is the establishment of a central reference bureau desirable?" |
45756 | Should we not expect the schools to supply more men? |
45756 | Supplied information to be bracketed? |
45756 | THE LIBRARY AS A BUSINESS ASSET; WHEN AND HOW? |
45756 | The PRESIDENT: What is your pleasure, Ladies and Gentlemen? |
45756 | The PRESIDENT: What is your pleasure? |
45756 | The VICE- PRESIDENT: Do you wish the committee to be continued? |
45756 | The governors of sovereign states come together, for what? |
45756 | The question is, can the schools go further than this? |
45756 | The question may be raised,"How shall we secure the money for this great work?" |
45756 | The questions remaining are: What kind of co- operation is most effective? |
45756 | The topic has been changed by the speaker so, that it reads,"The library as a business asset; when and how?" |
45756 | Then the question comes, are you helping, yourself, to make up these bibliographies? |
45756 | Under Negro suffrage or Negroes-- Suffrage? |
45756 | Under Psychology, Educational, or Educational psychology? |
45756 | WHAT DO THE PEOPLE WANT? |
45756 | Was there ever a time when pictorial imagery was presented to the public as in these days? |
45756 | We are to get the answer to the question,"What do the people want?" |
45756 | We may now ask ourselves: What would be the scope of the entries? |
45756 | Welles, Jessie,"What do the people want?" |
45756 | What Granger is to poetry, may we not compile for the short story? |
45756 | What are some of the revelations which have been made to those of us who reluctantly undertook this work some eight or ten years ago? |
45756 | What are the pictures that come into your minds as librarians? |
45756 | What are the races represented-- English speaking, Germanic, Slavic, Latin, etc.? |
45756 | What are the social and economic conditions? |
45756 | What are the things that matter in training? |
45756 | What are their occupations? |
45756 | What authoritative material may we find on all these subjects, and how may we make it of valuable use? |
45756 | What but all the people of these two great experiments in democratic society? |
45756 | What does it mean when a librarian states that a certain number of assistants have during a certain period cataloged a certain number of books? |
45756 | What does"public"signify in Canada and the United States? |
45756 | What has occupation to do with conservation? |
45756 | What has the school given them with which to fight the battles of democracy? |
45756 | What have all the great nations of Western Europe done? |
45756 | What is a great novel? |
45756 | What is a novel? |
45756 | What is being done in our city for the fine arts; for natural science; for the study of literature; for religious and ethical teaching? |
45756 | What is it that makes life interesting? |
45756 | What is literature and how does it come into being? |
45756 | What is our concern with this lad? |
45756 | What is the average salary of the members of your cataloging force? |
45756 | What is the pleasure of this conference? |
45756 | What is the situation? |
45756 | What is the use of his getting a knowledge of the subject if he can not really use it? |
45756 | What is your pleasure? |
45756 | What keeps up the breed? |
45756 | What man or woman can not look back to the inspiration of some finding of his own for which he owes no one but his Creator? |
45756 | What manufacturing is done, and what raw materials are used? |
45756 | What means the present commotion which bursts through conventional conventions of polite speech? |
45756 | What of its markets? |
45756 | What of its transportation? |
45756 | What of their education and à ¦ sthetic development? |
45756 | What shall I do?" |
45756 | What shall be done that this"light of human achievement"shall penetrate the cloud of ignorance and cause the lamp of wisdom to burn in every home? |
45756 | What shall be the principles of buying? |
45756 | What shall the tests of fitness for such service be? |
45756 | What sort of a stream of consciousness have I? |
45756 | When that picture comes on the screen of your mind the spectator within you shrinks and says:"Why must we look at that? |
45756 | When we have to make conversation, what do we do? |
45756 | When you look at the turrets of that beautiful Chateau Laurier, what do you see? |
45756 | Where shall we draw our line? |
45756 | Where shall we draw this line? |
45756 | Where should such an agency be established? |
45756 | Who are the people whom we are to serve? |
45756 | Who are we but"the public"to the actor, the artist, the man in the railway office? |
45756 | Who is the original person? |
45756 | Who knows it? |
45756 | Why did you choose the last book you read? |
45756 | Why do so many men give up reading when they leave college? |
45756 | Why do the pleasant little informal chats in the Chicago book bulletin about the troubles of the reference department meet with so wide a response? |
45756 | Why do we not give them something more than a bare list of accessions? |
45756 | Why do you dress as you do? |
45756 | Why do your people flock over to those prairies? |
45756 | Why does he not try to do a little of that which the merchant spends millions in trying to do-- transmit that confidence to his patron? |
45756 | Why is Mr. Wellman''s charming booklet about"Some modern verse"still kept in every librarian''s little private file of things really worth keeping? |
45756 | Why is it that when we receive the St. Louis bulletin, we turn first to the page of"Books I like and why I like them?" |
45756 | Why not also the short story? |
45756 | Why should I have cloth in my house because it is cheap-- when it is transfused by the blood of women in Leeds? |
45756 | Why should I want a coat on my back that carries with it the stain of tears from children who have had no chance? |
45756 | Why should a public library put an expensive assistant into a high school, where, after all, the actual numbers affected are small? |
45756 | Why should there have been? |
45756 | Why to Chest and not to Lungs? |
45756 | Why try to say it again when the philosopher has said it so exactly? |
45756 | Why, when his business is book selection, and he knows he prosecutes it faithfully, is he so afraid of being caught at it? |
45756 | Why? |
45756 | Why? |
45756 | Will not some library make trial of this method? |
45756 | Will the secretary please read once more the recommendations from the report of the Executive board? |
45756 | With definite assignments, under an editor- in- chief, is not this index possible? |
45756 | Without the subject characterization one man could do it, but would not one of the most valuable features be omitted? |
45756 | Would not such an index show that this story appeared in the Century for January, 1902, under the title"The gentleman of the plush rocker"? |
45756 | You laugh at that, but how about"Harry Richmond?" |
45756 | and,"Which can pay the higher salary-- public library or high school?" |
45756 | free public library, spoke on the subject IS THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A CENTRAL REFERENCE BUREAU DESIRABLE? |
45756 | title writing) all the time, and other days given up to other kinds of work? |
45756 | to investigate cost and method of cataloging, 193;"What is cataloging?" |
9567 | ''I love you: on that love alone, And not my worth, presuming, Will you not trust for summer fruit The tree in May- day blooming?'' 9567 ''Nor frock nor tan can hide the man; And see you not, my farmer, How weak and fond a woman waits Behind this silken armor? |
9567 | ''What dost thou here, poor man? 9567 ''You go as lightly as you came, Your life is well without me; What care you that these hills will close Like prison- walls about me? |
9567 | And, if in peril from swamping sea Or lee shore rocks, would he call on thee? |
9567 | But what of my lady? |
9567 | But where are the clowns and puppets, And imps with horns and tail? 9567 Come hither, child, and say hast thou This young man ever seen?" |
9567 | Did we count on this? 9567 Have not,"he asks,"these negroes as much right to fight for their freedom as you have to keep them slaves?" |
9567 | Here''s a priest and there is a Quaker, Do the cat and dog agree? 9567 Is an English Christian''s home A chapel or a mass- house, that you make the sign of Rome?" |
9567 | Is it a chapel bell that fills The air with its low tone? |
9567 | Know''st thou,he said,"thy gift of old?" |
9567 | Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old, Shall we see the poor and righteous again for silver sold? |
9567 | Midst soulless forms, and false pretence Of spiritual pride and pampered sense, A voice saith,''What is that to thee? 9567 My name indeed is Mary,"said the stranger sobbing wild;"Will you be to me a mother? |
9567 | O sister of El Zara''s race, Behold me!--had we not one mother? |
9567 | Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen, The flower of Ireland? 9567 Shall we demur"Because the vision tarrieth? |
9567 | She looked up in his face of pain So archly, yet so tender''And if I lend you mine,''she said,''Will you forgive the lender? 9567 Thou of the God- lent crown, Shall these vile creatures dare Murmur against thee where The knees of kings kneel down?" |
9567 | Thou weariest of thy present state; What gain to thee time''s holiest date? 9567 What is it I see?" |
9567 | What is it to thee, I fain would know, That waves are roaring and wild winds blow? 9567 What is it, my Pastorius?" |
9567 | What is this? |
9567 | What seek ye? |
9567 | What thought Chorazin''s scribes? 9567 Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and sweet, Seen in thy father''s dwelling, heard in the pleasant street? |
9567 | Who is losing? 9567 Who knocks?" |
9567 | Whom shall we give the strong ones? 9567 Why should folk be glum,"said Keezar,"When Nature herself is glad, And the painted woods are laughing At the faces so sour and sad?" |
9567 | Why wait to see in thy brief span Its perfect flower and fruit in man? 9567 Would the old folk know their children? |
9567 | Yonder spire Over gray roofs, a shaft of fire; What is it, pray? |
9567 | A fawn beside the bison grim,-- Why turns the bride''s fond eye on him, In whose cold look is naught beside The triumph of a sullen pride? |
9567 | And Anna''s aloe? |
9567 | And could it be, she trembling asked, Some secret thought or sin Had shut good angels from her heart And let the bad ones in? |
9567 | And did a secret sympathy possess That tender soul, and for the slave''s redress Lend hope, strength, patience? |
9567 | And he, so gentle, true, and strong, Of men the bravest and the best, Had he, too, scorned her with the rest? |
9567 | And o''er her vault of burial( who shall tell If it be chance alone or miracle?) |
9567 | And the pressure of his arm, And his breathing near and warm? |
9567 | And what to her is now the boy Who fed her father''s kine? |
9567 | And where are the Rhenish flagons? |
9567 | And where is the foaming ale? |
9567 | And who shall deem the spot unblest, Where Nature''s younger children rest, Lulled on their sorrowing mother''s breast? |
9567 | And, as the slow hours passed, Would he doubt her faith at last? |
9567 | Are His responsibilities For us alone and not for these? |
9567 | Before her queenly womanhood How dared our hostess utter The paltry errand of her need To buy her fresh- churned butter? |
9567 | But hark!--from wood and rock flung back, What sound comes up the Merrimac? |
9567 | But he knelt with his hand on her forehead, his lips to her ear, And he called back the soul that was passing"Marguerite, do you hear?" |
9567 | But in their hour of bitterness, What reek the broken Sokokis, Beside their slaughtered chief, of this? |
9567 | But when she saw through the misty pane, The morning break on a sea of rain, Could even her love avail To follow his vanished sail? |
9567 | Canst thou hear me? |
9567 | Could it be his fathers ever Loved to linger here? |
9567 | Deem ye that mother loveth less These bronzed forms of the wilderness She foldeth in her long caress? |
9567 | Did all thy memories die with thee? |
9567 | Did boyhood frolic in the snow? |
9567 | Did child feet patter on the stair? |
9567 | Did gray age, in her elbow chair, Knit, rocking to and fro? |
9567 | Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way That Adam heard in the cool of day? |
9567 | Did he pace the sands? |
9567 | Did he pause to hear The sound of her light step drawing near? |
9567 | Did light girl laughter ripple through the bushes, As brooks make merry over roots and rushes? |
9567 | Did maidens, swaying back and forth In rhythmic grace, at wheel and loom, Make light their toil with mirth? |
9567 | Did rustic lovers hither come? |
9567 | Did the boy''s whistle answer back the thrushes? |
9567 | Did we leave behind The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease Of our English hearths and homes, to find Troublers of Israel such as these? |
9567 | Do I look on Frankfort fair? |
9567 | Does, then, immortal memory play The actor''s tragic part, Rehearsals of a mortal life And unveiled human heart? |
9567 | For his tempted heart and wandering feet, Were the songs of David less pure and sweet? |
9567 | Had He sent His angel down? |
9567 | Had he not seen in the solitudes Of his deep and dark Northampton woods A vision of love about him fall? |
9567 | Had she in some forgotten dream Let go her hold on Heaven, And sold herself unwittingly To spirits unforgiven? |
9567 | Had then God heard her? |
9567 | Has not a cry of pain been heard Above the clattering mill? |
9567 | Hast thou not read,''Better the eye should see than that desire Should wander?'' |
9567 | Have they burned the stocks for ovenwood? |
9567 | Have they cut down the gallows- tree? |
9567 | Have they not in the North Sea''s blast Bowed to the waves the straining mast? |
9567 | He comes with a careless"How d''ye do?" |
9567 | He erred: shall we count His gifts as naught? |
9567 | Hearts are like wax in the furnace; who Shall mould, and shape, and cast them anew? |
9567 | I often said to myself,''My sole study has been to merit well of mankind; why do I fear them?''" |
9567 | I see her face, I hear her voice; Does she remember mine? |
9567 | If he kept This gold, so needed, would the dreadful God Torment him like a Mohawk''s captive stuck With slow- consuming splinters? |
9567 | If it flowered at last In Bartram''s garden, did John Woolman cast A glance upon it as he meekly passed? |
9567 | Impatient of our Father''s time And His appointed way? |
9567 | In the over- drift And flow of the Nile, with its annual gift, Who cares for the Hadji''s relics sunk? |
9567 | Is it a fete at Bingen? |
9567 | Is it the Indian''s yell, That lends to the voice of the north- wind The tones of a far- off bell? |
9567 | Is it the clang of wild- geese? |
9567 | Is there madness in her brain? |
9567 | Living or dying, bond or free, What was time to eternity? |
9567 | One healed the sick Very far off thousands of moons ago Had he not prayed him night and day to come And cure his bed- bound wife? |
9567 | One with courteous gesture lifted the bear- skin from his head;"Lives here Elkanah Garvin?" |
9567 | Or cold self- torturing pride like his atone For love denied and life''s warm beauty flown? |
9567 | Or shall the stir of outward things Allure and claim the Christian''s eye, When on the heathen watcher''s ear Their powerless murmurs die? |
9567 | Or thy own prophet''s,''Whoso doth endure And pardon, of eternal life is sure''? |
9567 | Out spake the King to Henrik, his young and faithful squire"Dar''st trust thy little Elsie, the maid of thy desire?" |
9567 | SPEAK and tell us, our Ximena, looking northward far away, O''er the camp of the invaders, o''er the Mexican array, Who is losing? |
9567 | Shall I pity them? |
9567 | Shall I spare? |
9567 | She kissed the lips of kith and kin, She laid her hand in mine What more could ask the bashful boy Who fed her father''s kine? |
9567 | Should the worm be chooser?--the clay withstand The shaping will of the potter''s hand? |
9567 | Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost, and who has won? |
9567 | That over the holy oracles Folly sported with cap and bells? |
9567 | The Moslem''s sunset- call, the dance Of Ceylon''s maids, the passing gleam Of battle- flag and lance? |
9567 | The angel brought One broad piece only; should he take all these? |
9567 | The pawing of an unseen horse, Who waits his mistress still? |
9567 | The steed stamped at the castle gate, The boar- hunt sounded on the hill; Why stayed the Baron from the chase, With looks so stern, and words so ill? |
9567 | Then to the stout sea- captains the sheriff, turning, said,--"Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this Quaker maid? |
9567 | Then up spake a Scottish maiden, With her ear unto the ground"Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it? |
9567 | These bare hills, this conquered river,-- Could they hold them dear, With their native loveliness Tamed and tortured into this? |
9567 | Thou hast our prayers;--what can we give thee more?" |
9567 | Was I more than these? |
9567 | Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze Sang in their saddest of minor keys? |
9567 | Was it a dream, or did she hear Her lover''s whistled tune? |
9567 | Was it an angel or a fiend Whose voice be heard? |
9567 | Was that the tread of many feet, Which downward from the hillside beat? |
9567 | Was the Hebrew temple less fair and good That Solomon bowed to gods of wood? |
9567 | Was the work of God in him unwrought? |
9567 | Was there a hell? |
9567 | We walk in clearer light;--but then, Is He not God?--are they not men? |
9567 | Wequashim, my moonlight, say, Wilt thou go with me, or stay?" |
9567 | Were all his fathers''people writhing there-- Like the poor shell- fish set to boil alive-- Forever, dying never? |
9567 | Were any we d, were any born, Beneath this low roof- tree? |
9567 | What blessing is thy choice?" |
9567 | What cares she that the orioles build For other eyes than ours,-- That other hands with nuts are filled, And other laps with flowers? |
9567 | What could it matter, more or less Of stripes, and hunger, and weariness? |
9567 | What faith In Him had Nain and Nazareth? |
9567 | What ghost his unforgiven sin Is grinding o''er and o''er? |
9567 | What goodwife sent the earliest smoke Up the great chimney flue? |
9567 | What hate of heresy the east- wind woke? |
9567 | What heard they? |
9567 | What hints of pitiless power and terror spoke In waves that on their iron coast- line broke? |
9567 | What is the shame that clothes the skin To the nameless horror that lives within? |
9567 | What matter if the gains are small That life''s essential wants supply? |
9567 | What matter whose the hillside grave, Or whose the blazoned stone? |
9567 | What nameless horror of the past Broods here forevermore? |
9567 | What noble knight was this? |
9567 | What sea- worn barks are those which throw The light spray from each rushing prow? |
9567 | What sounds are these But chants and holy hymns?" |
9567 | What though the places of their rest No priestly knee hath ever pressed,-- No funeral rite nor prayer hath blessed? |
9567 | What to her was the song of the robin, or warm morning light, As she lay in the trance of the dying, heedless of sound or sight? |
9567 | What was it his fond eyes met? |
9567 | What was it the mournful wood- thrush said? |
9567 | What was it the parting lovers heard? |
9567 | What was the world without to them? |
9567 | What whispered the pine- trees overhead? |
9567 | What wolf has been prowling My castle within?" |
9567 | What words for modest maiden''s ear? |
9567 | When such lovers meet each other, Why should prying idlers stay? |
9567 | Where be the youths whose glances, the summer Sabbath through, Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father''s pew? |
9567 | Whether her fate she met On the shores of Carraquette, Miscou, or Tracadie, who can say? |
9567 | Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand and faintly smiled; Was that pitying face his mother''s? |
9567 | Who from its bed of primal rock First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block? |
9567 | Who is strong, If these be weak? |
9567 | Who knows what goadings in their sterner way O''er jagged ice, relieved by granite gray, Blew round the men of Massachusetts Bay? |
9567 | Who shall rebuke the wrong, If these consent? |
9567 | Who sought with him, from summer air, And field and wood, a balm for care; And bathed in light of sunset skies His tortured nerves and weary eyes? |
9567 | Who thinks of the drowned- out Coptic monk? |
9567 | Who would be wiser, in the blind, dumb woods? |
9567 | Whose axe the wall of forest broke, And let the waiting sunshine through? |
9567 | Whose hand, of curious skill untaught, Thy rude and savage outline wrought? |
9567 | Why mourn above some hopeless flaw In the stone tables of the law, When scripture every day afresh Is traced on tablets of the flesh? |
9567 | Why waves there no banner My fortress above?" |
9567 | With half- uttered shriek and start,-- Feels she not his beating heart? |
9567 | Would the saints And the white angels dance and laugh to see him Burn like a pitch- pine torch? |
9567 | Would they own the graceless town, With never a ranter to worry And never a witch to drown?" |
9567 | Yet, who shall guess his bitter grief who lends His life to some great cause, and finds his friends Shame or betray it for their private ends? |
9567 | are they far or come they near? |
9567 | are they not in his Wonder- Book? |
9567 | at last he cried,--"What to me is this noisy ride? |
9567 | can thy grim sire impart His iron hardness to thy woman''s heart? |
9567 | canst thou see? |
9567 | did she watch beside her child? |
9567 | lay thy poor head on my knee; Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? |
9567 | love you the Papist, the beggar, the charge of the town?" |
9567 | of the fiery pit, And how, drop by drop, this merciful bird Carries the water that quenches it? |
9567 | quoth Waldron,"leave a child Christian- born to heathens wild? |
9567 | said Keezar"Am I here, or ant I there? |
9567 | said a voice,"What seekest thou? |
9567 | she cried in fear,"Hearest thou nothing, sister dear?" |
9567 | she cried,"hast thou forgotten quite The words of Him we spake of yesternight? |
9567 | she cried,"now tell me, has my child come back to me?" |
9567 | was it truth or dream? |
9567 | was that Thy answer From the horror round about? |
9567 | we need nor rock nor sand, Nor storied stream of Morning- Land; The heavens are glassed in Merrimac,-- What more could Jordan render back? |
9567 | weighed with childhood''s haunts and friends, And all that the home sky overbends, Did ever young love fail To turn the trembling scale? |
9567 | what matters where A true man''s cross may stand, So Heaven be o''er it here as there In pleasant Norman land? |
9567 | who is winning? |
9567 | who is winning?" |
9567 | why That wild stare and wilder cry, Full of terror, full of pain? |
9567 | why should we?" |
9567 | wilt thou give me shelter here?" |
621 | ( 118) Our great American revivalist Finney writes:I said to myself:''What is this? |
621 | ( 202) Well, what were its good fruits for Margaret Mary''s life? 621 Heavens, how can I speak of it? |
621 | How are we to conceive,Principal Caird writes,"of the reality in which all intelligence rests?" |
621 | How does it work when we thus anticipate God by going our own way? 621 I then closed my eyes for a few minutes, and seemed to be refreshed with sleep; and when I awoke, the first inquiry was, Where is my God? |
621 | Is there, then,our author continues,"no solution of the contradiction between the ideal and the actual? |
621 | It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do?--deeper than hell; what canst thou know? |
621 | She burst out weeping, and said,''O Richard, what made you fight?'' 621 The spiritual life,"he writes,"justifies itself to those who live it; but what can we say to those who do not understand? |
621 | What for? |
621 | What is the answer which Jesus sends to John the Baptist? |
621 | What shall I think of it? |
621 | Wherefore? |
621 | ''And where shall I do that, Lord?'' |
621 | ''But,''said I,''is that possible?'' |
621 | ''Some one ought to do it, but why should I?'' |
621 | ''Some one ought to do it, so why not I?'' |
621 | ''What is it that is finished?'' |
621 | ''Why,''I asked of myself,''does the author use these terms? |
621 | ( 328) Ought it to be assumed that in all men the mixture of religion with other elements should be identical? |
621 | ( 333) How indeed could it be otherwise? |
621 | ); H. L. HASTINGS: The Guiding Hand, or Providential Direction, illustrated by Authentic Instances, Boston, 1898(?). |
621 | --"How did I come to be? |
621 | ------------------------------------- What shall we now say of the attributes called moral? |
621 | ------------------------------------- What, now, must we ourselves think of this question? |
621 | --or shall we do so with enthusiastic assent? |
621 | ..."Why does man go out to look for a God?... |
621 | ; Brainerd''s, 212; Alline''s, 217; Oxford graduate''s, 221; Ratisbonne''s, 223; instantaneous, 227; is it a natural phenomenon? |
621 | ?_ A. |
621 | After this distinct revelation had stood for some little time before my mind, the question seemed to be put,''Will you accept it now, to- day?'' |
621 | After this, with difficulty I got to sleep; and when I awoke in the morning my first thoughts were: What has become of my happiness? |
621 | Again, are men the factors of some dream, the dream- like unsubstantiality of which they comprehend at such eventful moments? |
621 | And how should I have cried, since I was swooning with happiness within? |
621 | And if it be so, how can any possible judge or critic help being biased in favor of the religion by which his own needs are best met? |
621 | And in what form should we conceive of that"union"with it of which religious geniuses are so convinced? |
621 | And it being said to her in the going out,_ Where is thy faith? |
621 | And second, What is its importance, meaning, or significance, now that it is once here? |
621 | And second, ought we to consider the testimony true? |
621 | And what could it matter, if all propositions were practically indifferent, which of them we should agree to call true or which false? |
621 | And what had they exactly in their several individual minds, when they delivered their utterances? |
621 | And what then? |
621 | And why may not religion be a conception equally complex? |
621 | Are the men of this world right, or are the saints in possession of the deeper range of truth? |
621 | Are there not hereabouts some points of application for a renovated and revised ascetic discipline? |
621 | Are you any more prepared for heaven, or fitter to appear before the impartial bar of God, than when you first began to seek? |
621 | Are you any nearer to conversion now than when you first began? |
621 | At once I replied,''Will you take the desire away?'' |
621 | But I can not keep myself from being either crazy or an idiot; and, as things are, from whom should I ask pity? |
621 | But do you wish, Lord, that I should inclose in poor and barren words sentiments which the heart alone can understand?" |
621 | But how came I, then, to this perception of it? |
621 | But in all seriousness, can such bald animal talk as that be treated as a rational answer? |
621 | But make a mother of her, and what have you? |
621 | But now, I ask you, how can such an existential account of facts of mental history decide in one way or another upon their spiritual significance? |
621 | But the idea of him, I said, how did I ever come by the idea? |
621 | But verily, how stands it with her arguments? |
621 | But what matters it in the end whether we call such a state of mind religious or not? |
621 | But why in the name of common sense need we assume that only one such system of ideas can be true? |
621 | Can modern idealism give faith a better warrant, or must she still rely on her poor self for witness? |
621 | Can philosophy stamp a warrant of veracity upon the religious man''s sense of the divine? |
621 | Can things whose end is always dust and disappointment be the real goods which our souls require? |
621 | Can you believe it? |
621 | Did I stop to ask a single question? |
621 | Did he not love me? |
621 | Do mystical states establish the truth of those theological affections in which the saintly life has its root? |
621 | Do they deduce a new spiritual judgment from their new doctrine of existential conditions? |
621 | Do they frankly forbid us to admire the productions of genius from now onwards? |
621 | Do we accept it only in part and grudgingly, or heartily and altogether? |
621 | Do you not blush with shame at wishing that a knife should be your master? |
621 | Does God really exist? |
621 | Does it act, as well as exist? |
621 | Does it furnish any_ warrant for the truth_ of the twice- bornness and supernaturality and pantheism which it favors? |
621 | Does this temperamental origin diminish the significance of the sudden conversion when it has occurred? |
621 | Everything in me awoke and received a meaning.... Why do I look farther? |
621 | Finney, what ails you?'' |
621 | First of all, then, I ask, What does the expression"mystical states of consciousness"mean? |
621 | First, is there, under all the discrepancies of the creeds, a common nucleus to which they bear their testimony unanimously? |
621 | First, what is the nature of it? |
621 | For what seriousness can possibly remain in debating philosophic propositions that will never make an appreciable difference to us in action? |
621 | Had I not found my God and my Father? |
621 | Had he not called me? |
621 | Has he made religion universal by coercive reasoning, transformed it from a private faith into a public certainty? |
621 | Has he rescued its affirmations from obscurity and mystery? |
621 | Has science made too wide a claim? |
621 | Have I not said the state is utterly beyond words?" |
621 | He came and, placing his hand upon my shoulder, said:''Do you not want to give your heart to God?'' |
621 | He then said,''Are you in pain?'' |
621 | How can I learn aught when naught I know? |
621 | How can the devotee show his loyalty better than by sensitiveness in this regard? |
621 | How do we part off mystical states from other states? |
621 | How does he exist? |
621 | How is success to be absolutely measured when there are so many environments and so many ways of looking at the adaptation? |
621 | How should you know their true nature, since one knows only what one can comprehend? |
621 | How, then, should we_ act_ on these facts? |
621 | How_ can_ you measure their worth without considering whether the God really exists who is supposed to inspire them? |
621 | I ask you, what is human life? |
621 | I asked them what place that was? |
621 | I feel the pressure of his hand, I feel something else which fills me with a serene joy; shall I dare to speak it out? |
621 | I halted but a moment, and then, with a breaking heart, I said,''Dear Jesus, can you help me?'' |
621 | I now turn to my second question: What is the objective"truth"of their content? |
621 | I say God, but why? |
621 | If I, being a wretch and damned sinner, could be redeemed by any other price, what needed the Son of God to be given? |
621 | If it did not, wherein would its superiority consist? |
621 | If one with Omnipotence, how can weariness enter the consciousness, how illness assail that indomitable spark? |
621 | If so, in what shape does it exist? |
621 | If the inner dispositions are right, we ask, what need of all this torment, this violation of the outer nature? |
621 | If the natural world is so double- faced and unhomelike, what world, what thing is real? |
621 | If we are sick souls, we require a religion of deliverance; but why think so much of deliverance, if we are healthy- minded? |
621 | If we can not explain physical light, how can we explain the light which is the truth itself? |
621 | If we were to ask the question:"What is human life''s chief concern?" |
621 | If, then, the entire work is finished, all the debt paid, what remains for me to do?'' |
621 | In other words, is the existence of so many religious types and sects and creeds regrettable? |
621 | In our own attitude, not yet abandoned, of impartial onlookers, what are we to say of this quarrel? |
621 | In the healthiest and most prosperous existence, how many links of illness, danger, and disaster are always interposed? |
621 | In the mean time while thus exercised, a thought arose in my mind, what can it mean? |
621 | In what facts does it result? |
621 | Into what definite description can these words be translated, and for what definite facts do they stand? |
621 | Is an instantaneous conversion a miracle in which God is present as he is present in no change of heart less strikingly abrupt? |
621 | Is it necessary, some of you have asked, as one example after another came before us, to be quite so fantastically good as that? |
621 | Is it not surprising that health exists at all? |
621 | Is it possible that I, in that moment, felt what some of the saints have said they always felt, the undemonstrable but irrefragable certainty of God? |
621 | Is not it a maimed happiness-- care and weariness, weariness and care, with the baseless expectation, the strange cozenage of a brighter to- morrow? |
621 | Is not its blessedness a fragile fiction? |
621 | Is not your joy in it a very vulgar glee, not much unlike the snicker of any rogue at his success? |
621 | Is such a"more"merely our own notion, or does it really exist? |
621 | Is the saint''s type or the strong- man''s type the more ideal? |
621 | Is there in life any purpose which the inevitable death which awaits me does not undo and destroy? |
621 | May not voluntarily accepted poverty be"the strenuous life,"without the need of crushing weaker peoples? |
621 | Of what I shall do to- morrow? |
621 | Oh, happy child, what should I do? |
621 | Or how does it assist me to plan my behavior, to know that his happiness is anyhow absolutely complete? |
621 | Or is dogmatic or scholastic theology less doubted in point of fact for claiming, as it does, to be in point of right undoubtable? |
621 | Ought all men to have the same religion? |
621 | Ought it, indeed, to be assumed that the lives of all men should show identical religious elements? |
621 | Ought they to approve the same fruits and follow the same leadings? |
621 | Ought we not, whether we dig or plough or eat, to sing this hymn to God? |
621 | Pray, what specific act can I perform in order to adapt myself the better to God''s simplicity? |
621 | Religion, whatever it is, is a man''s total reaction upon life, so why not say that any total reaction upon life is a religion? |
621 | Severed like cobwebs, broken like bubbles in the sun--"Wo sind die Sorge nun und Noth Die mich noch gestern wollt''erschlaffen? |
621 | She asked always earnestly,''When shall I be perfectly thine, O my God?'' |
621 | Should we not love it; should we not feel buoyed up by the Eternal Arms?" |
621 | So what good will it do you to think all your lives,''Oh, I have done evil, I have made many mistakes''? |
621 | The mere possibility of producing milk from grass, cheese from milk, and wool from skins; who formed and planned it? |
621 | The poet says, Dear City of Cecrops; and wilt thou not say, Dear City of Zeus? |
621 | The question, What are the religious propensities? |
621 | The questions"Why?" |
621 | The subject of Saintliness left us face to face with the question, Is the sense of divine presence a sense of anything objectively true? |
621 | The whole feud revolves essentially upon two pivots: Shall the seen world or the unseen world be our chief sphere of adaptation? |
621 | Then I flung myself on the ground, and at last awoke covered with blood, calling to the two surgeons( who were frightened),''Why did you not kill me? |
621 | Then there crept in upon me so gently, so lovingly, so unmistakably, a way of escape, and what was it after all? |
621 | Then what was to me an audible voice said:''Are you willing to give up everything to the Lord?'' |
621 | There was a sincerity about this man that carried conviction with it, and I found myself saying,''I wonder if God can save_ me_?'' |
621 | These questions"Why?" |
621 | They drew the cord tight with all their strength and asked me,''Does it hurt you?'' |
621 | Thy cowl, thy shaven crown, thy chastity, thy obedience, thy poverty, thy works, thy merits? |
621 | To the believer in moralism and works, with his anxious query,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
621 | To what psychological order do they belong? |
621 | Under just what biographic conditions did the sacred writers bring forth their various contributions to the holy volume? |
621 | Under what form will this fear crush me? |
621 | Was there not a Church into which I might enter?... |
621 | We are It already; how to know It?" |
621 | Well, how is it with these fruits? |
621 | Well, what did I do? |
621 | What are we to think of all this? |
621 | What can be more base and unworthy than the pining, puling, mumping mood, no matter by what outward ills it may have been engendered? |
621 | What could I do? |
621 | What have I done to deserve this excess of severity? |
621 | What is he? |
621 | What is it, indeed, that keeps existence exfoliating? |
621 | What is its cash- value in terms of particular experience? |
621 | What is more injurious to others? |
621 | What is the particular truth in question_ known as_? |
621 | What less helpful as a way out of the difficulty? |
621 | What may the practical fruits for life have been, of such movingly happy conversions as those we heard of? |
621 | What more have we to say now than God said from the whirlwind over two thousand five hundred years ago? |
621 | What must I do to please thee? |
621 | What single- handed man was ever on the whole as successful as Luther? |
621 | What then must the person do? |
621 | What will be the outcome of all my life? |
621 | What will be the outcome of what I do to- day? |
621 | What would happen if the final stage of the trance were reached? |
621 | When I came to him he burst into tears and said:''Richard, will you forgive me for striking you?'' |
621 | When I waked in the morning, the first thought would be, Oh, my wretched soul, what shall I do, where shall I go? |
621 | When S. had finished his prayer and was turning to sleep, the brother said,''Do you still keep up that thing?'' |
621 | When could it be evil when thou wert near? |
621 | When such a conquering optimist as Goethe can express himself in this wise, how must it be with less successful men? |
621 | When we think certain states of mind superior to others, is it ever because of what we know concerning their organic antecedents? |
621 | Whence am I? |
621 | Wherefore did I come? |
621 | Why are twice two four? |
621 | Why can I not write down the inconceivable influences, consolations, and peace which I felt interiorly? |
621 | Why do n''t you manage it somehow?" |
621 | Why does he not say"the atoning work"?'' |
621 | Why not simply leave pathological questions out? |
621 | Why regret a philosophy of evil, a mind- curer would ask us, if I can put you in possession of a life of good? |
621 | Why should I do anything? |
621 | Why should I live? |
621 | Why then not call these reactions our religion, no matter what specific character they may have? |
621 | Why would you not let me die?'' |
621 | Will you be the slave of a knife or the slave of Jesus Christ? |
621 | Would martyrs have sung in the flames for a mere inference, however inevitable it might be? |
621 | Yet he finds himself forced to write:--"What right have we to believe Nature under any obligation to do her work by means of complete minds only? |
621 | Yet how believe as the common people believe, steeped as they are in grossest superstition? |
621 | You have been seeking, praying, reforming, laboring, reading, hearing, and meditating, and what have you done by it towards your salvation? |
621 | _ Have you had any experiences which appeared providential?_ A. |
621 | _ Je m''en fiche_ is the vulgar French equivalent for our English ejaculation"Who cares?" |
621 | _ Things are wrong with them_; and"What shall I do to be clear, right, sound, whole, well?" |
621 | _ What does Religion mean to you?_ A. |
621 | _ What is your notion of sin?_ A. |
621 | _ What is your temperament?_ A. |
621 | _ What things work most strongly on your emotions?_ A. Lively songs and music; Pinafore instead of an Oratorio. |
621 | a common person says to himself about a vexed question; but in a"cranky"mind"What must I do about it?" |
621 | and in what proportion may it need to be restrained by other elements, to give the proper balance? |
621 | and must our means of adaptation in this seen world be aggressiveness or non- resistance? |
621 | and say outright that no neuropath can ever be a revealer of new truth? |
621 | and the question, What is their philosophic significance? |
621 | and"What next?" |
621 | how did it come about? |
621 | in a penny?_ she threw it away, begging pardon of God for her fault, and saying,''No, Lord, my faith is not in a penny, but in thee alone.'' |
621 | until this came:''Why do you not accept it_ now_?'' |
621 | what is its constitution, origin, and history? |
621 | what shall I do now?'' |
621 | what shall I do?'' |
621 | what shall all these do? |
621 | what shall the law of Moses avail? |
36312 | ''Hath she brought the book to you( the accusing girls)?'' 36312 ''How can you say you know nothing, when you see these tormented and accuse you?'' |
36312 | ''Is this folly to see these so hurt?'' 36312 ''Of what sin?'' |
36312 | ''Sarah Good, do you not see now what you have done? 36312 ''Sarah Good, what evil spirit have you familiarity with?'' |
36312 | ''Well, sir, would you have me confess what I never knew?'' 36312 ''What did you think of the actions of others before your sisters came out? |
36312 | ''What do you say to this?'' 36312 ''What do you say; are you guilty?'' |
36312 | ''What do you think ails them?'' 36312 ''What have you done to these children?'' |
36312 | ''What_ creature_ do you employ, then?'' 36312 ''Why did you go away muttering from Mr. Parris''s house?'' |
36312 | ''Why, do you not think it is witchcraft?'' 36312 Can you not,"we asked,"find him through her?" |
36312 | How did you afflict folks? 36312 I do not hurt poor children? |
36312 | O, star- eyedFancy,"hast thou wandered there, To waft us back the message of"--_credulity_? |
36312 | Sarah Good being then asked, if that_ she_ did not hurt them, who did it? 36312 She_ pretended_ that the evil[?] |
36312 | TheWhy have you done it?" |
36312 | Were you to serve the devil ten years? 36312 What does she eat or drink?" |
36312 | Who is it then? |
36312 | Who made you a witch? 36312 Why did you say the magistrates''and ministers''eyes were blinded,"and"you would open them? |
36312 | Why did you say you would show us? 36312 Why make an alternative? |
36312 | _ Q._ At first beginning with them, what then appeared to you? 36312 _ Q._ But what did they say unto you? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did he ask you no more but the first time to serve him? 36312 _ Q._ Did you ever go with these women? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did you go with the company? 36312 _ Q._ Did you never practice witchcraft in your own country? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did you see them do it now while you are examining( being examined)? 36312 _ Q._ Do you never see something appear in some shape? |
36312 | _ Q._ Elizabeth Hubbard, who hurts you? 36312 _ Q._ How long since you began to pinch Mr. Parris''s children? |
36312 | _ Q._ Is that the same man that appeared before to you, that appeared last night and told you this? 36312 _ Q._ Susan Sheldon, who hurts you? |
36312 | _ Q._ Tell us true; how many women do you use to come when you ride abroad? 36312 _ Q._ What appearance, or how doth he appear when he hurts them?" |
36312 | _ Q._ What clothes doth the man appear unto you in? 36312 _ Q._ What did he say you must do more? |
36312 | _ Q._ What do you say to this you are charged with? 36312 _ Q._ What familiarity have you with the devil, or what is it that you converse withal? |
36312 | _ Q._ What hath Osburn got to go with her? 36312 _ Q._ What made you hold your arm when you were searched? |
36312 | _ Q._ What other creatures have you seen? 36312 _ Q._ What other likenesses besides a man hath appeared unto you? |
36312 | _ Q._ What? 36312 _ Q._ When did he say you must meet together? |
36312 | _ Q._ Who was that appeared to Hubbard as she was going from Proctor''s? 36312 _ Q._ With what shape, or what is_ he_ like that hurts them? |
36312 | _ Q._ Would they have had you hurt the children last night? 36312 _ Q._''What did it propound to you?'' |
36312 | _ Q._''What lying spirit is this? 36312 _ Q._''What lying spirit was it, then?'' |
36312 | _ Tituba, the Indian woman, examined March 1, 1692.__ Q._ Why do you hurt these poor children? |
36312 | ''Are you certain this is the woman?'' |
36312 | ''Are you not willing to tell the truth?'' |
36312 | ''Do you think they are bewitched?'' |
36312 | ''Doth this woman hurt you?'' |
36312 | ''Have you made no contract with the devil?'' |
36312 | ''Have you made no contract with the devil?'' |
36312 | ''How came they thus tormented?'' |
36312 | ''How comes your appearance just now to hurt these?'' |
36312 | ''How do I know?'' |
36312 | ''Then,''said I,''how can all these things be done by him?'' |
36312 | ''What God do you serve?'' |
36312 | ''What commandment is it?'' |
36312 | ''What do you laugh at?'' |
36312 | ''What is it you say when you go muttering away from persons''houses?'' |
36312 | ''What psalm?'' |
36312 | ''Who do you employ, then, to do it?'' |
36312 | ''Who do you employ, then?'' |
36312 | ''Who do you serve?'' |
36312 | ''Who do you think is their master?'' |
36312 | ''Who was it, then, that tormented the children?'' |
36312 | ''Why do you hurt these children?'' |
36312 | ''Why, who was it?'' |
36312 | 70),"Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is_ a devil_?" |
36312 | :"What does she eat or drink? |
36312 | A trifle, was that? |
36312 | And especially who"improved her tongue to express what was never in her mind"? |
36312 | And how was it with the others? |
36312 | And what is involved in that? |
36312 | And when was he first seen? |
36312 | And which boy did he see? |
36312 | And who was_ the black man_? |
36312 | And whose emotions mantled her face with smiles in the stern and frowning presence of"authority"? |
36312 | And why"_ greater_ cruelty"? |
36312 | And why? |
36312 | And why? |
36312 | Are expert tricksters accustomed to disown their own powers to astonish? |
36312 | Are the results of your course to be lamented? |
36312 | But is there probability either that he dictated any part of her testimony, or that she fabricated anything? |
36312 | But seemingly the court could not wait for an answer, because, in the same breath, it asked, What did your visitant tell you? |
36312 | But the magistrate seemingly doubted its truth or its sufficiency, for he next asked,--"_ Q._ Why have you done it? |
36312 | But the_ cui bono_, the what good? |
36312 | But what did her master require her to"stand to"? |
36312 | But what did she say by way of confessing or accusing? |
36312 | But which, among the human faculties, did that delusion spell- bind, stultify, and make sanguinary? |
36312 | But who was genuine author of playful proceedings at a time when the business was so grave and solemn? |
36312 | But why she? |
36312 | But why to Thomas Putnam''s? |
36312 | But with what eyes? |
36312 | By whom was it seen? |
36312 | Can any one doubt that she conceived herself to be speaking to the same being, though in dog form, that she had yielded to before in form like a man? |
36312 | Can reflection find her competent to all that was ascribed to her? |
36312 | Community called such matters witchcrafts, and why should not these children do the same? |
36312 | Confessed to what? |
36312 | Could Ann Foster''s gray- haired man have been Tituba''s white- haired visitant-- the originator and enactor of Salem witchcraft? |
36312 | Could firm, true men, holding then prevalent beliefs, have done less? |
36312 | Dadie thought I spoke, and said,''What''m?'' |
36312 | Did he believe that_ demons_ acted within her, held her back, and made her something like three times heavier than she normally was? |
36312 | Did he offer you any paper? |
36312 | Did he say you must write anything? |
36312 | Did he see, hear, and feel all that he testifies to? |
36312 | Did he tell you who they were? |
36312 | Did such observable effects occur as Mather described? |
36312 | Did supernal prescience select and post agents peculiarly fitted to perform the witchcraft tragedy? |
36312 | Did the historian himself who quoted those words and let them appear to be accurately descriptive of facts, believe that they were such? |
36312 | Did they, or did other agencies, produce the mysterious disorders which seemed to devil- dreading beholders like diabolical obsessions? |
36312 | Did you think it was witchcraft?'' |
36312 | Do such feats bespeak their origin in_ delirium tremens_? |
36312 | Do you get those cats, or other things, to do it for you? |
36312 | Does he believe that such things were actually performed either by or through her? |
36312 | Does he believe that such were the literal facts even in appearance? |
36312 | Does the hugeness which debars them from entering contracted domiciles to- day prove their existence to be but fabulous? |
36312 | Doth the devil tell you that he hurts them? |
36312 | Doth the devil tell you that he hurts them?" |
36312 | Elizabeth Knap''s visitant-- the one to whom she said,"What cheer, old man?" |
36312 | Especially do they ever spontaneously avow that the devil or any_ evil spirit_ is helping them? |
36312 | For who, in any community, would ever count one_ a saint_ who manifested such offensive qualities to any great extent as he ascribed to her? |
36312 | For,--"_ Q._ What did you say to him, then, after that? |
36312 | From whom came the things put forth through her which"she knew nothing of"? |
36312 | From whom came the tones, if not the words, of languages which this possessed girl had never learned? |
36312 | Had he met Tituba? |
36312 | Had it less sagacity than his own? |
36312 | Had she divulged her knowledge, what heed would have been given to the word of the ignorant slave? |
36312 | Had she made a_ covenant_ with the devil, or any devotee of his? |
36312 | Has he left record of a series of facts, or only of fictions which he set forth as facts? |
36312 | Has the Great Permitter of the many sufferings which war has engendered been"shockingly wicked"? |
36312 | Hath the devil ever deceived you and been false to you?'' |
36312 | He said,''Miss Perkins, can I go out and see who''s there?'' |
36312 | He was stating facts, which, in his apprehension, were harmless, and why should he not let them out? |
36312 | Her patients promiscuously? |
36312 | His only question was, did the thing occur? |
36312 | How can the occurrence of such facts be explained, or rather_ who_ produced them? |
36312 | How could he? |
36312 | How did the historian account for such-- for those seeming"more than natural"? |
36312 | How did you set your hand to it? |
36312 | How else can thought inhere?" |
36312 | How far have you complied with Satan whereby he takes this advantage of you?'' |
36312 | How far up, down, around, do natural forces and agents extend and operate? |
36312 | How much beneficence did one then need to perform before public sentiment, would reprobate its author? |
36312 | How much did this import? |
36312 | How old are you now? |
36312 | How_ know_ that she or her case was the then all- engrossing topic? |
36312 | How_ know_ that their manner was expressive of any particular topic of conversation? |
36312 | Hutchinson says,"The most remarkable occurrence in the colony in the year 1655[ 1656?] |
36312 | Hutchinson states that Mr. Dane himself"is_ tenderly_ touched in several of the examinations, which"( the tenderness?) |
36312 | I presently asked her, what letter? |
36312 | I said to him,''Can you say your lesson?'' |
36312 | If he resembled an Indian, is not the inference very fair that he was an Indian? |
36312 | If there be a fixed limit to nature''s domain, where is it? |
36312 | If we presume( and why may we not?) |
36312 | If_ entranced_, was the girl, then, a voluntary seer and speaker? |
36312 | Indeed, how can any other than perverted vision see harm in the girl''s filial compact? |
36312 | Indeed, who among men could possibly have taught or helped her to prophesy correctly, to hear the far distant, or to embody a spirit child? |
36312 | Is crabbed temper there? |
36312 | Is ignorance of, or is knowledge of, nature''s forces and inhabitants the greater blessing? |
36312 | Is it possible that the mind of man should be capable of such strong prejudices as that a suspicion of fraud should not immediately arise? |
36312 | Is she a witch or a cunning woman? |
36312 | Is slander there? |
36312 | Is that idea conveyed in calling her a successful practitioner? |
36312 | Is there only one kind of mental power throughout the whole animal kingdom, differing only in intensity and range of manifestation? |
36312 | Is this the woman?'' |
36312 | Little Sarah was asked,--"How long have you been a witch? |
36312 | May not natural endowments sometimes be ample qualification for admitting the evolvement through one''s form of very great marvels? |
36312 | Modern wisdom(?) |
36312 | Most seriously we ask whether forces which can be and have been measured by palpable scales, are"beyond the legitimate boundaries of human knowledge?" |
36312 | Mrs. Morse''s possession of their secret was so unaccountable that the husband in astonishment asked,"Is she a witch or a cunning woman?" |
36312 | My husband presently said, What? |
36312 | Now, then, there are some persons_ so constituted_ that they perceive these shadows(?) |
36312 | On that Wednesday night"Abigail first became ill.""_ Q._ Where was your master then? |
36312 | Or the second time? |
36312 | Perhaps he did; and yet on what rational grounds could he? |
36312 | She cried out to him,"What cheer, old man?" |
36312 | She had penetration enough to_ conjecture_"( why say_ conjecture_?) |
36312 | Should they be called outgrowths from"fraud and imposture,"as they were by another? |
36312 | Should they be left unadduced and unalluded to, as they were by one elaborate historian? |
36312 | The external or the internal one-- the boy material or the boy spiritual? |
36312 | The girl''s confession? |
36312 | The outer or the inner-- his material or his spiritual ones? |
36312 | The question was repeated thus:"_ Why_ did you never visit these afflicted persons?" |
36312 | The same question, partially, is up to- day-- viz., Can any but willing devotees to Satan be used in the processes of spirit manifestations? |
36312 | The_ confessions_(?) |
36312 | The_ only_ charge_ proved_? |
36312 | Then what did you answer him? |
36312 | Then why write? |
36312 | Therefore our fathers would with conscious propriety ask any one whom they supposed to be under"an evil hand,""Who hurts you?" |
36312 | This begs the primal question, viz.,_ Did_ he undertake to torment them? |
36312 | This weakness(?) |
36312 | To whom can they refer, if not to spirits of some grade? |
36312 | Was clear statement of what its senses had witnessed evidence of its credulity? |
36312 | Was he a faithful and true witness, or not? |
36312 | Was it causing iron to swim? |
36312 | Was it foolish in him to state the truth? |
36312 | Was it only her_ pretense_? |
36312 | Was it so? |
36312 | Was its belief in the testimony of its own senses a proof of its_ credulity_? |
36312 | Was she so generous as to give credit to another, and that other an"evil spirit,"for help which she did not receive? |
36312 | Was that a condition of things in which the younger two would join the elder in sly additions to the distress around them? |
36312 | Was that a_ deluded_ court, representative of a_ deluded_ people, which condemned Margaret Jones to"hang high on the gallows- tree"? |
36312 | Was that a_ playful_ moment? |
36312 | Was the former generation less truthful than his own? |
36312 | Was their perception of him nothing more than the product of the imagination of the witnesses? |
36312 | Was there any_ fraud_? |
36312 | Was there anywhere a prior institution of that kind? |
36312 | Were Braybrook''s statements true as to the main fact? |
36312 | Were all the declarations false? |
36312 | Were all those youthful females shockingly wicked? |
36312 | Were horses, vehicles, and drivers, or were even saddle- horses, regularly at the command of such girls for conveyance to and from such meetings? |
36312 | Were its senses less reliable? |
36312 | Were the external senses of a whole community so disordered that the character and dimensions of sensible acts were grossly misapprehended? |
36312 | Were these doings by Mather foolish and useless? |
36312 | What amount of success in alleviating the sufferings that flesh is heir to would invoke public vengeance? |
36312 | What beatings might she not well fear if she confessed to any dealings with invisible beings? |
36312 | What did he say you must do? |
36312 | What did he tell you?" |
36312 | What do you ride upon? |
36312 | What had you there? |
36312 | What harm have they done unto you? |
36312 | What if it was? |
36312 | What is fit treatment of such facts and testimony from such a source? |
36312 | What is_ he_ like? |
36312 | What miracle did he concede that the devil can work? |
36312 | What more common than for attendants to offer and urge upon a suffering and agonized person any stimulant or cordial at hand? |
36312 | What next? |
36312 | What persons would be summoned into court to testify concerning her when such was the charge? |
36312 | What qualities give better_ a priori_ promise of correct testimony than do sincerity and a sound understanding? |
36312 | What started, and extended, and intensified that tongue if it did wag? |
36312 | What then? |
36312 | What then? |
36312 | What then? |
36312 | What though all spectators failed to see the Indian? |
36312 | What though the agitation of Christendom brings its latent iniquities and impurities to the surface? |
36312 | What though the counterparts of publicans, sinners, and harlots float numerously into view? |
36312 | What unseen power? |
36312 | What was it like that got you to do it? |
36312 | What was the character of the Goodwin children themselves? |
36312 | What was their duty? |
36312 | What were the accusations against him? |
36312 | What were those feats? |
36312 | What would you have me do?'' |
36312 | What, therefore, must be done? |
36312 | What, therefore, was the historian''s necessity? |
36312 | What_ lies_ were or could be fabricated against such a woman, the nature of which the common sagacity of society there and then would not detect? |
36312 | What_ lies_ which the truthfulness of society there and then would not decline to repeat against her? |
36312 | When I ceased working upon my patient, her husband said,''Do you suppose you can affect_ me_ in the same way?'' |
36312 | When her master hath asked her( Tituba?) |
36312 | When she perceived and called out to some personage invisible to her companions, saying,"What cheer, old man?" |
36312 | Whence the excitement itself-- such excitement as could regard an accurate guess as necessarily the offspring of diabolical insight? |
36312 | Whence the impulse? |
36312 | Where are they? |
36312 | Where did they find him? |
36312 | Wherein lurks anything which indicates that the witnesses in this case stated anything that was not substantially true? |
36312 | Which is most dutiful to God and friendly to man? |
36312 | Which is most scientific? |
36312 | Which shall we do? |
36312 | Which? |
36312 | Which? |
36312 | Which? |
36312 | Which? |
36312 | Which? |
36312 | Who and what was he? |
36312 | Who but visible or audible spirits, proving themselves to be such, can give decisive response to that momentous question? |
36312 | Who first appeared to her? |
36312 | Who helped the little clergyman lift and hold the heavy gun? |
36312 | Who knows? |
36312 | Who knows? |
36312 | Who sees either mind, or the force by which an aching toe reports to the brain and excites the sympathy of the whole organism? |
36312 | Who sees electricity, magnetism, gravitation, attraction, cohesion, repulsion? |
36312 | Who was the prime mover? |
36312 | Who was"my Indian man"? |
36312 | Who, next to Powell, among those present at the manifestations, was most likely to have made a covenant with the Evil One? |
36312 | Why afraid of such result? |
36312 | Why call that a_ pretense_, and make her a liar? |
36312 | Why did any intelligent being, whether mortal or spirit, thus woefully invade and disturb the homes of able, honored, worthy Christian men? |
36312 | Why did n''t you take the words of your own witnesses as corroborative of the man''s statement? |
36312 | Why did the people of his time take his life? |
36312 | Why do you not tell us the truth? |
36312 | Why do you thus torment these poor children?'' |
36312 | Why not put some confidence in the words of this religiously educated girl? |
36312 | Why say_ pretended_? |
36312 | Why should they lead to, or rather why fix upon, the beloved and venerated Mrs. Nurse? |
36312 | Why was such a one an enterer of complaints against neighbors, whether high or low, good or bad? |
36312 | Why, said she, hadst not thee such a letter from such a man at such a time? |
36312 | Why? |
36312 | Why? |
36312 | With''eagerness of mind''she asked them,''Does she tell you what clothes I have on?'' |
36312 | Yes,_ what_ unseen power? |
36312 | Yes; who that baker whose cake raised the devil, and caused apparitions to become exceeding plenty? |
36312 | _ Ans._''What do I know? |
36312 | _ Ans._''Would you have me accuse myself?'' |
36312 | _ Beyond a doubt?_ Perhaps not in some minds. |
36312 | _ Mortal._"How do spirits materialize?" |
36312 | _ Q._ And what book did he bring, a great or little book? |
36312 | _ Q._ And what did he say to you when you made your mark? |
36312 | _ Q._ And when would he come then? |
36312 | _ Q._ But did he tell you the names of the other? |
36312 | _ Q._ But why did not you do so before? |
36312 | _ Q._ Can you look upon these and not knock them down? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did he get it out of your body? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did he not make you write your name? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did he show you in the book which was Osburn''s and which was Good''s mark? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did he tell you the names of them? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did he tell you where the nine lived? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did they do any hurt to you or threaten you? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did they write their names? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did you go into that room in your own person, and all the rest? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did you promise him this when he first spake to you? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did you see any other marks in his book? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did you see the man that morning? |
36312 | _ Q._ Did you write? |
36312 | _ Q._ Do not those cats suck you? |
36312 | _ Q._ Do not you see them? |
36312 | _ Q._ Have you seen Good and Osburn ride upon a pole? |
36312 | _ Q._ How did you go? |
36312 | _ Q._ How did you pinch them when you hurt them? |
36312 | _ Q._ How do you hurt those that you pinch? |
36312 | _ Q._ How far did you go-- to what town? |
36312 | _ Q._ How long ago was this? |
36312 | _ Q._ How many marks do you think there was? |
36312 | _ Q._ How many times did you go to Boston? |
36312 | _ Q._ What apparel do the women wear? |
36312 | _ Q._ What bird? |
36312 | _ Q._ What black man did you see? |
36312 | _ Q._ What black man is that? |
36312 | _ Q._ What clothes the little woman? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did he say to you then? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did he say you must do in that book? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did he say you must say? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did he then to you? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did these cats do? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did they say? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did this man say to you when he took hold of you? |
36312 | _ Q._ What did you promise him? |
36312 | _ Q._ What is the other thing that Goody Osburn hath? |
36312 | _ Q._ What kind of clothes hath she? |
36312 | _ Q._ What other creatures did you see? |
36312 | _ Q._ What other pretty things? |
36312 | _ Q._ What service do they expect from you? |
36312 | _ Q._ What should you have done with it? |
36312 | _ Q._ What sights did you see? |
36312 | _ Q._ What time of night? |
36312 | _ Q._ When did Good tell you she set her hand to the book? |
36312 | _ Q._ When did you see them? |
36312 | _ Q._ When? |
36312 | _ Q._ Where did you go? |
36312 | _ Q._ Where does it keep? |
36312 | _ Q._ Who came back with you again? |
36312 | _ Q._ Who did make you go? |
36312 | _ Q._ Who tells you so? |
36312 | _ Q._ Who were they that told you so? |
36312 | _ Second Examination, March 2, 1692._"_ Q._ What covenant did you make with that man that came to you? |
36312 | _ The Examination of Martha Carrier, May 31, 1692._"_ Q._ Abigail Williams, who hurts you? |
36312 | _ The only charge proved!_ What can that mean? |
36312 | _ These shadows_(?) |
36312 | and especially why perpetrate such agonizing cruelties upon bright, lovely, and promising children? |
36312 | have they done unto you?" |
36312 | her course of fraud and imposture? |
36312 | her frolic? |
36312 | or of acts called witchcraft of old? |
36312 | or was it such lifting of Margaret Rule as had been sworn to? |
36312 | see the devil?" |
29760 | A tall lady in brown furs, who knew how to praise without making a fool of herself? |
29760 | About his gray matter? |
29760 | Against what? 29760 Am I a child, to be diverted with soothing drinks? |
29760 | American? |
29760 | And even then would n''t they accept you for the ministry? |
29760 | And happy? |
29760 | And he will accompany? |
29760 | And if you fail? |
29760 | And now you expect to sing? |
29760 | And she has heard of Arlt? |
29760 | And sign the contracts on the spot? |
29760 | And since then? |
29760 | And take the responsibility of silence? |
29760 | And the Liszt Rhapsodie? |
29760 | And the question is? |
29760 | And then what became of them? |
29760 | And then? |
29760 | And then? |
29760 | And to sing by the hour for your friends? |
29760 | And what is right? |
29760 | And you have known from the first that it was all a mistake? |
29760 | And you have let me suffer for it? |
29760 | And you really think Mr. Thayer will sing for us? |
29760 | And you think I am justified? |
29760 | And you think there''s no cure? |
29760 | And you want to compose? |
29760 | And you will be best man? |
29760 | And you would run the risk of loosing this hold, when you know the danger to your friend? |
29760 | And you''re willing to put up with one for the sake of the other? |
29760 | And you? |
29760 | And, if she breaks her engagement to him? |
29760 | Animated phonograph records, in short? |
29760 | Any longer? |
29760 | Anything especial? |
29760 | Are n''t you rushing things a little? |
29760 | Are you sure that it would be best to prevent it? |
29760 | Arlt, why do n''t you take the hint? |
29760 | As critic? |
29760 | As wonderful as it is to have a good listener who always understands and rarely praises? |
29760 | At my home? 29760 Bad or good?" |
29760 | Beatrix? |
29760 | Beatrix? |
29760 | Beatrix? |
29760 | Because consistent people are such bores, Miss Van Osdel? |
29760 | Beg pardon, Thayer; but can I speak to you for a moment? |
29760 | Bobby been making a bad pun, that you look so savage? |
29760 | Bobby, does it occur to you that we are just exactly where we started? 29760 Bobby, or the devil?" |
29760 | But could n''t you just say a good word for us? |
29760 | But do you think it is as-- as--"Good form? |
29760 | But how do you expect to get up a criticism? |
29760 | But if he does? |
29760 | But if you are all stooping? |
29760 | But in the end? 29760 But is Mr. Thayer as great a singer as they say?" |
29760 | But the Adirondacks? |
29760 | But you are scheduled for something else; are n''t you? |
29760 | But you enjoyed the trip? |
29760 | But, if the right people would take him up? |
29760 | But, if you wanted to study counterpoint, why did n''t you say so? 29760 But, to go back to Beatrix, if you feel in this way about Mr. Lorimer, why do n''t you do something about it?" |
29760 | Ca n''t you make any sort of an excuse for yourself, Sidney? |
29760 | Ca n''t you? |
29760 | Can you destroy the future for a race that habitually goes backwards? |
29760 | Can you get all your arrears of penitence done up in six weeks, Sally? |
29760 | Could n''t you put it to him strongly that he has no moral right to hold her to her promise? |
29760 | Could n''t you say something, Sally? |
29760 | D''you ever''sperience university discipline? |
29760 | Did he say anything about Lorimer? |
29760 | Did he say that? |
29760 | Did it ever occur to you the handicap of going through life as Bobby? |
29760 | Did love? |
29760 | Did n''t someone tell me you were old friends, Mr. Thayer? 29760 Did you think she looked well?" |
29760 | Do n''t you care anything at all for Beatrix? |
29760 | Do n''t you think he fought with the best that was in him? |
29760 | Do what, for example? |
29760 | Do you expect us to dictate our own praises? |
29760 | Do you honestly enjoy this sort of thing? |
29760 | Do you know, Mr. Thayer, it is a very wonderful experience, this having a species of court musician? |
29760 | Do you mean that nothing else counts here? |
29760 | Do you mind, Bobby? |
29760 | Do you not love me any longer? |
29760 | Do you think I ever could have held him? |
29760 | Do you think Mr. Arlt will ever succeed? |
29760 | Do you think he will gain from such a thing? |
29760 | Do you think that there is no limit to the help which I must give him? |
29760 | Do you want to know what I think of her? |
29760 | Does he turn the other cheek? |
29760 | Does it increase? |
29760 | Does it strike you that this is perilously near to being gossip? |
29760 | Does n''t that depend upon what the decision finally proves to be? |
29760 | Does that mean I am narrow? |
29760 | Does that mean you will sing to me, myself? 29760 Does-- does he get-- drunk?" |
29760 | Ever tackled Mrs. Lloyd Avalons''s idiocy? |
29760 | Feels cunning; does n''t he, Beatrix? 29760 For any especial reason?" |
29760 | For what? 29760 From, by, in, or with charity, and to or for a charity?" |
29760 | Granted that Arlt, whoever he is, gets second nibble, who comes in ahead? |
29760 | Has she been talking the matter over with you? |
29760 | Have n''t you learned that I always get around? |
29760 | Have you any idea that Beatrix, if she marries him, can escape years of anxiety and wretchedness? |
29760 | Have you heard Mr. Thayer say what he thinks about it? |
29760 | Have you heard Thayer yet, Sally? |
29760 | Have you joined the ranks of the musicians, Bobby? |
29760 | Have you seen Miss Dane, since you came back? |
29760 | Have you spoken to her about it? |
29760 | He does promise? |
29760 | He is a stranger, then? |
29760 | How can I talk about something that does n''t exist? |
29760 | How can she be? 29760 How can we tell, unless you stand back to back?" |
29760 | How could I? |
29760 | How did it happen that you were at Eton, Lorimer? |
29760 | How did she get there? |
29760 | How did she seem to you? |
29760 | How do you know, Bobby? 29760 How do you know?" |
29760 | How do you know? |
29760 | How do you mean? |
29760 | How does it happen you have n''t mentioned it? |
29760 | How does she-- Mrs. Lorimer look? |
29760 | How far did you get? |
29760 | How in thunder should I know, Bobby? 29760 How is Lorimer, this morning? |
29760 | How is Lorimer? |
29760 | How is it going to stand your burying yourself in the wilderness, just when you have the city at your feet? |
29760 | How is she? |
29760 | How long have you known it? |
29760 | How long since? |
29760 | How much does my singing amount to me in comparison with my love for Beatrix? 29760 How much time do you need?" |
29760 | How much worse? |
29760 | How should I know? |
29760 | How soon must you have my answer? |
29760 | How soon? |
29760 | I say, Arlt,Bobby suggested;"why do n''t you write a series of articles on How to Get on in the World?" |
29760 | I say, Sally,he remarked at length, apparently apropos of nothing in particular;"how does it happen that you have never married me?" |
29760 | I thought-- Wasn''t that your first recital? 29760 If Mr. Thayer should fall in love and get engaged, what could the girl call him? |
29760 | In_ Faust_? |
29760 | Is Mr. Thayer here? |
29760 | Is anything wrong with Lorimer? |
29760 | Is it final? |
29760 | Is n''t he always? |
29760 | Is n''t there a certain comfort to be gained from it? |
29760 | Is that a fact? |
29760 | Is that the reason you are trying to sit on them, Bobby? |
29760 | Is that the reason you coined its negative? |
29760 | Is there a hotel near there? |
29760 | It must have been very sudden? |
29760 | It was D.T.? |
29760 | Just what is it that you do, Bobby? 29760 Like the fabled dog? |
29760 | May I have the pleasure of taking you to the dining- room? |
29760 | May I take that as a hint, Miss Dane? 29760 Me? |
29760 | More? |
29760 | Mr. Thayer, do you realize that it is two months since I have heard you sing? |
29760 | Mr. Thayer, have you any idea that Mr. Lorimer will ever give up drinking, drinking more than is good for him? |
29760 | Mrs. Avalons, when are you going to give us another recital? |
29760 | Much? |
29760 | Nor a poke bonnet? |
29760 | Not even to ease your conscience? |
29760 | Not in? 29760 Not quite?" |
29760 | Often? |
29760 | Open at this season? |
29760 | Otto? 29760 Really?" |
29760 | Sally, did you ever make a gown? |
29760 | Shall we take that? |
29760 | She asked you to help him? |
29760 | She does love him, then? 29760 Sidney dearest, do you know what it is to love as I love you? |
29760 | Sidney,she said, as she slowly held out both hands to him;"shall we fight side by side for a little longer?" |
29760 | Sidney? |
29760 | So you are a heretic, too? 29760 Something about Lorimer?" |
29760 | Spooky again, dear girl? |
29760 | Sure this is yourself, Beatrix? 29760 Surely, you are n''t child enough to need a bribe?" |
29760 | Taking us all in? |
29760 | That was the blow that floored you, that summer; was it? 29760 Thayer?" |
29760 | The help of man? |
29760 | Then it is not about yourself? |
29760 | Then shall I telephone mother that we will be there? |
29760 | Then that is your final advice? |
29760 | Then there is still trouble? |
29760 | Then what are you doing here? |
29760 | Then why did n''t you warn me? |
29760 | Then why do you ask it? |
29760 | Then why the deuce do you argue for it? |
29760 | Then why the deuce has n''t the fellow arrived? |
29760 | Then you do care? |
29760 | Then you do n''t approve, either? |
29760 | Then you really liked him? 29760 They? |
29760 | To be able to resign your own individuality, for the sake of the pleasure you can give other people? 29760 To- day? |
29760 | To--? |
29760 | Was Mr. Thayer with him? |
29760 | Was n''t that a success? 29760 Was that your work, Bobby?" |
29760 | Well, Sidney? |
29760 | Well, what of it? |
29760 | Well? |
29760 | Were they properly grateful? |
29760 | Wha''now, Sally? |
29760 | What about Beatrix? |
29760 | What about Lorimer? |
29760 | What about Saturday, then? |
29760 | What about him? |
29760 | What about now? |
29760 | What about the Forbes supper? |
29760 | What about your hold on him? |
29760 | What am I, that I should advise the star of the season? 29760 What are the operas?" |
29760 | What are you going to do about it? |
29760 | What are you going to do, Beatrix? |
29760 | What business have you to be doing oratorio? |
29760 | What color is consistency, Bobby? |
29760 | What could I say? |
29760 | What did he do there? |
29760 | What did she say? |
29760 | What do you care what she thinks? |
29760 | What do you mean, Bobby? |
29760 | What do you mean, Dane? |
29760 | What do you mean, Dane? |
29760 | What do you mean? |
29760 | What do you mean? |
29760 | What do you think about it? |
29760 | What do you think of him? |
29760 | What do you think was the reason? |
29760 | What do you think? |
29760 | What does he need, then? |
29760 | What does it do to his singing? |
29760 | What does she know about music? |
29760 | What for? |
29760 | What good will it do? |
29760 | What has come between us? |
29760 | What in thunder is that woman doing here, Sally? |
29760 | What is Saturday? 29760 What is he, this time?" |
29760 | What is it, Dane? |
29760 | What is it, dear? |
29760 | What is that? |
29760 | What is the discussion? |
29760 | What is the particular appositeness of your remarks, Beatrix? |
29760 | What is the use of keeping up the pretence any longer? |
29760 | What is the use of trying? 29760 What is the use?" |
29760 | What is your grievance? |
29760 | What now? |
29760 | What of it? |
29760 | What reason have you to think that I am fitted for your vacancy? |
29760 | What should there be? |
29760 | What then? |
29760 | What was it? |
29760 | What was it? |
29760 | What will be the end of it all? |
29760 | What would be the concrete application of your theory to my practice? |
29760 | What''s the use now? |
29760 | What''s the use? |
29760 | When did she come? |
29760 | When did you get home again? |
29760 | When do they go? |
29760 | When have you seen him? |
29760 | When was that? |
29760 | Where are you going? |
29760 | Where the unmentionable mischief did you come from? |
29760 | Which do you mean? 29760 Who are to be there?" |
29760 | Who are_ we_? |
29760 | Who can go? 29760 Who does n''t?" |
29760 | Who else? |
29760 | Who gets first bite at your bread, Beatrix? |
29760 | Who goes? |
29760 | Who has rubbed you the wrong way, this time? |
29760 | Who is he, and where did Mrs. Stanley accumulate him? |
29760 | Who told you? |
29760 | Who told you? |
29760 | Who was the man? |
29760 | Who will give it? 29760 Why did n''t you call me over to give you some points? |
29760 | Why do n''t you try it? 29760 Why do n''t you?" |
29760 | Why not announce that on Tuesdays you are at home to clever people and friends only? |
29760 | Why not this? |
29760 | Why not, Sidney? |
29760 | Why not? 29760 Why not? |
29760 | Why not? 29760 Why not?" |
29760 | Why not? |
29760 | Why not? |
29760 | Why not? |
29760 | Why not? |
29760 | Why should I? |
29760 | Why the unmentionable mischief do you waste your energies, singing like that at a rehearsal? |
29760 | Why? |
29760 | Will they like the news? |
29760 | Will you come in? |
29760 | Would you advise threats or bribery, Miss Gannion? 29760 Would you be willing to allow Katarina to take such a risk?" |
29760 | Would you? |
29760 | Yes? |
29760 | You do n''t mean that Mrs. Lorimer is going up into that wilderness alone? |
29760 | You do n''t mean--? |
29760 | You have seen Bobby, then? |
29760 | You know Miss Gannion? |
29760 | You know him, then? |
29760 | You see it, too? |
29760 | You think Beatrix ca n''t hold him? |
29760 | You think Mr. Lorimer has really reformed and is out of danger? |
29760 | You understand why I am doing this? |
29760 | You were over, in January; were n''t you? |
29760 | You wished me? |
29760 | And do n''t you think we could get that little Arlt to fill in with?" |
29760 | And how about himself? |
29760 | And now--""And now?" |
29760 | And then what? |
29760 | And then? |
29760 | And would they all make the same port in the end? |
29760 | And, besides, if Beatrix--"How long would you need me?" |
29760 | And--?" |
29760 | Are n''t one''s friends immune from analysis?" |
29760 | Are there any men of our set who have n''t been a little frisky?" |
29760 | Are you feeling nervous over the prospect?" |
29760 | Are you going to marry him?" |
29760 | Arlt?" |
29760 | Arlt?" |
29760 | Arlt?" |
29760 | Arlt?" |
29760 | Arlt?" |
29760 | Avalons?" |
29760 | Avalons?" |
29760 | Avalons?" |
29760 | Beatrix, is he really presentable?" |
29760 | Beatrix?" |
29760 | Besides, have n''t I begged you not to allude to the fact that I am a year older than you?" |
29760 | But do n''t you ever rest? |
29760 | But do you also remember the last time we did this in Germany?" |
29760 | But do you think she could hold him, if she were to try?" |
29760 | But has it ever occurred to you that Young America has abandoned its sieve for a man of war? |
29760 | But really--""Yes?" |
29760 | But what about a florist?" |
29760 | But what makes you do it?" |
29760 | But you fellows honestly do make an awful fuss about yourselves; now do n''t you?" |
29760 | But, Beatrix child, where is Mr. Lorimer? |
29760 | But, if it is the only thing you can do: at least, ca n''t we say a decent good- by to each other?" |
29760 | By the way, what''s his name?" |
29760 | By the way, why is it polite to call a woman stout, but rude in the extreme to dub her fat? |
29760 | CHAPTER TWENTY- TWO"Otto, how does it feel to be a celebrity?" |
29760 | Dane, will you help me to carry him to his room?" |
29760 | Dane?" |
29760 | Dane?" |
29760 | Did Beatrix send for me?" |
29760 | Did he remember me?" |
29760 | Did you see it, Miss Gannion? |
29760 | Do n''t you get very tired?" |
29760 | Do n''t you want to meet him?" |
29760 | Do you ever work, really work?" |
29760 | Do you grasp the pleasant state of things? |
29760 | Do you realize that, for the past two months, you have sung to me on an average of two hours a week?" |
29760 | Do you really think she ought to have someone?" |
29760 | Do you remember her?" |
29760 | Do you still take only one lump?" |
29760 | Do you suppose I would have been Bobby, if I had been consulted?" |
29760 | Do you suppose we could get him?" |
29760 | Does Otto know about it?" |
29760 | Does he sing again?" |
29760 | Does n''t it get a frightful bore, after the dozenth time you''ve been through it?" |
29760 | Has he come back yet?" |
29760 | Have you heard anything new about him?" |
29760 | Have you seen Thayer lately, Arlt?" |
29760 | Have you seen the latest importation at the Metropolitan?" |
29760 | Have you thought of that?" |
29760 | He did not take the trouble to discount the fact; but merely asked,--"How did you know about it?" |
29760 | He gave you a letter of introduction to me, I think?" |
29760 | He''s geniush,''n no mishtake; are n''you, Arlt?" |
29760 | His grandfather had refused to become reconciled to his son; then why should he assume post- mortem friendship with his son''s son? |
29760 | How can I escape them?" |
29760 | How could they? |
29760 | How did the poor girl stand it?" |
29760 | How do you do it, Thayer? |
29760 | How do, Arlt? |
29760 | How does it happen that I have the good luck to find you alone?" |
29760 | How does it happen you are n''t going?" |
29760 | How does it make you feel?" |
29760 | How far was she accountable for the future? |
29760 | How is it? |
29760 | How long do you mean to stay?" |
29760 | How long has it been going on?" |
29760 | How many tickets did you say you would take?" |
29760 | How much was my allowance, the last of the time in Berlin, Lorimer? |
29760 | I have hopes of you yet; but whence comes your conversion?" |
29760 | I prefer an occasional street- cleaning episode; but what can you expect in a March thaw?" |
29760 | I? |
29760 | If I were to go off and study something, what would you all think?" |
29760 | If I will wait until a week from to- night, will you give me your answer then?" |
29760 | If Lorimer had not kept a straight course during his honeymoon, what hope was there for either himself or Beatrix in the many, many moons to come? |
29760 | If it is n''t the applause and such stuff, what do you do it for?" |
29760 | If not, where would the diverging currents be waiting for them? |
29760 | If you do n''t care for the charity, you''ll do it for me; wo n''t you?" |
29760 | Is it much?" |
29760 | Is n''t it rather sudden?" |
29760 | It was a German piece; was n''t it? |
29760 | It would be a parallel case; but what would be the effect upon literature?" |
29760 | Just the living image of Lorimer; is n''t he?" |
29760 | Lorimer has been my friend for years, and it seems rather beastly to begin talking him over; but--""But?" |
29760 | Lorimer?" |
29760 | Lorimer?" |
29760 | Lorimer?" |
29760 | Lorimer?" |
29760 | Lorimer?" |
29760 | Lorimer?" |
29760 | May I ask whether you are going into slumming?" |
29760 | May I take you to the dining- room?" |
29760 | Miss Gannion, do you honestly think it worth the while?" |
29760 | Miss Gannion,"he turned upon her sharply;"ca n''t you realize the pain it is to me to be saying this? |
29760 | Mr. Thayer,"she added abruptly;"why have you never sung in opera?" |
29760 | Now shall we run over my songs?" |
29760 | Now, if I--""What have you to do with it, Bobby?" |
29760 | Oh, why was I the first to come? |
29760 | Or when? |
29760 | Or where? |
29760 | Queer thing; is n''t it? |
29760 | Sally, what is the reason you do n''t like Mrs. Lloyd Avalons?" |
29760 | Sally, which is greater, to create a gown, or to cut it out by a paper pattern?" |
29760 | Shall we leave my father here, and run off in search of some goodies? |
29760 | She was bound to send him away; but was she equally bound to send him away like a beaten dog, without a word of explanation or of pity? |
29760 | Should she close her eyes to the plague- spot which might one day spread and spread until it tainted her whole life? |
29760 | Sure it wo n''t upset your singing?" |
29760 | THE DOMINANT STRAIN[ Illustration:"''Beatrix?'' |
29760 | Tell me, has anybody seen Beatrix, this week?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | Thayer?" |
29760 | The child?" |
29760 | The meeting was inevitable, so what was the use of trying to put it off? |
29760 | Then Bobby inquired,"Well, and now what are you going to do next?" |
29760 | Then Thayer added suddenly,--"What did you want of me for Wednesday?" |
29760 | Then Thayer asked,--"Do you see Mrs. Lorimer often?" |
29760 | Then what shall you tell him?" |
29760 | Then what will the future amount to? |
29760 | Then wherefore deny?" |
29760 | There was a long interval of silence, before he added,"And is this final?" |
29760 | To Katarina?" |
29760 | Was he justified in working out his own professional salvation at the certain cost of the damnation of another soul? |
29760 | Was not fate in it; and was not a man always justified in following out his fate? |
29760 | Was there any trouble about the certificate?" |
29760 | Was this the true Beatrix Lorimer? |
29760 | Well, granted that we represent the two classes, the creative and the interpretive, which is the greater?" |
29760 | Were his crowns to be only the thornless, characterless ones that went with his profession? |
29760 | What about him, Miss Dane?" |
29760 | What are we all coming to?" |
29760 | What did you think?" |
29760 | What do you think of Thayer now, Beatrix?" |
29760 | What do you think?" |
29760 | What does it all amount to?" |
29760 | What does she know of music? |
29760 | What had Sidney Lorimer, drunkard, profligate that he was, to do with this high- bred, high- spirited, heart- broken woman? |
29760 | What if we give up the theatre? |
29760 | What makes you do music in pleasant weather, Arlt? |
29760 | What right have you to suppress facts that would change her whole point of view? |
29760 | What shall you say to him?" |
29760 | What time is the service?" |
29760 | What was the trouble? |
29760 | When Thayer comes, Tuesday night, are you willing to talk the whole matter over with him and see what he thinks about it now? |
29760 | When am I to have another chance of hearing you?" |
29760 | When?" |
29760 | When?" |
29760 | Which is lacking: enjoyment, or friendship?" |
29760 | Which is under your especial care?" |
29760 | Who could foretell what its resurrection would be? |
29760 | Who else has better claim?" |
29760 | Who is he, Sally?" |
29760 | Who is there?" |
29760 | Who?" |
29760 | Why ca n''t you be accurate, Beatrix, as befits your higher education? |
29760 | Why ca n''t you be original? |
29760 | Why did you come to her old party, then?" |
29760 | Why do n''t you sing_ My Desire_, if you are so anxious for an American song?" |
29760 | Why does she take Patsey Keefe to her heart and home, and snub Arlt upon all occasions?" |
29760 | Why not take it, and ignore the future? |
29760 | Why not?" |
29760 | Why not?" |
29760 | Why not?" |
29760 | Why should I need help?" |
29760 | Will it break up your part, if I tell you some news?" |
29760 | Will you have the new songs, or the old?" |
29760 | Will you take his place?" |
29760 | Would it be for weal, or for woe? |
29760 | Would that answer your purpose, Beatrix?" |
29760 | You do n''t mean you think he will kill her sometime when he is drunk?" |
29760 | [ Illustration:"''Ca n''t you make any sort of an excuse for yourself, Sidney?'' |
29760 | he said"_ Frontispiece_"''Ca n''t you make any sort of an excuse for yourself, Sidney?'' |
29760 | she demanded"]"How did you happen to do it, Sidney?" |
41440 | ''All right,''says I,''what kind of a team do you want, chaise or sleigh?'' 41440 ''Lisha,"called Gilbert to the backwoodsman, who had now come in,"will you go over home with sister Pegrim? |
41440 | ''N''when he wakes up, will he see muvver and Ma''gold and tell''em we was here? |
41440 | ''One of the mules? 41440 ''What place am I in, Doctor?'' |
41440 | All? |
41440 | And if I can, is that all that stands between us, Poppea? 41440 And if I do not choose to read it? |
41440 | And now the thing of which you made a barrier has vanished, how can you keep me out, how can you hold me away even if you want to, little one? 41440 And the funeral?" |
41440 | And what are you if you are not one of the home people? 41440 And you will stay with me to- night?" |
41440 | Are n''t you going in to see the Latimers? |
41440 | Are the ladies at home? |
41440 | Are they living? |
41440 | Are you coming, Emeline? 41440 Are you fond of dancing?" |
41440 | Are you going to speak to her? |
41440 | Brother Oliver has his hands full and wants me to come down and help him out for a week? 41440 Brother and sister?" |
41440 | But how can that be, Mr. Latimer? 41440 But how did the child come here so soon and why was she left at Oliver Gilbert''s instead of the Angus house?" |
41440 | But really, Miss Emmy, do n''t you think it would look more honest if I wore my own gown? |
41440 | But where is it to come from? 41440 Can I help you in any way?" |
41440 | Can she know about my father; is it turning her away from me? |
41440 | Can you describe the man? |
41440 | Did Hugh break your sleep to call you? |
41440 | Did Miss Emmy and Mr. Esterbrook and''Lisha and Aunt Satira and everybody know but me? 41440 Did it come with her?" |
41440 | Did you keep the bits of newspaper? |
41440 | Do n''t you calkerlate, Gilbert, it''ll be best to lead her up to calling us aunty and uncle? 41440 Do n''t you think that is the way of it, Hugh? |
41440 | Do n''t you want me to visit or have speech with the neighbors? |
41440 | Do you know what I said to myself as you slid away behind the heavy stair guards? |
41440 | Do you reckon he''ll want me for more than a week? 41440 Do you reckon there''s any of this old stuff that''s any good to dry out?" |
41440 | Do you remember once calling upon the Felton ladies in New York one afternoon and finding a half- wild girl dancing before the parlor mirror? |
41440 | Do you suppose he''s got any reason other than his usual one of taking the off side of things? |
41440 | Do you think under the circumstances it is a wise thing to give ornaments to a foundling of whose antecedents we know nothing? 41440 Do you think under the circumstances it is necessary? |
41440 | Do you think,sobbed Miss Emmy,"that she could have drowned herself? |
41440 | Do_ you_ know who this woman is, this adventuress? 41440 For New York? |
41440 | Gilbert, are you willing that the child should stay here while we investigate? |
41440 | Going to leave it on? 41440 Gone home? |
41440 | Got a small open kettle? |
41440 | Had the ladies heard of the lady baby left at old Oliver Gilbert''s, and his preposterous idea of keeping her? |
41440 | Had they seen Miss Marcia Duane, John Angus''s intended, and was she as handsome and rich as folks said? 41440 Has n''t she any name? |
41440 | Has n''t the pup got any name yet? |
41440 | Has the child been temperish and vexed you, or did she pull your ribbons awry in play? |
41440 | Has''Lisha Potts been in to- day? |
41440 | Have n''t you got a warm- looking comfortable to throw over that? |
41440 | Have they got names yet? |
41440 | Have you any other proof of this claim that you are making? |
41440 | Have you the keys, Mr. Latimer? 41440 He asked you how far it was to Harley''s Mills Post- office?" |
41440 | He has big cotton interests for one thing,said Gilbert;"otherwise, who can tell why he does this or that? |
41440 | How and when shall you tell her, Stephen? 41440 How do you know all this, Aunty dear?" |
41440 | How do you like that, cousin Emmy? |
41440 | How do you think she come here? 41440 How is Hugh?" |
41440 | How long have you been here? 41440 How much company is there?" |
41440 | I am going up to the Oldyses''now; may I tell Madam that you''re coming, say this afternoon? |
41440 | I''ll just clip over there by the back way and leave the box and home again before a soul''s awake to spy and whisper; hey, Toby''n Bill? |
41440 | If so, why did n''t we hear the rumble of it on the ice, and how would they account for the robe when they got back? |
41440 | Is he-- is Mr. Esterbrook any worse? 41440 Is it not strange, Stephen, that''Lisha Potts, who was the first to open the door that night, should have been the one to bring this all about?" |
41440 | Is that in the book? |
41440 | Is that strange to you, Poppea? 41440 Is there any quiet spot where I can wait?" |
41440 | Is there-- do you think that there is anything I could do if I should go there? |
41440 | Just friends, then? |
41440 | Know? 41440 Let''s see if the little lammy can stand? |
41440 | Like? 41440 Males or females?" |
41440 | Married couple? |
41440 | Miss Emmy, what is a parrotpet? |
41440 | Mr. Angus? 41440 Mr. Gilbert, did I understand you to say that the child is to be baptized this afternoon?" |
41440 | Mr. Latimer, an Episcopalian? 41440 Must I lose you, too, as I have lost Philip?" |
41440 | Neither of us, my child; do you not understand? |
41440 | News? 41440 Not even if the mystery of the name is solved?" |
41440 | Now how about the girl? |
41440 | Now will you come to the studio and see it for yourself, father? 41440 Oh, God, what have I done?" |
41440 | Oh, Hugh, Hugh, ca n''t you help me; wo n''t you help me find out who I am? 41440 Oh, it''s you, is it, Hughey, and who told you about her, pray?" |
41440 | Philip-- he? 41440 Poppea, do you not understand how much and why I care for you, for yourself and that only?" |
41440 | Shall I never know anything more? |
41440 | Shall you wear black? |
41440 | So she knows daddy already, does she? |
41440 | That''s why, then, he did all he could to keep you from getting the post- office? |
41440 | The man repeated the name to himself several times, and then asked:--''Would that be near a little place called Harley''s Mills?'' |
41440 | Then can we no longer be friends? |
41440 | Then he has gone? 41440 Then his dislike is public property?" |
41440 | Then it is good- by? |
41440 | Then why did you not write me only one word,''Come''? |
41440 | Then why not stop with me? |
41440 | Then you do know? |
41440 | Then you have some idea about her mother? 41440 Then you''ve heard every word they said?" |
41440 | Think? 41440 To- morrow? |
41440 | Was I other than I am now in those far- away days? 41440 Was Poppea''s secret hid among those papers?" |
41440 | Was it the wrong door after all, Stephen? 41440 Well?" |
41440 | Were they married? |
41440 | What are they, Poppea? 41440 What did his father say?" |
41440 | What do I know of you or you of me, either; what we are or may be? |
41440 | What do you know of those she came from? 41440 What do you think? |
41440 | What do you wish? |
41440 | What do you wish? |
41440 | What has Miss Angus-- Gilbert-- or whatever she persists in calling herself, to say to that, pray? |
41440 | What is it, Hugh? |
41440 | What is it, child? 41440 What is it, lammy? |
41440 | What is it? 41440 What is the news?" |
41440 | What is the other thing, my child, that you must do to- night? |
41440 | What made you run away, Poppea? 41440 What shall you do?" |
41440 | What will they do with him? |
41440 | What''s that? |
41440 | What''s this dull town to me? 41440 What''s this dull town to me? |
41440 | Where did you get them? |
41440 | Where is Poppea? |
41440 | Where is she? 41440 Where''d they come from_ last_?" |
41440 | Where''s Poppy? 41440 Who all is coming to the naming? |
41440 | Who is going to do it, and will it be here or at one of the churches? 41440 Who is it?" |
41440 | Who is it? |
41440 | Who is she, that is neither a model nor askable? |
41440 | Who is usually asked? |
41440 | Who might those be? |
41440 | Who? |
41440 | Why do you not go to her? |
41440 | Why have you stayed away so long? 41440 Why not destroy it now,"the voice whispered,"and for once will for good?" |
41440 | Why not take your mother''s name, then? |
41440 | Why, where is the lady baby? |
41440 | Why? 41440 Why?" |
41440 | Will Hugh let her be taken away? |
41440 | Will you come indoors? 41440 Will you stay here?" |
41440 | Wo n''t you set up to the table, Hugh, and eat with us? |
41440 | Would you have stopped still just long enough to tell a story to make folks laugh, and then gone straight on and walked over or out of the trouble? 41440 Would you not better read these papers now?" |
41440 | Wrote_ you_? 41440 You ai n''t never heard? |
41440 | You know how late the mail- train was last night, and how it stormed? 41440 You know who my parents are?" |
41440 | You want me? 41440 You will dance with me or at least speak to me afterward?" |
41440 | Your mother-- is she worse? |
41440 | _ Who_ was my mother? |
41440 | A tight string that chokes? |
41440 | Able to wind him, who had never before bent head or knees, around her little finger? |
41440 | Ah me, what could she do? |
41440 | Ah, how can you go on so when every one else falters?" |
41440 | Ah, little mother, wo n''t you ask God to help me in some way that I can feel and understand? |
41440 | Am I too old to change the might have been?" |
41440 | And Daddy-- isn''t Daddy my father? |
41440 | And if so, why did she take a man old enough to be her father?" |
41440 | And why should n''t he if he wishes? |
41440 | Are n''t they fine? |
41440 | Are not Stephen Latimer and Jeanne friends? |
41440 | Are they not going?" |
41440 | As he was in a somewhat exalted and generous mood, why do things by halves? |
41440 | But how about Miss Elizabeth and Mr. Esterbrook? |
41440 | But since then the doubt had come to her, suppose that the knowing proved to her also a final barrier instead of the key? |
41440 | But the life? |
41440 | But you do n''t, you ca n''t; ah, child, child, do you know how I have missed you? |
41440 | But,"as an idea made him brighten again,"she can keep my name, ca n''t she, dominie? |
41440 | By the way, what is the news of poor old Esterbrook? |
41440 | CHAPTER XII FRIENDSHIP? |
41440 | Can we hold out? |
41440 | Coming directly toward Poppea, he said:--"Can you go through one more ordeal, the last?" |
41440 | Could this be the same being who, less than an hour before, joyous and radiant, was skating up the river holding Miss Emmy by the hand? |
41440 | Could you be glad? |
41440 | Could you find it right in your conscience to burn the papers and let the past be buried? |
41440 | Could you think that I would not?" |
41440 | Did I do wrong in keeping the child from those who could do better by her? |
41440 | Did n''t specify any length of time, only said fetch her down? |
41440 | Did n''t''Lisha explain?" |
41440 | Did she realize the lapse of time? |
41440 | Do I not always study your interests?" |
41440 | Do n''t you know that this is my home, and that you are my father, just as God is, because we love each other?" |
41440 | Do n''t you like the idea, child? |
41440 | Do n''t you remember what you said to me about it last autumn when you urged me to come down and try my luck? |
41440 | Do n''t you see that I can never be any man''s wife, much less yours, who knows my whole life through, until I can give my own name with my love?" |
41440 | Do you hear that, all?" |
41440 | Do you remember, Hugh, the music-- the song that you and Poppy used to sing sometimes without the organ? |
41440 | Do you remember?" |
41440 | Do you suppose one of the mules could have broke loose?'' |
41440 | Do you think it is like her?" |
41440 | Do you think that he is coming?" |
41440 | Do you understand, Hugh? |
41440 | Doan yo''want to step in the little''ception room and circumnavigate it private like? |
41440 | Does little Philip know? |
41440 | Esterbrook caught his breath:"Is it too late? |
41440 | Esterbrook?" |
41440 | Ever heard about it? |
41440 | Ever since those shameless fence cats came?" |
41440 | FRIENDSHIP? |
41440 | For a minute Gilbert and Poppea sat looking at one another, then he said:"I wonder why that smart Aleck dropped in here just now and hung around so? |
41440 | For a moment general conversation reigned, then--"What is she to be named? |
41440 | Had his wife Helen directed in the case of her death that the child be left with Gilbert as a sort of spite to himself? |
41440 | Had she, possibly, laid to him the scheme of consolidating the two post- offices under a new name? |
41440 | Had the child none? |
41440 | Has anything happened? |
41440 | Has she not been protected and loved as her mother would have wished until she knows what love is, even if she has suffered in a lesser way?" |
41440 | Have I not always been the same to you? |
41440 | He drew up a second chair, saying quietly:"I understand so well that I will either go away or stay and play watch- dog; which do you prefer? |
41440 | Hesitate? |
41440 | How I had to put the ocean between in order to obey the plea in your letter?" |
41440 | How could she go back to town, Poppea thought, and wreathe her hair and sing? |
41440 | How did you know?" |
41440 | How long have you been here?" |
41440 | How was it that this humble man always managed to come between? |
41440 | How? |
41440 | Hugh surveyed the lady baby in silence for a moment, and then gravely shook her hand, saying,"How do you do?" |
41440 | I do not mean the outside things, the theatre, music, galleries, and shops, but the inner life that you led of yourself?" |
41440 | I mean, have n''t you decided what to call her?" |
41440 | I should judge that it was one of the times that you danced because you must, was it not?" |
41440 | I suppose, of course, that you know every resident in the town?" |
41440 | I want the one that has the white robe, the book, and the law behind him; but maybe, sir, you do not understand?'' |
41440 | I wonder if we can put it back? |
41440 | I''m not going home any more; how can I, when I have n''t a home or even a_ dead_ mother or a Daddy, and every one has deceived me?" |
41440 | If you had fled before a cruel hurt, would you like to be brought home by the ringing of bells?" |
41440 | Is he dead? |
41440 | Is he going to heaven in that bed asleep?" |
41440 | Is he very sick?" |
41440 | Is it not a rather public expression of our approval of what the conservative townspeople consider a very unwise action of Gilbert''s?" |
41440 | Is it not perfect?" |
41440 | Is it possible that you''re falling in--? |
41440 | Is it yours, Mr. Gilbert? |
41440 | Is n''t it putting possible temptation in her way?" |
41440 | Is n''t this about the time of day for a barley stick, sonny?" |
41440 | Is that your little grandchild? |
41440 | Is the miniature in the locket my mother''s portrait?" |
41440 | It''s hers, is n''t it, by law?" |
41440 | Latimer?" |
41440 | Latimer?" |
41440 | Lincoln wrote you? |
41440 | Looking down into her upturned face, an almost holy light came into Philip''s eyes as he repeated softly,"Sister? |
41440 | Mary, or a flower name, if you like fanciful things, such as Violet or Rose?" |
41440 | May I have it, Miss Emmy?" |
41440 | Might it not happen, far away as it seemed, that the change might also lie before Poppea? |
41440 | Miss Emmy, however, had replied:"Send Poppea home with you when she''s only been here two weeks? |
41440 | Must it be altogether broke? |
41440 | Need_ she_ know?" |
41440 | No, your daughter? |
41440 | Nora came into the room at that minute to say,"Miss Felton and Mr. Esterbrook had gone to Bridgeton and would Miss Gilbert come upstairs? |
41440 | Not for yourself, not for ourselves, but for the law''s full measure?" |
41440 | Now my point is, can you from an outside and perhaps kinder point of view set me straight upon this matter?" |
41440 | Now the remaining question is, will you?" |
41440 | Oh, Sister, what if he had not? |
41440 | Or are you too tired after your long drive yesterday?" |
41440 | Or is it because he withered little Roseleaf? |
41440 | Or was it a mistake and the intention been to leave her at his house on Windy Hill? |
41440 | Please, Daddy? |
41440 | Poppea asked pleadingly;"is n''t there anything to tell except that I am not me-- that I do n''t belong to them?" |
41440 | Quarter of four already? |
41440 | Say, Gilbert, do n''t you want me to stop at Mis''Pegrim''s as I go up and hustle her down for the day until this child business is settled up? |
41440 | Shall I make the tea, Miss Emmy? |
41440 | She hoped that he would not know and be hurt; as for the rest, what did it matter? |
41440 | Still holding fast and looking in his face, she gasped:--"What were my mother''s and father''s names? |
41440 | Straightway going to Poppea, he threw one arm about her, and then turning, said:--"What are you saying to her, Father? |
41440 | Suppose for one of the three to- morrow should not come? |
41440 | The months of parting had broken the old shuttle and snapped the thread; what pattern would the new loom weave that the meeting had set in motion? |
41440 | The old man Gilbert? |
41440 | Then she said timidly:"Meanwhile, Hugh, could you-- could we go on being friends? |
41440 | To- night?" |
41440 | Upstairs? |
41440 | Was he mistaken, or are you?" |
41440 | Was he to be trusted? |
41440 | Was it one of the mazes of a bad dream? |
41440 | Was it possible that only four hours had elapsed since she had left it? |
41440 | Was it possible that she had been too sensitive? |
41440 | Was she come to either beg or offer quarter in the shape of the original bit of land he coveted? |
41440 | Was that time now? |
41440 | We have met twice by accident, the third time by intent; does not that make us friends?" |
41440 | Well, Gilbert, what do you think?" |
41440 | Well, why not old Gilbert''s steps as well as old Tilley''s? |
41440 | Were the Mills to be abandoned? |
41440 | Were you not well received? |
41440 | What ails you?" |
41440 | What are you gaining now by trying to control others absolutely after you are dead?" |
41440 | What avail was his athletic strength or moral courage? |
41440 | What better to wake me up than to track her origin and find her name? |
41440 | What can I say? |
41440 | What day was it? |
41440 | What did Poppea think of it? |
41440 | What do you know?" |
41440 | What doubts raised? |
41440 | What has become of the young woman who is not a model or to be had for the asking? |
41440 | What has happened?" |
41440 | What if he had not? |
41440 | What is it?" |
41440 | What martyrs''blood must be shed to cleanse it? |
41440 | What part are you going to?'' |
41440 | What questions might be asked her? |
41440 | What should I do without you?" |
41440 | What would become of the expectant men? |
41440 | What would become of us? |
41440 | What''ll you have? |
41440 | When urged by Potts to sell her farm, she had answered:"No, Gilbert or I either one of us may feel called to marry, then what''s to do? |
41440 | When? |
41440 | Where did Daddy get me? |
41440 | Where did you find that name, Gilbert?" |
41440 | Where is your shawl, child? |
41440 | Who brought her and why? |
41440 | Who could tell or count the pulse beats of a man and a maid, that, being good friends, have temperament and the world before them? |
41440 | Who knows? |
41440 | Who was it? |
41440 | Who was my mother, Hugh? |
41440 | Why ca n''t I stay where I am for at least a half a dozen years?" |
41440 | Why could he not wait?" |
41440 | Why did n''t the Feltons have better sense than to take her into their family, a less than nobody? |
41440 | Why did n''t you tell the boys? |
41440 | Why did she call me as if she were afraid?" |
41440 | Why do n''t you speak? |
41440 | Why do n''t you speak? |
41440 | Why do you shiver so and draw away; you''ve always taken my arm?" |
41440 | Why does he hate me? |
41440 | Why had he made it? |
41440 | Why not try the head once more from memory?" |
41440 | Why should he not expect that its completion should be on the same plane? |
41440 | Why should he not worship her? |
41440 | Why? |
41440 | Will it be well, think you, that he falls entirely in love with Poppea?" |
41440 | Will you do it for the sake of all those years that we were comrades?" |
41440 | Will you go with me, dear?" |
41440 | Will you not also tell Miss Emmy and Hugh? |
41440 | Will you not call him in?" |
41440 | Wo n''t you please come and tell us all together, Jeanne and Miss Emmy? |
41440 | Wo n''t you step up into the best room and lay off your bunnit? |
41440 | Would he live to know? |
41440 | Would her faith be shattered? |
41440 | Would n''t she be his guide that afternoon? |
41440 | Would n''t that square up everything for everybody just right? |
41440 | Would n''t you like it, Poppy? |
41440 | Would she be victor or vanquished? |
41440 | Would the blaze reach it? |
41440 | Yet what does Nature care for such distinctions and boundaries? |
41440 | You are my sister? |
41440 | You have never heard it? |
41440 | You know Elizabeth, do you not?" |
41440 | You would have still been yourself, but I, what should I have been without you to love?" |
41440 | You''re sure he does n''t feel sick and does n''t want to allow it? |
41440 | Your mother and Daddy, what could I say to them if we did n''t speak? |
41440 | alone in the dark? |
41440 | and my father and mother also? |
41440 | and what''s Judy but a young woman? |
41440 | asked Jeanne,"and how could the little trunk have been hidden away so long?" |
41440 | but still he would laugh noiselessly, the laugh of senility not mirth, and nod his head to and fro, saying:--"Know Emmy? |
41440 | but_ who_ was her mother?" |
41440 | how could any one have the heart to desert such an exquisite little creature? |
41440 | know Emmy? |
41440 | look quick, and tell me if the snow has blinded me, or are those numbers 1851?" |
41440 | or does it seem to you as it does to me, the fulfilment?" |
41440 | or shall I tell him you are here?" |
41440 | or still walk on foot- length by foot- length, trusting to circumstance for keeping the course that one may not divine? |
41440 | she whispered;"how did it come here?" |
41440 | sit down to think it out? |
41440 | the man with the scar on his hand?" |
41440 | what has he done to be so dealt with? |
41440 | what''s that, a place?" |
41440 | who is it?" |
41440 | you see it then; was that why you left the room so suddenly the night that I sang in the dress of the miniature?" |
29849 | ''Do n''t you hear my little bell Go chinking, chinking, chink? 29849 ''Do n''t you remember The fifth of November-- The gunpowder treason plot? |
29849 | ''Spect you are from the country and on your way to market, eh? |
29849 | And are you acquainted? |
29849 | And so you are a lieutenant? |
29849 | And so you are from that dependency of the crown? 29849 And what do you do with the potash?" |
29849 | And why are they like a sermon? |
29849 | And you saw him when he was killed? |
29849 | Anybody ax ye to get it knocked down? |
29849 | Are dairymaids ladies? |
29849 | Are n''t you going to do something? |
29849 | Are n''t you going to protest? |
29849 | Are such masquerade balls usually attended by noble lords and ladies? |
29849 | Are the gentlemen invited to the tea- parties? |
29849 | Are they going to fire? |
29849 | Are you and Miss Newville still friends? |
29849 | Are you not jesting, my lord? |
29849 | Are you ready there? |
29849 | Are you sure it is authentic information? |
29849 | Are you the officer who was in command of the troops? |
29849 | Are your guns loaded? |
29849 | But how do you load it? |
29849 | But what if one has not the qualities? |
29849 | But what shall we drink instead of tea? |
29849 | By what right does Colonel Hardman seize these premises? |
29849 | Ca n''t General Howe drive Mr. Washington from the hill just as he did at Charlestown? |
29849 | Can it be he? |
29849 | Can not Admiral Graves protect the transports? |
29849 | Can you direct me to the house of Mr. Samuel Adams? |
29849 | Can you guess who carved it? |
29849 | Colonel Hardman desires to take our house, does he? |
29849 | Did George become the son- in- law of the king? |
29849 | Did I understand correctly that you are Robert Walden from Rumford? |
29849 | Did not the people protest against such a law? |
29849 | Did the Sons of Liberty smuggle it ashore during the night? |
29849 | Do all the ladies take snuff? |
29849 | Do ladies play? |
29849 | Do ladies ride horseback in the Colonies? |
29849 | Do not the gentlemen participate in some way? |
29849 | Do not the young ladies meet? |
29849 | Do they feel equally jolly? |
29849 | Do you have any other recreations equally attractive and delightful? |
29849 | Do you have garden tea- parties in Rumford? |
29849 | Do you have melocotoons in Rumford? |
29849 | Do you know me? |
29849 | Do you know you have no power to fire upon the people except by order of a magistrate? |
29849 | Do you mean to say that you swallow these monsters? |
29849 | Do you mean to say there is scheming among the reverend prelates of our most holy church? |
29849 | Do you not have snow in London, my lord? |
29849 | Do you not hear it? 29849 Do you not think, Mr. Walden, that the doctor is very rude to take a young lady''s hand when she can not help herself?" |
29849 | Do you own the figger? |
29849 | Do you own the store? |
29849 | Do you remain long in town? |
29849 | Do you think such a time will ever come? |
29849 | Do you think the people will deny themselves for a principle? |
29849 | Do you think the present scarcity of food will continue long? |
29849 | Do you think these are true stories? |
29849 | Do you think we can induce the ladies to quit drinking it? |
29849 | Do you think, father, that General Gage will win back the affections of the people, or even retain their respect by permitting such outrages? |
29849 | Do you think, your excellency, the time will ever come when his majesty''s troops will take their departure? |
29849 | Does she love flowers? |
29849 | Does the Bible say a wife must kneel at her husband''s feet? |
29849 | Does the town clerk cry the proposed marriages? |
29849 | Ever been this way before? |
29849 | Father and mother have told me what they want, and now what shall I get for you, Rachel? |
29849 | Father, have you forgotten who it is that feeds the ravens and cares for the sparrows? 29849 Finding the red ear?" |
29849 | Fondness for me, mother? |
29849 | General Howe threatens that? |
29849 | Go where? |
29849 | Good- evening; will you walk in? |
29849 | Has Lillie engaged ye to get rid of the thing? |
29849 | Has Parliament any right to tax the people of America without their consent? |
29849 | Has he ordered you to take possession of it for him? |
29849 | Have you any idea, Tom, who placed the effigy there? |
29849 | Have you any other recreations? |
29849 | Have you not, father, said in the past that he was an estimable young man? |
29849 | How are you, rebel? |
29849 | How are you, redcoat? |
29849 | How did the king receive her? |
29849 | How do you do, father? |
29849 | How do you know it is genuine-- from the writing? |
29849 | How does he know that I am a rebel? |
29849 | How would you like a sleigh- ride? |
29849 | I dare say, Mr. Duncan, you are quite well acquainted with the country around Boston? |
29849 | I do n''t know; what can we? |
29849 | I have not served you with tea, doctor; what kind would you prefer? |
29849 | I hope you find the tea to your taste? |
29849 | I never have fired a pistol, Pompey; how do you do it? |
29849 | I remember, Miss Newville, that you once graciously served me at an afternoon tea; shall I have the pleasure of waiting upon you? |
29849 | I suppose she is spinning for herself, these days? |
29849 | I suppose you can hardly wonder at it? |
29849 | If by any chance the town should be evacuated, what think you, your excellency, those of us who are loyal to the king ought to do? |
29849 | If you win, my lord, does not somebody else lose? |
29849 | In England we feed our sheep on beans,his lordship replied;"and may I ask what is Indian corn?" |
29849 | Is Captain Brandon at home? |
29849 | Is it far to Doctor Warren''s house? |
29849 | Is it right ever to resist the authority of the king? |
29849 | Is it so bad as that? |
29849 | Is n''t it delightful that they have come in the nick of time? |
29849 | Is that so? |
29849 | Is the fellow dead, I wonder-- frozen stiff, this bitter night, and standing still? |
29849 | Is this Colonel Hardman? |
29849 | Is what you are saying a fair picture of life among the nobility? |
29849 | Is your father loyal to the king, Miss Brandon? |
29849 | It was very kind of you to send such a basket of fruit to me, a stranger; will you please accept a little gift in return? 29849 Just gee a little and run the nose of your sled agin it and knock it over, will ye? |
29849 | May I ask Miss Newville to favor us with music? |
29849 | May I ask why Miss Newville would not have knelt to her future husband and sovereign, had she been Princess Sophia? |
29849 | May I ask why you like it best? |
29849 | May I ask why you withhold two? |
29849 | May I ask, my lord, what a masquerade is supposed to represent? |
29849 | May I ask, my lord, what recreations you have in London? |
29849 | May I look at your books? |
29849 | Mr. Walden, may I ask if we have not met before? |
29849 | Must you go? 29849 My lord, may I presume to assign my daughter to you?" |
29849 | My lord, shall I give you some cranberries? |
29849 | My lord, shall I have the pleasure of presenting my daughter? |
29849 | My name is Peter Bushwick, and yours may be--? |
29849 | Not if the country required it? |
29849 | Not those sent to protect us? |
29849 | Oh, Mr. Walden, what do you think your good cousin has been saying? |
29849 | Oh, from New Hampshire? 29849 Ought it not to be beautiful as well?" |
29849 | Ought the Colonies to unite for self- defense? |
29849 | Ought the Colonies, in any event, to separate from England? |
29849 | Ought we not to call in the doctor? |
29849 | Pardon me, madam, but may I inquire what these may be? |
29849 | Robert,he said at length,"how would you like to try your hand at truck and dicker?" |
29849 | Say, Poke Nose; how much are ye going to get for the job? |
29849 | Say, bumpkin, how did ye get away from your ma''s apron- string? |
29849 | Shall I give him my hand, if I can not at the same time give him my heart? |
29849 | Shall I help you to a bit of canvasback, my lord? |
29849 | Shall I pass you a cup, Miss Newville? |
29849 | Shall we drink the health of our gracious sovereign? |
29849 | Shall we go up on the housetop and see the sun set? |
29849 | Shall we have the pleasure of drinking the health of your father? |
29849 | So it is the son and not the father? 29849 So you have heard from Tom?" |
29849 | Suppose you first ask those two fellows what they''ve been doing? 29849 Tell who?" |
29849 | That is my name; what can I do for you? |
29849 | The tea, do you mean? |
29849 | Then, Miss Brandon, you do not consider yourself, at this moment, one of his subjects? |
29849 | Think so, do ye? |
29849 | This is Mr. Adams, is it not? |
29849 | Was it Robert you saw? |
29849 | Was it not rather out of character for a man old enough to be grave and dignified to take such a part? |
29849 | Was not our queen consulted in regard to the matter? |
29849 | Was the marriage of our king and queen a love- match? |
29849 | Well Jenny, old girl, how do you do? |
29849 | Well, how is the Mary Jane getting on? 29849 What aim?" |
29849 | What can I do? |
29849 | What can I say that will interest her, what talk about? |
29849 | What can I show you? 29849 What can we do to round out the day for you, dear?" |
29849 | What d''ye want to come in for? |
29849 | What d''ye want? |
29849 | What did Nancy do? |
29849 | What do you mean? |
29849 | What do you wish? |
29849 | What has come? |
29849 | What has happened, daughter? |
29849 | What has happened, father? |
29849 | What has happened? |
29849 | What have you been doing, sir? |
29849 | What have you to say to that? |
29849 | What is all this about? |
29849 | What is it? |
29849 | What is it? |
29849 | What is the trouble? |
29849 | What is to be the outcome of all this? |
29849 | What makes you think so? |
29849 | What might it be? |
29849 | What shall be done? |
29849 | What will you live on? 29849 What would a crest do for me?" |
29849 | What''d they do that for? |
29849 | What''s going on? |
29849 | What''s the matter, my boy? |
29849 | What''s the news, Billy? |
29849 | What''s up? |
29849 | What? 29849 Where are the blackguards? |
29849 | Where are we going? |
29849 | Where have you been? 29849 Which season do you like best?" |
29849 | Who are the Macaroni ladies? |
29849 | Who are ye, and what d''ye want? |
29849 | Who are you and what do you want? |
29849 | Who are you and what do you wish? |
29849 | Who are you? |
29849 | Who knows how tea will mix with salt water? |
29849 | Who''s shot? |
29849 | Who''s there, and what is wanted? |
29849 | Who? |
29849 | Why ca n''t we have a dance? |
29849 | Why can I not do something for somebody instead of idling my time away? |
29849 | Why did n''t General Howe take possession of the hill, and prevent the provincials from doing it? |
29849 | Why did n''t you tell us about it, Ruth, so we could have shown him some attention? |
29849 | Why do you call it the Liberty Tree? |
29849 | Why do you wish to search it? |
29849 | Why must the army go? |
29849 | Why not? |
29849 | Why should they not be, Miss Newville? |
29849 | Why should they? 29849 Why should they? |
29849 | Why, father? |
29849 | Wild turkey, did you say? |
29849 | Will you allow me to take a glass with you for your own health? |
29849 | Will you be in town through the week and over the Sabbath? |
29849 | Will you not make an exception of those who call upon Miss Newville? |
29849 | Will you not take a look at the garret? |
29849 | Will you please allow me to pass? |
29849 | Will you try some succotash, my lord? |
29849 | Would I like to be free, Miss Ruth? |
29849 | Would n''t ye like a chaw of tobacco, redcoat? |
29849 | Would they not be likely to regard those who support the king as their enemies? |
29849 | Would you think it strange, your excellency, if they were not lenient? |
29849 | Yes, would you like to be free, to own yourself, to come and go as you please? |
29849 | You are Tom Brandon, are you not? |
29849 | You have a brother, I think, in the provincial army? |
29849 | You have come to take possession of my house? |
29849 | You have not told me about Rachel; is she well? |
29849 | You will not, ladies, decline to drink the health of the queen, I trust? |
29849 | ''Do you not see the dragon? |
29849 | ''Why should I fly?'' |
29849 | *****"What is it, husband?" |
29849 | A thought came; why not seize his musket and have a weapon of defense? |
29849 | And do you wonder I have hated the sight of a redcoat ever since? |
29849 | And how is Rachel?" |
29849 | And how''s your dad?" |
29849 | And is he well?" |
29849 | And they are of your own carding, spinning, and knitting? |
29849 | And what do you suppose the reverend donkey set him to doing? |
29849 | And yet, what right had they to make a decision for her when her own life''s happiness was concerned? |
29849 | And yet, would it not be ignoble to remain? |
29849 | Are not Lucy Flucker Knox, Dorothy Quincy, and Abigail Smith Adams my friends? |
29849 | Are not your people rather slow?" |
29849 | Berinthia, you have the colonel''s order, I think? |
29849 | Brandon?" |
29849 | Brandon?" |
29849 | But how could he help looking at her? |
29849 | But the canoe was water- logged; how should he get rid of it? |
29849 | But upon reflection there was another serious and disquieting aspect; how should he make his way and by what objects could he mark out his course? |
29849 | But what is it here for? |
29849 | But what will one who knows so much think of the awkward fellow keeping you company? |
29849 | But what would be the outcome of a battle? |
29849 | But what''s the use of knocking''em up at two o''clock in the morning? |
29849 | But why must we go? |
29849 | But would she not think him wanting in manliness? |
29849 | By what right were they strolling the streets of an orderly town? |
29849 | Can you expect them to be as gracious as in former days?" |
29849 | Can you not prolong your stay?" |
29849 | Could he embark his army in boats, land at the foot of the hill, climb the steep ascent, and drive the rebels with the bayonet? |
29849 | Could he hope for any less a sacrifice of his army in attacking a more formidable position, with the rebels more securely intrenched? |
29849 | Could he hope to capture them? |
29849 | Could not the face before her exhibit like qualities under like provocation? |
29849 | Could she ever be happy with Lord Upperton? |
29849 | Could she find pleasure in fine dressing, card playing, and masquerading as he had described them? |
29849 | Could she in any way barter her future welfare for the present life and for the larger life beyond? |
29849 | Did he not show proper respect not only to herself but to everybody? |
29849 | Did you say we is free?" |
29849 | Do n''t you know better than to draw your sword against a citizen in this way?" |
29849 | Do the ladies who hunt foxes attend meeting on the Sabbath, my lord?" |
29849 | Do they grow on trees?" |
29849 | Do you eat beans over here?" |
29849 | Do you forget that he can trace his lineage down to the time of William the Conqueror, and I do n''t know how much farther? |
29849 | Do you know Sam?" |
29849 | Do you mean to intimate that our king has corrupt men around him?" |
29849 | Do you remember a day, six years ago, one September afternoon, when I came into the house greatly agitated? |
29849 | Do you still have delightful times at quiltings and huskings?" |
29849 | Do you think my old friends will do anything to annoy me? |
29849 | Do you want cash? |
29849 | Does he think that by burning the town he will frighten those men in the redoubt into submission? |
29849 | Does your excellency think such a course of conduct will tend to restore to the king the alienated affections of his late subjects?" |
29849 | George?" |
29849 | Give up Tom? |
29849 | Give up our home? |
29849 | Had he not been down to death''s door through brutal treatment from the redcoats? |
29849 | Had he not just as much right to stand resolutely for the liberties of the people as her father for the prerogatives of the king? |
29849 | Had he not transported heavy cannon across the country from Lake Champlain to bombard the town? |
29849 | Had she many flowers? |
29849 | Had she not a right to do as she pleased? |
29849 | Haow''s King George and his wife?'' |
29849 | Has not Mr. John Hancock danced with me? |
29849 | Have I done anything that should cause them to turn against me? |
29849 | Have I not sat in his lap in my girlhood? |
29849 | Have you a pen at hand?" |
29849 | Have you brothers and sisters?" |
29849 | Have you found anything in the market on which we can turn a penny? |
29849 | Have you not noticed that almost everything we prize has come through sacrifice and suffering? |
29849 | Have you seen a canoe?" |
29849 | Having wiped out every statute, what do you suppose Parliament did?" |
29849 | He could die in their defense; why should it trouble him, then, to think of shooting those who were assailing what he held so dear? |
29849 | He was so noble and true, how could I help it? |
29849 | How ascertain if she were well: if her heart was still her own? |
29849 | How could Ruth ever become a rebel, disloyal to her rightful sovereign? |
29849 | How could he go and leave her with such uncertainty before him? |
29849 | How could his eyes help following her? |
29849 | How dispose of them? |
29849 | How occupy his time? |
29849 | How should he ask about Miss Newville without revealing his interest in her? |
29849 | How would he live in a foreign land? |
29849 | How would she greet him were they to meet again? |
29849 | How would the people of England regard his administration of affairs? |
29849 | How''s yer dad and marm?" |
29849 | I am not going to marry his ancestors, am I?" |
29849 | I suppose, Mr. Walden, you leach the ashes, which you scrape up from your fireplace?" |
29849 | If he could get away, was it not his duty to do so? |
29849 | If his majesty''s officers do these things, what may we not expect from the provincials, should it ever come our turn?" |
29849 | If meeting, would she ever be other than an old acquaintance? |
29849 | If so, what should she say to him-- how make known her gratitude? |
29849 | If the British regarded Charlestown Heights of such importance, why should not the provincials seize them? |
29849 | If the British were to learn he was getting well, would they not be likely to send him on board one of the ships and pack him off to Halifax? |
29849 | If we ask them to be lenient, will they not inquire if the king''s troops were merciful when they set Charlestown on fire?" |
29849 | Is this your first visit to town?" |
29849 | It is very honorable in you, and you will not let the soldiers injure you?" |
29849 | It was plain that the leak must be stopped, but how? |
29849 | Leave our home and become wanderers and vagabonds? |
29849 | May I not ask that it shall be our secret, and ours only?" |
29849 | May I say I can not find words to express the pleasure I have had in your society? |
29849 | Maybe they are a sort of hackney or chariot?" |
29849 | Might not her father, through Lord Upperton''s influence at court, attain a more exalted position? |
29849 | Might they not do the same with him? |
29849 | More than that, was it not becoming plain, that were the British to go, the Tories must also go? |
29849 | Mr. Walden, shall I serve you with a cup of tea? |
29849 | Must she leave her home,--the home that had been so blissful, so hospitable? |
29849 | Must she stop seeing him to please her father? |
29849 | Of course you have felt the excitement of a horse- race, Miss Newville?" |
29849 | Older than yourself?" |
29849 | Ought he not to allow her to win? |
29849 | Ought she not to abide their judgment as to what was best for her? |
29849 | Ought she not to feel flattered in having a noble lord for a lover? |
29849 | Ought she to allow prospective pleasure or position to influence her choice? |
29849 | Ought she to sacrifice herself to their selfish interests? |
29849 | Rector, will there be anything beyond these in the New Jerusalem?" |
29849 | Shall I attempt to escape, run the chance of being shot, or captured and executed, as threatened by the proclamation? |
29849 | Shall I go, or shall I stay?" |
29849 | Shall I say anything about it? |
29849 | Shall we take a stroll through the grounds?" |
29849 | Should he do it? |
29849 | Should he leave them to the tender mercies of the exasperated provincials whose homes had been burned? |
29849 | Should he remain secreted? |
29849 | Should she give her hand to Lord Upperton and keep back her heart? |
29849 | Should she plunge a knife into her own heart to please her father? |
29849 | Should she withdraw her engagement? |
29849 | Son of my friend Joshua Walden? |
29849 | That seat of Science, Athens, And earth''s proud mistress, Rome: Where now are all their glories? |
29849 | The murmuring ceased as Samuel Adams addressed him:--"Will you, Mr. Rotch, send the Dartmouth back to London with the tea on board?" |
29849 | The tavern is still standing in the suburbs of the city of Manchester, N. H.]"So you are the son of Josh Walden, eh? |
29849 | Then what? |
29849 | To have diamonds and pearls? |
29849 | To have precedence over others of lower station in social life? |
29849 | Walden?" |
29849 | Walden?" |
29849 | Walden?" |
29849 | Walden?" |
29849 | Was Lord Upperton of such lofty character that she could render him honor and respect, even if she could not give to him a loving heart? |
29849 | Was he not a gentleman? |
29849 | Was he not giving his time and strength to relieve suffering? |
29849 | Was he not kind- hearted? |
29849 | Was he not polite? |
29849 | Was it an angel bending over him,--whose eyes of love and infinite tenderness looked into his own? |
29849 | Was it one of the seraphim that pressed her lips to his, that dropped tears upon his cheeks? |
29849 | Was it possible that ladies in the Colonies were acquainted with the classics? |
29849 | Was not his country calling him? |
29849 | Was she awake or dreaming? |
29849 | Was she awake or dreaming? |
29849 | Was she never again to welcome a guest to that table, never hear the merry chatter of voices in parlor or garden? |
29849 | Was she not her own? |
29849 | Was she still making cheese? |
29849 | Well, what do you think happened? |
29849 | Were he to say the thought of her had filled the days with happiness, would she not think him presumptuous? |
29849 | Were position in society, pleasure, gratification of self, to be the end and aim of life? |
29849 | Were there tears in Heaven? |
29849 | Were they not ever doing what they could for her? |
29849 | What are they? |
29849 | What course should he pursue? |
29849 | What course should she pursue? |
29849 | What had she ever done for anybody? |
29849 | What had the future in store for them? |
29849 | What had they done? |
29849 | What has become of her? |
29849 | What have I done that you should think of dropping me from your acquaintance?" |
29849 | What have those people done that their homes should be destroyed? |
29849 | What if he did help destroy the tea; was it not a righteous protest against the tyranny of the king and Parliament? |
29849 | What is it you wish?" |
29849 | What is it you wish?" |
29849 | What is the meaning of this? |
29849 | What kind will you take-- shall it be Old Hyson, Bohea, or Twankey?" |
29849 | What leave behind? |
29849 | What may it be? |
29849 | What news do you bring from that Province?" |
29849 | What of the citizens who had maintained their loyalty to the king? |
29849 | What ought I to do? |
29849 | What ought she to take, what would she most need? |
29849 | What possessed her to turn her back upon Lord Upperton, upon the opportunity to become a peeress of the realm? |
29849 | What probability of their ever meeting again? |
29849 | What right have they to be standing there? |
29849 | What route should he take? |
29849 | What should he do? |
29849 | What should he do? |
29849 | What should he do? |
29849 | What should he say to her? |
29849 | What should he take? |
29849 | What should she say to him? |
29849 | What should she say to him? |
29849 | What should she say? |
29849 | What sort of accommodations would they find at Halifax? |
29849 | What that deep, heavy roar reverberating along the shore? |
29849 | What that plunge in the water not far away? |
29849 | What the meaning of such silence? |
29849 | What the meaning of that flash in the distance? |
29849 | What the meaning of this flood of light? |
29849 | What the people of England? |
29849 | What use would he have for them in exile? |
29849 | What was the meaning of it? |
29849 | What was the meaning of such mysterious inaction? |
29849 | What was there about him that made the thought repellent? |
29849 | What would King George say? |
29849 | What would such a life be worth? |
29849 | What would the king say? |
29849 | What would the ministry think? |
29849 | What would they do? |
29849 | When would he again behold those loving eyes, that radiant face, that beauty of soul seen in every feature? |
29849 | Where had she seen one like him? |
29849 | Where was he? |
29849 | Whether favoring or opposing the course of the Colonies, what matter to him? |
29849 | Who goes there?" |
29849 | Who would purchase them? |
29849 | Why could n''t Ruth go with them? |
29849 | Why could n''t she? |
29849 | Why did n''t you come right here, you naughty boy?" |
29849 | Why do you do it? |
29849 | Why not ask Doctor Cooper to preach about it? |
29849 | Why not make an effort to overcome her repugnance to him? |
29849 | Why not remain and enjoy the blessedness of her presence? |
29849 | Why not stay? |
29849 | Why not take revenge? |
29849 | Why not? |
29849 | Why not?" |
29849 | Why should they fire? |
29849 | Why should they, when they know that I myself am a rebel? |
29849 | Why undertake the arduous task alone? |
29849 | Why was Miss Newville sending it? |
29849 | Why was she averse to receiving his attentions? |
29849 | Why, Ruth, what are you thinking of? |
29849 | Will He not care for you? |
29849 | Will it be long before we shall see you again? |
29849 | Will not the selectmen make a fuss if I do n''t notify''em at once? |
29849 | Will she not regard me as a simpleton?" |
29849 | Will they ever again see her? |
29849 | Will you not try a cup of Young Hyson for variety?" |
29849 | With her father, mother, and Tom she had quit drinking tea; why should she not persuade others to banish it from their tables? |
29849 | With so many things to care for, I do not suppose she finds much time for reading?" |
29849 | Would he ever be able to take part again in the struggle for freedom? |
29849 | Would he not run upon the boats of the marine patrol and be hailed by the sentinels on the Boyne, Somerset, and other vessels of the fleet? |
29849 | Would it be an exhibition of filial duty were she to disappoint them? |
29849 | Would it be gentlemanly to defeat her? |
29849 | Would not her marriage fill her mother''s life with happiness? |
29849 | Would not her marriage to Lord Upperton contribute to their happiness? |
29849 | Would she be changed by the changing circumstances? |
29849 | Would she not think him rude? |
29849 | Would she think of him when lying down to sleep? |
29849 | Would she, daughter of a loyalist, deign to notice him, a rebel? |
29849 | Would strength ever come? |
29849 | Would you like to be free, Pompey?" |
29849 | Would you like to hear it?" |
29849 | Ye see that thing out there, do n''t ye?" |
29849 | You have changed the charter of this Province; if this, why not all the others? |
29849 | You remember that sweet girl, Lucy Flucker, whom you met at Miss Newville''s garden party?" |
29849 | You would not have me ask him if he does, would you, father dear?" |
29849 | [ 38] Was it a burglar? |
29849 | and when you asked, as you have now, what had happened, I would not make reply?" |
29849 | is it possible? |
29849 | is that so? |
29849 | what had it? |
29849 | what is it?" |
29849 | what is it?" |
29849 | where did you come from?" |
9590 | ''But might not life be spared?'' 9590 ''Did she rail at, or cry out against any?'' |
9590 | ''Julia,''said I,''do you know that Robert Barnet loves you with all the strength of an honest and true heart?'' 9590 ''What in the world, Skipper, does this mean?'' |
9590 | And hast thou attained thy object? |
9590 | And have I not an assurance of it at this very moment? |
9590 | And how is he? |
9590 | And so your fishing voyage really cured him? |
9590 | And this is thy friend, Eleonora? |
9590 | And were you kindly treated by this chief? |
9590 | And what did become of the women? |
9590 | And what would a miracle avail us at such times of darkness and strong temptation? |
9590 | Are you content to live as a servant? |
9590 | But can it be possible,said I,"that the influence of such an excessive use of opium can produce any alleviation of mental suffering? |
9590 | But he did n''t die after all, did he? |
9590 | But if I should tell you that you are free to go or stay, as you will, would you be glad or sorry? |
9590 | But what came of it? |
9590 | But what shall I say of the mind? 9590 Can it be?" |
9590 | Come hither, child, and say hast thou This young man ever seen? |
9590 | Dear me,says the woman, looking very dismal,"have you seen anything of the Deacon?" |
9590 | Did it seem to go up, or down? |
9590 | Did she die? |
9590 | Did the Evil Spirit whom they thus called upon testify against himself, by telling who were his instruments in mischief? |
9590 | Die? 9590 Do you not remember, father,"said Rebecca,"some verses of Tibullus, in which he speaketh of a certain enchantress? |
9590 | Do you not think her a fine woman? |
9590 | Do you speak of Margaret Brewster? |
9590 | Does n''t she look like Robert? |
9590 | From whence hast thou sought it? |
9590 | Has the great chief forgotten his white friends? 9590 Have we not been told that they whom Moses and the prophets have failed to convince would not believe although one rose from the dead? |
9590 | Have you voted yet, Mr. Ivison? 9590 How do you do? |
9590 | How do you think it would suit your case? |
9590 | How have ye known this? |
9590 | How you know Amesbury wolf? |
9590 | How you think Sam know you? 9590 How''s thee do, Aminadab?" |
9590 | I marvelled much they could not see Thou comest from above And often to myself I said,''How can they thus approach the dead?'' 9590 It may be so,"he replied, while another shudder ran along his nerves;"but why should I fear it? |
9590 | John,said my cousin, in a quick, choking voice,"is it You?" |
9590 | Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen, The flower of Ireland? 9590 Oh, how shall he know where he went before? |
9590 | Oh, is that all? |
9590 | Once? 9590 Or the swine of the Gadarenes?" |
9590 | Pray, how was that? |
9590 | Seekest thou, like Pilate, after truth? 9590 Tell me,"said the shape,"if thou canst, which of the twain is the Quaker and which is the Priest?" |
9590 | Thee''s voted, I suppose? |
9590 | Truly a marvellous providence,said Mr. Ward;"but what has been done in your settlements in consequence of it?" |
9590 | WELL, what''s the news below? |
9590 | Was my aim too lofty? 9590 Well, Robert,"said the Doctor,"how do matters now stand with you? |
9590 | Well, what happened next? |
9590 | What ails you? |
9590 | What are you doing there? |
9590 | What avail,he said,"these long and painful endeavors, these midnight vigils, these weary studies, before which heart and flesh are failing? |
9590 | What became of Robert Barnet? |
9590 | What if a son of mine was in a strange land? |
9590 | What makes you lie there? |
9590 | What mean you, Richard? 9590 What new piece of scandal is afloat now?" |
9590 | What news do you bring us of the savages? |
9590 | What think you of this passage? |
9590 | What''s the matter, my lad? |
9590 | What, from Dick Wilson? |
9590 | What, from Labrador? 9590 Where is the constable?" |
9590 | Who makes strong drink? |
9590 | Who takes the Indian''s beaver- skins and corn for it? 9590 Why cowers the dog, whose snuffing nose Was never once deceived till now? |
9590 | Why is the son of the great chief bound by my brothers? |
9590 | Why, Thankful, do n''t you know me? 9590 Will my brother go?" |
9590 | Will the great chief forget his promise? |
9590 | Would you leave me if you could? |
9590 | Ye have, indeed, done well for the spiritual,said Mr. Ward;"what have you done for your temporal defence?" |
9590 | Ye little skelpan- limmer''s face, How dare ye try sic sportin'', An''seek the foul thief ony place For him to try your fortune? 9590 You have seen Mrs. H------, of-------?" |
9590 | You speak of the young farmer Barnet and his wife, I suppose? |
9590 | ''A horse?'' |
9590 | ''How cam this horse here? |
9590 | ''How can you talk so? |
9590 | ''Who can paint like Nature''?" |
9590 | A milch cow?'' |
9590 | Ah, what have I not seen and heard? |
9590 | All who live die sooner or later; and pray who was Dr. Singletary, that his case should claim particular attention? |
9590 | And art thou, too, among the blessed, mild, much- injured Poetry? |
9590 | And even under the old law of rituals, what answer had the Pharisees to the question,"Is it not lawful to do good on the Sabbath day?" |
9590 | And how was it all this time with David himself? |
9590 | And the shape said,"Dost thou well to be angry?" |
9590 | And this is his son Wonolanset? |
9590 | And why amidst the chilling snows Does either hunter wipe his brow? |
9590 | And, after all, is the idea itself a vain one? |
9590 | Are we Jews, or Christians? |
9590 | Blot out the memory of this world, and what would heaven or hell be to us? |
9590 | But what else is going?" |
9590 | But what has all this to do with the falls? |
9590 | But what has thee been dreaming about?" |
9590 | But what was to be done? |
9590 | Did he perish at the hands of the infidels, and does the maiden sleep in the family tomb, under her father''s oaks? |
9590 | Did the knight forego his false worship and his vows, and so marry his beloved Anna? |
9590 | Do n''t you know that no unclean thing can enter the kingdom of heaven?" |
9590 | Do we not feel that the only real deformity is sin, and that goodness evermore hallows and sanctifies its dwelling- place? |
9590 | Doth the eagle mount up at thy command, and make her nest on high?" |
9590 | Fifty dollars? |
9590 | How cam this horse here Without the leave of me?'' |
9590 | How can it be? |
9590 | Huge, almost sublime, in its tense rotundity, the father of all packs, never laid aside and never opened, what might there not be within it? |
9590 | I wish thee would tell me, Hannah, what thee can make of these three dreams?" |
9590 | If the stream had no quiet eddying place, could we so admire its cascade over the rocks? |
9590 | Is it not rather an aggravation?" |
9590 | Is it not the face of the forlorn father of six small children, whom the"marcury doctors"had"pisened"and crippled? |
9590 | Is not cheerfulness a duty, a better expression of our gratitude for God''s blessings than mere words? |
9590 | Is there aught you want? |
9590 | Is there no hope that this world- wide prophecy of the human soul, uttered in all climes, in all times, shall yet be fulfilled? |
9590 | It is said, thou knows, in Ecclesiastes,''Be not righteous overmuch: why shouldst thou destroy thyself?''" |
9590 | Let me conjure him into his own likeness:--"Well, Stephen, what news from old Barrington?" |
9590 | Let me see; you are in the iron business, I think?" |
9590 | Love, fame, wealth, honor, may engross the attention of the multitude; to me they are all shadows; and why should I grasp at them? |
9590 | Mary, dear Mary, for of a truth thou art very dear to me; wilt thou go with me and be my wife?" |
9590 | Mary, thou knowest my love; wilt thou be my wife?" |
9590 | Must even our gratitude for"glad tidings of great joy"be desponding? |
9590 | Must the hymn of our thanksgiving for countless mercies and the unspeakable gift of His life have evermore an undertone of funeral wailing? |
9590 | Nay, is not its truth proved by its universality? |
9590 | Or did they part forever,--she going back to her kinsfolk, and he to his companions of Malta? |
9590 | Shall the antagonism of good and evil continue as heretofore forever? |
9590 | Shall to- morrow be as to- day? |
9590 | The one Tom Osborne went in?" |
9590 | They have, moreover, diligently and earnestly inquired, Whence cometh this evil? |
9590 | Thus you perceive that the spirit sees and hears without the aid of bodily organs; and why may it not be so hereafter? |
9590 | Uncle Rawson came home to- day in a great passion, and, calling me to him, he asked me if I too was going to turn Quaker, and fall to prophesying? |
9590 | WHAT''S now in the wind? |
9590 | Was not the whole round world their own? |
9590 | We do not ask, What is right and best for us? |
9590 | Well, what of it? |
9590 | Were there no clouds, could we so hail the sky shining through them in its still, calm purity? |
9590 | What avail great talents, if they be not devoted to goodness? |
9590 | What cared these sturdy old Puritans for the wild beauty of the landscape thus revealed before them? |
9590 | What child, although Anglo- Saxon born, escapes a temporary sojourn in fairy- land? |
9590 | What gave such fascination to the narrative of the grand Homeric encounter between Christian and Apollyon in the valley? |
9590 | What have I gained? |
9590 | What is beauty, after all? |
9590 | What is good looking, as Horace Smith remarks, but looking good? |
9590 | What marvel that she consented? |
9590 | What of the spirit, the resident divinity of so fair a temple? |
9590 | What shall I put you down for? |
9590 | What shall I tell her?" |
9590 | What was''t you said about our going to that sink of wickedness at Providence? |
9590 | Where be they now? |
9590 | Who is the Achan in the camp of our Israel? |
9590 | Who shall decide which is beautiful, or otherwise, in itself considered? |
9590 | Who shall say it may not be true? |
9590 | Who shall venture to ask our kind Mother Nature to remove from our sight any one of her forms or colors? |
9590 | Who wants eternal sunshine or shadow? |
9590 | Who would fix forever the loveliest cloudwork of an autumn sunset, or hang over him an everlasting moonlight? |
9590 | Why did I follow Ossian over Morven''s battle- fields, exulting in the vulture- screams of the blind scald over his fallen enemies? |
9590 | Why do n''t you go back with me to sister Ward''s?" |
9590 | Why should you not? |
9590 | Why was Mr. Greatheart, in Pilgrim''s Progress, my favorite character? |
9590 | Why, then, should we go searching after the cast- off sackcloth of the Pharisee? |
9590 | Will he send his young men to take their scalps when the Narragansett bids him?" |
9590 | Will he wander around forever? |
9590 | and how''s your folks? |
9590 | and should they haggle about boundaries and title- deeds? |
9590 | any real relief to the harassed mind? |
9590 | but to our posterity,''How sped the rebels, your fathers?''" |
9590 | but, What will folks say of it? |
9590 | do we not read the placid significance thereof in the human countenance? |
9590 | is she not so now?" |
9590 | said my uncle,"is that all? |
9590 | said neighbor Simkins,''are you going to vote for a man whose whole life has been spent in killing people?'' |
9590 | said the doctor, in his quick, sarcastic way,"What of that? |
9590 | said the humbled student,"truth is plain before us; can we follow its teachings? |
9590 | shall such Jacks as you come before authority with your hats on?'' |
9590 | sobbed Mary,"can it be? |
9590 | what sorrow was like unto her sorrow? |
9590 | what was it?" |
9590 | who can tell? |
9389 | A waiting- maid? 9389 And did her mother really let her roam away, alone, on such an errand, to a perfect stranger?" |
9389 | And suppose some of these terrible things should happen,--the last, for instance,--what would you do? |
9389 | And what kind of a frock, pray, does''papa''wear? |
9389 | And what name do you give to that white thing with blue sprigs in it? |
9389 | And who in the room opposite, on this floor? |
9389 | And who lives in the room just under mine? 9389 And you do n''t want the grapes?" |
9389 | And you have kept the girl safe in the shelter of your honest home all these years? 9389 And you thought my superfluous time and wisdom might be transferred to you, thus making a more equal division of property?" |
9389 | And you? |
9389 | Any strange cases among the scholars? |
9389 | Are you afraid to come up the ladder? |
9389 | Are you not happy, Basil? |
9389 | As much as if I went to school? |
9389 | Basil, what man? 9389 But how shall I get in?" |
9389 | But what do you wish, my friend? |
9389 | But you like me better now? 9389 Catharine, whose pass- key was that you found in the door? |
9389 | Did not they direct you to come to me to- day? |
9389 | Do n''t I always? |
9389 | Do n''t think to humbug any more, Shut up there in your shanty,-- But solve the problem, once for all,-- De Sauty, or De Santy? |
9389 | Do you always pity people, when they love you very much? |
9389 | Do you like me to be pretty, Sir? |
9389 | Do you really think I can learn? |
9389 | Friendless, when you are gone? 9389 Happy?" |
9389 | Horrid old, is n''t it? |
9389 | House or meadow? 9389 I? |
9389 | Is that reward enough for coming? |
9389 | Lady Gower? 9389 Matter? |
9389 | May I inquire how you propose to effect such an exchange? |
9389 | May I tell you another thing I do n''t like in you? 9389 May I?" |
9389 | Mr. Geer, how can you sleep away your precious time so? |
9389 | No, I do n''t mean that; but how shall I get in where you are, after I am up? |
9389 | Nor Dan Norris? 9389 Nor Music?" |
9389 | Possible? |
9389 | Pray, my good Sir,ask legions of fond parents,"what do you mean? |
9389 | Said? 9389 Sir?" |
9389 | Sir? |
9389 | Sleep? 9389 So you would not come and nurse me, and take care of me, and get me well again?" |
9389 | Suppose we take a vacation to- day, and investigate the state of the atmosphere? |
9389 | Then what can I do, Jean? |
9389 | This? |
9389 | What could put it into poor papa''s head? 9389 What do you think of that sample of mixed tobacco I gave you to try?" |
9389 | What in thunder? 9389 What is the difference between them? |
9389 | What is the use of telling it, then? |
9389 | Where did you get that flower, Elsie? |
9389 | Who is the tall lady who dined here yesterday with Miss Rocket, and talked so enthusiastically about woman''s rights? |
9389 | Who''d''a''thunk it? |
9389 | Why ca n''t we? |
9389 | Will you go, love? |
9389 | Wo n''t care? |
9389 | Would not an appeal to Mr. Lyndsay reach him now, think you? 9389 You are? |
9389 | You do know your letters? 9389 _ Savez- vous_,"asks an epicure,"_ ce qui a chassé la gaîté? |
9389 | ''"[ 2]"The diploma of Doctor of Music Marx received from the University at Marburg; and thereupon(?) |
9389 | After all, is there anything very strange in silly men writing silly books? |
9389 | Am I sufficiently obvious?" |
9389 | And Grammar?" |
9389 | And how about that other stupendous fiction of the harvest- moon? |
9389 | And what is the conclusion? |
9389 | And what was the end of all this? |
9389 | And when do you write?" |
9389 | And when this is both understood and felt, what rules shall be given to guide and control the construction and the delivery of discourses? |
9389 | And you are not in the least vexed that I spoke to you about it?" |
9389 | Are the Biddies given over to a reprobate mind, because you do n''t happen to like their vocalization? |
9389 | Are you willing to go with me as my wife?" |
9389 | Besides, nobody loves me enough to be pitied, except papa.--Isn''t it pleasant here? |
9389 | Blocks or a primer?" |
9389 | But as I ceased, joy conquered grief and wonder; for she clapped her hands like a glad child, exclaiming,--"Go with you, Sir? |
9389 | But if you like to write in the evening, you would just as soon I would come in the morning?" |
9389 | But know ye where she hides her nest, Beneath what balmy dropping eaves, The Dove that bears on her white breast The sacred green of olive- leaves? |
9389 | But this is not climbing the hill of science, is it?" |
9389 | But, Jean, you surely do not mean that Effie has no claim on any human creature, beyond the universal one of common charity?" |
9389 | Can I never be more to you than now? |
9389 | Can you be happy here, with no fortune but the little store set apart for you, and the knowledge that no want shall touch you while I live?" |
9389 | Can you heal a heart- ache with a syllogism? |
9389 | Can you plant a garden with weeds and then pull them up again in secure trust that no lurking burdocks and Canada thistle shall remain? |
9389 | Did the girls of a larger growth lose their dangerous qualities on arriving at belle- hood? |
9389 | Did the wilful girl go off without leave? |
9389 | Did you think I should shrink from sharing poverty with you who gave me all I own?" |
9389 | Do tell us_ what_ your name is,--come: De Santy, or De Sauty? |
9389 | Do you inquire, To what good purpose do you thrust the possibility of failure upon the attention of the candidate for the ministry? |
9389 | Do you like Arithmetic?" |
9389 | Do you really believe that the solar and stellar system was arranged to accommodate"the reapers reaping early"of the little island of Great Britain? |
9389 | Do you think you should like me for a teacher?" |
9389 | Drawing, for instance?" |
9389 | Effie bent suddenly, saying, with a look of anguish,"Do you regret that I am your wife, Sir?" |
9389 | Eh,--eh,--something about Ivy, was n''t it?" |
9389 | He greeted me as I passed in, addressing me in an interrogative manner with one word, the only one I ever heard him utter,--"Owasyerelthbin?" |
9389 | How could I forget that happy night, long years ago, when she and I went floating down the same bright stream, two happy lovers just betrothed? |
9389 | How long ought a sermon to be? |
9389 | How shall one know which is which?" |
9389 | I echoed, bitterly,--"how can I be happy, remembering what might have been?" |
9389 | IS THE RELIGIOUS WANT OF THE AGE MET? |
9389 | Is beatification dependent upon the platform- balance? |
9389 | Is it Dalby''s Carminative, Daffy''s Elixir, Brown''s Syrup of Squills, or White''s Magnetic Mixture? |
9389 | Is it of the soothing or the coercing system? |
9389 | Is it only the Piccolomini and Linds of the feathered kingdom who have a right to practise sacred music? |
9389 | Is there any reason why they should not? |
9389 | Love, then, is a_ sine qua non_ in stories; and if love, why not marriage? |
9389 | May not the command of a maximum speed of thirteen knots be obtained from the machinery now employed for a maximum speed of ten knots? |
9389 | Might not Effie go to him herself? |
9389 | Miss Ivy, what are you going to do?" |
9389 | Must our ways lie apart? |
9389 | No more you do n''t want to marry John Herricks, do you?" |
9389 | Oh, Jean, why did you leave me when you went?" |
9389 | Oh, Mr. Clerron, did you see the clouds this morning?" |
9389 | Oh, no,--not at all,--but as Republicans_ do n''t_ consider it necessary, is it strange that they should, vote as they think? |
9389 | Oh, that is it, then? |
9389 | On the whole, you are not particularly fond of books?" |
9389 | Pray, what set you--"The next morning the lady- teacher took to asking me this? |
9389 | Presently he said,--"Ivy, how old are you?" |
9389 | Shall I never know the blessedness of a return?" |
9389 | Shall we proceed to History? |
9389 | She cast a quick look into my face, asking, hurriedly,--"Am I to go alone?" |
9389 | Some sudden hope seemed born of my regretful words, for, with an eager glance, she cried,--"Was it that desire which prompted you to part from me? |
9389 | The enterprise of the more active spirits of our day is astounding; we begin to ask,"Will they stop at anything? |
9389 | Was n''t this a pretty dish to set before-- not a king- but a young republican, who fancied himself the equal of kings? |
9389 | Well, he is just as happy, and just as rich, and everybody likes him just as well, as if he knew the whole world full; and why ca n''t I do so, too? |
9389 | What else could I think, when you came so often and were so kind to us?" |
9389 | What has she to do with Effie, Jean?" |
9389 | What have the innocent heirs of our name done, that Hannah should continue under numberless_ noms- de- plume_ to cater for them? |
9389 | What have you studied?" |
9389 | What is the Nursery Blarney- Stone? |
9389 | What is the mission of the surviving Whigs? |
9389 | What is the reason?" |
9389 | What mattered it that slowly, almost unconsciously, I had learned to love her with the passion of a youth, the power of a man? |
9389 | What other branches have you pursued? |
9389 | What other city furnishes such a work as the Duchess D''Abrantes''"Histoire des Salons de Paris"? |
9389 | What shall I do?''" |
9389 | What shall we have next?" |
9389 | What the deuse brings you to Paris, then? |
9389 | What will they not undertake?" |
9389 | What''s John Herricks and Dan Norris hangin''round for all the time?" |
9389 | What''s the matter?" |
9389 | What''s the use havin''her, if she ca n''t stay at home with us? |
9389 | What, then, could she do? |
9389 | What_ shall_ I do? |
9389 | When will you go?" |
9389 | Where is it kept? |
9389 | Where is the child?" |
9389 | Where''s the use? |
9389 | Where, then, is the good of being opposed to it? |
9389 | Where, we repeat, is the Nursery Blarney- Stone? |
9389 | Whither? |
9389 | Who so dull as to require an interpreter for such plain speakings? |
9389 | Who was our geographer? |
9389 | Why are you sorry?" |
9389 | Why ca n''t we? |
9389 | Why do civic wood- rangers choose the ailantus- tree for a bouquet- holder to the close- pent inhabitants of towns? |
9389 | Why do our educated men of other professions so seldom and so reluctantly contribute to the addresses in our religious assemblies? |
9389 | Why is the life of little boys and girls in books always pictured on the foot- lights pattern? |
9389 | Why must we, then, be conscientiously constrained to mark out such a very different plan for our children at home? |
9389 | Why not? |
9389 | Why was I blind so long?" |
9389 | Why was it made a crime worthy of Draconian sternness to address our she- comrades in the pleasant paths of learning? |
9389 | Why was it-- except for the Blarney- Stone-- that we were always checked in any Sabba''day notes and queries of what we had noticed in the sanctuary? |
9389 | Would not this be obviated by having a gate or slide to fill out the dead- wood when the screw is lifted? |
9389 | Would you utterly discourage those who are already more alive to the perils of their undertaking than we could wish them? |
9389 | You detect signs of a moral reformation?" |
9389 | You do not see the connection? |
9389 | You think I improve on acquaintance? |
9389 | [ Footnote*: Might not a metallic stern- post, combining strength, lightness, and little resistance, be introduced?] |
9389 | _"What do you want of me, Elsie Venner?_"It was a strange question to put, for the girl had not signified that she wished the teacher to come to her. |
9389 | a bad habit?" |
9389 | a substitute for lollipops or for birch? |
9389 | but what can I do?" |
9389 | exclaimed Ivy, with a great gush of gratitude and happiness;"do I, can I, do_ you_ any good?" |
9389 | is it_ yesterday_ or_ to- morrow?_ LOVE AND SELF- LOVE. |
9389 | nor none of''em?" |
9389 | or rather, where is it not? |
9389 | rock candy or rock the cradle?" |
9389 | said Ivy, blushing, and quickly added,"Do you know I have discovered the reason why you like me this morning?" |
9389 | that all? |
9389 | upon your word of honor, Madam, you have not? |
9389 | without even informing her parents?" |
9389 | would you turn your Ivy out of doors and break her heart?" |
9389 | you were a Phi- Beta- Kappa man in college, and know that you can write better than many a man in a metropolitan pulpit? |
28556 | Abandoned? |
28556 | And do you think there is any danger of your being turned out? |
28556 | And now would you like to see the jail? |
28556 | And you are not lonesome out here? |
28556 | But Attorney- General Vanetta gave an adverse opinion as to the legality of your appointment? |
28556 | Did you have all your property before marriage? |
28556 | Do you refuse it on legal grounds? |
28556 | Do you think prohibition prohibits? |
28556 | Do you think the majority of women want to vote? |
28556 | Has your wife helped you in any way to earn it? |
28556 | Have I not just brought about a reconciliation between Tammany and the rest of New York? |
28556 | How can we soonest convince the demons that we have rights which must be respected? |
28556 | How long have you been married? |
28556 | How many children have you had? |
28556 | I do not; but is that any reason why you should deprive the one who does? 28556 Is English spoken in Connecticut?" |
28556 | Is it cold in Russia? |
28556 | Is she the only wife you ever had? |
28556 | Mr. President,I exclaimed,"by what right do you refuse to recognize women when their names are called? |
28556 | On what grounds do you refuse? |
28556 | Well, Jo,said Mrs. Stewart,"what did you do?" |
28556 | Where is my shawl? 28556 Why should I,"he continued,"bring this charge? |
28556 | Will not the ballot be used rather by that class who would not use it wisely than by those who are most competent? |
28556 | *** Mr. GARLAND: I should like to ask the senator from California if the courts of the United States can not admit them upon their own motion anyhow? |
28556 | --and I would add with emphasis, Without an education, what is woman?" |
28556 | :"Can the legislature empower women to vote for presidential electors?" |
28556 | A correspondent describing what the voters had to encounter, said: Is the question asked, why have not more women voted? |
28556 | A gentleman said to me last week:"What is the use of your doing this? |
28556 | A. BRONSON ALCOTT wrote:*** Where women lead-- the best women-- is it unsafe for men to follow? |
28556 | Abandoned of whom? |
28556 | Above all, is it manly or just to be charging corrupt motives on nine- tenths of those who advocate the reform? |
28556 | Add to this, that the Good Physician should heal him of his''chronic invalidism''and then-- well what''s the use of dreaming? |
28556 | After all, by what are governments organized and maintained? |
28556 | Again, addressing his audience at St. Clement''s, he says:"You may marry a bad man, but what of that? |
28556 | All day long women met each other, and asked:"Are you going to the election to- morrow?" |
28556 | Among the hundreds of questions asked me by that committee were these:"Do you want a prohibitory plank in our State constitution?" |
28556 | And I think as we slowly sail up the bay on our vessel, Does that deadened soul respond to what lies before him? |
28556 | And having the best means for deciding this question, have they not the right to decide? |
28556 | And how is it if she remains on this until her continued residence upon it has enabled her husband to prove up? |
28556 | And how was this most successful experiment in equal rights received and treated by the press and the people out of the territory? |
28556 | And if it was illegal in women and deserving of punishment, why should men escape? |
28556 | And if so, is it not better for the women delegates to go home?" |
28556 | And if, forsooth, they had, would not each one of you have declared such act unconstitutional and unjust? |
28556 | And now perhaps some materially- minded person will ask,"What are you going to do about it? |
28556 | And now, friends, in view of the present status of our cause, have we not much to encourage us in our work? |
28556 | And the other person I want to speak of? |
28556 | And what is this family impediment which is thus set up as a female disability? |
28556 | And why not? |
28556 | And why not? |
28556 | And why should any one be displeased? |
28556 | And, says Charles Sumner,"What can be more universal than the rights of man?" |
28556 | Are men the only lawful members of this Alliance? |
28556 | Are not all the men protecting you?" |
28556 | Are not the political disabilities of sex as grievous as those of color? |
28556 | Are our women less capable than these? |
28556 | Are the rights of American citizens more sacred on the soil of Great Britain or France than on the soil of one of our own States? |
28556 | Are the rights of women in all the Southern States, whose slaves are now their rulers, less sacred than those of the men of Louisiana? |
28556 | Are they in your prayers? |
28556 | Are they not rather intelligence, virtue, truth and patriotism? |
28556 | Are you willing to stand a legal prosecution?" |
28556 | As to its justice, who shall deny it? |
28556 | At the house of one of the members a discussion was held on this subject:"Does the Private Character of the Actor Concern the Public?" |
28556 | Before that Committee on Revolutionary Claims why could not this most revolutionary of all claims receive immediate and ample attention? |
28556 | Breathes there a woman with soul so dead that she would bring forth slaves? |
28556 | But do we want such men? |
28556 | But let me ask why, then, a large class of men remained disfranchised after these States again took up local government? |
28556 | But there are some who would say:"Would you have woman enjoy all the political rights of men?" |
28556 | But what is love, tenderness, protection, even, unless rooted in justice? |
28556 | But where slept his"sworn duty"when he recorded his vote in the Senate against woman suffrage? |
28556 | But who will tell me they would not have gained them sooner, with less heart- breaking labor, if they had had the political franchise? |
28556 | But why peer into the future? |
28556 | But would Mr. Leatham guarantee that the 2,000,000 men he proposes to enfranchise shall be perfectly pure and moral men? |
28556 | By brute force alone? |
28556 | By what authority do the police call women"abandoned"and arrest them because they are patrolling any public park or square? |
28556 | By what principle of democracy do men assume to legislate for women? |
28556 | By what right do men declare themselves invested with power to legislate for women? |
28556 | By what right? |
28556 | C. G. Ames concluded the course, November 18, with"What Does it Mean?" |
28556 | Can a future legislature, by the passage of a law not liable to the objection, that it violates the obligation of contracts, take away those rights? |
28556 | Can our friends inform us what is our crime, that we are denied the right of representation? |
28556 | Can the legislature repeal or modify this mandate? |
28556 | Can the sex, ordinarily so quick to pronounce pre- judgments, divest itself of them sufficiently to enter the jury- box with unbiased minds? |
28556 | Can there be any possible danger in trusting those who have trusted us? |
28556 | Can they point to any mental or moral deficiency, to render justifiable our being denied political rights? |
28556 | Certainly they would not be guilty of deceiving, for are they not"all honorable men"? |
28556 | Could any woman withstand that? |
28556 | Could satire go farther? |
28556 | Could the absoluteness of this right be expressed in plainer or more energetic terms? |
28556 | Did his honorable friend ask him to admit that the question deserved the fullest consideration? |
28556 | Did not this woman also suffer? |
28556 | Did not this woman bear her portion of the martyrdom? |
28556 | Did you all pay your taxes and stay at home and refrain from voting because the Covenanters did not vote? |
28556 | Do they deserve the classification? |
28556 | Do they enter into your plans? |
28556 | Do they lie on your hearts? |
28556 | Do they not deserve a share of its glories also? |
28556 | Do you doubt that I would use the ballot in the interests of order, retrenchment, and reform? |
28556 | Do you not believe I feel the duties it demands of its citizens? |
28556 | Do you think such women would not change the laws of inheritance if they had the power? |
28556 | Do you think, gentlemen, said Mrs. Stewart, that such women as attend our conventions, and speak from our platform, could make so ludicrous a blunder? |
28556 | Does Senator Wadleigh know nothing of that woman''s"experience in politics"? |
28556 | Does a man earn a hundred thousand dollars and lie down and die, saying,"It is all my boys''"? |
28556 | Does any one pretend to say that men alone constitute races and peoples? |
28556 | Does it become us to lay additional burdens on those who are already overweighted?" |
28556 | Does it need a prophet to tell us where to begin this work? |
28556 | Does it not affect to control the legislature in the exercise of its powers? |
28556 | Does not the physical and intellectual condition of the women of a nation decide the capacity and power of its men? |
28556 | Does not this suggest reasons why woman should wish to represent herself? |
28556 | Does our constitution provide any remedy whatever? |
28556 | Does she then share in its benefits? |
28556 | Does that mean the ballot_ for men only_ or the ballot_ for the people_, men and women too? |
28556 | Does this prove that Dr. Lord and every other Democrat in the State of Vermont is brutal and ignorant and disloyal? |
28556 | Dr. See-- May we have a season of prayer, sir? |
28556 | Finding ourselves quite in accord, I said,"how did you get those ideas in Georgia?" |
28556 | For what would not the patient, energetic mind of woman accomplish, when once resolved? |
28556 | Freedom to men and women alike is but a question of time-- is America now equal to the great occasion? |
28556 | Gentlemen, what does it all amount to? |
28556 | Graceful return for her devotion, was n''t it? |
28556 | H. R. The question is often asked, why are women so much more desirous than men to see their children educated? |
28556 | Had he ever read:"I will be master of what is my own; She is my goods, my chattels-- My horse, my ox, my ass, my anything"? |
28556 | Has her development expanded to that degree where her legislators can say in very truth, as of the colored man,"Let the oppressed go free"? |
28556 | Have they not equal right with bad men, to self- government? |
28556 | Have you the election law by you?" |
28556 | How can a mother give birth to a noble soul while herself a slave? |
28556 | How can justice be expected from those who instinctively combine to preserve their privilege to abuse women? |
28556 | How can men appreciate their injury? |
28556 | How can men justly judge a woman? |
28556 | How can she impart a free spirit when her own is servile? |
28556 | How can that form of government be called republican in which one- half the people are forever deprived of all participation in its affairs? |
28556 | How can you expect them to develop into patriotic American statesmen? |
28556 | How has woman''s work as county superintendent impressed other educators? |
28556 | How shall they estimate the part we bear in the unbroken line of the nation''s progress? |
28556 | How so? |
28556 | How was this to be accomplished? |
28556 | I ask you, therefore, for the sake of your own question, do you think it wise to pick my apples now? |
28556 | I would add,"What can be more universal than the rights of woman?" |
28556 | If any woman shall ask it, who shall deny it because another woman does not ask it? |
28556 | If he had, we usually troubled him no further; if he had not, we asked,"Can you vote for woman suffrage?" |
28556 | If it is not a crime to be a woman, why are women subjected to unequal payment with men for the same service? |
28556 | If one woman shall ask for a voice in the regulation of society of which she is at least one- half, who shall say her nay? |
28556 | If so, why not do it at once? |
28556 | If the United States has no voters of its own creation in the States, what are these men? |
28556 | If there is nothing new to be said in favor of suffrage for women, is there anything new to be urged against it? |
28556 | If they are more efficient as teachers is it not fair to presume that they would excel as committees? |
28556 | If they are really eligible, then why not have them selected and appointed? |
28556 | If they can be elected to that office, is it proper to say they shall have no voice in the elections? |
28556 | If woman asks for the ballot shall man deny it? |
28556 | If woman may fitly determine this question, for what question of public policy is she unfit? |
28556 | If you bring legislation here, what will you bring? |
28556 | In 1851 an order was introduced asking"whether any legislation was necessary concerning the wills of married women?" |
28556 | In asking for a voice in the government under which we live, have we been pursuing a shadow for forty years? |
28556 | In case it should become necessary, may I rely on your valuable services? |
28556 | In closing, I have only to ask, is there no man here present who appreciates the emergencies of this hour? |
28556 | In closing, he said:"But what think you, sisters, of the dangers that threaten the republic? |
28556 | In fact, unless you show that the exercise of your alleged right will be useful, can you logically conclude that you have any? |
28556 | In replying, read between the lines of my tedious story and bear in mind the words of Voltaire:"Who would dare change a law that time has consecrated? |
28556 | In seeking political power, are we abdicating that social throne where they tell us our influence is unbounded? |
28556 | In the course of their conversation Professor Dwight said;"Do you think girls know enough to study law?" |
28556 | In the first place-- accepting that prophecy as true-- why will women not marry? |
28556 | In thus affirming Mrs. McFarland''s right to marry Mr. Richardson, has the Supreme Court of the United States sanctioned free- love? |
28556 | In view of the terrible corruption of our politics, people ask, can we maintain universal suffrage? |
28556 | In view of these facts, does it not appear that if there is any one distinctively feminine characteristic, it is the mother- instinct for government? |
28556 | In_ The Revolution_ of March 26, 1868, we find the following: It is often asked, would you make women police officers? |
28556 | Is it a matter of regret to us that they should have these aspirations? |
28556 | Is it at all more indelicate for a woman to go to the polls, than it is for her to go to the court- house and pay her taxes? |
28556 | Is it not time that this aristocracy of sex should be overthrown? |
28556 | Is it possible that the editor regards such a relation of protest and disgust as consistent with the unity of Christian marriage? |
28556 | Is not liberty as sweet to her as to him? |
28556 | Is not the same principle involved in both cases? |
28556 | Is she then half owner of the land? |
28556 | Is the Republican party therefore"low company"? |
28556 | Is the ballot more precious than the soul of your child? |
28556 | Is the meaning this, that all citizens shall have the right to vote, or simply that citizenship shall be the basis of suffrage? |
28556 | Is the oppression to last forever? |
28556 | Is there any remedy? |
28556 | Is there no one among you who will rise on the floor of congress as the champion of this unrepresented half of the people of the United States? |
28556 | Is this all woman is to do? |
28556 | Is to be a wife and mother, and nothing else, the sole end and aim of woman? |
28556 | It has recently been asked in congressional debates,"What is the grand idea of the centennial?" |
28556 | It is a pertinent question now, shall all other contradictory principles be retained in the constitution until they, too, are expounded by civil war? |
28556 | It was impossible, he was out, and what could they do? |
28556 | Just here, in imagination, is heard the question,"How much help could we expect from women on financial questions?" |
28556 | MARY A. STEWART of Delaware said: The negroes are a race inferior, you must admit, to your daughters, and yet that race has the ballot, and why? |
28556 | May I ask you to bring to that labor as fair a spirit, as unprejudiced an outlook, as just a decision as he would have done? |
28556 | May this not be one reason why the Swedish legislature has been so liberal toward women? |
28556 | Men of Melrose, Concord and Malden, why persecute us? |
28556 | Miss SMITH said:_ Gentlemen of the Committee_--This is the first time in my life that I have trod these halls, and what has brought me here? |
28556 | More than that, as I said before, if there is any tribunal that could give undivided time and dignified attention, is it not this committee? |
28556 | Mr. BAYARD: Is it in order for me to move the reference of the subject to the Committee on the Judiciary? |
28556 | Mr. HARRIS: Did not the senator from Missouri[ Mr. Vest] offer an amendment? |
28556 | Mr. HOAR: Will the senator allow me to interrupt him for a moment? |
28556 | Mr. INGALLS: What is the regular order? |
28556 | Mr. JONES of Florida: I ask for information how long the morning hour is to extend? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Then you have no opinion beyond his decision? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Will the gentleman permit me to ask him a question? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Would you not, as a parliamentarian, concede that this does change the existing rules of the House? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Can you have a committee without a rule of the House providing for it? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Does the Chair hold that the making of a new rule is not a change of the existing rules? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Is this not a new rule? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: It is not? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: What does the Chair decide? |
28556 | Mrs. Blake spoke on the question,"Is it a Crime to be a Woman?" |
28556 | Mrs. Duniway, will you not favor us with a speech?" |
28556 | My theme was,"What has Christianity done for Woman?" |
28556 | N. J. Burton, said:"Has not this convention been a success? |
28556 | Need we tell you where to find this master- hand which has planned so wisely? |
28556 | Now the question is,"Will the women vote for this man, if we nominate him?" |
28556 | Of what use was woman in the ranks of any political party, with no vote outside the caucus? |
28556 | On the other hand, what is centralization? |
28556 | On what authority are women taxed while unrepresented? |
28556 | On what just ground is discrimination made between men and women? |
28556 | On what theory is it less dangerous to defraud twenty million women of their inalienable rights than four million negroes? |
28556 | One day a dude accosted Miss Bridget on the road, and said, in the usual manner:"Beg pardon, but may I walk with you?" |
28556 | One man asked me, though not rudely,"Who is cooking your husband''s dinner?" |
28556 | Or is there not other work in God''s universe which some woman may possibly be called upon to do? |
28556 | Or will it, as so repeatedly in the past, turn a deaf ear to reason, and still continue to deny the rights of half the human family? |
28556 | Ought it not rather to be a subject of satisfaction and of pride? |
28556 | Our course was somewhat as follows: On the approach of a voter, we would ask him,"have you voted?" |
28556 | Perhaps the women would be lenient to you( the sexes do favor each other), but would you be satisfied? |
28556 | Polling places were gaily decorated; banners floated to the breeze, bearing suggestive mottoes:"Are Women Citizens?" |
28556 | Said I,"Why do you pay your tax?" |
28556 | Says the editor of the Boston_ Index_: What is local self- government? |
28556 | Shaking my finger at the clergymen, I exclaimed:"How_ dare_ you make such charges against the mothers of men? |
28556 | Shall I describe this box, twelve inches long and six wide, and originally a grape- box? |
28556 | Shall it not be done? |
28556 | Shall it then be recorded of us that the demand and the protest of the women were not made in vain? |
28556 | Shall we now hold that it can not apply to black men? |
28556 | She has more privileges than she could vote herself into,"says Mr. H. Has she, indeed? |
28556 | Since woman has proved faithful over a few things, need you fear to summon her to your side to assist you in executing the will of the nation? |
28556 | Some may say,"But what is to be the end?" |
28556 | Standing over him, the warrior asked,"Diogenes, what can I do for you?" |
28556 | Suppose many women would not avail themselves of such a function, are those with higher, or other views, to be therefore kept in tutelage? |
28556 | Suppose the court should exclude women, but not on account of sex, then what is their remedy? |
28556 | Suppose they are; have not the masses of all oppressed classes been apathetic and indifferent until partial success crowned the enthusiasm of the few? |
28556 | Ten minutes were given Miss Anthony to plead the cause of 10,000,000--yes, 20,000,000 citizens of this republic(? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Are there further"concurrent or other resolutions"? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Does the Chair understand that the senator from Missouri has offered an amendment? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Is the Senate ready for the question on the motion of the senator from Delaware? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Is there objection? |
28556 | The VICE- PRESIDENT: The question is, Will the Senate agree to the resolution? |
28556 | The importance of this education to the future-- who can measure it? |
28556 | The method of reasoning is the same, but it do n''t sound quite fair and honorable, does it? |
28556 | The only question was, would the ballot cure these wrongs? |
28556 | The power to fight? |
28556 | The questions presented by the demurrer were:_ First_--Is the defendant eligible to this office, she being neither a practicing nor a learned lawyer? |
28556 | The territorial legislature of Utah conferred upon the females of that territory the right of suffrage, and how have they exercised that right? |
28556 | There are inconveniences and cares in all possessions; but who argues that therefore they should be abandoned? |
28556 | There are many men who do not value their citizenship; shall other men therefore be deprived of the ballot? |
28556 | They are citizens, they are tax- payers; they bear the burdens of government-- why should they be denied the rights of citizens? |
28556 | They have sat as jurors, and have the laws been less faithfully and justly administered, and criminals less promptly and adequately punished? |
28556 | They replied,"What of it? |
28556 | They wore white ribbon badges on which was printed,"Are we citizens?" |
28556 | This raised a delicate question, for how could women take part in celebrating the triumphs of their country whose laws disfranchised them? |
28556 | This we say to all who are contending for liberty, for what is liberty if the claims of women be disregarded? |
28556 | Thus, suppose the question to be,"Is the family or the individual the political basis of the State of Connecticut?" |
28556 | Underhill, Sarah E., i, 308--sketch of, i, 313 United States a nation? |
28556 | Was ever such sublime womanly heroism and self- sacrifice before known? |
28556 | Was ever such worth of culture, such wealth of womanhood, laid on the altar of country and humanity? |
28556 | We may doubt it is policy for women to vote, but who can draw the line and say that naturally she has not a right to do so? |
28556 | We might just as well ask,"Is the climate cold in a State?" |
28556 | Well, I have been examining a little into the conduct of those ladies who do stay at home so much, and what do I find? |
28556 | Well, what of it? |
28556 | Were all you men disfranchised because that class or sect up in New York would not vote? |
28556 | Were his dreams of freedom less real because the stolid masses were not awake to their significance? |
28556 | Were not her talents and virtues too much confined to private, social and domestic life? |
28556 | Were not the political fortunes and the sacred honor(?) |
28556 | Were not this plainly a violation of the constitution? |
28556 | What answer? |
28556 | What are the newspapers but sheets sold out to the highest bidder? |
28556 | What are the qualifications for the ballot? |
28556 | What avails a decree of divorce or separation for woman, if the court can give the children to the father at its pleasure? |
28556 | What business have these women with so much money?" |
28556 | What can they not accomplish, if, with their whole hearts they set about it? |
28556 | What child would wish to have a public- speaking mother? |
28556 | What did he care what the newspapers said? |
28556 | What do we ask? |
28556 | What do you mean by it? |
28556 | What does the senator propose to do to- day? |
28556 | What does this provide? |
28556 | What else could one expect? |
28556 | What for education? |
28556 | What for sobriety? |
28556 | What for social purity? |
28556 | What has been the strong motive that has taken us away from the quiet and comfort of our own homes and brought us before you to- day? |
28556 | What has she wrought? |
28556 | What if she did hunger and thirst after knowledge? |
28556 | What is female justice, or what is it likely to be? |
28556 | What is the fact? |
28556 | What is the proposition on the table? |
28556 | What laws did they mean? |
28556 | What more can be said of any one than that? |
28556 | What more can we ask, unless, indeed, it be for a very conscientious idea of duty? |
28556 | What more could one expect from such a disturber of public peace? |
28556 | What other city on this continent can present such a showing? |
28556 | What question of equal importance will ever be submitted to her decision? |
28556 | What shall they say of us? |
28556 | What then? |
28556 | What then? |
28556 | What unheard of oppressions drove these people to the mad attempt? |
28556 | What were the women to gain by waiting? |
28556 | What would be the next effect of such an extension of the suffrage? |
28556 | What would have been thought thirty years ago, if women had studied finance, banks and banking, money, currency, sociology and political science? |
28556 | What would woman do with the ballot if she had it? |
28556 | What_ is_ a vote? |
28556 | What_ shall_ we say to them? |
28556 | When any man expresses doubt to me as to the use that I or any other woman might make of the ballot if we had it, my answer is, What is that to you? |
28556 | When we say children, do we not mean girls as well as boys? |
28556 | When we say parents, do we not mean mothers as well as fathers? |
28556 | When we say people, do we not mean women as well as men? |
28556 | When will the verdict be rendered and what will it be? |
28556 | Where are the boundaries of your jurisdiction? |
28556 | Where did you get the right to_ give_ Massachusetts women the right to vote? |
28556 | Where is now the family representation? |
28556 | Where is the boasted chivalry of the English- speaking nations? |
28556 | Where is the necessity of raising the number of voters in the United States from 10,000,000 to 20,000,000? |
28556 | Where next? |
28556 | Where was their State sovereignty? |
28556 | Whether the wise(?) |
28556 | Which party can play this game the longer? |
28556 | Who are more interested than mothers in the sanitary condition of our schools and streets, and in the moral atmosphere of our towns and cities? |
28556 | Who can answer? |
28556 | Who challenges a male juror and demands whether he left his family well provided, and his wife well cherished? |
28556 | Who could assign a reason why women should vote in one and not in the other? |
28556 | Who have upheld it? |
28556 | Who should fear the result who desires the public welfare? |
28556 | Who stay at home from the election? |
28556 | Whose blood paid for yours? |
28556 | Why are they forced at times to don men''s clothes in order to obtain employment that will keep them from starvation? |
28556 | Why deny me a voice in any or all of these? |
28556 | Why does not man establish them for woman, his wife, his mother?" |
28556 | Why is this? |
28556 | Why not also of men? |
28556 | Why not open the doors of that institution and let her make the experiment? |
28556 | Why not? |
28556 | Why send a man to do a boy''s work, or a boy to do that which a shepherd dog can do just as well? |
28556 | Why send your mothers, wives and daughters to the unwashed, unlettered, unthinking masses that carry popular elections? |
28556 | Why should the family requirement, which man throws off so easily, be made a yoke for woman? |
28556 | Why should they not vote for a member of parliament? |
28556 | Why should we do right for nothing? |
28556 | Why should women, more than men, be denied trial by a jury of their peers? |
28556 | Why should women, more than men, be governed without their own consent? |
28556 | Why was it defeated? |
28556 | Why would it not be a good idea for women to leave these conservative gentlemen alone in the churches? |
28556 | Why would not the same results be wrought out by their presence at the ballot- box? |
28556 | Will it be wise enough to seize it for self preservation, if not from principle? |
28556 | Will the_ Watchman_ assert that the people of Vermont"throw scorn on the marriage relation"? |
28556 | Will the_ Watchman_ call Chief- Justice Chase and the Supreme Court free- lovers? |
28556 | Will there be found in this party enough of spiritual life to lay hold of the help now proffered it, and once more renew its strength thereby? |
28556 | Will this fact lessen the alarm of some men for the safety of the babies of enfranchised women on election day? |
28556 | Will women revolutionize justice? |
28556 | Will you call on all women of the State who can do so to assemble at Lincoln during the session of the legislature, appointing the day, etc.? |
28556 | Will you forbid them having any voice in relation to the taxation of that property? |
28556 | Will you make woman suffrage an underlying principle in your platform? |
28556 | Will you make yourselves the party of the future? |
28556 | Will you please inform me if this is to be the form of petition to be presented during the present session of the legislature? |
28556 | Will you receive it?" |
28556 | Will you recognize woman''s right of self- government? |
28556 | Will you say that the wives and the mothers, the house and homekeepers of this small territory, have no interest in all these things? |
28556 | Will you take from her all voice in relation to the public schools established for the education of those children? |
28556 | Will you visit Dakota again? |
28556 | Without it what is man?'' |
28556 | Woman''s equality, why so long denied?... |
28556 | Women have voted, and have the officers chosen been less faithful and zealous and the legislature less able and upright? |
28556 | Would any professor agree to lecture to the women separately? |
28556 | Would any professor favor the admission of women into the female wards of the hospitals? |
28556 | Would giving her the right to vote interfere with her home duties any more than it does with a man''s business? |
28556 | Would he propose a clause to exclude from the franchise those men who lead and retain in vice and degradation these unfortunate women? |
28556 | Would not every criminal be a monster, provided not a female? |
28556 | Would those statesmen have dared to tax those landholders and yet deny them the privilege of choosing their representatives? |
28556 | Would twelve women return the same verdict as twelve men, supposing that each twelve had heard the same case? |
28556 | Would you disfranchise them, sir? |
28556 | Would you feel that such an arrangement was exactly the just and fair thing? |
28556 | Would you like to be a slave? |
28556 | Would you like to be bound to respect the laws which you can not make? |
28556 | Would you like to be disfranchised? |
28556 | You did n''t see the hatching department of my chicken- house? |
28556 | You may ask,"Do not your husbands protect you? |
28556 | You raise your committee and allow the agitators to come before them, yea, more than that, you invite them to come; and what is the result? |
28556 | [ 166] See Appendix for Mr. Hooker''s article,"Is the Family the Basis of the State?" |
28556 | [ 449] Miss Marion Lowell recited"The Legend,"by Mary Agnes Ticknor, and"Was he Henpecked?" |
28556 | _ Is the Family the Basis of the State?_ BY JOHN HOOKER. |
28556 | _ Second_--Is the defendant eligible to this office, she being a female? |
28556 | and amend it by adding,"What is woman, that they never thought of her?" |
28556 | and we ask in the name of justice, must we continue ever the silent and servile victims of this injustice? |
28556 | and would she not, if entrusted with it, exercise it for the elevation of a common humanity? |
28556 | for does she not toil early and late in the factory, and in every department of life subject to the despotism of men? |
28556 | make me true to the duties about to be laid upon me; make me worthy of being free? |
28556 | of men in jeopardy? |
28556 | or if, through his detention in court, the cupboard will be bare, the wife neglected, or the children with holes in their trousers? |
28556 | or,"Is the English language spoken in a State?" |
28556 | perform all the drudgery of his political societies and never possess a single political right? |
28556 | the other,"Shall One Federal Judge Abolish Trial by Jury?" |
28556 | the strong will, the clear brain, the warm heart, the pure soul? |
28556 | you_ here?" |
18127 | Am I big enough now? |
18127 | How are you? |
18127 | How''s that? |
18127 | What cheer, friend? 18127 ''Well, Friend Charles,''said Penn,''suppose a canoe full of Indians should cross the sea and should discover England, would that make it theirs? 18127 ''Why, is not the whole of America mine?'' 18127 83. Who owned the greater part of America? 18127 After General Jackson had beaten the Indians, where did they go? 18127 After a time what general got the command of all the armies of the North? 18127 After he returned from the Black Hawk War, what did Lincoln do? 18127 Are you alone? 18127 Are you sure? 18127 At the beginning of 1733 how many English colonies were there in America? 18127 Before Whitney invented his cotton- gin how much cotton did we send abroad? 18127 Can any one in the class repeat what was on the banner? 18127 Did Clark take the fort? 18127 Did Franklin think that anything more would be discovered about electricity? 18127 Did Sir Walter''s attempt to settle Virginia do any good? 18127 Did he ever land on any part of what is now the United States? 18127 Did he ever stand in the presence of any kings? 18127 Did the Indians trouble the Quakers? 18127 Did they ever elect him to the state legislature again? 18127 Did they have guns? 18127 Did they have horses and wagons? 18127 Did they have iron hatchets and knives? 18127 Did we buy it? 18127 Did we own New Orleans or Louisiana when Whitney invented his cotton- gin? 18127 Do you swear to it? 18127 Do you think he was mistaken about that? 18127 For what profession was Jefferson educated? 18127 From what place in England, and in what ship, did the Pilgrims sail? 18127 Had Columbus ever seen it? 18127 He did not care for a gold mine-- why should he? 18127 He said, Why not try lightning or electricity? 18127 He would laugh, and tell them that his father used to repeat to him this saying of Solomon''s:_ Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
18127 | How can you make a small wire telegraph? |
18127 | How did Captain Smith get corn? |
18127 | How did Clark save the lives of some of the men? |
18127 | How did Columbus get help at last? |
18127 | How did Columbus think he could reach Asia and the Indies? |
18127 | How did Franklin look to Miss Read? |
18127 | How did Washington take Boston? |
18127 | How did he get help about his telegraph? |
18127 | How did he help his father? |
18127 | How did he live? |
18127 | How did he make his nails? |
18127 | How did he pay his debt? |
18127 | How did he save money to buy books? |
18127 | How did many of the people of Massachusetts feel about Mr. Williams? |
18127 | How did most of the people at the North feel about it? |
18127 | How did most of the people at the South feel about slavery? |
18127 | How did most of the people of the slave states feel when Lincoln became President? |
18127 | How did the Indians feel about the west? |
18127 | How did the New World come to be called America? |
18127 | How did the North and the South feel about President Lincoln? |
18127 | How did they feel? |
18127 | How did they fight? |
18127 | How far did the United States then extend towards the west? |
18127 | How far off was Fort Vincennes? |
18127 | How far up the Hudson did it go? |
18127 | How large was Louisiana then? |
18127 | How long ago did the Revolution end? |
18127 | How long did General Harrison live after he became President? |
18127 | How long did he stay abroad? |
18127 | How long did the war last? |
18127 | How long had the war lasted? |
18127 | How long is it since Columbus discovered America? |
18127 | How many counties and towns in the United States are now called by his name? |
18127 | How many miles of telegraph are there now in the United States? |
18127 | How many people went to California? |
18127 | How many pounds of cotton would his cotton- gin clean in a day? |
18127 | How many states did we have then? |
18127 | How many such additions have we made in all? |
18127 | How much could one negro clean? |
18127 | How much did we pay? |
18127 | How much do we send from New Orleans now? |
18127 | How much land did we get? |
18127 | How much of the world was then known? |
18127 | How was Fort Vincennes taken? |
18127 | How was the Declaration sent to all parts of the country? |
18127 | How was the news carried to Philadelphia? |
18127 | How were Catholics then treated in England? |
18127 | How were the Quakers then treated in England? |
18127 | In 1819? |
18127 | In 1846? |
18127 | In 1848? |
18127 | In 1867? |
18127 | Is anything left for us to do? |
18127 | Is there a telegraph line under the sea? |
18127 | Of what was Maryland the home? |
18127 | Presently the chief gave him a push and said, Do move further on, wo n''t you? |
18127 | Roger Williams at Seekonk;[6]"What cheer, friend?" |
18127 | Tell what you can about Franklin''s landing in Philadelphia? |
18127 | Tell why so many people in the South wished to leave the Union? |
18127 | The message on the strip of paper above is the question,_ How is trade?_] 228. |
18127 | Then what happened? |
18127 | Then where did they send him? |
18127 | They looked at each other, and asked,"What does it mean?" |
18127 | To what did the people of Illinois elect Lincoln? |
18127 | To what office was Houston elected? |
18127 | To what part of the country did it spread? |
18127 | To what state did his father move? |
18127 | To whom did King Charles the Second owe a large sum of money? |
18127 | To whom did New Orleans and Louisiana then belong? |
18127 | Was he going any higher? |
18127 | Was the captain pleased with the discovery? |
18127 | What American plants did the emigrants send him? |
18127 | What about Captain Smith''s trial? |
18127 | What about De Soto? |
18127 | What about Fort Necessity? |
18127 | What about Georgia powder in the Revolution? |
18127 | What about Governor Berkeley and Mr. Bacon? |
18127 | What about Indian Rock? |
18127 | What about Jackson and Weathersford? |
18127 | What about Lafayette? |
18127 | What about Massasoit? |
18127 | What about Paul Revere? |
18127 | What about Squanto? |
18127 | What about emigrants? |
18127 | What about him when he was nineteen? |
18127 | What about his books and maps? |
18127 | What about his old age? |
18127 | What about his sea- fight? |
18127 | What about people going west? |
18127 | What about railroads? |
18127 | What about raising silk? |
18127 | What about the German emigrants and Ebenezer? |
18127 | What about the Revolution? |
18127 | What about the battle of Long Island? |
18127 | What about the battle with the Mexicans? |
18127 | What about the discovery of land? |
18127 | What about the first Thanksgiving? |
18127 | What about the gold- diggers? |
18127 | What about the last voyages of Columbus? |
18127 | What about the picture of the king? |
18127 | What about the raft? |
18127 | What about tobacco? |
18127 | What can you tell about Captain John Smith before he went to Virginia? |
18127 | What city did Penn begin to build here? |
18127 | What city did the British take? |
18127 | What could the French say? |
18127 | What could the North and the South do? |
18127 | What could the giant do? |
18127 | What did Abraham Lincoln and John Hanks do? |
18127 | What did Abraham Lincoln hire out to do in New Salem? |
18127 | What did Andrew do? |
18127 | What did Andrew use to do at the blacksmith shop? |
18127 | What did Boone do when he became old? |
18127 | What did Cabot do when he went on shore? |
18127 | What did Captain Parker of Lexington say to his men? |
18127 | What did Captain Smith want to do? |
18127 | What did Clark and his men start to do? |
18127 | What did Clark get for us? |
18127 | What did Clark say to the people in the fort? |
18127 | What did Clark undertake to do? |
18127 | What did Columbus name the island? |
18127 | What did Congress do on July 4th, 1776? |
18127 | What did Congress do? |
18127 | What did Cornwallis do? |
18127 | What did Cornwallis do? |
18127 | What did Eli make in that workshop? |
18127 | What did Eli make next? |
18127 | What did Eli''s fiddle seem to say? |
18127 | What did Franklin do after he returned to Philadelphia? |
18127 | What did Fulton say? |
18127 | What did General Harrison do in Canada? |
18127 | What did General Rufus Putnam do for Washington? |
18127 | What did George''s mother say? |
18127 | What did Governor John Winthrop do? |
18127 | What did Jefferson say? |
18127 | What did Jefferson write? |
18127 | What did Kentucky get for him? |
18127 | What did King George the Third determine to do? |
18127 | What did Lord Baltimore''s son do? |
18127 | What did Massasoit and Governor Carver do? |
18127 | What did Massasoit do for Mr. Williams? |
18127 | What did Menendez do in Florida? |
18127 | What did Mr. Livingston say about Louisiana? |
18127 | What did Mr. Whitney build at Whitneyville? |
18127 | What did Mr. Whitney say? |
18127 | What did Mr. Williams do at Seekonk? |
18127 | What did Mr. Williams do? |
18127 | What did Mrs. Greene say to the planters? |
18127 | What did Mrs. Jackson do? |
18127 | What did Myles Standish do there? |
18127 | What did Penn and the Indians do? |
18127 | What did Penn do in 1682? |
18127 | What did Penn want the land here for? |
18127 | What did Pocahontas do? |
18127 | What did Ponce De Leon do? |
18127 | What did President Lincoln do for the slaves? |
18127 | What did Professor Morse make? |
18127 | What did Robert do for his mother? |
18127 | What did Samuel Morse say to himself? |
18127 | What did Sevier become? |
18127 | What did Sir Walter then do? |
18127 | What did Tarleton say? |
18127 | What did Tecumseh determine to do? |
18127 | What did Tecumseh do when he got back? |
18127 | What did Texas become? |
18127 | What did Thomas Lincoln''s new wife say about"Abe"? |
18127 | What did Washington and Jefferson do? |
18127 | What did Washington do for Robertson? |
18127 | What did Washington do? |
18127 | What did Washington say about the settlers? |
18127 | What did bands of armed men use to do in the country where Andrew lived? |
18127 | What did he and Robertson do? |
18127 | What did he ask Congress to do? |
18127 | What did he begin to build at Coloma? |
18127 | What did he buy there? |
18127 | What did he call it? |
18127 | What did he call the river he discovered? |
18127 | What did he cut on a beech tree? |
18127 | What did he do for Philadelphia? |
18127 | What did he do in 1792? |
18127 | What did he do in 1839? |
18127 | What did he do in Lisbon? |
18127 | What did he do then? |
18127 | What did he do there? |
18127 | What did he do when he was fourteen? |
18127 | What did he do with it in France? |
18127 | What did he do with those plants? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he find on it? |
18127 | What did he find? |
18127 | What did he first carry round the globe? |
18127 | What did he hire Washington to do? |
18127 | What did he invent? |
18127 | What did he learn at school? |
18127 | What did he make for her? |
18127 | What did he make the settlers do? |
18127 | What did he make there? |
18127 | What did he make while his father was away? |
18127 | What did he say about her? |
18127 | What did he say after he became a man? |
18127 | What did he say he would do about Texas? |
18127 | What did he say to himself? |
18127 | What did he say? |
18127 | What did he think would happen? |
18127 | What did he try to do in Portugal? |
18127 | What did he try to do? |
18127 | What did he try to find? |
18127 | What did he use to write on? |
18127 | What did he want to find? |
18127 | What did he wish to do for the poor debtors? |
18127 | What did he write in one of his writing- books? |
18127 | What did his father say? |
18127 | What did many Englishmen refuse to do? |
18127 | What did most of the people at the North think about this? |
18127 | What did most of the people in England think about this? |
18127 | What did people think of him after he began to practise law? |
18127 | What did she do for Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What did some men in Congress say? |
18127 | What did some of the greatest men in England say? |
18127 | What did some of them try to do? |
18127 | What did such people think we were like? |
18127 | What did the Americans get possession of by this victory? |
18127 | What did the Americans say to that? |
18127 | What did the British do the next year? |
18127 | What did the British have in the west? |
18127 | What did the Cabots carry back to England? |
18127 | What did the Dutch do? |
18127 | What did the Dutch hire him to do? |
18127 | What did the English general do about the great elm in the Revolution? |
18127 | What did the English people offer him? |
18127 | What did the Indians agree to do? |
18127 | What did the Indians call him? |
18127 | What did the Indians call it? |
18127 | What did the Indians say about the"Prophet"after the battle? |
18127 | What did the Pilgrims build to protect them from the Indians? |
18127 | What did the Pilgrims do on the Cape? |
18127 | What did the South do at last? |
18127 | What did the chief men of Boston do? |
18127 | What did the colonies now do? |
18127 | What did the cotton- planters say? |
18127 | What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned? |
18127 | What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned? |
18127 | What did the governor order him to do? |
18127 | What did the king name the country? |
18127 | What did the king name the country? |
18127 | What did the king of England give Lord Baltimore in America? |
18127 | What did the king of France do? |
18127 | What did the king promise Lord Baltimore? |
18127 | What did the king say? |
18127 | What did the king then try to do? |
18127 | What did the king want the Americans to do? |
18127 | What did the people now begin to call themselves? |
18127 | What did the people of New England do in the Revolution? |
18127 | What did the people of his state like to call him? |
18127 | What did the people of the west say? |
18127 | What did the people who held slaves at the South want to do? |
18127 | What did the planters say about cotton? |
18127 | What did the settlers name their town? |
18127 | What did the success of the North do? |
18127 | What did the war of the Revolution do? |
18127 | What did these people do? |
18127 | What did they build there on Manhattan Island? |
18127 | What did they call the English troops? |
18127 | What did they call the place? |
18127 | What did they do at Cape Cod Harbor? |
18127 | What did they name the country? |
18127 | What did they nickname him in the printing- office? |
18127 | What did they want to do? |
18127 | What did we add in 1845? |
18127 | What did we buy in 1853? |
18127 | What did we fight about? |
18127 | What did we get at the end of the war? |
18127 | What did we get by that war? |
18127 | What did we say? |
18127 | What did"Abe"do? |
18127 | What does Philadelphia mean? |
18127 | What does it show us? |
18127 | What does the name mean? |
18127 | What does the unfinished pyramid stand for? |
18127 | What else did Myles Standish do besides fight? |
18127 | What else did he publish? |
18127 | What else did we get? |
18127 | What experiments did Franklin make? |
18127 | What friend did Boone have in North Carolina? |
18127 | What friend did Daniel Boone have in Virginia? |
18127 | What good did the battle of Tippecanoe do? |
18127 | What good work did the people of Georgia do? |
18127 | What had Philadelphia grown to be by 1733? |
18127 | What had the North and the South come to be like? |
18127 | What happened after Captain Gray returned to Boston? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened at Chicago? |
18127 | What happened at Hadley? |
18127 | What happened at Lexington and at Concord? |
18127 | What happened at Princeton? |
18127 | What happened at Saratoga? |
18127 | What happened at the end of the Revolutionary War? |
18127 | What happened at the south? |
18127 | What happened during the winter? |
18127 | What happened in 1812? |
18127 | What happened in 1846? |
18127 | What happened in Boston? |
18127 | What happened in May, 1848? |
18127 | What happened in New York? |
18127 | What happened in the course of eighty years? |
18127 | What happened in the spring of 1861? |
18127 | What happened next? |
18127 | What happened on the Alamance River? |
18127 | What happened on the first part of the voyage? |
18127 | What happened on the way down the Ohio River? |
18127 | What happened then? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Hudson the next year? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Smith when he went in search of the Pacific? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Sutter? |
18127 | What happened to Jamestown? |
18127 | What happened to King Philip himself? |
18127 | What happened to him on his way to Virginia? |
18127 | What happened to him when he went back to Boston on a visit? |
18127 | What happened to him? |
18127 | What happened to one of them? |
18127 | What happened to the Virginia settlement? |
18127 | What happened to the settlers? |
18127 | What happened when he died? |
18127 | What happened when he got there? |
18127 | What has been found there? |
18127 | What has made such a wonderful change? |
18127 | What has"Brother Jonathan"done? |
18127 | What help did the people of Boston get? |
18127 | What if he will not listen to us? |
18127 | What in 1867? |
18127 | What in England? |
18127 | What is a telegraph? |
18127 | What is said about Abraham Lincoln and his party? |
18127 | What is said about Balboa? |
18127 | What is said about Benedict Arnold? |
18127 | What is said about Canonchet? |
18127 | What is said about Canonicus and Governor Bradford? |
18127 | What is said about Captain Smith''s cold- water cure? |
18127 | What is said about Fort Alamo? |
18127 | What is said about General Greene? |
18127 | What is said about General Wayne? |
18127 | What is said about Marshall? |
18127 | What is said about Monticello? |
18127 | What is said about Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What is said about Weymouth? |
18127 | What is said about a magic fountain? |
18127 | What is said about her afterward? |
18127 | What is said about him and the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about it? |
18127 | What is said about negro slaves at the time of the Revolution? |
18127 | What is said about one of the great seals of the United States? |
18127 | What is said about our war with Mexico? |
18127 | What is said about railroads? |
18127 | What is said about signs of land? |
18127 | What is said about slavery? |
18127 | What is said about that river? |
18127 | What is said about the Friends or Quakers? |
18127 | What is said about the Indian guide? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the North and the South in the war? |
18127 | What is said about the North and the South since the war? |
18127 | What is said about the West? |
18127 | What is said about the boy''s mother? |
18127 | What is said about the celebration of that discovery? |
18127 | What is said about the church in Jamestown? |
18127 | What is said about the end of the war? |
18127 | What is said about the landing of the settlers in Virginia? |
18127 | What is said about the price of cotton cloth? |
18127 | What is said about the second voyage of the Cabots? |
18127 | What is said about the settlement of Savannah? |
18127 | What is said about the telephone? |
18127 | What is said about the war? |
18127 | What is said about the"Praying Indians"? |
18127 | What is said of Abraham Lincoln at seventeen? |
18127 | What is said of General Houston in the great war between the North and the South? |
18127 | What is said of General Oglethorpe in old age? |
18127 | What is said of General Washington after the war? |
18127 | What is said of George the Third? |
18127 | What is said of Jack Armstrong? |
18127 | What is said of King Philip''s wife and son? |
18127 | What is said of Lafayette? |
18127 | What is said of Lord Fairfax? |
18127 | What is said of Lord Fairfax? |
18127 | What is said of Ohio at that time? |
18127 | What is said of Providence? |
18127 | What is said of Queen Mary of France? |
18127 | What is said of Samoset? |
18127 | What is said of St. Augustine? |
18127 | What is said of Washington at the age of twenty- one? |
18127 | What is said of his death and burial? |
18127 | What is said of his death? |
18127 | What is said of his funeral? |
18127 | What is said of his return to Bristol? |
18127 | What is said of negro slaves? |
18127 | What is said of other islands? |
18127 | What is said of steamboats at the west? |
18127 | What is said of the Indians in Kentucky? |
18127 | What is said of the Revolution? |
18127 | What is said of the Texas flag? |
18127 | What is said of the city of Baltimore? |
18127 | What is said of the country west of the Mississippi? |
18127 | What is said of the fort at Boonesboro''? |
18127 | What is said of the grave at Louisville, Kentucky? |
18127 | What is said of the growth of Philadelphia? |
18127 | What is said of the last days of Sir Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What is said of the men whose lives we have read in this book? |
18127 | What is said of the return of Columbus to Spain? |
18127 | What is said of the"Sons of Liberty"? |
18127 | What is said of"Captain George"? |
18127 | What is the river he discovered called now? |
18127 | What kind of a bargain did he make for a new pair of trousers? |
18127 | What kind of boats did they have? |
18127 | What kind of houses did they live in? |
18127 | What lady did he become acquainted with? |
18127 | What land did they first see in America? |
18127 | What land did they see? |
18127 | What land did we buy in 1803? |
18127 | What land did we buy in 1853? |
18127 | What lands did they come to? |
18127 | What made them both certain that the dust was gold? |
18127 | What must be done to raw cotton before it can be made into cloth? |
18127 | What name did Queen Elizabeth give to the country? |
18127 | What name did a boy cut on a door? |
18127 | What name did they give it? |
18127 | What news did Miss Annie Ellsworth bring him? |
18127 | What other great man died on the same day? |
18127 | What saying of Solomon''s did Franklin''s father use to repeat to him? |
18127 | What sayings did he print in his almanac? |
18127 | What state grew out of the Watauga settlement? |
18127 | What the next November? |
18127 | What three things did he do for Virginia? |
18127 | What title did a college in Scotland now give him? |
18127 | What two states were made out of the Oregon Country? |
18127 | What two things did Franklin do in the Revolution? |
18127 | What two things did he find out by means of this kite? |
18127 | What war then broke out? |
18127 | What was David Crockett''s motto? |
18127 | What was Jefferson chosen to be? |
18127 | What was Lord Baltimore to pay for Maryland? |
18127 | What was done at New York? |
18127 | What was done then? |
18127 | What was done there in the Revolution? |
18127 | What was done to Boston? |
18127 | What was done with three of Philip''s men? |
18127 | What was he called? |
18127 | What was he talking about on his voyage back to America? |
18127 | What was the country on the Miami River called? |
18127 | What was the first message sent by telegraph in 1844? |
18127 | What was the saddest thing which happened at the close of the war? |
18127 | What were the four steps in Andrew Jackson''s life? |
18127 | What were we like? |
18127 | What words did Jefferson have cut on his gravestone at Monticello? |
18127 | What would Hudson say if he could see New York City now? |
18127 | What would a traveller going west then find? |
18127 | When Mr. Whitney came back he asked his housekeeper,"What has Eli been doing?" |
18127 | When and where did the emigrants land? |
18127 | When and where was Columbus born? |
18127 | When and where was George Washington born? |
18127 | When did Jefferson die? |
18127 | When did he sail? |
18127 | When did we buy Florida? |
18127 | When he left college where did he go? |
18127 | When they met a farmer, they would stop him and ask,''Which side are you for?'' |
18127 | When was Abraham Lincoln born? |
18127 | When was Texas added to the United States? |
18127 | Where and how did the war begin? |
18127 | Where did Cornwallis shut himself up with his army? |
18127 | Where did Franklin find work? |
18127 | Where did Fulton make and try his first steamboat? |
18127 | Where did General Putnam go in 1788? |
18127 | Where did Houston go after he became governor of Tennessee? |
18127 | Where did Houston go next? |
18127 | Where did Robertson and others go? |
18127 | Where did Washington go? |
18127 | Where did Washington take command of the army? |
18127 | Where did he first go in Spain? |
18127 | Where did he go after he gave up making nails? |
18127 | Where did he go after that? |
18127 | Where did he go when he became a man? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he live? |
18127 | Where did he live? |
18127 | Where did he then go? |
18127 | Where did the British go? |
18127 | Where did the_ Mayflower_ stop? |
18127 | Where did they land on December 21st, 1620? |
18127 | Where did they settle? |
18127 | Where is Fulton buried? |
18127 | Where is he buried? |
18127 | Where is he buried? |
18127 | Where is his monument? |
18127 | Where is his monument? |
18127 | Where is one foot? |
18127 | Where is the other? |
18127 | Where was Colonel Washington living? |
18127 | Where was Washington''s army? |
18127 | Where was a great battle fought with the Indians in 1811? |
18127 | Where was he born? |
18127 | Where was the first blood shed? |
18127 | Where were the last battles fought? |
18127 | Where were three of those forts? |
18127 | Who became the chief defender of the South? |
18127 | Who bought them for us? |
18127 | Who built the throne for King Cotton? |
18127 | Who commanded the British soldiers in Boston? |
18127 | Who did Mr. Williams think first owned the land in America? |
18127 | Who did a great deal for Philadelphia? |
18127 | Who did this work? |
18127 | Who fired the first gun in the war? |
18127 | Who fought the greatest battle of the War of 1812? |
18127 | Who gained the victory? |
18127 | Who helped emigration to the west? |
18127 | Who hired the Indians to fight? |
18127 | Who sailed with him? |
18127 | Who seized New Netherland? |
18127 | Who stopped them? |
18127 | Who was Captain Sutter? |
18127 | Who was General Oglethorpe? |
18127 | Who was Henry Hudson? |
18127 | Who was John Cabot? |
18127 | Who was Lord Baltimore, and what did he try to do in Newfoundland? |
18127 | Who was Myles Standish? |
18127 | Who was Roger Williams? |
18127 | Who was Thomas Jefferson? |
18127 | Who was Wamsutta? |
18127 | Who was William Henry Harrison? |
18127 | Who was its great military leader? |
18127 | Who was the tall man in Congress from Illinois? |
18127 | Who was"King Philip"? |
18127 | Why did Captain Smith go back to England? |
18127 | Why did Franklin go to London? |
18127 | Why did Hudson turn back? |
18127 | Why did Lincoln get the name of"Honest Abe"? |
18127 | Why did he go to Spain? |
18127 | Why did he hate the white men? |
18127 | Why did he name the settlement Providence? |
18127 | Why did he run away? |
18127 | Why did he want to go there? |
18127 | Why did some Englishmen in Holland call themselves Pilgrims? |
18127 | Why did some of the people of Virginia trouble them? |
18127 | Why did they give him that name? |
18127 | Why did they like to be there? |
18127 | Why did they now wish to go to America? |
18127 | Why did we fight the British? |
18127 | Why had they left England? |
18127 | Why is Virginia sometimes called the"Mother of Presidents"? |
18127 | Why not? |
18127 | Why was he made a general? |
18127 | Why was the new settlement called Georgia? |
18127 | Why? |
18127 | Would you give up the country to them?'' |
18127 | [ 4] and so have n''t I the right to it?'' |
18127 | [ Can any one in the class tell how many we have now?] |
18127 | replied the king;''did n''t my people discover it? |
18127 | what cheer?" |
53861 | A bug come out of this table? 53861 Ah, what they call''Poor Man''s Pudding,''I suppose you mean?" |
53861 | Ah? 53861 Ah? |
53861 | Ah? 53861 Ah? |
53861 | Ah? |
53861 | Ai n''t that a boy, sitting like Zaccheus in yonder tree of the orchard on the other bank? 53861 Am I Yorpy, boy? |
53861 | And how did it come there? 53861 And if he ca n''t prove that; what, then?" |
53861 | And must you not admit, sir, that it is the work of-- of-- of sp--? |
53861 | And now, Professor,said I,"what do you think of it?" |
53861 | And the children? |
53861 | And was not that what you asked about? 53861 And what did you do with it?" |
53861 | Are you sure? |
53861 | Bug? |
53861 | Bug? |
53861 | Bursts?--collapses? |
53861 | But do n''t you think, though,hinted I,"that the sculptor, whoever he was, carved the laugh too much into a grin-- a sort of sardonical grin?" |
53861 | But how got this strange, pretty creature into the table? |
53861 | But is it not miraculous,said Anna,"how a bug should come out of a table?" |
53861 | But is it not wonderful, very wonderful? |
53861 | But suppose he can not say exactly; what, then? |
53861 | But tell me, this warm spring snow may answer very well, as you say; but how is it with the cold snows of the long, long winters here? |
53861 | But this ticking-- this ticking? |
53861 | But when is Mr. Scribe to begin to pull it down? |
53861 | But why pull so far, dear uncle, upon the present occasion? 53861 But wo n''t the cock be prevailed upon to join us?" |
53861 | But, Mr. Scribe,said I, stroking my chin,"have you allowed for the walls, both main and sectional? |
53861 | But, surely, my friend, you do not call that charity-- feeding kings at that rate? |
53861 | But, wife,said I,"the chimney-- consider the chimney: if you demolish the foundation, what is to support the superstructure?" |
53861 | Certainly; what else should a paper- factory make? |
53861 | Come, Standard,he gleefully cried to my friend,"are you not going to the circus? |
53861 | Did n''t you hear''em_ ask_ for it? |
53861 | Did you ever hear of Master Betty? |
53861 | Did you never hear of the''Poor Man''s Eye- water''? |
53861 | Did you see a tumbler here on this table when you swept the room? |
53861 | Did you see it come out? |
53861 | Do look at the chimney,she began;"ca n''t you see that something must be in it?" |
53861 | Do n''t you turn out anything but foolscap at this machine? |
53861 | Do n''t_ you_ like it? 53861 Do you hear any more ticking?" |
53861 | Do you see this crack? |
53861 | Do you see this hole, this crack here? |
53861 | Does it never stop-- get clogged? |
53861 | Does not this disturb Mrs. Merrymusk and the sick children? |
53861 | Does that thin cobweb there,said I, pointing to the sheet in its more imperfect stage,"does that never tear or break? |
53861 | Genius? 53861 Gold digging, sir?" |
53861 | Have n''t I Trumpet? 53861 Have not live toads been found in the hearts of dead rocks, as old as creation?" |
53861 | He do n''t play the spy on you, does he? |
53861 | Heavens, mamma-- you are not going to take up the carpet? |
53861 | His true name? |
53861 | How can I hear it, if you make such a noise? 53861 How is it, that your sick family like this crowing?" |
53861 | How? |
53861 | Is James Rose within there? |
53861 | Is it not an unusual thing, this? |
53861 | Is there any hope of your wife''s recovery? |
53861 | Is there no horse- shed here, Sir? |
53861 | It ai n''t full of combustibles? 53861 It does not disturb them, then?" |
53861 | Merrymusk, will you present me to your wife and children? |
53861 | Moses? 53861 Mrs. Merrymusk and children?" |
53861 | My dear,said I,"we have plenty of other tables; why be so particular?" |
53861 | My friend, have you heard an extraordinary cock- crow of late? |
53861 | My friend,said I, addressing this woeful mortal,"have you heard an extraordinary cock- crow of late?" |
53861 | My friend,said I,"do you know of any gentleman hereabouts who owns an extraordinary cock?" |
53861 | No; do n''t I own that cock, and have n''t I refused five hundred dollars for him? |
53861 | Nonsense,said my wife,"Who ever heard of a ticking table? |
53861 | Now tell me,said she, addressing me, as soon as they had withdrawn,"now tell me truly, did a bug really come out of this crack in the table?" |
53861 | Now, Julia,said I,"after that scientific statement of the case( though, I confess, I do n''t exactly understand it) where are your spirits? |
53861 | One moment, my girl; is there no shed hereabouts which I may drive into? |
53861 | Please, marm,said Biddy, now entering the room, with hat and shawl--"please, marm, will you pay me my wages?" |
53861 | Pray is not that the Signor Beneventano? |
53861 | Secret ash- hole, wife, why do n''t you have it? 53861 Shall I go to the wood- house for it, or will you?" |
53861 | Simple boy,quoth my uncle,"would you have some malignant spy steal from me the fruits of ten long years of high- hearted, persevering endeavor? |
53861 | Sir,said I,"excuse me, but I am a countryman of yours, and would ask, if so be you own any Shanghais?" |
53861 | Sir,said I,"is there one of your Shanghais which far exceeds all the others in the lustiness, musicalness, and inspiring effects of his crow?" |
53861 | Sir? |
53861 | Smoke? 53861 Something of an Orpheus, ah?" |
53861 | Spirits? 53861 Spirits?" |
53861 | Tell me true? |
53861 | That magic cock-- what will you take for him? |
53861 | That sad fire on the river- side, you mean, unhousing so many of the poor? |
53861 | The children? |
53861 | The great English prodigy, who long ago ousted the Siddons and the Kembles from Drury Lane, and made the whole town run mad with acclamation? |
53861 | The man, then, I saw below is a bachelor, is he? |
53861 | Then why cross the ocean, and rifle the grave to drag his remains into this living discussion? |
53861 | Then''Poor Man''s Manure''is''Poor Man''s Eye- water''too? |
53861 | This ticking,said my wife;"do you think that another bug will come of this continued ticking?" |
53861 | To- morrow? |
53861 | Well, Helmstone,said Standard, inaudibly drumming on the slab,"what do you think of your new acquaintance?" |
53861 | Well, how long was it? |
53861 | Well, old man,said she,"who is it from, and what is it about?" |
53861 | Well, then, did you ever eat of a''Poor Man''s Pudding''? |
53861 | Well,said my smiling host,"what do you think of the Temple here, and the sort of life we bachelors make out to live in it?" |
53861 | What devil, wife, prompted you to crawl into the ash- hole? 53861 What makes those girls so sheet- white, my lad?" |
53861 | What of that? |
53861 | What then? 53861 What will you take for Signor Beneventano?" |
53861 | What, pray, Mr. Scribe;_ what_ can be done? |
53861 | What, what? |
53861 | What, wife? |
53861 | When will they begin? |
53861 | Where did you get it? |
53861 | Where do you get such hosts of rags? |
53861 | Where is that table? |
53861 | Where is that tumbler? |
53861 | Where, indeed? |
53861 | Who are you? |
53861 | Why do you say_ ah_ to me so strangely whenever I speak? |
53861 | Why is it, Sir, that in most factories, female operatives, of whatever age, are indiscriminately called girls, never women? |
53861 | Why, have n''t you seen him? 53861 Why, now, she did not_ really_ associate this purely natural phenomenon with any crude, spiritual hypothesis, did she?" |
53861 | Why, old man, do n''t you know I am building a new barn? 53861 Wife,"said I,"whose boards and timbers are those I see near the orchard there? |
53861 | Will the world ever be so decayed, that spring may not renew its greenness? |
53861 | Will you give him? |
53861 | Will you set the table? |
53861 | Will you turn back, and show me those Shanghais? |
53861 | Wo n''t you step in? |
53861 | Yorpy there, dear uncle; think you his grizzled locks thatch a brain improved by long life? |
53861 | You make only blank paper; no printing of any sort, I suppose? 53861 You?" |
53861 | _ Poor_ man like_ me_? 53861 _ When_, then?" |
53861 | _ Yours?_ First pay your debts before you offer folks_ your_ stout! |
53861 | ... what better could be done for anybody who came within our magic circle than to throw the spell of a tranquil spirit over him?" |
53861 | A fire- fly bug come out of a piece of ancient lumber, for one knows not how many years stored away in an old garret? |
53861 | A live bug come out of a dead table? |
53861 | Ai n''t flying justice? |
53861 | Ai n''t it inspiring? |
53861 | All blank paper, do n''t you?" |
53861 | And could it not be tested almost anywhere?" |
53861 | And did n''t you yourself lay his whole anatomy open on the marble slab at Taylor''s? |
53861 | And do you really think that jellies are the best sort of relief you can furnish to beggars? |
53861 | And is_ this_ the thing, uncle, that is to make you a million of dollars ere the year be out? |
53861 | And the day will come when you shall say, Who reads a book by an Englishman that is a modern? |
53861 | And what could be more economically contrived? |
53861 | And what did you do with it?" |
53861 | And who shall reproach thee with borrowed wit on this occasion, though borrowed indeed it was? |
53861 | And would spirits haunt a tea- table? |
53861 | Are there, indeed, spirits, thought I; and is this one? |
53861 | Bless me, said I to myself, with a sudden revulsion, it must be very late; ai n''t that my wife calling me? |
53861 | But between the felling of the tree and the present time, how long might that be? |
53861 | But could you not fancy that Hautboy might formerly have had genius, but luckily getting rid of it, at last fatted up?" |
53861 | But even granting all this-- and adding to it, the assumption that the books of Hawthorne have sold by the five thousand,--what does that signify? |
53861 | But hold, is there no man about?" |
53861 | But no-- what ventriloquist could so crow with such an heroic and celestial crow? |
53861 | But supposing there be a secret closet, what then?" |
53861 | But that dust of which our bodies are composed, how can it fitly express the nobler intelligences among us? |
53861 | But this secret oven; I mean, secret closet of yours, wife; where exactly do you suppose that secret closet is?" |
53861 | But what am I about? |
53861 | But what cared I? |
53861 | But what sort of a belief is this for an American, a man who is bound to carry republican progressiveness into Literature as well as into Life? |
53861 | But where are the gay bachelors? |
53861 | But where from? |
53861 | But where is Napoleon''s head in a charger? |
53861 | But who is sure of himself, especially an old man, with both wife and daughters ever at his elbow and ear? |
53861 | But why wail? |
53861 | But, is it possible? |
53861 | But, like those stones at Gilgal, which Joshua set up for a memorial of having passed over Jordan, does not my chimney remain, even unto this day? |
53861 | By Jove, what''s that? |
53861 | By what magic put pitch into sticks which have lain freezing and baking through sixty consecutive winters and summers? |
53861 | By what perverse magic, I a thousand times think, does such a very autumnal old lady have such a very vernal young soul? |
53861 | Come here, husband; was this the ticking you spoke of? |
53861 | Could Cotton Mather speak true? |
53861 | Did n''t you know that, old man?" |
53861 | Did n''t_ my_ cock encourage_ you_? |
53861 | Do n''t it do_ you_ good? |
53861 | Do n''t it impart pluck? |
53861 | Do n''t the cock_ I_ own glorify this otherwise inglorious, lean, lantern- jawed land? |
53861 | Do n''t the heavens themselves ordain these things-- else they could not happen? |
53861 | Do n''t you believe that, sir? |
53861 | Do n''t you know that St. Dunstan''s devil emerged from the ash- hole? |
53861 | Do n''t you see it rests now square on its bottom?" |
53861 | Do they pain you at all now? |
53861 | Do they really like it?" |
53861 | Do we understand you to insinuate that those famous Templars still survive in modern London? |
53861 | Do you hear that, my girls?" |
53861 | Do you know anything about them, wife? |
53861 | Do you mean to destroy the box?" |
53861 | Do you seek admiration from the admirers of a buffoon? |
53861 | Does not this look egotistical, selfish? |
53861 | Does she take me for a pauper? |
53861 | For how can one make rotten rail- fences stand up on their rotten pins? |
53861 | For shame, said I to myself, what is the use of so fine an example of philosophy, if it can not be followed? |
53861 | For the life of me, I could not help turning round upon the table, as one would upon some reasonable being, when-- could I believe my senses? |
53861 | Graceless ragamuffin, do you hear?" |
53861 | Hark? |
53861 | Has it not a sort of sulky appearance? |
53861 | Have n''t been committing murder? |
53861 | Have you a bit of paper? |
53861 | Heard the news? |
53861 | His knees, any Belshazzar symptoms there? |
53861 | His legs, does the''Gee stand strongly on them? |
53861 | How else would you have it, where princes are concerned? |
53861 | How fares it in the withers? |
53861 | How got the bug there? |
53861 | I and my chimney--""Personal?" |
53861 | I hope you have not on your drawing- room suit? |
53861 | I will give a traveler a cup of switchel, if he want it; but am I bound to supply him with a sweet taste? |
53861 | Is it a bug-- a bug that can frighten you out of what little wits you ever had? |
53861 | Is it not so? |
53861 | Is it possible, thought I, that any gentleman owning a Shanghai can dwell in such a lonesome, dreary region? |
53861 | Is it, ay?" |
53861 | Is that cock yours?" |
53861 | Is there any hard work to be done, and the''Gees stand round in sulks? |
53861 | Is this well? |
53861 | It is very wonderful as it is, but where are your spirits?" |
53861 | It plainly says--"_Never say die!_"My friends, it is extraordinary, is it not? |
53861 | Like Anacreon, do these degenerate Templars now think it sweeter far to fall in banquet hall than in war? |
53861 | Look, youngster-- young eyes are better than old-- don''t you see him?" |
53861 | May it not be, that this commanding mind has not been, is not, and never will be, individually developed in any one man? |
53861 | May the ring of their armed heels be heard, and the rattle of their shields, as in mailed prayer the monk- knights kneel before the consecrated Host? |
53861 | Merrymusk?" |
53861 | Mumps? |
53861 | My auditors have opened their eyes as much as to say,"What under the sun is a''Gee?" |
53861 | Now youngster, are you ready? |
53861 | Oh, noble cock, where are you? |
53861 | Oh, what does-- what_ does_ it all mean?" |
53861 | Or did you mean the gold bosom- buttons of our boss, Old Bach, as our whispering girls all call him?" |
53861 | Or, indeed, how can there be any survival of that famous order? |
53861 | Pray, did you ever hear of a''Poor Man''s Egg''?" |
53861 | Pray, did you hear that extraordinary cock- crow this morning? |
53861 | Pray, my lad, do you ever find any bachelor''s buttons hereabouts?" |
53861 | Pull that old dry- goods box ten miles up the river in this blazing sun?" |
53861 | Said I,"Gentlemen, is this an honorable-- nay, is this a lawful way of serving a civil- process? |
53861 | Scribe?" |
53861 | Scribe?" |
53861 | Scribe?" |
53861 | Scribe?" |
53861 | Shall I tell a weakness? |
53861 | Stuff with your mumps and Moses?" |
53861 | Tell me candidly, now,"I added,"would you have such a famous chimney abolished?" |
53861 | Tell me, I entreat you, who is Hautboy?" |
53861 | Tell me, can you expect that the crumbs of kings can be like the crumbs of squirrels?" |
53861 | Templar? |
53861 | The stranger who is buried here, what liberal- hearted landed proprietor among us grudges him six feet of rocky pasture? |
53861 | Then what does this prove? |
53861 | Then you do n''t think it''s spirits?" |
53861 | There it is; but where? |
53861 | Thinks she to salve a gentleman''s heart with Poor Man''s Plaster?" |
53861 | Tick, tick, tick!--don''t you hear it now?" |
53861 | Was ever such a thing heard of, or even dreamed of? |
53861 | Was ever the hearth so glorified into an altar before? |
53861 | Was it a death- tick in the wainscot? |
53861 | Was it my watch? |
53861 | Was this it? |
53861 | Were there spirits? |
53861 | What better could be done for those weary and world- worn spirits? |
53861 | What care I? |
53861 | What do you say? |
53861 | What have you been doing to the table?" |
53861 | What is it, anyhow, but a lump of loam? |
53861 | What is that, now?" |
53861 | What justice of the peace will right this matter? |
53861 | What more can you possibly learn? |
53861 | What possible motive could such a man have to deceive? |
53861 | What''s the use of pulling''em?" |
53861 | What''s the world compared to you? |
53861 | What''s_ in_ that box?--paving- stones? |
53861 | What? |
53861 | Where are the tack- hammers?" |
53861 | Where lurked he? |
53861 | Where lurked this valiant Shanghai-- this bird of cheerful Socrates-- the game- fowl Greek who died unappalled? |
53861 | Where stands the mill? |
53861 | Who can forget it? |
53861 | Who ever heard of a solid chimney?" |
53861 | Who in this region can afford to buy such an extraordinary Shanghai? |
53861 | Who put them there? |
53861 | Who wants to dine under the dome of St. Peter''s? |
53861 | Who wants to travel so fast? |
53861 | Whose cock is that? |
53861 | Why call_ me_ poor? |
53861 | Why do n''t you move? |
53861 | Why pull ten miles for it? |
53861 | Will you go?" |
53861 | Will you try it? |
53861 | Would he keep a- crowing all day? |
53861 | Would not plain beef and bread, with something to do, and be paid for, be better?" |
53861 | Would the Evil One dare show his cloven foot in the bosom of an innocent family? |
53861 | Yea, what''s the use of bothering the very heavens about it? |
53861 | Yes, I dare say there is a secret ash- hole in the chimney; for where do all the ashes go to that drop down the queer hole yonder?" |
53861 | Yet what''s the use of complaining? |
53861 | You have not been putting bugs into our tumblers? |
53861 | You remember the event of yesterday?" |
53861 | You think he never had genius, quite too contented and happy, and fat for that-- ah? |
53861 | You think him no pattern for men in general? |
53861 | You wo n''t sell him, then?" |
53861 | You would not think him an extraordinary genius then?" |
53861 | Your chimney, sir, you regard as too small, I suppose; needing further development, especially at the top?" |
53861 | Your infatuation or their insensibility? |
53861 | claps, thumps, deafening huzzas; the vast assembly seemed frantic with acclamation; and what, mused I, has caused all this? |
53861 | cried I;"what are you doing? |
53861 | cried the girls;"not_ our_ tumblers, papa? |
53861 | do you own the cock? |
53861 | exclaimed I, in wonder;"and do they all crow?" |
53861 | give stuff against despair?" |
53861 | is that you, old lad?" |
53861 | jumping on this rotten old log here, to flap my elbows and crow too? |
53861 | said I, all eagerness, expecting some mystical proposition;"what, wife?" |
53861 | said I,"abolish the chimney? |
53861 | thought I-- he''s a jigembob_ fiddler_ then? |
53861 | what''s that?" |
53861 | what''s the matter? |
53861 | you mean the_ flowers_ so called-- the Bachelor''s Buttons?" |
46286 | ''Tectives-- what is a''tective? |
46286 | Alive or dead? |
46286 | Alone with the Indians? 46286 And how about Frank?" |
46286 | Are not the disciples of Jesus Galileans? |
46286 | Art thou a Galilean? |
46286 | Avalanche? 46286 Bears? |
46286 | Because you know that Jesus lives? |
46286 | Burroughs-- Burroughs-- he did not come from Salem, did he? |
46286 | Can a man so arouse the world unless God be with him? |
46286 | Can the dead communicate with the living? |
46286 | Can you deliver him? |
46286 | Cold? 46286 Could we know it? |
46286 | Dead, no, but where are my pants and did anybody see us? 46286 Dead? |
46286 | Did I not place him in your charge? |
46286 | Did James and Fanny have any children? |
46286 | Did Jesus speak to you after he was dead? |
46286 | Did he catch anybody? |
46286 | Did he ever call himself the son of God? |
46286 | Did he have a family? |
46286 | Did he kill anyone else? |
46286 | Did not you and all the neighbors, after we had gone, find the place where the wolves had killed her? |
46286 | Did she exhibit great affection? |
46286 | Did she invite you in? |
46286 | Did she win fair? |
46286 | Did you go ashore at Bahrein, Arabia? |
46286 | Did you go ashore? |
46286 | Did you have your best girl along? |
46286 | Did you hear Jesus talk in the synagogue today? |
46286 | Did you join the Galilean band as a spy? |
46286 | Did you not hear my parable of the rich man and Lazarus? |
46286 | Did you see me? |
46286 | Did you see them all at one time? |
46286 | Did you see them? |
46286 | Did you take her home? |
46286 | Did you talk that way to her? |
46286 | Did you think I looked heavenly when you used to peddle fish? |
46286 | Did your mother love him better than she did you younger children? |
46286 | Do the people actually believe the child of Jarius was dead, or was she possessed by demons? |
46286 | Do yees think that auld Ben aught to larn that wee bit of a snipe to insolt the loikes of me? |
46286 | Do you expect to go to the penitentiary? |
46286 | Do you know,inquired Ruth,"that Delila has married that rich man who had been a leper and they are living in Bethany, near Jerusalem? |
46286 | Do you see that young woman there facing Judas? 46286 Do you think he wants to hire a man?" |
46286 | Do you think that is necessary, Ruth? |
46286 | Do you want me to clear you? |
46286 | Does Deacon Hobbs live in this town? |
46286 | Does his sermon on the mount portray derangement of the mind? |
46286 | Does she believe in Jesus? |
46286 | From whence came Moses and Elias? |
46286 | Glacier? 46286 Good afternoon, Deacon,"said Stubbs,"what is the news?" |
46286 | Gracious, Merrick, but there is ice floating down now and are n''t your legs cold? |
46286 | Great what? |
46286 | Has he gone up to heaven, from whence he came? |
46286 | Has he not criticized the law of God, through Moses? |
46286 | Have I not told you that flesh profiteth nothing? |
46286 | Have n''t you seen an avalanche? |
46286 | He has eulogized Abraham, Moses and the prophets, but the law,''An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth,''what is it? 46286 How could Jesus have tolerated the doings of those he now so bitterly opposes?" |
46286 | How did he do it? |
46286 | How did you like my playing Sampson, when I boxed your ears? |
46286 | How is that, Luna, for a boy of eight years old? |
46286 | How so, Merrick? |
46286 | How, then, does David in spirit call him Lord? 46286 How?" |
46286 | Hurt? 46286 I suppose that is your secret? |
46286 | I thought you had given him up? |
46286 | I wish I was God,broke in Magdalene,"would n''t I jerk those priests out of their phylactery garments and put them to grinding in the mill? |
46286 | If I see one of your wives falling, head downward from a camel, shall I save her from breaking her neck? |
46286 | Is God an animal? |
46286 | Is he? |
46286 | Is n''t it awful about Deacon Hobbs? |
46286 | Is not rise, rose, risen, proper? |
46286 | Is this struggle a sacrifice or a privilege? 46286 Is your father alive?" |
46286 | Is your wife alive? |
46286 | James, James,cried Peter,"are we to reap no earthly benefit from this course?" |
46286 | Jesus, can one enter the Kingdom of Heaven before they die? |
46286 | Jesus,she inquired earnestly,"what is death?" |
46286 | John Bragg? |
46286 | Mad? 46286 Mary Magdalene was all right, friend, but how about your girl wife, who shook me so fondly when I saw her face?" |
46286 | Nonsense, Pat, have n''t you worked beside me for a long time? |
46286 | Not after anyone? 46286 Not even for you?" |
46286 | Not long ago? 46286 Not so very long? |
46286 | Now, Winnie, why were you worried for fear I would not come home and what did you want me to come back for? |
46286 | Oh, Lena,he said, as he turned the conversation,"do you buy your fish of Simon yet?" |
46286 | Oh, dear,said Gordon,"when he gets those great white teeth on to him, wo n''t the blood fly? |
46286 | Oh, my soul, hast thou no home? 46286 Oh, no-- no, Magdalene; but tell me, before we part, how you can be so cheerful, even blithe, in the face of death?" |
46286 | Oh, yes, Joseph, I know your faithful wife; and does she scold you as much as you deserve? 46286 Oh-- I-- yes-- say, Mr. Stubbs, did you ever see a live detective?" |
46286 | On the return to the steamer did you assist those women again? |
46286 | On your return to the steamer did you assist two Mohammedan women? |
46286 | Papa,she continued,"will you, for once, allow your pet to have her own way? |
46286 | Queen Esther? 46286 Ruth, how long has it been since your brother began to talk this way?" |
46286 | Ruth,said John, as arm in arm with the two girls they turned to the garden,"can you abide Magdalene without obeying her commands?" |
46286 | Say, Jim, why do you take such an interest in Frank; where did the Felkers get him? |
46286 | Showed what? |
46286 | Squoze, Rastus? 46286 Suppose your theory is true, Winnie, what steps would you take to find her?" |
46286 | Surely; how far is it, John? |
46286 | Thanks, Jim, I''m glad you like it; do you know I have worked on it ever since you went away? 46286 Then is man a spirit or an animal?" |
46286 | Then why comest thou hither? |
46286 | Then why not squize, squoze, squizzen? |
46286 | Thin why should a gintlemin aloix yee be axen meself quistions which I niver knew a- tal- tal? |
46286 | Think again, what did I read last Sunday about Christ at Jacob''s well? |
46286 | Thou art not fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham? |
46286 | Thou has rightly judged,and turning to Magdalene, he said,"Seest thou this woman? |
46286 | To get rid of him? |
46286 | Truly, John,inquired Aunt Susanna,"do you believe in him? |
46286 | Truly, truly, Peter, if we live the spotless life which Jesus lives our rewards will be great, but God''s plan----"Can I speak? |
46286 | Was Christ to come to the Gentiles? |
46286 | Was Mrs. Felker nervous? |
46286 | Was he that George Burroughs? |
46286 | Was there more than one? |
46286 | Was your wife that beautiful Fanny Shepherd, who died with a broken heart at Casco Bay, after the report of your death? |
46286 | Well, Jim, say, do you really want to make up? 46286 Well, if Juda had been with the camp when you and Frank came upon them, could they have concealed her?" |
46286 | Were they Mohawks? |
46286 | Were you acquainted with his father? |
46286 | Were you at Jask, Persia? |
46286 | Were you ever at Salem? |
46286 | Were you ever married? |
46286 | Were you living in the last one? |
46286 | What are you laughing at, you great fool? |
46286 | What crime hath he committed? |
46286 | What did she and you do? |
46286 | What did you do? |
46286 | What do you know about Cotton Mather? |
46286 | What do you mean by bordering on the truth? |
46286 | What is He? |
46286 | What is his name? |
46286 | What is that, Archibald? |
46286 | What is your name? |
46286 | What law? |
46286 | What news, Mrs. Beaver? 46286 What quarry dungeon?" |
46286 | What shall I do for him? |
46286 | What she said? 46286 What trouble?" |
46286 | What was his name? |
46286 | What was man to be like? |
46286 | What? 46286 When is all this to take place?" |
46286 | When is the resurrection? |
46286 | When? |
46286 | Where are you, Archibald? |
46286 | Where did he die? |
46286 | Where do you get that word? |
46286 | Where is Jesus? |
46286 | Where is he? |
46286 | Which one? |
46286 | Who did it? 46286 Who has said anything about marrying, Winnie?" |
46286 | Who told you all that stuff? |
46286 | Who were they? |
46286 | Whose do you suppose? |
46286 | Whose feet, Mary? |
46286 | Why all this haste, what has Jesus said, what has he done, that he should be apprehended in the night and destroyed before the people can gather? |
46286 | Why did so many hate her, John? |
46286 | Why is she called a sinner? |
46286 | Why were they glad? |
46286 | Why, Jim, are you so simple as all that? 46286 Why, Joseph, you are worse than Peter; do you think heaven is up above the moon?" |
46286 | Why, do n''t you know, Ralph? 46286 Will my body ever be resurrected?" |
46286 | Will you do what I want you to do about it? |
46286 | Will you promise not to cry, Winnie? |
46286 | Y- e- s."What makes you drag out that''yes''so long? |
46286 | Yes, you do know, and if I explain why I am so anxious you''ll tell me all you can, wo n''t you, Pat? |
46286 | You do? |
46286 | A moment silence, and Aunty continued,"What do you think of Jesus?" |
46286 | Accordingly, when he came about noon the third day, I pointed to the wall back of him, saying,"What is that?" |
46286 | After a few moments she seemed to come back again and said,"Oh, John, is Heaven really so near?" |
46286 | After he had gone through with the particulars she asked:"How many Indians camped at Wabbaquassett Lake that first night?" |
46286 | After the storm had passed, Magdalene laughingly inquired,"Now, John, did you actually come over to see Aunty, or did you come to see me?" |
46286 | Allowed, but if a man of my experience does not understand materialism, how is a youth of twenty years expected to understand it? |
46286 | Am I one of those whom he talked about the other day? |
46286 | Are we the results of some process of material nature, the fortuitous concurrence of innumerable atoms, or are we the creatures of a living God? |
46286 | Are you getting my postals, which I am sending back from every town? |
46286 | Art thou greater than our father, Abraham and the prophets, whom makest thou thyself?" |
46286 | As Jesus approached the rostrum an aged scribe, of the Arabian type, cried out,"Who art thou?" |
46286 | Believeth thou this?" |
46286 | Both were silent a moment and then she continued:"There, James Hall, has that little lecture almost killed you? |
46286 | But if this be so, how came we here? |
46286 | But is this a dream, or is it reality? |
46286 | But oh, is n''t she a diamond in the rough? |
46286 | But, say, you would think I was writing a novel, would n''t you? |
46286 | By the way, did you ever learn about the Neanderthal man whose skull was found in a cave in the Neanderthal Valley, with the bones of a bear? |
46286 | Can you all meet me there? |
46286 | Did Charlotte Lewis and Mariva Shepherd come this way from school?" |
46286 | Did not you both swear he was in league with the Devil? |
46286 | Did she love you?" |
46286 | Did this familiar voice, the true External Stimulus, awaken something which existed, or did it create something in my brain? |
46286 | Did you ever hear about him?" |
46286 | Did you know John Bragg was over to see me?" |
46286 | Did you know that your frankness gained their affection?" |
46286 | Dimock?" |
46286 | Do I know it? |
46286 | Do not weep, my boy, soon, in a moment as it were, you and I will stand before the judge, and who will this judge be? |
46286 | Do you believe in such a theory as that, Joseph?" |
46286 | Do you know it? |
46286 | Do you know, Stubbs, what is the main trouble with the human family?" |
46286 | Do you not know that our world is slowly revolving in the direction we call south? |
46286 | Do you not like Alaska?" |
46286 | Do you remember when you came to Jesus by night, in Bethany, and he explained how one could be born again? |
46286 | Do you think my men will back out of the agreement?" |
46286 | Do you think you are hurt inwardly?" |
46286 | Do you think, father, there are other worlds like ours?" |
46286 | Does not this sound more like God than man, lamenting over the unfortunate condition of those who reject him? |
46286 | Doth this offend you? |
46286 | Edom at the south?" |
46286 | Gee- whiz, were those women at Me- Schwad the same women I met on the steamer? |
46286 | George Burroughs, that worthy Christian minister, defile his name, now he is dead, will you? |
46286 | Gordon, stop him-- whoa- whoa-- Oh, Gordon, where have I been? |
46286 | Hall?" |
46286 | Has not Jesus said time and again,''My kingdom is not of the world?'' |
46286 | Hath no man condemned thee?" |
46286 | Have we the ability to comprehend his claim? |
46286 | Have you ever spoken to Jesus about it?" |
46286 | Have you not studied geology, Archibald?" |
46286 | Have you seen a live one, Bill?" |
46286 | He has been to Africa, has he not? |
46286 | He knows it all, and why should I fear?" |
46286 | He won the bet, I saw him do it, but you see that stone pavement on Broadway, do you? |
46286 | How all these unseen emotions if my feelings are not controlled by an invisible person who knows, thinks and dictates?" |
46286 | How and whence did we come? |
46286 | How can it be done?" |
46286 | How is Fanny Burroughs?" |
46286 | How is it, guide?" |
46286 | How, then, will I know that you remember me when you are gone?" |
46286 | Hoyne raised the window and said,"Do you see those woods yonder?" |
46286 | Hoyne took the prisoner into the ante- room, used for counsel, and said to him:"Mr. O''Flerity, did you steal the horse?" |
46286 | I am going to join the big caravan on its way from Persia to Palestine, and you do not like that either, do you?" |
46286 | I will have to marry him to get rid of him, wo n''t I?" |
46286 | I wonder if steers ever rear up in the front?" |
46286 | I wonder where they got evidence to convict him? |
46286 | If David call him Lord, how is he his son?" |
46286 | If God permits, does He not sanction? |
46286 | If an officer should come in here now and arrest me for complicity with the devil, I should consider it my death knell, would you not?" |
46286 | If he does, and we all go, will you both go with us? |
46286 | If this is true why not follow the Master through darkness into light? |
46286 | Is God an animal? |
46286 | Is Jesus authority? |
46286 | Is not his mother called Mary, and his brethren James and Joses, and Simon and Judas, and his sisters, are they not all with us?" |
46286 | Is not this the carpenter''s son? |
46286 | Is there an order and a plan about our being? |
46286 | Is there any more of them?" |
46286 | Is this the expression of God''s love to me? |
46286 | It rises here now at 2:30 in the morning, and as for staying at the landing is concerned, would you dare stay alone with those Indians?" |
46286 | It''s just fun, and when I tell the girls about it, wo n''t it make their eyes open wide? |
46286 | JESUS BEFORE PILATE Early Pilate entered the judgment hall and with a dark scowl said,"What accusation have you against this man?" |
46286 | Jesus adroitly evaded a direct reply by asking,"What think ye of Christ; whose son is he?" |
46286 | Jesus staid him, saying,"Judas, betrayest thou the son of man with a kiss?" |
46286 | Jim Hall, who taught you the Bible?" |
46286 | Jim could but see in her the model of pure virtue and loveliness, as she turned to him, saying:"Is your name James Hall?" |
46286 | Look up here, Mr. Hall, have you forgotten that Miss Richardson is present?" |
46286 | Many thought Jesus was mad or beside himself, while others said,"Has not God, in all ages past, at times, awakened the people in mysterious ways?" |
46286 | Martha groaned and cried,"Oh, the cruel Romans,"to which Magdalene voiced in,"Why blame the Romans? |
46286 | Mary Magdalene''s voice changed to milder tones as she sympathetically continued:"Oh, can you not ease my aching heart? |
46286 | Muldoon resented the innocent prattle, and turning to Benjamin, said:"Will ye allow that wee bit of a brat to spake that way of a gintleman?" |
46286 | Next day, going through a piece of woods, I heard Wilson''s voice,"Is everything all right?" |
46286 | Nicodemus, still a member of good standing among them, arose and asked,"Does our law judge any man before it hear him and know what he doeth?" |
46286 | Not willing to let up on the subject, I continued:"Do your women ever find fault with the way you treat them?" |
46286 | Now do you wonder at my enjoyment?" |
46286 | Now he comes to Zion, in the city of David, and what will we do? |
46286 | Now we may ask,"Is this that we call death the end of our being?" |
46286 | Now what or who cognizes the primitive object, the formed picture or the retained image? |
46286 | Now, Mamma, will you take my side?" |
46286 | Now, Ralph, do not count double- yelk eggs for two any more, do you understand?" |
46286 | Now, what can I do? |
46286 | Now, will you give up that trip to Nazzip, or must you go into the stamping grounds of the dare- devil Mohammedans?" |
46286 | Now, you''re not mad?" |
46286 | Oh, evening star, beautiful heavenly light, wilt thou find rest in the ocean waves, and Magdalene find none, oh spangled heavens and God? |
46286 | Oh, soulless maid from Galilee, did you once think that men had souls? |
46286 | One day she and I-- say Aunty, there comes John, what do you suppose he wants?" |
46286 | Page 29:"Can we tell precisely in what the feelings of the central active self consists? |
46286 | R.?" |
46286 | Really, do you think those bears are of the savage kind?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Say, Richardson, tell me how long you expect to stay in this God- forsaken country?" |
46286 | Say, Richardson, were you living in the Glacial Period?" |
46286 | Say, Ruth, why do people call me a sinner and say I am possessed with devils?" |
46286 | Say, are you almost dead?" |
46286 | Say, friend, where did you come from, and where are you going?" |
46286 | Say, is n''t it funny he does not move or stir? |
46286 | See?" |
46286 | Shall I instruct you?" |
46286 | Shall our days end with the autumn and the snow, or will there be a spring time? |
46286 | She came forward, and placing her hand in his, said, laughingly,"Well, Jim, what?" |
46286 | She had staunch friends, who would go through fire and water to protect her--""And you were one?" |
46286 | She hesitated, and then said,"Why, Peter?" |
46286 | She kept saying,''Oh, Jim, Jim, do n''t you love me any more, wo n''t you let me put my arms around your neck and kiss you once more before I die?''" |
46286 | She raised her eyes upwards, smiled so sweetly and said:''Oh, father, father, where is Jim?'' |
46286 | Soon another boy came in and I heard him say,"Hello, Ralph, did you hear about the''tectives?" |
46286 | Soon the stranger will pause to read and say:"Who were all these Richardsons, Newells, Aborns and Dimocks?" |
46286 | Stubbs came in and said,"Ralph, why have you not swept the floor?" |
46286 | THE HOME OF MAGDALENE"Magdalene, why are you so restless, and why gazing so intently at the stormy sea; has anything crossed your path, dear?" |
46286 | Tell me, Aunt Mary, did you see Jesus?" |
46286 | Tell, me, Jim, all about the first day you were out hunting for Juda, who you saw and what they said?" |
46286 | That is all, Jim-- do you hear?" |
46286 | The man must have lived contemporary with Adam, and it seems that the bear----""Were the bones of that man and bear found in this place?" |
46286 | The sad girl looked upon the ground in a brown study, and then continued:"Is that which one can not control sinful?" |
46286 | Then coming near me inquired quizzically,"What is your name?" |
46286 | Then he turned and looked the other way, but I shook his hand and said,''Do you hear me? |
46286 | Then looking inquiringly in my face, he said,"Say, mister, are you sick?" |
46286 | Then many of his disciples, when they heard it, said:"This is an hard saying; who can hear it?" |
46286 | Then patting the dog on the head, I continued:"Wo n''t old Skip be ashamed when he sees you, Towser?" |
46286 | Then rising to his full height, he exclaimed,"Is there another Galilean sympathizer among us? |
46286 | Then she looked inquiringly at Jesus, saying,"Were you with me?" |
46286 | Then the multitude murmured and said:"Why does this man disdain signs and wonders and yet says he came down from Heaven? |
46286 | Then to feel the spell of silence, where tumult once arose, we can but ask,"Is life a reality or a myth?" |
46286 | Then turning to Vida said:"You can keep a secret?" |
46286 | Then what will it be? |
46286 | Then, after he had wiped the tears and gotten me to laughing, he said,''I want you to do something for me, will you?'' |
46286 | There and then we can easily forgive those who have wronged us, but if we have wronged others, will their forgiveness to us set us free? |
46286 | They may be blameless, but you-- you, Judas Iscariot-- you who have been with him more than two years, are you yet befogged, or are you a coward? |
46286 | This is what I call real inspiration, do n''t you? |
46286 | Turning back to Jesus, Pilate asked,"From whence art thou?" |
46286 | Was my condition better or worse than Fanny''s or father''s? |
46286 | Was n''t that an awful price for your family to pay for the Union? |
46286 | Was not Abigail at Salem, swearing against the minister? |
46286 | What did I tell you, Merrick? |
46286 | What did he do? |
46286 | What do you thing of that?" |
46286 | What does that mean? |
46286 | What have you heard?" |
46286 | What is it?" |
46286 | What makes you smile?" |
46286 | What sayest thou?" |
46286 | What was it?" |
46286 | What will Pilate, the Roman governor, say?" |
46286 | What, and if you see the son of man ascend up where he was before? |
46286 | When about forty we seem to rest, reflect and soliloquize:"Who am I; what am I; where from; where bound; why do I enjoy, and why do I weep? |
46286 | When all was quiet, Jesus, in a low voice, said:"Did my words in the synagogue offend you? |
46286 | When he arose he saw none save the woman, to whom he said,"Where are those, thine accusers? |
46286 | When he had taken her she looked in his face and laughingly said,"Queer, is n''t it, John? |
46286 | When told she had not died she inquired:"Was I alive when Jesus came to me?" |
46286 | When was all this talk?" |
46286 | When we were about to part, Arthur said to me:"Father, do you expect to win that race today?" |
46286 | Where am I now? |
46286 | Where have they gone, and will they come again? |
46286 | Where is my dream of spirit homes, where tranquil souls are joined in love, far away in Heaven''s domain? |
46286 | Where will we get our breakfast?" |
46286 | While Paul was helping board up the broken window, I overheard Stubbs ask him:"Do you consider Cotton Mather and his associates murderers?" |
46286 | While we were waiting Moses jokingly inquired of me,"Do you wish you were in Chicago?" |
46286 | Why dead?" |
46286 | Why is this? |
46286 | Why, Lena, are you in pain?" |
46286 | Why, the Alaska Indians are civilized, are n''t they?" |
46286 | Why? |
46286 | Will he be ashamed of me when he comes into his kingdom?" |
46286 | Will it be earthly fame? |
46286 | Will it be that while others died, we live to good old age? |
46286 | Will it be the beauty of face and form we wore? |
46286 | Will it be the days when the soft summer breeze fanned our cheeks and flitted our souls away on an untroubled sea? |
46286 | Will we reject him? |
46286 | Will you come?" |
46286 | Will you not aid the birth of universal grace to all mankind? |
46286 | Winnie, noticing Jim''s emotion, turned back to the original theme and continued:"And I suppose Juda was on your mind?" |
46286 | Would the Stimuli which cause Edison to invent cause any other man of the same experience and education to evolve the same results? |
46286 | Ye serpents, vipers, how can you escape the damnation of hell? |
46286 | You did not sleep well last night, did you?" |
46286 | You know, I have lots of love letters she wrote me? |
46286 | You used to run in, when a boy, and why do you not come oftener now?" |
46286 | You would not allow yourself to love another, were she ever so young and pretty, would you?" |
46286 | Young caught me smiling, and looked at a little scared as he whispered,"There is no shot in the gun?" |
46286 | and I said,''Yes, you know I will, what is it?'' |
46286 | and shall we wake in the long tomorrow and be forever? |
46286 | and where are my pants?" |
46286 | he exclaimed as he extended his lower jaw defiantly and repeated,"What law? |
32845 | ''Den you is de ringleader,''he says,''an''you tempted de other chillen?'' 32845 ''I takes it you''re the old he- coon of this yere outfit?'' |
32845 | ''Is you Miss Nannie?'' 32845 ''Lowmintrduce L''d Cairngorm,"he said; then, adding quickly to me,"Come and dine to- morrow, wo n''t you?" |
32845 | ''Oh, dat''s you, is it, Nannie?'' 32845 ''What did he say to ye, honey?'' |
32845 | ''What sort of a game is this, anyhow?'' 32845 ''What was the last words of this yere gent who''s killed?'' |
32845 | ''What was you- all doin''in camp yourse''f,''asked the jedge of this yere witness,''the day of the killin''?'' 32845 ''What you mean by makin''eyes at Dr. Boling? |
32845 | ''Where''s she gwine to sleep?'' 32845 ''Who''s this yere toomultuous man on the hoss?'' |
32845 | ''Yes,''she says,''dat''s me, an''ai n''t you Aunt Chloe what I heared so much about?'' 32845 ''You was namin'',''says Cherokee,''some public improvements you aims to make; sech as movin''this yere camp''round some, I believes?'' |
32845 | A madman, eh? |
32845 | A skull, you say!--very well-- how is it fastened to the limb?--what holds it on? |
32845 | A woman? 32845 And did he die?" |
32845 | And how is the Woman of the Water? |
32845 | And how is this to be done? |
32845 | And is it contagious? |
32845 | And the man who stood guardian over you and entertained you with wine and cigars, was not he a German too? |
32845 | And this silly fellow has made you believe it? |
32845 | And what cause have you, Jupiter, for such a supposition? |
32845 | And what did he die of? |
32845 | And what did you do, madam? |
32845 | And what is it now? |
32845 | And where do you mean to carry me? |
32845 | And who are you? |
32845 | And who''s Archy Dargan? |
32845 | And why not to- night? |
32845 | And you really solved it? |
32845 | And you think, then, that your master was really bitten by the beetle, and that the bite made him sick? |
32845 | Andy,said Maggie with a somewhat shy smile, after she had been thoroughly assured of forgiveness,"did you believe all that story about the Count?" |
32845 | Any letters? |
32845 | Are these all for me? |
32845 | Are you always gay? |
32845 | Are you punishing me? 32845 Are you sure you saw that third crow on the wood- pile?" |
32845 | Are you trying to save kerosene or are you lazy, Rebecca Glynn? |
32845 | At what time does this steamer start? |
32845 | Books? |
32845 | But how did you proceed? |
32845 | But how do you know he dreams about gold? |
32845 | But how was it possible to effect this? |
32845 | But what disorder is it? 32845 But what is the matter, Mademoiselle? |
32845 | But what wud ye do with a child that refused to obey ye? |
32845 | But what, beautiful one? |
32845 | But what, in the name of all that is mysterious, is your''Massa Will''going to do with scythes and spades? |
32845 | But-- what do they contain? |
32845 | By yourself!--what do you mean? |
32845 | Ca n''t he get out, papa? |
32845 | Consultation? |
32845 | Could you-- could you forgive me, Andy? |
32845 | D''ye call yourselves chiefs and warriors? |
32845 | Deal punishment? |
32845 | Dear me,said Emmeline,"is he in that place?" |
32845 | Dick, what_ do_ you mean? |
32845 | Did Henry have many words with him? |
32845 | Did I not warn you? |
32845 | Did I scare you? |
32845 | Did he say hard things? |
32845 | Did they send her to school? |
32845 | Did you ever know anybody like her? |
32845 | Did you say it was a_ dead_ limb, Jupiter? |
32845 | Did you-- hear anything? |
32845 | Did your own mother find it out? |
32845 | Do I look like a man who makes puns? |
32845 | Do all you sailormen belong down there at the bay? |
32845 | Do n''t you want an envelope? |
32845 | Do they ever fight dooels in the West? 32845 Do you know what they contain?" |
32845 | Do you mind my runnin''out a minit? |
32845 | Do you remember that time he killed the cat because she had scratched him? |
32845 | Do you see no change in your portrait? |
32845 | Do you see those packages? |
32845 | Do you suppose that I would condemn you for doing on a large scale what I have been doing on a smaller scale ever since last November? |
32845 | Do you think that my chiefs would hang one of you between two such miserable saplings as these? 32845 Do you think you could communicate to my aunt the fact that you are a Cairngorm and a neighbor? |
32845 | Do you think you could fool_ me_? 32845 Does Fate impede its own decree?" |
32845 | Does everything come handy to- day? |
32845 | Does it look like anybody you ever saw, Aunt Chloe? |
32845 | Does she know he is going? 32845 Does she still play in the moonlight?" |
32845 | Does the light hurt your eyes, and is that the reason why you did n''t want the lamp? |
32845 | Elinor,exclaimed Walter, in amazement,"what change has come over you?" |
32845 | Everything? |
32845 | Feed her? 32845 For me?" |
32845 | Had we better have it in here? |
32845 | Have you got any of that old wine in the house, Caroline? 32845 Have you''The City of Credit''?" |
32845 | He looked mad? |
32845 | How I know? 32845 How came it there?" |
32845 | How can you leave your patients now? |
32845 | How can you''tell life''anything? |
32845 | How could he have known it? |
32845 | How did the trial come out? |
32845 | How do I know that you are going to be brave enough to fight the English, or clever enough to outwit them? 32845 How far mus''go up, massa?" |
32845 | How high up are you? |
32845 | How much fudder is got for go? |
32845 | How should I know? |
32845 | How was that? |
32845 | How would it suit you, Miss Conway, to give me the pleasure of your company to Coney next Sunday afternoon? |
32845 | How''s that? |
32845 | How? 32845 Hungry? |
32845 | I am a servant in the house where she was taken ill."Then she is not at home? |
32845 | I ask you again, how should I know? |
32845 | I did n''t hear him say anything, but----"But what? |
32845 | I hope none of your relatives-- I hope you have n''t sustained a loss? |
32845 | I know you said that he had terrible pains in his stomach, and had spasms, but what do you think made him have them? |
32845 | I open de do''on de crack, I did, an''low,''Who dat?'' 32845 I say to Marse Tumlin,''Ai n''t you des ez well ter fetch Marse Paul Conant home whar we all kin take keer uv''i m?'' |
32845 | I say-- it ai n''t a_ her_, is it? |
32845 | I think you proved that at Trenton Falls,he rejoined;"but will you grant me the pleasure of another test during the next quadrille?" |
32845 | I-- beg your pardon-- but then-- is your aunt Lady Bluebell? 32845 In looks?" |
32845 | In what way? |
32845 | Intrude? |
32845 | Is Mrs. Warner here? |
32845 | Is it to be-- yes? |
32845 | Is n''t a mad person very strong? |
32845 | Is n''t there any other book- shop in town where I can get what I want? |
32845 | Is that all? |
32845 | Is there any reason in the world why you should not enjoy all you have got in life? |
32845 | Is there not a change? |
32845 | Is this the Widow Ducket''s? |
32845 | Is, then, the picture less like than it was yesterday? |
32845 | Is-- is that quite_ en regle_? |
32845 | It has been there every night since he died,cried Rebecca.--"Every night?" |
32845 | Jupiter,cried he, without heeding me in the least,"do you hear me?" |
32845 | Kin you tell me if the man that box 690 b''longs to is in? |
32845 | Madam,said Captain Bird,"what''s to pay for the supper and-- the rest of the entertainment?" |
32845 | Madam,said he,"I just came back to ask what became of your brother- in- law through his wife''s not bein''able to put no light in the window?" |
32845 | Mademoiselle,he cried,"what has happened? |
32845 | Maggie,said Andy presently,"do you think as much of me as you did of your-- as you did of the Count Mazzini?" |
32845 | Mighty queer, warn''t it? |
32845 | Miss Vallie say,''Well, what uv it? 32845 Mr. Ducket did n''t like the sea?" |
32845 | Nex''time Dr. Tom Boling come he say to de mist''ess,''Who''s dat young lady,''he says,''dat opened de door for me las''time I was here? 32845 No, massa, I bring dis here pissel;"and here Jupiter handed me a note which ran thus:"My Dear--: Why have I not seen you for so long a time? |
32845 | No? |
32845 | Patience? |
32845 | Pretty nigh ready? |
32845 | Rat poison? |
32845 | Secondly,I continued,"I was sitting alone in my garden last summer-- near the end of July-- do you remember? |
32845 | Shall I go away? |
32845 | Shall we clear off the table and wash up the dishes,said Dorcas,"or wait until they are gone?" |
32845 | She had her voice then? |
32845 | So young, and embarrassed in his manners; how could he ever have taken hold of the Queen''s foot? |
32845 | Such as anything in particular? |
32845 | Sure? |
32845 | That he would stay here as long as he lived and afterward, too, if he was a mind to, and he would like to see Henry get him out; and then----"What? |
32845 | The discount will make it$ 1.20--a dozen, did you say? 32845 The what?" |
32845 | Then you think there_ was_ suthin''in what he said? |
32845 | Up to me, is it? 32845 Very true; but what are they doing here?" |
32845 | Walter, are you in earnest? |
32845 | Was Miss Nannie her child? |
32845 | Was the accused found guilty? |
32845 | Was the man who came for you a German? |
32845 | Was there any talk of an-- examination? |
32845 | Well now, Jupiter, do exactly as I tell you-- do you hear? |
32845 | Well, Jup, perhaps you are right; but to what fortunate circumstance am I to attribute the honor of a visit from you to- day? |
32845 | Well, Jup,said I,"what is the matter now?--how is your master?" |
32845 | Well, that is queer, if true,said I,"but how about Mr. Conant''s crippled shoulder?" |
32845 | Well, then, was it this eye or that through which you dropped the beetle? |
32845 | Well, what does your story prove? |
32845 | What are you doing that for? |
32845 | What are you going to do? |
32845 | What de matter now, massa? |
32845 | What de matter, massa? |
32845 | What did Edward say? |
32845 | What did Henry say? |
32845 | What did he die of? 32845 What did you call it?" |
32845 | What disease? 32845 What disorder?" |
32845 | What do you mean by keeping me in this place against my will? 32845 What do you mean by that?" |
32845 | What do you mean? |
32845 | What do you mean? |
32845 | What do you mean? |
32845 | What do you mean? |
32845 | What do you really think ailed Edward? |
32845 | What do you want of me? |
32845 | What does all this mean? |
32845 | What does she mean? |
32845 | What have you put that lamp over there for? |
32845 | What in the name of heaven shall I do? |
32845 | What is it, Barbe, beloved? 32845 What is it, Judith?" |
32845 | What is so funny to- day? |
32845 | What is that? |
32845 | What is the meaning of all this, Jup? |
32845 | What murder trial was this you speak of? |
32845 | What sort of man is he? |
32845 | What was it? |
32845 | What''s the matter, Andy, you are so solemn and grouchy to- night? |
32845 | What''s the matter? |
32845 | What''s the use if--"If what?" |
32845 | What''s this for? |
32845 | What, for instance? |
32845 | What? |
32845 | What? |
32845 | What?--sunrise? |
32845 | What_ is_ that? |
32845 | What_ would_ you hev done? |
32845 | When? |
32845 | Where are you going? |
32845 | Where are you going? |
32845 | Where did she live? |
32845 | Where were you staying? |
32845 | Where''s that''Dream Book''gone to? |
32845 | Which way mus go now, Massa Will? |
32845 | Who are you, that come to disturb a lone woman at this hour of the night? |
32845 | Who had been killed? |
32845 | Who hev''I got in the pen? |
32845 | Who was Miss Nannie? |
32845 | Who? 32845 Who?" |
32845 | Why am I here? 32845 Why did n''t you set it in the hall and have done with it? |
32845 | Why do n''t you go and see if 690 is in the box? |
32845 | Why do n''t you invite him, then, if he''s so much to the mustard? |
32845 | Why do n''t you put the lamp on this table, as she says? |
32845 | Why do n''t you turn around and look? |
32845 | Why do you act so, Rebecca? |
32845 | Why, Dick,he exclaimed,"are n''t you going after all? |
32845 | Why, what is the matter,_ mon gar''_? |
32845 | Why? 32845 Will you let me try?" |
32845 | Will you not take a cigar? |
32845 | Wot trade? |
32845 | Wot''s that? |
32845 | Would you have me take you on trust, Jean? |
32845 | Write a novel, eh? |
32845 | Ye ai n''t got anybody you''re owin''money to,said Uncle Jim earnestly,"anybody follerin''you to get paid, eh? |
32845 | You are fond of dancing, Miss Morris? |
32845 | You bought all those-- for me? |
32845 | You did not think of an examination? |
32845 | You do not drink wine? |
32845 | You mean, to punctuate it? |
32845 | You''ve taken me up for a madman, have you? |
32845 | _ Me_ play- actin''? 32845 _ Out to the end!_"here fairly screamed Legrand;"do you say you are out to the end of that limb?" |
32845 | _ Very_ sick, Jupiter!--why did n''t you say so at once? 32845 ''''Fo''God,''I says to ole Sam, who was settin''de table for dinner,''who''s dis yere comin''in?'' 32845 ''Am I goin''to use this oil,''I said to myself,''and let my sister- in- law''s husband be wrecked for want of it?'' 32845 ''Is she in now?'' 32845 ''Oh, Aunt Chloe, what did you let me go for?'' 32845 ''The scenery''s very fine?'' 32845 ''What''s dis,''says Marse Henry--''chillen stealin''cake? 32845 ***** Have I lost Dora? 32845 --Who''s your friend, Bertha?" |
32845 | ; 8o6*;48[d]8[pilcrow]6o))85; 1[dd](;:[dd]*8[d]83(88)5*[d];46(;88* 96e*? |
32845 | A pain in the toe is probably as troublesome as a pain in the head; and why should not one be cured as well as the other? |
32845 | After an interval of gloom, in which each partner successively drew the candle to his side to examine his cards, Uncle Jim said:--"Say?" |
32845 | Ai n''t thar no way to fix it? |
32845 | Ai n''t ye goin''to play? |
32845 | Am I not thy Prophet?" |
32845 | An''he look up an''say,''Who''s dat?'' |
32845 | An''he say,''What you want?'' |
32845 | And I-- do you know who I am?" |
32845 | And den he keep a syphon all de time--""Keeps a what, Jupiter?" |
32845 | And must I die in a ditch, after all? |
32845 | And now what Night are you going to take me around to Call on her?" |
32845 | And pray, my dear sir, why not-- why? |
32845 | And was he not already in a fair way to be successful? |
32845 | And while you''re doing this, are n''t you, by your age and position here, holding out hopes to others that you know can not be fulfilled?" |
32845 | And why did you insist upon letting fall the bug, instead of a bullet, from the skull?" |
32845 | And why? |
32845 | And you''ve set down my claim at Angel''s?" |
32845 | Are n''t you actually living off each other? |
32845 | Are n''t you grinding each other down, choking each other''s struggles, as you sink together deeper and deeper in the mud of this cussed camp? |
32845 | Are they at home?" |
32845 | Are they within?" |
32845 | Are you consumptive? |
32845 | Are you deaf, like Aunt Bluebell? |
32845 | Are you feeble- minded, a cripple, an outcast? |
32845 | Are you much hurt?" |
32845 | Are you poor, like-- lots of people? |
32845 | Are you subject to hereditary insanity? |
32845 | Are you telling me of a painter, or a wizard?" |
32845 | Are you-- repulsively ugly?" |
32845 | Atter while he low,''Dey done come, is dey, Minervy Ann?'' |
32845 | Avoid him? |
32845 | Be quiet now, and----""What do you mean-- what is my situation?" |
32845 | Boomin'', eh?" |
32845 | But after a minute Uncle Jim resumed:--"Of course you''ve made a little raise somehow, or you would n''t be here?" |
32845 | But can you leave your patients?" |
32845 | But how to make known my wishes even if there was any one to listen to them? |
32845 | But if, after all, it must be-- duty, or what- not, making provocation-- what then? |
32845 | But perhaps you smoke?" |
32845 | But this discovery gives us three new letters,_ o_,_ u_, and_ g_, represented by[ double dagger],?, and 3. |
32845 | But what shall I say? |
32845 | But where are the_ antennae_ you spoke of?" |
32845 | But why did she speak of patience? |
32845 | But wot are ye moonin''about for? |
32845 | But would it influence the event?" |
32845 | But, dear Harry, why can you not make yourself more of a man than you are? |
32845 | Ca n''t Dan yere settle with this Red Dog man?'' |
32845 | Ca n''t I tell? |
32845 | Can any children make less noise than the little rosy- cheeked ones who have no existence except in the omnium gatherum of your own brain? |
32845 | Can any domestic larder be better stocked than the private larder of your head dozing on a cushioned chair- back at Delmonico''s? |
32845 | Can any family purse be better filled than the exceeding plump one you dream of, after reading such pleasant books as Munchausen or Typee? |
32845 | Can any housewife be more unexceptionable than she who goes sweeping daintily the cobwebs that gather in your dreams? |
32845 | Can any wife be prettier than an after- dinner fancy, idle and yet vivid, can paint for you? |
32845 | Counting all, I constructed a table thus: Of the characters 8 there are 33.;"26 4"19*"16[ double dagger])"13 5"14 6"11[ dagger]1"8 o"6 92"5:3"4?" |
32845 | Dar wuz de money, but how wuz I gwine ter git it in Miss Vallie''s han''? |
32845 | Dar''s dat ar baby in dar, an''what mo''sign does you want ter show you dat it all turned out des like one er dem ol''-time tales?" |
32845 | Dear girl, she is quite well, I hope?" |
32845 | Did he simply want to detain me, and if so, did he have a motive it would pay me to fathom before I exerted myself further to insure my release? |
32845 | Did she encourage him?" |
32845 | Did they give him the Joyous Palm that Day? |
32845 | Did ye ever notice, Jim"--ostentatiously to his partner--"did ye ever notice that you get inter a kind o''sweaty lather workin''in it? |
32845 | Did you ever hear of such a man as Mad Anthony? |
32845 | Do n''t ye think he ought to have some castor ile?''" |
32845 | Do n''t yer see? |
32845 | Do n''t you know he''s good as''gaged to my daughter?'' |
32845 | Do n''t you know my voice? |
32845 | Do n''t you see what he fixin''ter do?'' |
32845 | Do you believe it?" |
32845 | Do you know anybody here?" |
32845 | Do you know her well?" |
32845 | Do you know that Jupiter is quite right about it?" |
32845 | Do you not envy her, Elinor?" |
32845 | Do you really believe those men are comin''here?" |
32845 | Do you think I did n''t spy on ye and find that out? |
32845 | Do you want it certified?" |
32845 | Do you?" |
32845 | Does Prisidint Hadley grab th''child be th''ear an''conduct him to a corner iv th''schoolroom an wallup him? |
32845 | Does a man buy a ticket in a lottery-- a poor man whose whole earnings go in to secure the ticket-- without trembling, hesitating, and doubting? |
32845 | For was not his only business in Saratoga the endeavour to make her acquaintance? |
32845 | Ha!--what do you say to that? |
32845 | Had the carriage then taken away the two persons I had seen in this house, and was I indeed alone in its great emptiness? |
32845 | Hamp say,''Whyn''t you take some er yo''money an''make Miss Vallie git er nice frock?'' |
32845 | Hamp, he low,''What she say?'' |
32845 | Has anything unpleasant happened since I saw you?" |
32845 | Has n''t he told you what ails him?" |
32845 | Have there been any favorable reviews of the book?" |
32845 | Have you any body there?" |
32845 | Have you been crossed in love? |
32845 | Have you been feeding the Woman of the Water?" |
32845 | Have you ever heard of any important treasure being unearthed along the coast?" |
32845 | Have you found it?" |
32845 | Have you lost the world for a woman, or any particular woman for the sake of the world? |
32845 | Have you no mercy on a man who never did you wrong, and only asks to quit you and forget the precious hour you have made him lose?" |
32845 | He low,''Hit''s goods fer Major Tumlin Perdue, an''whar does you want um drapped at?'' |
32845 | He low,''You ai n''t brung dat money back, is you?'' |
32845 | He must be mad; nothing else but mania could account for such words and such actions; and yet, if mad, why was he allowed to enter my presence? |
32845 | He say,''Valentine, what de matter?'' |
32845 | He say,''What things, Minervy Ann?'' |
32845 | Her dress shows that she can lay aside the soulless forms of society in such a place as this: why not I? |
32845 | How can I get home?" |
32845 | How can a man of your age talk of being melancholy, or of the hollowness of existence? |
32845 | How come dat?'' |
32845 | How de we stand?" |
32845 | How did he know my name? |
32845 | How do I know you will really do the great things I''m expecting of you? |
32845 | How do we stand now?" |
32845 | How in the world did you come there at that hour?" |
32845 | How is it possible to extort a meaning from all this jargon about''devil''s seats,''''death''s- head,''and''bishop''s hotels?''" |
32845 | How is it yo''looks so comfble like?'' |
32845 | How many limbs have you passed?" |
32845 | How many maiden aunts will come to spend a month or two with their"dear Peggy,"and want to know every tea- time"if she is n''t a dear love of a wife?" |
32845 | How many of us have made, or are making, more than grub wages? |
32845 | How many twisted- headed brothers will be putting in their advice, as a friend to Peggy? |
32845 | How much?" |
32845 | How should I know any more than you?" |
32845 | How you know I been swindled?'' |
32845 | I asked"Where? |
32845 | I exclaimed to myself--"can she be here?" |
32845 | I had already called in vain, and there was no bell-- yes, there was; why had I not seen it before? |
32845 | I low,''Whar I got any money?'' |
32845 | I may call then, may I not?" |
32845 | I met him to- day on the Bowery, and what do you think he does? |
32845 | I say:''Does you think I''m a start naked fool?'' |
32845 | I says, callin''after her;''upstairs long wid Miss Rachel?'' |
32845 | I squall out, I did,''Whyn''t some er you white men take dat man pistol''way fum''i m? |
32845 | I took you at your word, I followed your advice, I asked you to marry me, and this is the delightful result-- what''s the matter?" |
32845 | I''low,''Honey, is I say anything fer ter hurt yo''feelin''s?'' |
32845 | If it''s right to larrup an infant iv eight, why ai n''t it right to larrup wan iv eighteen? |
32845 | If we''d been playin''fourhanded, say you an''me agin some other ducks, we''d have made''four''in that deal, and h''isted some money-- eh?" |
32845 | If you know''d any better, would you act such poor torment ag''in''a great brave? |
32845 | Ignore him? |
32845 | In vain did his friends endeavor to reason, and then to laugh him out of his strange whims; for when did ever jest or reason cure a sick imagination? |
32845 | Is he confined to bed?" |
32845 | Is it any wonder, then, that I prize it? |
32845 | Is she in?'' |
32845 | Is that why I am here?" |
32845 | Is there not a deep moral in the tale? |
32845 | Is this like Elinor?" |
32845 | It will stand thus: 5 represents a[ dagger]"d 8"e 3"g 4"h 6"i*"n[ double dagger]"o("r:"t?" |
32845 | Legrand?" |
32845 | Look here, Jupiter, do you hear me?" |
32845 | Look up at the house; what do you see there?" |
32845 | Look you, Billy Fall, do you know what you''ve done? |
32845 | Marse Tumlin low,''Is Paul Conant ever swindle_ you_?'' |
32845 | Miss Lammas, will you do me the honor to marry me?" |
32845 | Mr. Bartlett''s reflections, after his arrival, were-- we have good reason to know-- after this fashion:"When will I cease to be a fool? |
32845 | Much of a demand for it?" |
32845 | Must I give you your own card in order to acquaint you with your own business?" |
32845 | Now do n''t deceive me-- don''t, will you? |
32845 | Now, what would you say to our publishing the book on-- ah-- on your account, as it were?" |
32845 | OR, WHICH IS THE MADMAN? |
32845 | Oh, well-- why not? |
32845 | Ol''Ben Sadler wuz drivin'', an''he low,''Heyo, Minervy Ann, whar you want deze goods drapped at?'' |
32845 | Perhaps a couple of blows with a mattock were sufficient, while his coadjutors were busy in the pit; perhaps it required a dozen-- who shall tell?" |
32845 | Perhaps he had left a lucrative practice at Saratoga-- and why? |
32845 | Perhaps you would prefer to walk back to the house?" |
32845 | Perhaps-- perhaps you are a Miss Bluebell?" |
32845 | SMOKE-- SIGNIFYING DOUBT A wife? |
32845 | Say you expect by hanging on to make a strike-- and what does that amount to? |
32845 | Say you like_ it_? |
32845 | Say you took a little stroll in the park, Miss Conway-- don''t you think it might chase away some of your mullygrubs? |
32845 | Say you''re willing to share and share alike as you do-- have you got enough for two? |
32845 | Scared off by a frown? |
32845 | Shall I take you at your word, Miss Lammas?" |
32845 | Shall I tell you what else you did? |
32845 | Shall a man then scour the country on a mule''s back, like honest Gil Blas of Santillane? |
32845 | She laugh an''say,''What answer you gwine ter make?'' |
32845 | She low,''What''s dis, Aunt Minervy Ann?'' |
32845 | She say,''What he want?'' |
32845 | She say,''Who dat?'' |
32845 | Should I let such an interference as I had received go unpunished? |
32845 | So I will give you the specific suggestion, and it is this: Why do you not write a novel? |
32845 | Some are panthers, and some bears, and some buffaloes; but where are your weasels? |
32845 | Somebody make answer,''Is de Major in, Aunt Minervy Ann?'' |
32845 | Suddenly he paused and said,"Strange, ai n''t it, you should speak of it to- night? |
32845 | Summoning up, therefore, a show of courage, he demanded in stammering accents--"Who are you?" |
32845 | Suthin''high- toned, you know?" |
32845 | That fren''o''mine expects me to go to the theayter, do n''t ye see? |
32845 | The fact is, Dick, she still holds a soft place in her heart for you, and if you were going to be of the party--""Well?" |
32845 | The man is surely mad!--but stay!--how long do you propose to be absent?" |
32845 | The steamer sails at nine?" |
32845 | The two upper black spots look like eyes, eh? |
32845 | Then I spoke to the Welshwoman:"What are you about, Judith? |
32845 | Think o''dat, will ye? |
32845 | Was I the victim of a conspiracy, or was the man mad? |
32845 | Was any one more wretched than I that morning and could any one nourish a more bitter grievance? |
32845 | Was it possible? |
32845 | Was not his own the form in which that Destiny had embodied itself, and he a chief agent of the coming evil which he had foreshadowed? |
32845 | Well, how''s things agoin''on your claim, Dick? |
32845 | Well, what did this handful of pale- faces? |
32845 | What are we to make of the skeletons found in the hole?" |
32845 | What are_ your_ chances? |
32845 | What could he be dreaming of? |
32845 | What did it mean? |
32845 | What disease has carried off my friend here so suddenly?" |
32845 | What do you mean by talking so? |
32845 | What do you mean to do with me?" |
32845 | What does he complain of?" |
32845 | What good am I? |
32845 | What he doin''here?'' |
32845 | What if I address her boldly as an old acquaintance, and then apologize for my mistake? |
32845 | What is it, Caroline?" |
32845 | What is it? |
32845 | What is it?" |
32845 | What is it?" |
32845 | What is that dreadful shadow?" |
32845 | What is the matter?" |
32845 | What make him dream''bout de goole so much, if''taint cause he bit by the goole- bug? |
32845 | What new crotchet possessed his excitable brain? |
32845 | What reason is there for anybody to be afraid of Henry?" |
32845 | What shall I do with it?" |
32845 | What was it you lint him?" |
32845 | What was to be done? |
32845 | What was to be done? |
32845 | What was to be done? |
32845 | What were you thinking of?" |
32845 | What you got dar, an''who do it''blong ter?'' |
32845 | What"business of the highest importance"could he possibly have to transact? |
32845 | What''ll you take to drink?'' |
32845 | What-- what are the symptoms?" |
32845 | When we all come in-- dere was six or eight of us-- he says,''Eve''y one o''ye look me in de eye; now which one tuk it?'' |
32845 | When you left the Bishop''s Hotel, what then?" |
32845 | Where thenceforward will be those sunny dreams, in which I have warmed my fancies, and my heart, and lighted my eye with crystal? |
32845 | Where''s your plucky lad? |
32845 | Whither does it lead, may I ask?" |
32845 | Who is he?" |
32845 | Who knows what his seasons are? |
32845 | Who knows why he does it? |
32845 | Who knows why he likes to collect in wan pocket a ball iv twine, glass marbles, chewin''gum, a dead sparrow an''half a lemon? |
32845 | Who knows why he thinks a dark hole undher a sidewalk is a robbers''cave? |
32845 | Who shall dare to interpret the day- dream of a maiden? |
32845 | Who''d suspect_ you_ of having corns?" |
32845 | Why burden it? |
32845 | Why choose me out then for-- your society? |
32845 | Why could n''t I get down without missing the step and grazing my shin on the wheel? |
32845 | Why could n''t I stare back at all those people on the balcony as coolly as the two fellows who sat beside me? |
32845 | Why could not she look like her mother, too, as well as the rest of them? |
32845 | Why do n''t you go and get her if you want her? |
32845 | Why do n''t you set the lamp on the study table in the middle of the room, then we can both see?" |
32845 | Why have we never met before?" |
32845 | Why have you entrapped me into this place?" |
32845 | Why not choose some one who can-- talk?" |
32845 | Why not doubt? |
32845 | Why not, I thought, go on dreaming? |
32845 | Why not?" |
32845 | Why should I do anything so foolish? |
32845 | Why should there be?" |
32845 | Why this assault? |
32845 | Why?" |
32845 | Will nobody give me a drop of cold water?" |
32845 | Will you go?" |
32845 | Will you please tell her I enquired for her? |
32845 | Will you sit down? |
32845 | Wo n''t you come in, suh, an''wait fer''i m?'' |
32845 | Wot yer say-- eh?" |
32845 | Would my cuff do, do you think?" |
32845 | Would n''t it be singularly awkward for you if I had said''Yes''? |
32845 | Would yo''believe it? |
32845 | Would you and that other lady like to hear any of them?" |
32845 | Yet why should it be so? |
32845 | You ai n''t got left, over and above your d-- d foolishness at the Oriental, as much as five hundred dollars?" |
32845 | You must have wandered in there through the park; you came up to the house and looked at me--""Was that you?" |
32845 | You will, of course, ask''where is the connection?'' |
32845 | You''ve heard of Mike Sullivan, have n''t you? |
32845 | _ Me_ lyin''?" |
32845 | _ What is it_?" |
32845 | ai n''t dat de ve''y image of dat frock? |
32845 | ai nt dis here my lef eye for attain?" |
32845 | cried Legrand, apparently much relieved,"what do you mean by telling me such nonsense as that? |
32845 | cried Legrand, highly delighted,"what is it?" |
32845 | de bug, massa? |
32845 | do n''t know Archy? |
32845 | do you know your right hand from your left?" |
32845 | have you come at last? |
32845 | he exclaimed,"Miss Morris, what do you mean?" |
32845 | is dat so?'' |
32845 | said Legrand,"but it''s so long since I saw you; and how could I foresee that you would pay me a visit this very night, of all others? |
32845 | said Uncle Jim, as he hurriedly slurred over the French substantive at the close,"did ye ever see such God- forsaken foolishness?" |
32845 | said she,"what is the matter?" |
32845 | settled to your satisfaction, you will then return home and follow my advice implicitly, as that of your physician?" |
32845 | was the skull nailed to the limb with the face outward, or with the face to the limb?" |
32845 | what I keer for de bug?" |
32845 | what are you starin''so for?" |
32845 | what do you mean?" |
32845 | what mus do wid it?" |
32845 | what_ is_ dis here pon de tree?" |
32845 | why not hesitate; why not tremble? |
7283 | Ah, did n''t I tell ye so? |
7283 | And where will that be? |
7283 | And why that, and why that, O Morag, lennavanmo? |
7283 | And you? |
7283 | But if I had been born lord of Brisetout, and you had been the poor scholar Francis, would the difference have been any the less? 7283 Can we dig next to you, then?" |
7283 | Do n''t you get any gold? |
7283 | Does the Heaven- born want this ball? |
7283 | Fishing? |
7283 | Gain? |
7283 | Have you any money? |
7283 | How do they call you? |
7283 | How do you know,he said,"that your own eyesight has not degenerated with time? |
7283 | Is that gold? |
7283 | May we look? |
7283 | Of what trade? |
7283 | Put it,said Villon,"that I were really a thief, should I not play my life also, and against heavier odds?" |
7283 | Sure, now, Morag- a- ghraidh, you will be my own lass and no other? |
7283 | Time for what, Morag? |
7283 | What has gone wrong? |
7283 | What is it, Morag- mo- run? |
7283 | Where would it be but to the place you took me out of, and called across? |
7283 | Why does he make that abominable noise? 7283 Why should we put on fertilizer?" |
7283 | Will you seat yourself,said the old man,"and forgive me if I leave you? |
7283 | Yes,said I,"but when he gets old his face is black; and do you not see his nose, how flat it is, like yours?" |
7283 | You are cold,repeated the old man,"and hungry? |
7283 | Your donkey,says he,"is very old?" |
7283 | Among what kind of people would a story like this be believed? |
7283 | And have I nothing to reproach myself for? |
7283 | And when I wanted to go fishing for trout, have I ever hesitated to dismiss you?" |
7283 | Are the descriptions in the story simple or elaborate?] |
7283 | Are there any points of likeness?] |
7283 | Are you not ashamed of yourself? |
7283 | As a spectator, what things would you find most interesting in the scene? |
7283 | Born about 570 in Mecca(?) |
7283 | Born in 1500(?) |
7283 | But being deceived, why should she think it odd to find hay inside? |
7283 | But how had he managed to see that polo- ball? |
7283 | But if not milk, why not hay? |
7283 | By what details do you learn the state of the country? |
7283 | By what details does the author give special poignancy to the pathos of her account? |
7283 | By what incidents does the author show the unselfish devotion of the old musician for his pet? |
7283 | Can you characterize this kind of description?] |
7283 | Can you get any hint of the social conditions at the time of the story? |
7283 | Can you give any instances from history or fiction to show the attitude of the French aristocracy before the Revolution? |
7283 | Can you mention any other famous speeches that are regarded as fine literature?] |
7283 | Can you point to anything in Lincoln''s addresses that proves the correctness of the popular judgment of him? |
7283 | Can you quote any of the sayings in it? |
7283 | Can you see any likeness in this to Lamb and Hawthorne?] |
7283 | Can you show the evidence of Scotch Covenanter inheritance in the writer''s philosophy? |
7283 | Can you tell anything about the first rush of gold seekers to California? |
7283 | Could it have lived an hour as happily?" |
7283 | Could you infer anything about the writer''s character from this sketch?] |
7283 | Did Robin Hood ever take service with King Richard? |
7283 | Did you ever have the impulse to"take your spite out"on something, animate or inanimate? |
7283 | Did you ever sleep at night out of doors? |
7283 | Did you feel any better for relieving your feelings so? |
7283 | Do Lincoln''s statements about war apply to the present great European conflict? |
7283 | Do children think of their dolls as alive? |
7283 | Do people ever work such tricks? |
7283 | Do they heighten the picture? |
7283 | Do women in this country do the same kinds of work as the European peasant women? |
7283 | Do you feel the personality of Lincoln in these speeches? |
7283 | Do you get a single picture, or a rapid succession of pictures? |
7283 | Do you imagine that Mr. Beecher was successful in his addresses to the English people? |
7283 | Do you imagine that he would be a good out- of- doors companion? |
7283 | Do you imagine that the writer learned to make bread? |
7283 | Do you know Kipling''s ballad,"The East and the West"?] |
7283 | Do you know any books similar to what you may imagine the"Castle of the Pyrenees"to be?] |
7283 | Do you know any other stories written in this vein? |
7283 | Do you know anything about the custom of"heckling"in England? |
7283 | Do you know anything about the difficulties of Alpine climbing from other accounts you have read? |
7283 | Do you know anything about the"Lincoln Mythology"that has grown up since the war?] |
7283 | Do you know anything of Franklin''s life that showed whether he lived up to the moral he sets forth in this story?] |
7283 | Do you know of any abuses or wrongs that have been abolished by being shown up as ridiculous? |
7283 | Do you know what happened to the Marquis in the"Tale of Two Cities"? |
7283 | Do you know what science now says about"the beginning of things"being"associated with water"? |
7283 | Do you know what the general attitude of the savage and semi- civilized people is toward strange things? |
7283 | Do you know whether the monkey family is capable of the training which the author hoped to give to his pet? |
7283 | Do you know why the author calls the Sultan''s palace impenetrable? |
7283 | Do you sympathize with Pepper or the author? |
7283 | Do you think it likely that the militaristic type of mind can have much sense of humor?] |
7283 | Do you think that philosophizing helped or hindered the climber? |
7283 | Do you think the descriptions would be so purely objective if they were written by the explorer himself? |
7283 | Does Ichabod seem a real character or only a caricature?] |
7283 | Does Villon make out a good case? |
7283 | Does any article of food arouse your enthusiasm? |
7283 | Does ceremoniousness increase or decrease with civilization?] |
7283 | Does it add to the interest of the battle to attribute human qualities to the combatants? |
7283 | Does it add to the reality of the scene? |
7283 | Does that spirit live in France to- day?] |
7283 | Does the author describe the bear sympathetically and lovingly or as a naturalist? |
7283 | Does the author describe the taste of roast pig sympathetically? |
7283 | Does the author make the scene of the arrival of the Prussians vivid? |
7283 | Does the author make this story a personal tragedy or the tragedy of France? |
7283 | Does the author place the blame for such conditions as made this child an unhappy weakling? |
7283 | Does the author seem to think that Miss Betsey''s charms or her money were her attraction?] |
7283 | Does the author show a love for, and knowledge of, nature? |
7283 | Does the author show a sympathetic attitude toward war? |
7283 | Does the author succeed in giving a clear picture of the volcano?] |
7283 | Does the author succeed in giving you an idea of the excitement of coon- hunting? |
7283 | Does the author succeed in making the panther appeal to our sympathy? |
7283 | Does the author succeed in making you like or dislike"Tommy"? |
7283 | Does the author win your sympathy for the cats? |
7283 | Does the author write as an enthusiastic hunter? |
7283 | Does the author''s humor seem to you unkindly? |
7283 | Does the change wrought in Roaring Camp seem to you to be reasonable? |
7283 | Does the description seem like ridicule? |
7283 | Does the early life in New York appear to you attractive or uninteresting? |
7283 | Does the incident seem probable from what you know of the period? |
7283 | Does the portrait of the child seem real or exaggerated? |
7283 | Does the story seem plausible or merely fantastic? |
7283 | Does the story show"poetic insight"? |
7283 | Does the understanding between Buck and his master seem unusual? |
7283 | Does the"taboo"here seem to you to be a matter of law or religion? |
7283 | Does this give you any clue to Villon''s character?] |
7283 | Does this story seem to justify a belief in the origin of species? |
7283 | Does war seem glorious or heroic from this point of view? |
7283 | For what are you to do? |
7283 | Had these men any quarrel? |
7283 | Has any of it ever seemed so to you? |
7283 | Has the author used the element of surprise effectively? |
7283 | Has the narrative the stamp of a real experience? |
7283 | Have I not often made you water my garden instead of studying? |
7283 | Have we any"taboos"in our social system? |
7283 | Have you ever heard other stories of elephants that seem to show the power of reasoning?] |
7283 | Have you ever read any stories or fairy tales that tell about changelings? |
7283 | Have you ever thought of the quaint absurdity of this figurative expression?] |
7283 | Have you read any prose or poetry in which war is made to seem glorious? |
7283 | He has to bear so many hard words as it is; why should not we then be a little kind to him-- we who love music? |
7283 | How are the terror and suffering of the people indicated? |
7283 | How did she seem to be always putting him in the wrong? |
7283 | How did the war affect even the people remote from the battlefields? |
7283 | How do these cats differ from cats as you know them? |
7283 | How does it seem here? |
7283 | How does the element of suspense add to the interest? |
7283 | How has the author contrasted the civilizations of East and West? |
7283 | How has the author drawn the character of Bernadou? |
7283 | How is the sense of silence and isolation conveyed?] |
7283 | How is this done? |
7283 | How much was the success of the speech due to Mr. Beecher''s sense of humor? |
7283 | How then? |
7283 | How would the natives have solved the problem? |
7283 | How? |
7283 | If so, was the night empty of impressions or did you hear and see things? |
7283 | In the exaggerations? |
7283 | In what does the humor of the account lie?] |
7283 | In what does the humor of the story lie? |
7283 | Is his attitude toward the author a typically Eastern one? |
7283 | Is his description of war a fair one? |
7283 | Is it effective? |
7283 | Is it his child?" |
7283 | Is it in the absurdity of the story told? |
7283 | Is it made more poignant by being unexpected?] |
7283 | Is it not a kind of theft?" |
7283 | Is ridicule an effective weapon against wrongs? |
7283 | Is the account more interesting by being told in the first person? |
7283 | Is the appeal in the speeches to reason or to feeling? |
7283 | Is the description of the scene objective or subjective? |
7283 | Is the humor of the story one of situation merely? |
7283 | Is the humor of the story one of situation or character? |
7283 | Is the picture of the old man dignified or sordid? |
7283 | Is the story technical at the expense of the reader''s interest? |
7283 | Is the story too fantastic to gain the reader''s sympathy?] |
7283 | Is the term used seriously or ironically? |
7283 | Is there any suggestion of the poet in his remarks? |
7283 | Is there anything in the narrative to suggest the identity of Locksley? |
7283 | Is there no difference between these two?" |
7283 | Or as representing people they know? |
7283 | Shall I tell you how it came into my head? |
7283 | She was well acquainted with the process of putting hay inside, why therefore should she be surprised to find hay inside? |
7283 | Should he, as he at first thought of doing, kill it with a shot from his carbine? |
7283 | Should not I have been the soldier, and you the thief?" |
7283 | Should not I have been warming my knees at this charcoal pan, and would not you have been groping for farthings in the snow? |
7283 | So you''ve been eating some Arab or other, eh? |
7283 | The Heaven- born set no particular store by it; but of what use was a polo- ball to a khitmatgar? |
7283 | The creature, part tiger and part woman, suggests what famous monument?] |
7283 | The fish had turned under it, and whether he was now up the river or down, or where he was who could tell? |
7283 | The horses there; are they right?" |
7283 | The sultana of the desert[ Footnote: Why does the author call the tiger the sultana of the desert?] |
7283 | WAR What, speaking in quite unofficial language, is the net purpose and upshot of war? |
7283 | Was Whitman''s carefulness about his personal appearance an evidence of egotism or altruism? |
7283 | Was his pet winning or lovable? |
7283 | Was it a crocodile? |
7283 | Was it a lion? |
7283 | Was it a tiger? |
7283 | Was the native in the story the sort of person whom you would expect to"hold forth in an authoritative voice on a variety of subjects"? |
7283 | Was the old Arab vain or only stupid? |
7283 | Was this, then, to be the end of the enterprise, and were they to meet death in that cold and pitiless sea? |
7283 | What Oriental custom is the author alluding to?] |
7283 | What adjective would we use now?] |
7283 | What are they called in the third sentence from the end of the paragraph?] |
7283 | What characteristic things has Stevenson chosen to give you in the picture of camping out at night? |
7283 | What characteristics of Villon are brought out? |
7283 | What characteristics of the author are shown in this sketch? |
7283 | What colors predominate? |
7283 | What contrasts between beauty and sordidness are made in the descriptions?] |
7283 | What country did use and still uses this system?] |
7283 | What courses of study do you imagine were given in Ichabod''s school? |
7283 | What do such stories make you think of"the glory of conquest"? |
7283 | What do we mean when we say of an act or a thing that it is"taboo,"or"tabooed"? |
7283 | What do we wish to obtain from him, and why have we brought him forth from his impenetrable palace? |
7283 | What do you imagine were the"adventures with the pine knots"that Burroughs speaks of?] |
7283 | What do you know of Peary''s later expedition? |
7283 | What do you know of Thoreau''s life at Walden Pond?] |
7283 | What do you think of the priest and his comment? |
7283 | What does it mean? |
7283 | What does the author mean by this?] |
7283 | What does this mean?] |
7283 | What does this mean?] |
7283 | What effect is produced by the absence of color in the description? |
7283 | What famous book of maxims was written by Franklin? |
7283 | What glimpses of the character of the miners does the story give you? |
7283 | What has come to be the universally accepted estimate of Lincoln? |
7283 | What human qualities does"Tommy"show? |
7283 | What impresses you most in the account: the fun or the cruelty of hunting? |
7283 | What is added to the story by attributing human qualities to Modestine? |
7283 | What is gained by this? |
7283 | What is meant by this term?] |
7283 | What is the allusion? |
7283 | What is the climax of the story? |
7283 | What is the effect of Hubert''s repetition of the words"my grandsire drew a long bow,"etc.? |
7283 | What is the effect of this? |
7283 | What is the most interesting point in the narrative?] |
7283 | What is the probable time? |
7283 | What is the real difference between the two men? |
7283 | What is the significance of the title"A Leaf in the Storm"?] |
7283 | What is the usual form?] |
7283 | What kind of child do you imagine the writer was? |
7283 | What kind of spirit does it show? |
7283 | What observations does the author make on the difference between East and West? |
7283 | What other qualities of the naturalist does Burroughs show in this account? |
7283 | What other selections are similar to this in the style of writing? |
7283 | What other selections have you studied in which this sort of humor is shown? |
7283 | What other stories have been told in this way? |
7283 | What other things might the descriptions have included if the author had not been so much interested in the people? |
7283 | What parts of the sketch are humorous? |
7283 | What picture do you get of the country in which the travelers journeyed? |
7283 | What plea does the author make for all childhood? |
7283 | What possibilities of tragedy are hinted at in the narrative? |
7283 | What qualities had the cub that endeared it to the author? |
7283 | What qualities have they that you recognize? |
7283 | What qualities of Lincoln seem most to impress the writer? |
7283 | What qualities of Whitman''s do you think most endeared him to the soldiers? |
7283 | What qualities of the true explorer does Peary show? |
7283 | What qualities would you attribute to an English audience, judging from this account? |
7283 | What sense would you find most active if you were on the coon- hunt? |
7283 | What similar statement was made in"An Arab Fisherman"?] |
7283 | What stories, of those you have studied, does this most resemble? |
7283 | What success do you think they had? |
7283 | What things are contrasted in the account? |
7283 | What things are sold in the bazaar that show the Eastern skill in handicraft? |
7283 | What things do you suppose Stevenson most enjoyed in his life out of doors?] |
7283 | What things does he notice? |
7283 | What things in nature seem most to attract his attention? |
7283 | What things in the scene should you like to see for yourself? |
7283 | What things in the text suggest this? |
7283 | What touches of humor do you find in the description? |
7283 | What traits of character does the writer show? |
7283 | What was the music like? |
7283 | What was the real"luck"that Tommy brought to Roaring Camp?] |
7283 | What was to be done? |
7283 | What were they?] |
7283 | What words in the first sentence show that it is not the beginning of the story? |
7283 | Where do you find surprises in the story that add to its interest?] |
7283 | Where do you see these things in this story? |
7283 | Where does the author indicate that he is about to begin a story? |
7283 | Where is the climax of the story? |
7283 | Which is the author really giving you: nature as it is, or as it seems to the boy? |
7283 | Which of the senses predominates in the description? |
7283 | Who and what may you be?" |
7283 | Who threw that?" |
7283 | Why did Locksley refuse the money?] |
7283 | Why did Villon not steal the goblets?] |
7283 | Why did the miners insist on"frills"for Tommy? |
7283 | Why did the old man care so much for it? |
7283 | Why do you suppose Mr. Beecher was introduced as Henry Ward Beecher Stowe? |
7283 | Why do you think Muhammad Din always played alone? |
7283 | Why does the author call the child the"Future of the Race"? |
7283 | Why does the author introduce such incongruous terms as"foreman of the jury,""jury box,""insurance offices"?] |
7283 | Why does the author think that his interview with the Sultan may be useless?] |
7283 | Why does the author use almost entirely the short sentences? |
7283 | Why does the danger of the enterprise take so small a part in the narrative? |
7283 | Why does the writer dwell on the physical fitness of Buck? |
7283 | Why not?] |
7283 | Why royal?] |
7283 | Why was it to Muhammad Din? |
7283 | Why was the decree made that this was to be"the last class in French"? |
7283 | Why was the miner willing to admit the newcomers? |
7283 | Why was there a staircase leading into a blind space? |
7283 | Why was there a strong padlocked door shutting off the staircase? |
7283 | Why would a painter find it easy to paint a picture from these written descriptions? |
7283 | Why"slippery"? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Will it be a''coon, or will it turn out a''possum, a wild- cat, or mayhap an owl? |
7283 | Would the account have any added interest if it were told in the first person?] |
7283 | Would the account seem more real or more interesting if it had been told in the first person?] |
7283 | Would the destruction of the sand- house be a tragedy to most Western children? |
7283 | Would you consider"Baby Sylvester"capable of training? |
7283 | Would you have been able to recognize Muhammad Din from the author''s description? |
7283 | Would you judge that the writer was a scientist? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Are there any parts of the country where the traditions of the"best parlor"are still kept? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Could you tell from the context where the scene is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Do the incidents related seem real or exaggerated? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Do you know any facts of Lincoln''s life that would support some of these statements? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Does Carlyle write from the usual military standpoint? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Does the opening paragraph give you any hint as to the source of this extract? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Does the style and sentiment expressed remind you of an older literature? |
7283 | [ Footnote: How does the heroism shown in this account of Peary''s struggle compare with military courage? |
7283 | [ Footnote: In this essay where does the humor lie? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Is the first part of the narrative a typical story of"fisherman''s luck"? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Is this style of writing similar to that of any other selections you have studied? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What do you imagine has preceded this selection? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What does the phrase"the trails would grow cold"mean? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What does this power of minute observation tell you about the writer? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What hints does the sketch give you of the period in which the story is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What interested the author in the old organ- grinder? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What is the effect of the repeated use of"always"in the first paragraph? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What part do you imagine the writer had in the expedition he describes? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What picture do you get of Whitman in this account? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What qualities of"Tommy"endeared him to his captors? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What reference in the first sentence to the sports in the arena of Rome? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things are contrasted in the story? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things in nature do you think most interested the writer? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things in the account of the battle show that the writer is a trained observer? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things in the description would tell you that the scene was Oriental? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What traits does the author find most admirable in the women of Brittany? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What traits of character does Maggie show? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What use does the author make of contrast? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Where do you imagine this scene is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Where is the scene of the story laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Whore do you imagine this scene is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Why could the child enjoy only"peppermints and kippered herring"? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Why had the miners chosen the name"Baby Sylvester"for the bear cub? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Would you imagine, from this extract, that the book from which it was taken would be interesting? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Would you judge that this was the writer''s first experience in camping? |
7283 | and quiver, to the Provost of the sports?" |
7283 | and the hoarse voice out in the sea?" |
7283 | but how when she is really hungry?" |
7283 | in the humor?] |
7283 | mademoiselle, you''re a nice girl, ai n''t you? |
7283 | manners? |
7283 | orders from headquarters; and I thought without stopping:"What can it be now?" |
7283 | said Pat;"what will we do now?" |
7283 | that show superstition? |
7283 | we hear so much about? |
7283 | we like to be petted, do n''t we? |
23738 | A convent? |
23738 | A lady with bright fair hair, colored like copper- bronze? |
23738 | A-- man I know? |
23738 | Ah? |
23738 | All you have seen? 23738 Although, as to not holding you----""You fancy you hold me? |
23738 | Although, it is rather near a stalemate for us both, is n''t it? |
23738 | And abandon Desire Michell? |
23738 | And all the divorce courts, Phil? 23738 And do you think Rossetti had no truth to base his poem upon?" |
23738 | And the truth? |
23738 | And what may be the explanation? |
23738 | And you came back here? |
23738 | And you will come to the farm soon? |
23738 | And you yourself? 23738 And, Desire Michell?" |
23738 | And, did you like the sight? |
23738 | Anything going on so early? |
23738 | Are you asking me to believe in witchcraft and sorcery? |
23738 | Are you going to stay and hunt for the book tonight, then? |
23738 | Are you sure, then, that it is not all this cabaret glamour you really are in love with? 23738 Because he has worn the uniform, then; proved his courage in war at sea? |
23738 | Better than catnip, Bagheera? |
23738 | But how can you be sure? |
23738 | But how do you explain that Desire knew what I experienced with the Thing from the Barrier, if my experiences were merely delirious dreams? |
23738 | But what are you going to do with her, man? |
23738 | But what of me, Desire? 23738 But why?" |
23738 | But will you not trust me to make a light and give what help I can? 23738 But you will come again?" |
23738 | By what claim? 23738 By what right?" |
23738 | Can you ask me? |
23738 | Can you hear, Roger? 23738 Come, Phillida, you take my sane point of view, I hope?" |
23738 | Cousin Roger? 23738 Cousin Roger? |
23738 | Cousin Roger? 23738 Cousin?" |
23738 | Desire,I said,"why should you be a sufferer for the actions of a woman who died over two centuries ago? |
23738 | Desire? |
23738 | Desire? |
23738 | Did the runaway sister leave any children? |
23738 | Did you know that? 23738 Did you take notice of what I do here?" |
23738 | Do ghosts write? |
23738 | Do n''t you see yourself one little, little bit, Cousin? |
23738 | Do they, perhaps, have visitors there, ladies in retreat for a time, as convents often do abroad? |
23738 | Do you judge she will? |
23738 | Do you know of a lady who wears that scent? |
23738 | Do you mean that you want me to go away from this place? |
23738 | Do you mean to account by nightmare for the wide and repeated experiences that twice brought me to the verge of death? 23738 Do you remember the maxim we used to write in copybooks? |
23738 | Do you suppose they will_ do_ anything dreadful about us? |
23738 | Do you think that all the traditions and learning of the younger world meant-- nothing? |
23738 | Do you? |
23738 | Ethan, what was that? |
23738 | Ethan, what_ are_ you talking about? |
23738 | Expiation of what? |
23738 | For so little, you would brave the Dread One in Its time of triumph? 23738 Gone?" |
23738 | Good, Phil? |
23738 | Has it not been so with all who loved the daughters of my race these two centuries past? 23738 Have none of you young people ever considered the singular emanations from swamps and marshes where rotting vegetation underlies shallow water? |
23738 | Have we not met front to front these many nights? 23738 Have you spoken to such beings, Desire?" |
23738 | He left children? |
23738 | Here, Phillida? |
23738 | Here, after my warning, after last night? |
23738 | Here? 23738 How can there be wrong in facing a situation that I did not cause?" |
23738 | How can you know? |
23738 | How can you say that? |
23738 | How could you tell? 23738 How could you?" |
23738 | How did you happen to come in at this hour? |
23738 | How did you know I was-- ill? |
23738 | How do you know that, Desire? |
23738 | How much do you both trust me? |
23738 | How shall I answer you, Roger? 23738 How shall I make you understand? |
23738 | How should I have harmed him, who came not near him, as ye know? 23738 I can keep you, then?" |
23738 | I do not mean trust my character or my good intentions, but how much confidence have you in my sanity and commonsense? 23738 I, to take happiness like that?" |
23738 | I? 23738 If as you say, this creature was not meant to meet mankind, how can It come after me this way?" |
23738 | If he takes money to leave me? |
23738 | If you are like other men and women, how can you know what happens when you are absent? 23738 Is it distrusting you to ask you to marry me?" |
23738 | Is it not hard enough, my duty? 23738 Is it not victory to have driven back the Dark One? |
23738 | Is n''t it funny, though, that he never will go into your room? 23738 Is n''t it lucky you and Desire could not get started in the car, after all? |
23738 | Is not that an injury? 23738 Is that all? |
23738 | Is there any other way? |
23738 | It will come-- often? |
23738 | Jealousy? 23738 Little? |
23738 | Man, whenever man has summoned Evil since the youngest days of the world have I not answered? 23738 Man,"It spat,"would you see me? |
23738 | Me? 23738 Me? |
23738 | Might n''t you help the lady more if you went away now, and came back? |
23738 | Mr. Locke, can you swallow some of this? |
23738 | Mrs. Hill, did you ever hear of anyone named Desire Michell? |
23738 | Music? |
23738 | My hair pleased you? |
23738 | No baggage? |
23738 | No one at all like that-- with hair warmer in shade than ordinary gold color, and a lot of it? |
23738 | No one who might be able to tell more than yourself? |
23738 | No? 23738 No? |
23738 | No? 23738 Not as sweet as this?" |
23738 | Not even to believe that you will press the knife if I refuse to free you? |
23738 | Not try-- to see me, even? |
23738 | Not-- hurt----? |
23738 | Notice what kind of water this is, Mr. Locke? 23738 Now that it''s a decent hour, do n''t you think Cristina might give us some breakfast?" |
23738 | Now? 23738 Of what would you convince me? |
23738 | Of what? 23738 Or did Mrs. Hill vamp you and make roast meat of your heart with her eyes?" |
23738 | Or do you propose to shut her up in some third- class boarding house day and night while you hang around here? 23738 Perhaps you felt that shake- up, a quarter- hour ago? |
23738 | Phil, do you put scent on your handkerchief week days as well as Sundays? |
23738 | Phil, will you come home to your father and mother, and consider all this a bit more before you decide? |
23738 | Puny earth- dweller, lost here,Its menace breathed,"what keeps you from destruction? |
23738 | Puny from of old, how should you prevail? 23738 Pygmy, will you think of another pygmy now?" |
23738 | Real? 23738 Really?" |
23738 | See how nice? |
23738 | Someone from your home town or your college town? |
23738 | The book? |
23738 | The convent? |
23738 | The door is barred, but what shall bar out the Enemy who creeps to the nine lamps? 23738 The lake, Vere? |
23738 | Then my nightmare was real? 23738 Then you are still happy?" |
23738 | Then-- were they pretty dreadful to you at home? |
23738 | Unless you are afraid I shall disturb your canaries? |
23738 | Unless you have a choice? |
23738 | Unless you wish me to go? |
23738 | Vere, in your varied experiences in peace and war, did you ever chance to meet a coward? |
23738 | Vere,I said abruptly,"did you know that I thought you were going to desert the farm, when you began to speak?" |
23738 | Vere? |
23738 | Was it? |
23738 | Was there something I can do for you? |
23738 | We are n''t ever going to give up? |
23738 | Well, Vere? |
23738 | Well? |
23738 | What can I tell you? 23738 What crouches behind her, unseen? |
23738 | What danger? |
23738 | What did you think? |
23738 | What does Vere say? |
23738 | What gates? |
23738 | What gates? |
23738 | What have I to do with It, who am more helpless before It than you? 23738 What have I to do with Sir Austin, or he with me?" |
23738 | What is happening outdoors? |
23738 | What kind of a place? |
23738 | What were the noises I heard from the lake, and the shocks we all felt? |
23738 | What? 23738 What? |
23738 | What? 23738 Where are you going?" |
23738 | Where did you buy it, Cousin Roger? 23738 Who are you?" |
23738 | Who are''we''? |
23738 | Who is she? 23738 Who is?" |
23738 | Who was she? |
23738 | Why can you not come again? |
23738 | Why do you tempt me? |
23738 | Why does It hate me? |
23738 | Why have you not spoken of this before? |
23738 | Why not, Vere? |
23738 | Why not? 23738 Why not?" |
23738 | Why not? |
23738 | Why not? |
23738 | Why, how did your lazy, tune- spinning, frivolous cousin get that reputation in this branch of the family? |
23738 | Why? 23738 Why? |
23738 | Will it make them lay? |
23738 | Will you die, then? 23738 Will you give it to me?" |
23738 | Will you go to my chiffonier, there in the alcove, and bring a package wrapped in white silk from the top drawer? |
23738 | Will you meet Phillida at the Grand Central and bring her home? 23738 Will you read, aloud, sir?" |
23738 | Wo n''t you drink the brandy, please? 23738 Would you hear a story of a woman of my house, and her anger, before you doubt too far?" |
23738 | Would you not live, pygmy? |
23738 | Would you take the witch- child to your hearth? 23738 Yes, Roger?" |
23738 | You believe my story, then? 23738 You came from there?" |
23738 | You do n''t care for the lake? |
23738 | You do not find it lonely here, or in any way depressing? |
23738 | You had no luncheon, you say? |
23738 | You like the place, Phil? |
23738 | You mean-- hypnotism? |
23738 | You observe that I have explained every point raised, Miss Michell''s testimony being of the vaguest? |
23738 | You read of the Thing----? |
23738 | You saw her? |
23738 | You served in the war? |
23738 | You trust him so much? |
23738 | You understand, Cousin Roger? 23738 You who have felt Its grope toward your inner spirit?" |
23738 | You will not? |
23738 | You would n''t bolt from it, either, would you? |
23738 | You would not leave me alone in this place, Cousin? |
23738 | You''ll do it? |
23738 | You-- value the braid so much? |
23738 | You? 23738 You?" |
23738 | Your father? |
23738 | Your own theory, sir, being----? |
23738 | _ But what crouches behind her, unseen? 23738 ''Measure a thousand times, and cut once?'' 23738 A clue? 23738 A healthy, normal life? 23738 A spirit or a woman? 23738 A thing of flesh and blood, or clever mechanism? 23738 A truth hinted at by alchemists, Pythagoreans, Rosicrucians, pale students of sorcery and magnificent charlatans, these many centuries? 23738 After all, why? 23738 All this eagerness pressing forward-- where? 23738 Already I had forced my way-- where? 23738 An embarrassment to her family, the heroine of a stolen marriage and Reno freedom, what chance of happiness would she have in her conventional circle? 23738 And Desire? 23738 And who has drawn back, Breaker of the Law? 23738 And why did not Phillida and Ethan suffer the nightmare with me? |
23738 | And why was its owner locked in silence and immobility? |
23738 | And, why?" |
23738 | And-- a new thought!--was she alone in the house? |
23738 | And-- and, will you tell Father and Mother?" |
23738 | Are n''t you working yourself too hard? |
23738 | Are there any interesting stories about the house? |
23738 | Are we not pleasantly urged out of our heroics and into the normal by breakfast, luncheon and dinner? |
23738 | Are you quite well? |
23738 | Are you sure you can not help me at all? |
23738 | Are you-- did I wake you up? |
23738 | As for the book''s existence, I had only to accept guidance from It----? |
23738 | As for the hair, is n''t that a matter of bottled polish and hairdressers? |
23738 | At the fire on the hearth or the cold phosphorescence of swamp and marsh? |
23738 | Basil, maybe?" |
23738 | Because he had the glamour about him of real adventure and cabaret glitter? |
23738 | Because he is strong and supple and has curly hair? |
23738 | Before you go upstairs to him, will you tell me where to find that bookcase?" |
23738 | Books or newspapers?" |
23738 | Both; as each time before? |
23738 | Brown like forest water, sort of green- lighted because the bottom is like turf; neither mud nor sand, but a kind of under- water moss? |
23738 | But can you conquer again, and again, and again? |
23738 | But does that sort of thing matter to you women? |
23738 | But how can either you or I forgive the cruelty that took it from its owner? |
23738 | But is there no knowledge not yet commonplace? |
23738 | But now, what of Desire Michell? |
23738 | But she has to come to me; it''s her right, do n''t you think? |
23738 | But surely the lady was not vanished like the nightmare? |
23738 | But the telephone wire came across the place right past the garage, you know----""The tree tore the wire down, too?" |
23738 | But what sane man had nightmares like these? |
23738 | But what was That just vanishing into the darkness beyond my window- sill? |
23738 | But where, then, was I next to seek? |
23738 | But you will admit the provocation to my curiosity? |
23738 | But you, so rich in all things, free and happy-- how should it matter to you if a voice in the dark speaks or is silent? |
23738 | But, are you fairy or automaton?" |
23738 | But, how did she know of the Thing''s visit to me? |
23738 | But-- in what land unknown to man towered the vast mountains in whose shadow I panted and strove? |
23738 | But-- one servant? |
23738 | By what swollen conceit could I hope to win against Them? |
23738 | CHAPTER XVII"They say-- What say they? |
23738 | Ca n''t we, Drawls?" |
23738 | Could I bear the agony of Its presence, the stench of death and corruption that was Its atmosphere? |
23738 | Could I care for this matter while I was here? |
23738 | Could I meet that Thing tonight, and tomorrow night? |
23738 | Could anyone fail to be pleased with that most magnificent braid? |
23738 | Could n''t a note be left for her, telling her to come to us?" |
23738 | Could that be what Desire had meant me to understand? |
23738 | Could this rest and calm hold me content here, where I had meant merely to pause and pass on? |
23738 | Cousin Roger----?" |
23738 | Creature of clay, crumbling now in the sea of mortality, do you brave my immemorial age?" |
23738 | Desire Michell, what has the Horror to do with you?" |
23738 | Desire of mine and of the unhuman Thing, did we grasp at Eve or Lilith? |
23738 | Did I fear to know the truth? |
23738 | Did I hear a movement, or only a stirring of the orchard trees beyond the windows? |
23738 | Did I imagine a slight uneasiness in those eyes, a wary readiness in gathered limbs and muscles bulking under the old cat''s scant fur? |
23738 | Did I not hear a wistful reluctance in her tone? |
23738 | Did Phillida allow him in the house, or not? |
23738 | Did Something uprear Itself out there in the black fog? |
23738 | Did Vere comprehend me better? |
23738 | Did anything slip out over the window- sill when you were waking up?" |
23738 | Did n''t you know that?" |
23738 | Did the others share my repugnance? |
23738 | Did the wind wake you, too? |
23738 | Did you actually know what Roger experienced in these excursions before he told you of them?" |
23738 | Did you measure it?" |
23738 | Do n''t you know, Cousin Roger, that the most important things in the world are those most people never know about?" |
23738 | Do not Ennemoser and many writers record it?" |
23738 | Do you have to write your lovely music at night, Cousin Roger? |
23738 | Do you not know what it means to take a gift from the Dark Ones of the Borderland? |
23738 | Do you see nothing there stranger than a path through the woods even when trodden by a wilful woman?" |
23738 | Do you think Mother and he ever will, Cousin Roger?" |
23738 | Do-- do I look queer, Cousin? |
23738 | Down-- shall your race affront mine?" |
23738 | Drawls, will you light the alcohol lamp on the tea- table? |
23738 | Eight hours? |
23738 | Ethan? |
23738 | Even in your world, does not evil hate good as naturally as good recoils from evil? |
23738 | Even with your voice in the dark? |
23738 | Flight? |
23738 | For none of these reasons? |
23738 | For what? |
23738 | For what? |
23738 | For whom?" |
23738 | Good heavens, Vere, do you realize what either life would be for an nineteen- year- old girl brought up as she has been?" |
23738 | Ha, was not Beauty the lure, and shall it not be the vengeance? |
23738 | Had I brought with me or did I hear now a whispered:"_ Pygmy, again!_""Cousin, Cousin, are you very ill?" |
23738 | Had I called or cried out? |
23738 | Had I fallen so low as to heed the caprices of a pet cat? |
23738 | Had I met one of these beings, inimical to man as a cobra, intelligent as man, hunting Its victim by methods unknown to us? |
23738 | Had any of us the right to lay hands upon her existence and mould it to our fancy? |
23738 | Had not my weeks of endurance earned me this right? |
23738 | Had she a home, or did she need one? |
23738 | Had the girl told the truth in her wild explanation? |
23738 | Had the old- world trinket been left to bewilder me? |
23738 | Had we ever really expected to go? |
23738 | Had you chosen the place, or shall I?" |
23738 | Have I not a right to curiosity? |
23738 | Have I not brought my presence to the magician''s lamp? |
23738 | Have I not injured you?" |
23738 | Have I not shadowed the alchemist at his crucible? |
23738 | Have you forgotten, Roger, that my life is not mine? |
23738 | Have you not opened your mind to the evil thoughts that creep upon the citadel of strength within and tear down its power? |
23738 | Have you not taken my gift that you might spy meanly on the secret of your beloved? |
23738 | Have you read the writings of the learned Jew or of the Platonist, you who are so very bold?" |
23738 | Have you seen it?" |
23738 | Have you the power? |
23738 | Have you, then, measured Nature? |
23738 | He asked me:"Shall I get you out of this room?" |
23738 | He is deceiving us, or mad''?" |
23738 | Here, where It glooms, you have dared bring the high joy of the artist who creates? |
23738 | How came a book to be written about the girl I supposed young, unknown and set apart from the world? |
23738 | How can I describe the certainty of life that possessed me? |
23738 | How can I find her? |
23738 | How can I tell of a love that grew without sight? |
23738 | How can you? |
23738 | How convey to a listener that, understanding her so little, I yet knew her so well? |
23738 | How could I do harm by learning what she was, unless she had evil to conceal? |
23738 | How could I trust my enemy? |
23738 | How could they feel what I had felt? |
23738 | How dared I even hope for her return? |
23738 | How did I know It stalked no prey but me? |
23738 | How did I know this? |
23738 | How did it come to trail across my bed, in any case? |
23738 | How do some lucky girls have hair like that? |
23738 | How do you know what passes between the Thing from the Frontier and me?" |
23738 | How do you like your place?" |
23738 | How does that strike you?" |
23738 | How free us both? |
23738 | How had she seen him? |
23738 | How had they found out my condition? |
23738 | How have you challenged and mocked It this very night? |
23738 | How is that, Miss Michell? |
23738 | How many men are written down liars because they traveled in strange lands indeed, and explorers, strove to report what they had seen? |
23738 | How shall I describe Fear incarnate? |
23738 | How should I find her? |
23738 | How should I find words to embody it? |
23738 | How, I wondered, could anyone be expected to credit the story I had to tell? |
23738 | How, unless she too----? |
23738 | I guess you like to do it, though? |
23738 | I have one of the electric flashlights you bought for us all; see?" |
23738 | I wonder, then, if you would mind if we stopped to see a show that I especially want to look over, for business reasons? |
23738 | I''d like to know where a young city feller like you got that old story from?" |
23738 | If I did meet her, would she forgive me the loss of her braid? |
23738 | If I should speak, what would she do? |
23738 | If I stood firm----? |
23738 | If It did----? |
23738 | If Phillida refused to consent to a divorce, how could she live at home as the wife of a man her parents had pronounced unfit to receive? |
23738 | If she was the woman that she had seemed to be throughout our intercourse, how could the dark enemy control her? |
23738 | If she yielded and gave up Vere, would she be much better off? |
23738 | If so, which one would come first, and what might be my measure of success or failure? |
23738 | If something moved under the water----? |
23738 | If the monster is a ghost thing, may not she be one, too? |
23738 | If the trial had been hard when mercifully unanticipated, what would it be to meet my enemy now that I knew myself conquered? |
23738 | If we are to believe in such things at all----? |
23738 | If we are to help each other, as I hope, would not plain openness be best? |
23738 | If, therefore, ye shall have prepared yourselves, yet may escape----_"What did they mean, the old, old words men have rejected? |
23738 | In town? |
23738 | In what madness of panic had the girl sacrificed this beauty? |
23738 | Is he not a soldier who, aroused in the night to meet dreadful assault, sets his face to the enemy and battles front to front? |
23738 | Is n''t a braid of hair this wide,"I laid off the dimensions on the table,"this long, and thick, a good deal for a woman to own?" |
23738 | Just us?" |
23738 | Just-- curiosity?" |
23738 | Light quietly filled the lamps-- or was it that I had opened my eyes? |
23738 | Like a kind of earthquake, or the kick from a big explosion a long ways off? |
23738 | Locke?" |
23738 | Locke?" |
23738 | Locke?" |
23738 | Locke?" |
23738 | Locke_ stage?" |
23738 | May I not take her to dinner here in town?" |
23738 | May I take her to tea, between trains, and get out to your place on the six o''clock express?" |
23738 | May I? |
23738 | No applause, no lights, no stage?" |
23738 | No?" |
23738 | Now tell me with what eyes you have seen the Barrier and the Far Frontier? |
23738 | Now that you have seen him, you do understand? |
23738 | Now that you know, can you bear with a man who-- limps? |
23738 | Now, is n''t that a jumbled speech to tumble out of me?" |
23738 | Now---- She spoke with a breathless difficulty, spacing her words apart:"How did you-- find-- the book?" |
23738 | Of what? |
23738 | Oh man, with all the unfathomed universe about us,_ dare_ you pronounce what is real?" |
23738 | Once frightened away, how could she be found? |
23738 | Only my ignorance? |
23738 | Only, do tell me what the perfume is?" |
23738 | Only, real in what sense? |
23738 | Only, what was his object? |
23738 | Only, what was she about to do? |
23738 | Or because he took you away from a life you hated? |
23738 | Or did she doubt my intentions, and was her quietness that of one on guard? |
23738 | Or if he had not seen It, how did he know this room was an unsafe area? |
23738 | Or perhaps you did not know that?" |
23738 | Or was I still dreaming? |
23738 | Or was it tinged with auburn? |
23738 | Or was my foot indeed upon the mountain itself? |
23738 | Or, could she? |
23738 | Or, if you will agree not to escape----?" |
23738 | Or, perhaps, because he is kind and loves you? |
23738 | Past? |
23738 | Perhaps you might seem at last a phantom of my own sick brain to which faithfulness would be folly? |
23738 | Perhaps you produced it?" |
23738 | Perhaps, with patience----? |
23738 | Perhaps----Have you told Vere about the woman who visited this room, the first night I spent in the house? |
23738 | Please me? |
23738 | Please, may I? |
23738 | Please, please----?" |
23738 | Pure? |
23738 | Repudiate my violence and me-- perhaps go back to her hiding- place? |
23738 | Shall we go down to Phillida?" |
23738 | Shall we go in to Phillida?" |
23738 | She was a witch?" |
23738 | She was wrapped in a lot of floating thin stuff; gray, I guess? |
23738 | Should I ever see my Lady of the Beautiful Tresses come that way, or travel that road to where she lived? |
23738 | Should I not rather stand on this my ground where I was not the"lame feller"? |
23738 | So one wrote:''_ There is neither crystallomancy nor hydromancy, but the magick is in the Seer himself._''""Well, Desire?" |
23738 | Still, if such gifts were given as she believed, if it was merely a question of being Ethan Vere-- or Roger Locke----? |
23738 | Suppose our escape succeeded? |
23738 | Suppose she had fainted? |
23738 | Suppose she never came again? |
23738 | Suppose the episode was ended? |
23738 | Suppose we sit here together, strong in numbers, for the few hours until daylight? |
23738 | Surely I should find her in some neighbor''s daughter, when my house was finished and I went there for the summer? |
23738 | That I am a prisoner who has crept out for a little while? |
23738 | That braid?" |
23738 | The Horror or the lady? |
23738 | The Thing will come, and not you?" |
23738 | The Thing-- the enemy that comes to me has never spoken to you?" |
23738 | The breach of promise suits, and the couples who make each other miserable?" |
23738 | The danger, then, was only for me? |
23738 | The dark creature claimed her, she declared herself helpless to escape from that dominion into normal life, and yet It never had spoken to her? |
23738 | The darkness had been only for my eyes, then? |
23738 | The eyes of the body, or that vision by which man sees in a dream and which is to the sight as the speech of spirits is to the hearing?" |
23738 | The perfumed bronze- colored braid up in my drawer----? |
23738 | The water you have just tasted is pure and clear in the glass? |
23738 | The woman? |
23738 | There is n''t enough water- power over the dam to do any more than run a toy, is there?" |
23738 | There is no newcomer in the neighborhood, no visitor at any house who might be the one I am looking for?" |
23738 | This darling house? |
23738 | To fly from my place now, herded like a cowardly sheep by the Thing of the Frontier, would that not be to thrust her away to save myself? |
23738 | Under what circumstances did she dwell? |
23738 | Very original, is it not? |
23738 | Was I a cheated fool, or a pioneer on the borders of a new country? |
23738 | Was I confronted with two beings from places unknown to normal humanity? |
23738 | Was I letting slip an opportunity by my fastidious notions of delicacy? |
23738 | Was I then fighting for Desire Michell? |
23738 | Was I to fall as low as that? |
23738 | Was I to lose my self- respect also? |
23738 | Was I to run a beaten man from this peril, after standing against my enemy so long? |
23738 | Was I wrong in fancying the sigh regretful? |
23738 | Was Phillida''s charming wish to become a fact, I wondered? |
23738 | Was entrance into human air open to the alien Thing only through the ruins of the house where It had first been called by the sorceress of long ago? |
23738 | Was it mere slavishness of mind on my part not to overrule her timid will? |
23738 | Was it not enough that I had fled from my enemy after accepting the knowledge It had striven so long to force upon me? |
23738 | Was it not time? |
23738 | Was it too late for my Desire to come, and time for the coming of that Other? |
23738 | Was she one of those who have stepped from the permitted places? |
23738 | Was she trying to turn me from my purpose with her soft speech? |
23738 | Was some dark bulk just fading from beyond my window? |
23738 | Was that the lake which stirred in the windless night? |
23738 | Was there indeed some quality of courage----? |
23738 | We could come out on the theatre express; as we have done before, you remember?" |
23738 | Well, I had seen her at last-- but how? |
23738 | Well, was I to run away, hands over my eyes, at the first alarm? |
23738 | Well, where does poor Phil go, and when?" |
23738 | Were those a woman''s draperies or part of the night fog that showed mere swirl upon swirl of pale gray twisting in the path of light? |
23738 | Were you ill?" |
23738 | Were you not under eighteen years old?" |
23738 | What are the wars of man with man, compared with a man''s battle against the Unknown? |
23738 | What bond held her subject to the Thing from the Barrier? |
23738 | What can I offer her that I have not offered? |
23738 | What connection could its Desire Michell have with the girl I knew? |
23738 | What could I tell her of my vision of her womanly softness and timidity brought to bay by the Thing of horror, down in those empty lower rooms? |
23738 | What could they have in common? |
23738 | What did I hold in my arms? |
23738 | What did I know of this man, or where he would take her? |
23738 | What did I see, starting out of the black gloom? |
23738 | What distinguished me from a thousand men she might meet on any city street? |
23738 | What do you love Vere for, at bottom? |
23738 | What footing was here for dreary terrors? |
23738 | What formed there, more inhuman from Its likeness to humanity? |
23738 | What gates were to close between us? |
23738 | What good might I not do her? |
23738 | What had Hermas glimpsed in his visions? |
23738 | What had I ever said worth note in the hours we had spent together? |
23738 | What harm could I do Desire by this plan of Vere''s? |
23738 | What if she did go home? |
23738 | What if we came to an explanation tonight and ended this long delirium? |
23738 | What interest had my lady of the dark in elaborately deceiving me? |
23738 | What is real?" |
23738 | What is that motive?" |
23738 | What is the long dead Desire Michell to you?" |
23738 | What malignant glare seared disappointment and grim promise across my consciousness? |
23738 | What moves It against me?" |
23738 | What of her knowledge of that same nightmare? |
23738 | What of the legend of her family so exactly coinciding with all I felt? |
23738 | What other shapes of dread stalked and watched beyond that titanic wall? |
23738 | What reason have you for desperate action? |
23738 | What remained to be done? |
23738 | What responsibility was I assuming in letting my little- girl cousin go like this? |
23738 | What sense of humor can view too intensely a creature who must feed himself three times a day? |
23738 | What sent you to me?" |
23738 | What should I say to Desire Michell if she came tonight? |
23738 | What should loom so tall? |
23738 | What stirred at this empty hour? |
23738 | What time does her train get in?" |
23738 | What was to become of this girl? |
23738 | What were you looking for, just now, behind you?" |
23738 | What would you have from me? |
23738 | What, then?" |
23738 | When I could, I asked:"Married legally, beyond mistake? |
23738 | When she was across the room, I asked quietly:"What was it, Vere? |
23738 | Where are their abodes? |
23738 | Where could such a volume be hidden, in what secret nook in wall or floor? |
23738 | Where did she live? |
23738 | Where is Vere?" |
23738 | Where was that Barrier before which I had stood? |
23738 | Where-- when can I see you in daylight?" |
23738 | Where-- where were you going to take me?" |
23738 | Who and what was the girl Desire Michell whom I had come to love through a more profound darkness than that of the sight? |
23738 | Who are you? |
23738 | Who before me had stood at the Barrier and set foot on the Frontier between the worlds? |
23738 | Who could the woman be who brought that costly fragrance into a deserted farmhouse? |
23738 | Who cut her hair and left the braid in my hand to escape from me?" |
23738 | Who was she, who was claimed by the Unspeakable and who did not deny Its claim? |
23738 | Who was she? |
23738 | Who would keep tryst with me tonight? |
23738 | Who, then, was my guest? |
23738 | Whose gentle pity had brought this pomander to my pillow, to help me from that faintness which had followed my struggle with the Thing? |
23738 | Whose was the exquisite, individual fragrance contained in the ball I held? |
23738 | Why could she not put her hand in mine, any night, and let me take her away from this haunted place? |
23738 | Why did you cut it off?" |
23738 | Why had I not put my question to our rural mail deliverer in the beginning? |
23738 | Why had a peculiar horror crept through me when Mrs. Hill told me what ruins that water covered? |
23738 | Why muffle her identity in mystery? |
23738 | Why not drive out to my new house this evening and sleep tonight in the rosewood- furnished bedroom? |
23738 | Why not, when all things are still equally wonderful to it? |
23738 | Why should he ask that, since the spectre was for me alone? |
23738 | Why should you die?" |
23738 | Why speak of anger or forgiveness? |
23738 | Why the indefinable quaintness of language, the choice of words that made her speech so different from even the college- bred Phillida''s? |
23738 | Why was the fog against the windows this morning so like the fog that shrouded the unearthly sea opposite the Barrier? |
23738 | Why, and by whom? |
23738 | Why, at least, not come to me in the light, and let me see her face to face? |
23738 | Why, she changed her name to one fancier that you might have heard talk of? |
23738 | Why, then, love Ethan Vere?" |
23738 | Why, would you have me live all the years to come in doubt whether you were a woman or a dream? |
23738 | Why? |
23738 | Why? |
23738 | Why? |
23738 | Why? |
23738 | Why?" |
23738 | Why?" |
23738 | Why?" |
23738 | Why?" |
23738 | Why?" |
23738 | Will you believe there is no risk that I would not take for a few hours with you? |
23738 | Will you not be worn down by the Thing that knows no weariness and fall its prey at last?" |
23738 | Will you not feel strength fail, health break, madness creep close? |
23738 | Will you put a match to it, please?" |
23738 | Will you take me where I say, this one time?" |
23738 | Would It not deliberately forestall Desire''s coming, tonight? |
23738 | Would morning find me so? |
23738 | Would she spring up and escape? |
23738 | Would she stay? |
23738 | Would she thank me, or would she reply with some eccentricity unpredictable as her whim to tell me that tale? |
23738 | Would the creature from the Barrier have appeared to me, if I had not known her? |
23738 | Would you believe a thing because I told it to you? |
23738 | Would you care for him as an ordinary, hard- working fellow in a pair of overalls and a flannel shirt? |
23738 | Would you challenge me? |
23738 | Would you have had me leave without meeting you again, neither thanking you nor asking your forgiveness?" |
23738 | Would you rather go upstairs and lie down, and not hear any more of this stuff tonight?" |
23738 | Would you see the Eyes once seen by the witch- woman, who fell blasted out of human ken? |
23738 | Would you watch a man enter a jungle where some hideous beast crouched in ambush, while you neither warned nor armed him? |
23738 | Writer, ai n''t you? |
23738 | Yet what could that vague and learned gentleman do that I could not? |
23738 | Yet, what safety lies in secrecy between us? |
23738 | Yet, what was I to think? |
23738 | You are looking at me so----?" |
23738 | You are so good that you should be happy, but-- are you?" |
23738 | You did that fatal madness-- and you are here? |
23738 | You do not mean to leave the farm?" |
23738 | You do not think me suffering from delusions?" |
23738 | You know Mis''Royal Hill? |
23738 | You know now that I belong to It by heritage? |
23738 | You know why we can never be together as you planned? |
23738 | You must have been out a long time? |
23738 | You must not be left alone until you are quite safe; perhaps in New York?" |
23738 | You remember, Cousin Roger, how Mother always forbade pets because she believed animals carry germs? |
23738 | You saw her face, then?" |
23738 | You see? |
23738 | You took Its gift? |
23738 | You understand what I am trying to explain, do n''t you?" |
23738 | You will forgive me?" |
23738 | You will tell me no more about yourself? |
23738 | You, so perfect?" |
23738 | _ But what was she to whom the Thing laid claim by the pact of centuries?_ Darkness began to tinge with light. |
16317 | Americans or Aliens? |
16317 | And do you know that man Jones that lives in that city? |
16317 | Are they all out, firemen? |
16317 | But what can I do about it? |
16317 | Did you expect me to give you a chance to destroy me and poison Jacqueline''s mind? 16317 Do you really believe that there is such a river?" |
16317 | Even if it does mean that,said Mr. Duthie, with impatience,"what was the need of being so particular? |
16317 | Is that so? 16317 What book?" |
16317 | What do you read, my lord? |
16317 | What is Congress going to do next? 16317 What think ye of Christ?" |
16317 | When are you going to be great? |
16317 | Who was General Grant? |
16317 | Who wrote it? 16317 Why do they lie about me the way they do?" |
16317 | Why not? |
16317 | Yes, why not? |
16317 | _ Why_,asks a critic,"_ do n''t you move FOR ALL WORKINGMEN?" |
16317 | ''"[ 6] What did this preacher do with his final consonants? |
16317 | (_ a_) What elements of appeal do you find in the following? |
16317 | (_ a_) What is an allegory? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are the cases parallel at the vital point at issue? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are the signs that point to the inference either clear or numerous enough to warrant its acceptance as fact? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are they truths of general experience? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are they weighty enough in character? |
16317 | (_ b_) Do the facts agree_ only_ when considered in the light of this explanation as a conclusion? |
16317 | (_ b_) Does it include too much? |
16317 | (_ b_) Does the law or principle clearly include the fact you wish to deduce from it, or have you strained the inference? |
16317 | (_ b_) Have you been guilty of stating a conclusion that really does not follow? |
16317 | (_ b_) Is confusion likely to arise as to its purpose? |
16317 | (_ b_) Is he mentally competent? |
16317 | (_ b_) Is it too florid? |
16317 | (_ b_) What constitutes him an authority? |
16317 | (_ b_) shame? |
16317 | (_ c_) Are the signs cumulative, and agreeable one with the other? |
16317 | (_ c_) Are they in harmony with reason? |
16317 | (_ c_) Are they truths of special experience? |
16317 | (_ c_) Can your syllogism be reduced to an absurdity? |
16317 | (_ c_) Does the importance of the law or principle warrant so important an inference? |
16317 | (_ c_) Has the parallelism been strained? |
16317 | (_ c_) Have you overlooked any contradictory facts? |
16317 | (_ c_) How could a short allegory be used as part of a public address? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is he morally credible? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is his interest in the case an impartial one? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is it stated so as to contain a trap? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is this style equally powerful today? |
16317 | (_ c_) hate? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are the contradictory facts sufficiently explained when this inference is accepted as true? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are the sentences too long and involved for clearness and force? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are there no other parallels that would point to a stronger contrary conclusion? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are they mutually harmonious or contradictory? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are they truths arrived at by experiment? |
16317 | (_ d_) Can the deduction be shown to prove too much? |
16317 | (_ d_) Could the signs be made to point to a contrary conclusion? |
16317 | (_ d_) Does he state his opinion positively and clearly? |
16317 | (_ d_) Is he in a position to know the facts? |
16317 | (_ d_) formality? |
16317 | (_ e_) Are all contrary positions shown to be relatively untenable? |
16317 | (_ e_) Are they admitted, doubted, or disputed? |
16317 | (_ e_) Is he a willing witness? |
16317 | (_ e_) excitement? |
16317 | (_ f_) Have you accepted mere opinions as facts? |
16317 | (_ f_) Is his testimony contradicted? |
16317 | (_ g_) Is his testimony corroborated? |
16317 | (_ g_)"The Effects of the Magazine on Literature;"(_ h_)"Does Modern Life Destroy Ideals?" |
16317 | (_ h_) Is his testimony contrary to well- known facts or general principles? |
16317 | (_ i_) Is it probable? |
16317 | (_ i_)"Is Competition''the Life of Trade?''" |
16317 | (_ m_)"Does Woman''s Competition with Man in Business Dull the Spirit of Chivalry?" |
16317 | (_ n_)"Are Elective Studies Suited to High School Courses?" |
16317 | (_ o_)"Does the Modern College Prepare Men for Preeminent Leadership?" |
16317 | 12. WHO IS THE TRAMP? |
16317 | A dust- cloth is a very useful thing, but why embroider it? |
16317 | A young man came to me the other day and said,"If Mr. Rockefeller, as you think, is a good man, why is it that everybody says so much against him?" |
16317 | ARE COLLEGES GROWING TOO LARGE? |
16317 | All you who are here, are you not tempted to envy him? |
16317 | And even then, would it not partly disarm your antagonism? |
16317 | And if so, how? |
16317 | And is it practicable? |
16317 | And is this all that is left of him-- this handful of dust beneath the marble stone? |
16317 | And our food, must we understand it before we eat it? |
16317 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
16317 | And who will measure the consolations of the hour of prayer? |
16317 | And why take ye thought for raiment? |
16317 | And why? |
16317 | And will you give me leave? |
16317 | And you met her-- did you tell me-- down at Newport, last July, and resolved to ask the question at a_ soirà © e_? |
16317 | Animal instinct say you? |
16317 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
16317 | Are the engines coming? |
16317 | Are the following points well considered? |
16317 | Are the people of the United States more devoted to religion than ever? |
16317 | Are there any other words here that long falling inflections would help to make expressive? |
16317 | Are there any others you would emphasize? |
16317 | Are they too high to be pleasant? |
16317 | Are ye not much better than they? |
16317 | Are you poor? |
16317 | As you recall a walk you have taken, are you able to remember better the sights or the sounds? |
16317 | Ask yourself-- or someone else-- such questions as these: What is the precise nature of the occasion? |
16317 | At first a quick contemptuous interrogation--''We fail?'' |
16317 | But an effect of what? |
16317 | But can the memory be trained to act as the warder for all the truths that we have gained from thinking, reading, and experience? |
16317 | But how shall he be able to criticise himself? |
16317 | But how shall we get the milk? |
16317 | But in what does a speaker''s reserve power consist? |
16317 | But is it more important than the amazing, imposing and perhaps disquieting apparition of Japan? |
16317 | But suppose I go into the High School to- morrow and ask,"Boys, who sunk the Merrimac?" |
16317 | But the enemies of tyranny,--whither does their path tend? |
16317 | But what followed? |
16317 | But what has been the experience of those who have been eminently successful in finance? |
16317 | But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from beneath the western horizon? |
16317 | But what of the problem itself? |
16317 | But when shall we be stronger? |
16317 | But_ how_ can I relax? |
16317 | By what analytical principle did you proceed? |
16317 | By what fair rule shall the stigma be put upon one section while the other escapes? |
16317 | By what spells, what magic, did Marius reinstate himself in his natural prerogatives? |
16317 | CAN MY COUNTRY BE WRONG? |
16317 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
16317 | Can suggestion arise from the audience? |
16317 | Can we solve it? |
16317 | Can you feel the forward tones strike against your hand? |
16317 | Can you feel the nose vibrate? |
16317 | Can you feel the vibration there? |
16317 | Can you imagine the average group becoming a crowd while hearing a lecture on Dry Fly Fishing, or on Egyptian Art? |
16317 | Can you suggest any combination of methods that you have found efficacious? |
16317 | Can you suggest any improvement? |
16317 | Choose an attitude toward your subject-- shall it be idealized? |
16317 | Come, for here he rests, and On this green bank, by this fair stream, We set to- day a votive stone, That memory may his deeds redeem? |
16317 | Conwell, tell me frankly, what do you think the American people think of me?" |
16317 | Could the subject be more effectively handled if somewhat modified? |
16317 | Could we dispense with either? |
16317 | Did it lose in effectiveness? |
16317 | Did n''t you ever see any of them astray at Atlantic City? |
16317 | Did not the pause surprisingly enhance the power of this statement? |
16317 | Did you ever know a really great man? |
16317 | Did you ever notice how hollow a memorized speech usually sounds? |
16317 | Do I speak first, last, or where, on the program? |
16317 | Do n''t you hear distant thunder? |
16317 | Do n''t you see those flashes of lightning? |
16317 | Do they really select the best men? |
16317 | Do we express the following thoughts and emotions in a low or a high pitch? |
16317 | Do you ask me to support a government that will tax my property: that will plunder me; that will demand my blood, and will not protect me? |
16317 | Do you ask_ how_ to concentrate? |
16317 | Do you feel it strike the lips? |
16317 | Do you feel the lips vibrate? |
16317 | Do you remember Elbert Hubbard''s tremendous little tract,"A Message to Garcia"? |
16317 | Do you say a_ bloo_ sky or a_ blue_ sky? |
16317 | Do you set down your name in the scroll of youth, that are written down old with all the characters of age? |
16317 | Do you shudder at the thought of velvet rubbed by short- nailed finger tips? |
16317 | Do you suppose I would go ahead of my men to be shot in the front by the enemy and in the back by my own men? |
16317 | Do you think we would have gained a victory if it had depended on General Grant alone? |
16317 | Do you want to know how to express victory? |
16317 | Do you want to plead a cause? |
16317 | Do your words come freely and your sentences flow out rhythmically? |
16317 | Does a direct question always require a rising inflection? |
16317 | Does conviction always result in action? |
16317 | Does effective persuasion always produce conviction? |
16317 | Does equal suffrage tend to lessen the interest of woman in her home? |
16317 | Does not that record honor him and vindicate his neighbors? |
16317 | Does that exclude those whose blood and money paid for it? |
16317 | Does the merit of the course have any bearing on the merit of the methods used? |
16317 | Does the reading of magazines contribute to intellectual shallowness? |
16317 | Does"dispose of"mean to rob the rightful owners? |
16317 | Finally, in preparing expository material ask yourself these questions regarding your subject: What is it, and what is it not? |
16317 | From what source do you intend to study gesture? |
16317 | From what walks of life do they come? |
16317 | HOW TO ACQUIRE THE IMAGING HABIT You remember the American statesman who asserted that"the way to resume is to resume"? |
16317 | Has Al Hafed returned?" |
16317 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
16317 | Has Labor Unionism justified its existence? |
16317 | Has he completely done? |
16317 | Has manner? |
16317 | Has posture in a speaker anything to do with persuasion? |
16317 | Has voice? |
16317 | Have any been less successful than others? |
16317 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
16317 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love? |
16317 | Have you carefully considered all the qualities that go to make up voice- charm in its delivery? |
16317 | Have you ever heard such an address? |
16317 | Have you ever read a book on the practise of thinking? |
16317 | Have you ever seen a speaker use such grotesque gesticulations that you were fascinated by their frenzy of oddity, but could not follow his thought? |
16317 | Have you ever stopped to analyze that expression,"a ready speaker?" |
16317 | Have you not a moist eye? |
16317 | Have you used reference books in word studies? |
16317 | He awoke that priest out of his dreams and said to him,"Will you tell me where I can find diamonds?" |
16317 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in CÃ ¦ sar seem ambitious? |
16317 | He is_ WHITE_"than it would be by hearing you assert merely that your horse is white? |
16317 | He said to the old man:"Why do n''t you make it that way and sell it for confectionery?" |
16317 | He was watching the ladies as they went by; and where is the man that would n''t get rich at that business? |
16317 | His neighbor said to him:"Why do n''t you ask your own children?" |
16317 | His second duty is what? |
16317 | How are you trying to correct them? |
16317 | How can grace of movement be acquired? |
16317 | How can hatred be the law of development when nations have advanced in proportion as they have departed from that law and adopted the law of love? |
16317 | How can resonance and carrying power be developed? |
16317 | How could I have written songs of hate without hatred?" |
16317 | How do you intend to correct them? |
16317 | How does conviction affect the man who feels it? |
16317 | How does it build a watermelon? |
16317 | How does it collect its flavoring extract? |
16317 | How does moderate excitement affect you? |
16317 | How does my hair look? |
16317 | How does personality in a speaker affect you as a listener? |
16317 | How does the voice bend in expressing(_ a_) surprise? |
16317 | How important is the occasion to the audience? |
16317 | How is it now? |
16317 | How is it today? |
16317 | How large an audience may be expected? |
16317 | How large is the auditorium? |
16317 | How large will the audience be? |
16317 | How long would a play fill a theater if the actors held their cue- books in hand and read their parts? |
16317 | How many quotations that fit well in the speaker''s tool chest can you recall from memory? |
16317 | How much daily practise do you consider necessary for the proper development of your voice? |
16317 | How much did you miss? |
16317 | How much information, and what new ideas, does it contain? |
16317 | How much time does it require? |
16317 | How shall it be divided? |
16317 | How shall we account for Him? |
16317 | How shall you concentrate? |
16317 | How would you increase the fighting- effectiveness of a man- of- war? |
16317 | Humor was used in some of the foregoing addresses-- in which others would it have been inappropriate? |
16317 | I approached him and said,"Do you think it would be possible for me to see General Robert E. Lee, the President of the University?" |
16317 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
16317 | I ask this audience again who of you are going to be great? |
16317 | I can imagine him out there, as he sits by his fireside, and he is saying to his friends,"Do you know that man Conwell that lives in Philadelphia?" |
16317 | I fear that some have accepted it in the hope of escaping from the miracle, but why should the miracle frighten us? |
16317 | IS CLASSICAL EDUCATION DEAD TO RISE NO MORE? |
16317 | IS MANKIND PROGRESSING? |
16317 | IS OUR TRIAL BY JURY SATISFACTORY? |
16317 | IS THE PRESS VENAL? |
16317 | If Virginia is condemned because thirty- one per cent of her vote was silent, how shall this State escape, in which fifty- one per cent was dumb? |
16317 | If a man knows more than I know, do n''t I incline to criticise somewhat his learning? |
16317 | If a storm should come and awake the deep, What matter? |
16317 | If that were meant, why this chapter? |
16317 | If you say,"My horse is not_ black_,"what color immediately comes into mind? |
16317 | In how far are we justified in making an appeal to self- interest in order to lead men to adopt a given course? |
16317 | In moods of bitterness, of doubt and despair the heart cries out,"How could a just God permit such cruelty upon innocent Belgium?" |
16317 | In the following passage, would you make any changes in the author''s markings for emphasis? |
16317 | In what sense is description more_ personal_ than exposition? |
16317 | In what ways does personality show itself in a speaker? |
16317 | In your own opinion, do speakers usually err from the use of too much or too little force? |
16317 | Is David dead? |
16317 | Is Eugenics a science? |
16317 | Is Hampden dead? |
16317 | Is Mankind Progressing? |
16317 | Is Profit- Sharing a solution of the wage problem? |
16317 | Is Washington dead? |
16317 | Is a minimum wage law desirable? |
16317 | Is a strongly paternal government better for the masses than a much larger freedom for the individual? |
16317 | Is all this unsympathetic, do you say? |
16317 | Is any man dead that ever was fit to live? |
16317 | Is emotion without words ever persuasive? |
16317 | Is feeling more important than the technical principles expounded in chapters III to VII? |
16317 | Is he an eye- witness? |
16317 | Is it any wonder that reversing the process should reverse the result? |
16317 | Is it because she expects them to pay her back? |
16317 | Is it desirable that the national government should own all railroads operating in interstate territory? |
16317 | Is it desirable that the national government should own interstate telegraph and telephone systems? |
16317 | Is it easier to persuade men to change their course of conduct than to persuade them to continue in a given course? |
16317 | Is it fair for counsel to appeal to the emotions of a jury in a murder trial? |
16317 | Is it not true, my hearers, such tombs as this demonstrate immortality? |
16317 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
16317 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
16317 | Is that the way to teach history? |
16317 | Is the Open Shop a benefit to the community? |
16317 | Is the Presidential System a better form of government for the United States than the Parliamental System? |
16317 | Is the church losing its hold on thinking people? |
16317 | Is the hope of permanent world- peace a delusion? |
16317 | Is the national prohibition of the liquor traffic an economic necessity? |
16317 | Is there a desk? |
16317 | Is this question debatable? |
16317 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
16317 | It does not ask, What shall I say? |
16317 | It turns the mind in upon itself and asks, What do I think? |
16317 | Let a man stand in a pulpit and preach to thousands, and if I have fifteen people in my church, and they''re all asleep, do n''t I criticise him? |
16317 | Living in Philadelphia and looking at this wealthy generation, all of whom began as poor boys, and you want capital to begin on? |
16317 | Might gestures without words be persuasive? |
16317 | My life? |
16317 | Notice the contents of the show windows on the street; how many features are you able to recall? |
16317 | Now why do you not apply this principle in speaking a sentence? |
16317 | Of what sort are the men who can not be bought? |
16317 | Oh, gentlemen, am I this day only the counsel of my client? |
16317 | On what do you base your decision? |
16317 | One gentleman said to the other:"Is your wife entertaining this summer?" |
16317 | One of the richest men in this country came into my home and sat down in my parlor and said:"Did you see all those lies about my family in the paper?" |
16317 | Or deceive them, when we are educating them to the utmost limit of our ability? |
16317 | Or have robbed a people who, twenty- five years from unrewarded slavery, have amassed in one State$ 20,000,000 of property? |
16317 | Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? |
16317 | Or outlaw them, when we work side by side with them? |
16317 | Or shall we say that most definitions hang between platitude and paradox? |
16317 | Or that we intend to oppress the people we are arming every day? |
16317 | Or were you ever"burned"by touching an ice- cold stove? |
16317 | Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
16317 | Or, happier memory, can you still feel the touch of a well- loved absent hand? |
16317 | Ought it not to be so? |
16317 | Ought the judge use persuasion in making his charge? |
16317 | PARENTAGE OR POWER? |
16317 | Precisely how long am I to speak? |
16317 | Precisely how much time am I to fill? |
16317 | Precisely what is the object of the meeting? |
16317 | Recently a book- salesman entered an attorney''s office in New York and inquired:"Do you want to buy a book?" |
16317 | Rejected-- you rejected? |
16317 | Render the following passages: Has the gentleman done? |
16317 | SHALL WOMAN HELP KEEP HOUSE FOR TOWN, CITY, STATE, AND NATION? |
16317 | Said he,"What is the use of doing that? |
16317 | Say each aloud, and decide which is correct,_ Noo York_,_ New Yawk_, or_ New York_? |
16317 | Shall I descend? |
16317 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
16317 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
16317 | Shall we try argument? |
16317 | Should all church printing be brought out under the Union Label? |
16317 | Should all colleges adopt the self- government system for its students? |
16317 | Should all corporations doing an interstate business be required to take out a Federal license? |
16317 | Should all men be compelled to contribute to the support of universities and professional schools? |
16317 | Should arbitration of industrial disputes be made compulsory? |
16317 | Should college students who receive compensation for playing summer baseball be debarred from amateur standing? |
16317 | Should daily school- hours and school vacations both be shortened? |
16317 | Should equal compensation for equal labor, between women and men, universally prevail? |
16317 | Should football be restricted to colleges, for the sake of physical safety? |
16317 | Should home- study for pupils in grade schools be abolished and longer school- hours substituted? |
16317 | Should marginal trading in stocks be prohibited? |
16317 | Should ministers be required to spend a term of years in some trade, business, or profession, before becoming pastors? |
16317 | Should national banks be permitted to issue, subject to tax and government supervision, notes based on their general assets? |
16317 | Should our government be more highly centralized? |
16317 | Should our legislation be shaped toward the gradual abandonment of the protective tariff? |
16317 | Should public utilities be owned by the municipality? |
16317 | Should teachers of small children in the public schools be selected from among mothers? |
16317 | Should the Initiative and Referendum be adopted as a national principle? |
16317 | Should the Powers of the world substitute an international police for national standing armies? |
16317 | Should the Recall of Judges be adopted? |
16317 | Should the United States army and navy be greatly strengthened? |
16317 | Should the United States continue its policy of opposing the combination of railroads? |
16317 | Should the United States maintain the Monroe Doctrine? |
16317 | Should the United States send a diplomatic representative to the Vatican? |
16317 | Should the amount of property that can be transferred by inheritance be limited by law? |
16317 | Should the eight- hour day be made universal in America? |
16317 | Should the government of the larger cities be vested solely in a commission of not more than nine men elected by the voters at large? |
16317 | Should the honor system in examinations be adopted in public high- schools? |
16317 | Should the national government establish a compulsory system of old- age insurance by taxing the incomes of those to be benefited? |
16317 | Should the present basis of suffrage be restricted? |
16317 | Should the same standards of altruism obtain in the relations of nations as in those of individuals? |
16317 | Should woman be given the ballot on the present basis of suffrage for men? |
16317 | Soon the night will pass; and when, to the Sentinel on the ramparts of Liberty the anxious ask:"Watchman, what of the night?" |
16317 | Students of public speaking continually ask,"How can I overcome self- consciousness and the fear that paralyzes me before an audience?" |
16317 | Telling means communicating, and how can he actually communicate without making every word distinct? |
16317 | Telling? |
16317 | The egg is the most universal of foods and its use dates from the beginning, but what is more mysterious than an egg? |
16317 | The miracle raises two questions:"Can God perform a miracle?" |
16317 | The next morning when his boy came down the stairway, he said,"Sam, what do you want for a toy?" |
16317 | The priest said,"Diamonds? |
16317 | The words may be golden, but the hearers''(?) |
16317 | Then why is there a tomb on the Hudson at all? |
16317 | Then, what motives would be likely to appeal to_ your_ hearers? |
16317 | Think I''ll wander down and see you when you''re married-- eh, my boy? |
16317 | This is the whole question: Do you see a need? |
16317 | This right of equality being, then, according to justice and natural equity, a right belonging to all States, when did we give it up? |
16317 | To get a natural effect, where would you use slow and where fast tempo in the following? |
16317 | To some extent you do, in ordinary speech; but do you in public discourse? |
16317 | To think alike as to men and measures? |
16317 | To what faction do I belong? |
16317 | To what is the success due? |
16317 | Too little? |
16317 | Too much pathos? |
16317 | WHAT IS A NOVEL? |
16317 | WHAT IS HUMOR? |
16317 | WHAT IS IMAGINATION? |
16317 | WHAT IS THE THEATRE DOING FOR AMERICA? |
16317 | WHY HAVE WE BOSSES? |
16317 | WHY IS A MILITANT? |
16317 | Was it suppression in Virginia and natural causes in Massachusetts? |
16317 | Was this ambition? |
16317 | We asked him,"When do you think the time will come that these people can be placed in a position of self- support?" |
16317 | We do teach it as a mother did her little boy in New York when he said,"Mamma, what great building is that?" |
16317 | Well, why did you not say middling full-- or fell mask?" |
16317 | Were such experiments special or general? |
16317 | Were the experiments authoritative and conclusive? |
16317 | Were these changes in pitch advisable? |
16317 | Were they the best that could be used to bring out the meaning? |
16317 | Were they the best that could have been used? |
16317 | Were they well made? |
16317 | Were they well made? |
16317 | What advantages has the fluent speaker over the hesitating talker? |
16317 | What are its causes, and effects? |
16317 | What are some of the gestures, if any, that you might use in delivering Thurston''s speech, page 50; Grady''s speech, page 36? |
16317 | What are the best methods for acquiring reserve power? |
16317 | What are the causes of monotony? |
16317 | What are the four special effects of pause? |
16317 | What are the motives that arouse men to action? |
16317 | What are the other speakers going to talk about? |
16317 | What are the prime requisites for good voice? |
16317 | What are the two fundamental requisites for the acquiring of self- confidence? |
16317 | What are their ideals and interests in life? |
16317 | What are they to speak about? |
16317 | What are you going to do? |
16317 | What are your voice faults? |
16317 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
16317 | What causes a phrase to become hackneyed? |
16317 | What conclusion is to be drawn from the life, the teachings and the death of this historic figure? |
16317 | What constitutes pretentious talk? |
16317 | What could be more true? |
16317 | What difference do you notice in its rendition? |
16317 | What do the rebels demand? |
16317 | What do these things mean? |
16317 | What do we ask of you? |
16317 | What do you do mentally with the time you spend in dressing or in shaving? |
16317 | What do you understand by"the historical present?" |
16317 | What do you understand from the terms"reasoning from effect to cause"and"from cause to effect?" |
16317 | What do you want with diamonds?" |
16317 | What does he know about the subject and what right has he to speak on it? |
16317 | What does the flag stand for? |
16317 | What effect do habits of thought have on confidence? |
16317 | What effect do his own suggestions have on the speaker himself? |
16317 | What effect do such habits have on the audience? |
16317 | What effect does confidence on the part of the speaker have on the audience? |
16317 | What effect does personal magnetism have in producing conviction? |
16317 | What effect does reserve power have on an audience? |
16317 | What effects are gained by it? |
16317 | What examples illustrate it? |
16317 | What exercises did you find useful? |
16317 | What experiences does it recall? |
16317 | What faction, since the beginning of the Revolution, has crushed and annihilated so many detected traitors? |
16317 | What fitness is there in these people? |
16317 | What gestures do you use for emphasis? |
16317 | What good habit does not? |
16317 | What have I to gain from you? |
16317 | What have you done with the hundred thousand Frenchmen, my companions in glory? |
16317 | What in your opinion are the relative values of thought and feeling in a speech? |
16317 | What inferences may justly be made from the following? |
16317 | What influences, within and without the man himself, work against fluency? |
16317 | What invites the negro to the ballot- box? |
16317 | What is a"figure of speech"? |
16317 | What is emphasis? |
16317 | What is his relation to the subject at issue? |
16317 | What is it like, and unlike? |
16317 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
16317 | What is it that, having, we live, and having not, we are as the clod? |
16317 | What is meant by a change of tempo? |
16317 | What is meant by"elastic touch"in conversation? |
16317 | What is our duty? |
16317 | What is progress? |
16317 | What is so hard as a just estimate of the events of our own time? |
16317 | What is the cause of self- consciousness? |
16317 | What is the danger of too much reading? |
16317 | What is the danger of using too much humor in an address? |
16317 | What is the derivation of the word_ vocabulary_? |
16317 | What is the effect of a lack of emphasis? |
16317 | What is the effect of over- persuasion? |
16317 | What is the effect of too much force in a speech? |
16317 | What is the effect on the emphasis? |
16317 | What is the effect? |
16317 | What is the first requisite of good gestures? |
16317 | What is the nature of the auditorium? |
16317 | What is the police power of the States? |
16317 | What is the purpose of American institutions? |
16317 | What is the result? |
16317 | What is the result? |
16317 | What is the result? |
16317 | What is the testimony of the courts? |
16317 | What is the type of persuasion used by Senator Thurston( page 50)? |
16317 | What is the use of stopping to prime a mental pump when you can fill your life with the resources for an artesian well? |
16317 | What is their probable attitude toward the theme? |
16317 | What is there to commend in delivering a speech in any of the foregoing methods? |
16317 | What is your observation regarding self- consciousness in children? |
16317 | What kinds of selections or occasions require much feeling and enthusiasm? |
16317 | What matters it whether he shares in the shouts of triumph? |
16317 | What method did Jesus employ in the following: Ye are the salt of the earth; but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
16317 | What methods of description does he seem to prefer? |
16317 | What methods, according to your observation, do most successful speakers use? |
16317 | What next?" |
16317 | What other methods of persuasion than those here mentioned can you name? |
16317 | What people, penniless, illiterate, has done so well? |
16317 | What principle did Richmond Pearson Hobson employ in the following? |
16317 | What profiteth it the people if they do only the electing while the invisible government does the nominating? |
16317 | What proportion of emotional ideas do you find in the extracts given in this chapter? |
16317 | What reasons can you give that disprove the general contention of this chapter? |
16317 | What reasons not already given seem to you to support it? |
16317 | What relation does pause bear to concentration? |
16317 | What relation does this have to the use of the voice? |
16317 | What shall I read for information? |
16317 | What shall our action be? |
16317 | What solution do they offer? |
16317 | What solution, then, can we offer for the problem? |
16317 | What sort of figures do you find in the selection from Stevenson, on page 242? |
16317 | What sort of people are they? |
16317 | What states of mind does falling inflection signify? |
16317 | What steps do you intend to take to develop the power of enthusiasm and feeling in speaking? |
16317 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
16317 | What tyrant is my protector? |
16317 | What word? |
16317 | What words come from the same root? |
16317 | What would be the effect of adhering to any one of the forms of discourse in a public address? |
16317 | What would be the effect of shifting the viewpoint in the midst of a narration? |
16317 | What would happen if you should overdraw your bank account? |
16317 | What would have been the fate of the church if the early Christians had had as little faith as many of our Christians of to- day? |
16317 | What would they have? |
16317 | What would you gather from the expressions:_ descriptive_ gesture,_ suggestive_ gesture, and_ typical_ gesture? |
16317 | What, according to your observations before a mirror, are your faults in gesturing? |
16317 | What, cries the skeptic, what has become of all the hopes of the time when France stood upon the top of golden hours? |
16317 | What, in your own words, is personality? |
16317 | What, then, is the progressive answer to these questions? |
16317 | What, then, must we do to make American business better? |
16317 | What, then, shall we Americans do? |
16317 | What, then, shall we do to make our tariff changes strengthen business instead of weakening business? |
16317 | What, then, will you take? |
16317 | When are you going to be great?" |
16317 | When comes such another? |
16317 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
16317 | When in doubt about a gesture what would you do? |
16317 | When is it permissible to emphasize every single word in a sentence? |
16317 | When the honeymoon is over and you''re settled down, we''ll try-- What? |
16317 | When will he have the civil rights that are his?" |
16317 | When will the black man cast a free ballot? |
16317 | When will the blacks cast a free ballot? |
16317 | Where does it find its coloring matter? |
16317 | Where does that little seed get its tremendous power? |
16317 | Where is there ground for any hope of peaceful change? |
16317 | Where would you pause in the following selections? |
16317 | Where, on thy dewy wing Where art thou journeying? |
16317 | Where? |
16317 | Wherein hath CÃ ¦ sar thus deserv''d your loves? |
16317 | Which in your judgment is the most suitable of delivery for you? |
16317 | Which in your opinion is the most important of the technical principles of speaking that you have studied so far? |
16317 | Which is the more important? |
16317 | Which may be expressed in either high or low pitch? |
16317 | Which method do you prefer, and why? |
16317 | Which of the following do you prefer, and why? |
16317 | Which one do you like best? |
16317 | Which parts of the selection on page 84 require the most force? |
16317 | Which require little? |
16317 | Which words should be emphasized, which subordinated, in a sentence? |
16317 | Which, in each instance, is the more effective-- and why? |
16317 | Who am I that I should attempt to measure the arm of the Almighty with my puny arm, or to measure the brain of the Infinite with my finite mind? |
16317 | Who am I that I should attempt to put metes and bounds to the power of the Creator? |
16317 | Who are the great inventors? |
16317 | Who are the great inventors? |
16317 | Who are the great inventors? |
16317 | Who are the great men of the world? |
16317 | Who can say? |
16317 | Who can tell the new thoughts that have been awakened, the ambitions fired and the high achievements that will be wrought through this Exposition? |
16317 | Who else is to speak? |
16317 | Who else will speak? |
16317 | Who ever can forget the brazen robberies forced into the Payne- Aldrich bill which Mr. Taft defended as"the best ever made?" |
16317 | Who has forgotten the tariff scandals that made President Cleveland denounce the Wilson- Gorman bill as"a perfidy and a dishonor?" |
16317 | Who knows the people''s needs so well as the people themselves? |
16317 | Who recognizes him as authority? |
16317 | Who says it will? |
16317 | Who selects the speakers''themes? |
16317 | Who so long suffering, who so just? |
16317 | Who so patient as the people? |
16317 | Who so wise to solve their own problems? |
16317 | Who speaks before I do and who follows? |
16317 | Who will estimate the peace which a belief in a future life has brought to the sorrowing hearts of the sons of men? |
16317 | Who would have credited a century ago the stories that are now told of the wonder- working electricity? |
16317 | Why are animals free from it? |
16317 | Why are you free from it under the stress of unusual excitement? |
16317 | Why do speeches have to be spoken with more force than do conversations? |
16317 | Why do we move for this class? |
16317 | Why do we teach history in that way? |
16317 | Why do we use this principle everywhere except in the communication of ideas? |
16317 | Why is a continual change of pitch necessary in speaking? |
16317 | Why is it Mr. Carnegie is criticised so sharply by an envious world? |
16317 | Why is it impossible to lay down steel- clad rules for gesturing? |
16317 | Why is monotony one of the worst as well as one of the most common faults of speakers? |
16317 | Why is range of voice desirable? |
16317 | Why is this? |
16317 | Why not charm men instead of capturing them by assault?" |
16317 | Why not take me?" |
16317 | Why or why not? |
16317 | Why plunge a pump into a dry hole? |
16317 | Why should Germany be permitted to fight France, or Bulgaria fight Turkey? |
16317 | Why should humor find a place in after- dinner speaking? |
16317 | Why stand we here idle? |
16317 | Why stand ye here idle? |
16317 | Why this restraint? |
16317 | Why wait for a more convenient season for this broad, general preparation? |
16317 | Why was he the hero? |
16317 | Why was it appropriate? |
16317 | Why was this Republic established? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
16317 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
16317 | Will you please get the text- book and let me see it?" |
16317 | Will you stay awhile? |
16317 | With what other recognized authorities does he agree or disagree?" |
16317 | With what subjects is it correlated? |
16317 | Wo n''t you learn the lesson, young man; that it is_ prima facie_ evidence of littleness to hold public office under our form of government? |
16317 | Would circumstances make any difference in such grading? |
16317 | Would not such an introduction give you confidence in the speaker, unless you were strongly opposed to him? |
16317 | Would the triumph of socialistic principles result in deadening personal ambition? |
16317 | Would this amendment interfere with any State carrying on the promotion of its domestic order? |
16317 | Yet how can we induce an effect if we are not certain as to the cause? |
16317 | You all did love him once, not without cause; What cause withholds you then to mourn for him? |
16317 | You may"make a fool of yourself"once or twice, but is that too great a price to pay for success? |
16317 | _ 3 Ple._ Has he, masters? |
16317 | _ 4 Ple._ Mark''d ye his words? |
16317 | _ Ant._ Will you be patient? |
16317 | _ Ant._ You will compel me then to read the will? |
16317 | _ Can Force be Acquired?_ Yes, if the acquirer has any such capacities as we have just outlined. |
16317 | _ Deductions_(_ a_) Is the law or general principle a well- established one? |
16317 | _ FROM NAPOLEON''S ADDRESS TO THE DIRECTORY ON HIS RETURN FROM EGYPT_ What have you done with that brilliant France which I left you? |
16317 | _ Facial Expression is Important_ Have you ever stopped in front of a Broadway theater and looked at the photographs of the cast? |
16317 | _ How are We to Acquire and Develop Enthusiasm?_ It is not to be slipped on like a smoking jacket. |
16317 | _ Inductions_(_ a_) Are the facts numerous enough to warrant accepting the generalization as being conclusive? |
16317 | _ Inferences_(_ a_) Are the antecedent conditions such as would make the allegation probable? |
16317 | _ Is it a debatable question?_ 4. |
16317 | _ Is it clearly stated?_(_ a_) Do the terms of statement mean the same to each disputant? |
16317 | _ Is it clearly stated?_(_ a_) Do the terms of statement mean the same to each disputant? |
16317 | _ Is it fairly stated?_(_ a_) Does it include enough? |
16317 | _ Is it fairly stated?_(_ a_) Does it include enough? |
16317 | _ Parallel cases_(_ a_) Are the cases parallel at enough points to warrant an inference of similar cause or effect? |
16317 | _ Syllogisms_(_ a_) Have any steps been omitted in the syllogisms? |
16317 | _ The authorities cited as evidence_(_ a_) Is the authority well- recognized as such? |
16317 | _ The facts adduced as evidence_(_ a_) Are they sufficient in number to constitute proof? |
16317 | _ The principles adduced as evidence_(_ a_) Are they axiomatic? |
16317 | _ The witnesses as to facts_(_ a_) Is each witness impartial? |
16317 | _ To secure confidence, be confident._ How can you expect others to accept a message in which you lack, or seem to lack, faith yourself? |
16317 | _ What are the subordinate points?_ II. |
16317 | _ What is Force?_ Some of our most obvious words open up secret meanings under scrutiny, and this is one of them. |
16317 | _ What is the pivotal point in the whole question?_ 5. |
16317 | _ Why Use Force?_ There is much truth in such an appeal, but not all the truth. |
16317 | a decreasing leg? |
16317 | a dry hand? |
16317 | a white beard? |
16317 | a yellow cheek? |
16317 | an increasing belly? |
16317 | and every part about you blasted with antiquity? |
16317 | and will you yet call yourself young? |
16317 | and, saddest of all, that lovely and sorrowing empress, whose harmless life could hardly have excited the animosity of a demon? |
16317 | and,"Would He want to?" |
16317 | caricatured? |
16317 | defended? |
16317 | exaggerated? |
16317 | is not your voice broken? |
16317 | losing its spiritual power? |
16317 | or described impartially? |
16317 | reliable and unprejudiced? |
16317 | ridiculed? |
16317 | that brave and chivalrous king of Italy who only lived for his people? |
16317 | that enlightened and magnanimous citizen whom France still mourns? |
16317 | what, weep you, when you but behold Our CÃ ¦ sar''s vesture wounded? |
16317 | your chin double? |
16317 | your wind short? |
16317 | your wit single? |
27925 | A theory of disappearing? |
27925 | Ah, this was your prey, wolf? |
27925 | All your days you were devoted to one man, were n''t you? 27925 An''why should n''t I know you? |
27925 | An''would you take the position of secretary to the chief an''so get acquainted with everything an''everybody? |
27925 | And are you still afraid of Arthur? 27925 And did you meet her since you left her... that woman?" |
27925 | And divide the party? |
27925 | And do you think that the critics will read it and be overcome? |
27925 | And happy? |
27925 | And how about that other woman...? |
27925 | And how am I to know all these people, mother? |
27925 | And how did you come to mix Louis up in the thing? |
27925 | And if I agree to it, what do I get? |
27925 | And if your uncle should not run? |
27925 | And of course you have news? |
27925 | And the others? 27925 And the real Arthur Dillon? |
27925 | And the reason not to be controverted? |
27925 | And they are all gone? |
27925 | And what becomes of your dream? |
27925 | And what do they make of the hair? |
27925 | And what do you know of us? |
27925 | And what good would my interference do? |
27925 | And what had she to tell you, may I ask? |
27925 | And what has patriotism done for you? |
27925 | And what is a free hand? |
27925 | And what luck will there be in it for him? |
27925 | And where can we get that? |
27925 | And who are the Ledwiths? |
27925 | And why not Ireland''s sorrows as well as those of America, or any other country? |
27925 | And why should I give up now of all times? 27925 And why should n''t he?" |
27925 | And you are happy, really happy? 27925 And you are ready for any ill consequences, the resentment and suit of Mr. Dillon, for instance? |
27925 | And you lived through it all, mother? |
27925 | And you think I descend? |
27925 | And you were sitting there, in the cabin, not ten feet off, listening to him and me? |
27925 | And your child? 27925 Anything more, mum?" |
27925 | Are you afraid to ask Ledwith for an opinion? |
27925 | Are you as much in love as that? |
27925 | Are you friends of Lord Leverett? |
27925 | Are you satisfied, then,said Arthur,"that we are all right?" |
27925 | At eight o''clock this evening where will Miss Conyngham be, Sister? |
27925 | At the expense of my modesty,said Arthur,"ca n''t I mention myself as one of the brighter spots? |
27925 | Ay, indade,Judy said tenderly,"an''did ever a wild boy like him love his own more? |
27925 | But about your theory, Monsignor? |
27925 | But do n''t you see, my pet, that if this man is as clever as you would have him he has already seen to these things? 27925 But how?" |
27925 | But if, before the alliance came to pass, the Irish question should be well settled, how would that affect your attitude, Senator? |
27925 | But is it enough to give you Honora? 27925 But not everything, hey?" |
27925 | But this next man about whom you have been hinting since you came up here? 27925 Can he do this?" |
27925 | Can you deny that what I have spoken is the truth? |
27925 | Can you tell me, then, how I am to satisfy you in Ledwith''s case? |
27925 | D''ye hear that, Father Phil? |
27925 | Did he say all that? |
27925 | Did n''t she inform him of her triumph over Livingstone in London? 27925 Did n''t you tell me Father William was going to America this winter on a collecting tour? |
27925 | Did you ever dream in all your rainbow dreams,said Grahame,"of marching thus into Cruarig with escort of Her Majesty? |
27925 | Did you ever see the like of him? |
27925 | Did you get out any plans? |
27925 | Did you know Endicott? |
27925 | Did you say you had fixed the day, Honora? |
27925 | Do I fear Livingstone and the lawyers? 27925 Do n''t you know who''s paradin''to- day?" |
27925 | Do n''t you know,said he with the positiveness of a young theologian,"that Arthur will probably never marry? |
27925 | Do you know anything about Arthur''s history in California? |
27925 | Do you know anything about the earlier years of Arthur Dillon? |
27925 | Do you know the old house is still in Madison street, where we played and ate the pie? |
27925 | Do you know what I think, Dick Curran? |
27925 | Do you know what Livingstone and Bradford and the people whom they represent think of that temple? |
27925 | Do you know what this passion for justice has done for me, Mr. Livingstone? 27925 Do you know who sent me here, your Excellency, with the request for your aid?" |
27925 | Do you recognize him? |
27925 | Do you remember how we read and re- read it on the_ Arrow_ years ago? 27925 Do you remember what you said then, Honora, when Curran declared he would one day find Tom Jones?" |
27925 | Do you see any likeness? |
27925 | Do you tell me that? |
27925 | Do you think I have influence? |
27925 | Do you think that we can let you go easily? |
27925 | Do you think there is anything?--do you think there could be anything with regard to Honora Ledwith? |
27925 | Do you think you can catch a man like Arthur napping? |
27925 | Do you think you can do it, me boy? |
27925 | Do you wish to be made sure of it? |
27925 | For President? 27925 For a scene with the man who ran away from his wife before he deceived me, and then made love to you? |
27925 | Goin''to take off the ribbon? |
27925 | Has Everard anything against you? |
27925 | Has he any marks on his body that would help to identify him, if he undertook to get the gold mine that belongs to him? |
27925 | Has n''t it all been good? |
27925 | Has she any regard for you? |
27925 | Has the house gone mad? |
27925 | Have I ever stood in your way, Honora? |
27925 | Have I found thee, O mine enemy? |
27925 | Have n''t I the evidence of my own senses? 27925 Have ye ever thraveled beyant Donegal, me good little man?" |
27925 | Have you a picture of the young man? |
27925 | Have you not heard her talk of your friend, Louis Everard? 27925 Honora, has she been lying to you, this fox, Sister Claire, Edith Conyngham, with a string of other names not to be remembered? |
27925 | Honora,he cried,"was I ever faithless to Erin? |
27925 | How about the legs of the publishers? |
27925 | How came that feeling there touching people of whom you knew next to nothing? |
27925 | How can you ever think of giving him up? |
27925 | How can you let him go? |
27925 | How did it happen,he inquired of Mary,"that he took up the idea of being a priest? |
27925 | How do men reason themselves into such absurdities? |
27925 | How in the name of Heaven,said he,"did you conceive this scheme of converting this woman?" |
27925 | How long will it last? 27925 How will that sound among the brethren?" |
27925 | How would you feel if some hussy cheated Louis out of his priesthood, with blue eyes and golden hair and impudence? 27925 How, not wisely?" |
27925 | I am ready now to lay before you the conditions----"Are you going to send me to jail? |
27925 | I am sure,he said to the cabinet minister,"that in a matter so serious you want absolute sincerity?" |
27925 | I feared you would misunderstand... what can one like you understand of sin and misery?... 27925 I said that, did I?" |
27925 | I want to know what is the meaning of this,Everard sputtered,"this violence? |
27925 | I would like to know if you are acquainted with Mr. Horace Endicott? |
27925 | If it comes to a trial,said Arthur,"wo n''t Ledwith get the same chance as any other lawbreaker?" |
27925 | In God''s name what connection has your gorgeous cathedral with any one''s freedom? |
27925 | In this case would it not be better to get an advantage by declaring yourself, before Livingstone can bring suit against you? |
27925 | Is England so hateful then? |
27925 | Is Mr. Livingstone''s name among your papers? |
27925 | Is it as warm as that? |
27925 | Is it possible? |
27925 | Is it that you feel certain of giving me my last sleep, my last kiss as you steal the breath from me? 27925 Is it true, what I heard whispered,"said she,"that they will soon be looking for a minister to England, that Livingstone is coming back?" |
27925 | Is n''t it rather late in history for such things? |
27925 | Is not that just what we are to do, not after your fashion, but after the will of God, Arthur? 27925 Is that all?" |
27925 | Is that the meaning of the look on your face since your return? |
27925 | Is that the present name? |
27925 | Is there a moment in the last four years that he has been asleep? 27925 Is there any man in love with me, and planning to steal away my convent from me? |
27925 | Is this Arthur Dillon handsome, a dashing blade? |
27925 | Is this the result of your clever story- telling, Dick Curran? |
27925 | It is not affection, then, which prompts the actions of my client? 27925 It''s pleasant on a day like this for you to feel that you are just where nature intended you to be, is n''t it? |
27925 | Knew you, is it? |
27925 | Know what day o''the month it is? |
27925 | Live near New York? |
27925 | Locked in? |
27925 | May I suggest,said Arthur blandly,"that you wear it in his stead?" |
27925 | Mona, do you mean to tell me that every one knew it? |
27925 | Much as I hate England, what is it to my love for her victim? 27925 Nothing more than the fact, and the failure to find the young man?" |
27925 | Oh,cried Honora with a gasp of pain,"can there be such women now? |
27925 | Perhaps you are not sure about what Horace knew? 27925 Perhaps,"she said calmly,"this would be a good time to talk to you, Arthur, as sister to brother... ca n''t we talk as brother and sister?" |
27925 | Risking her own safety and happiness? |
27925 | See the green plumes an''ribbons? |
27925 | Since what began? |
27925 | So you have made a beginning? 27925 So you knew me, Judy, in spite of the whiskers and the long absence?" |
27925 | Tell me, partner,said Arthur lightly,"would you recognize me with whiskers?" |
27925 | That woman was the so- called escaped nun? |
27925 | The Senator, is it? |
27925 | The question is how to use our advantage? |
27925 | The question is, can I deal with her myself? 27925 Then Endicott must have known the priest before he disappeared: known him so as to trust him, and to get a great favor from him? |
27925 | Then how do you account for this, smart one? 27925 Then it''s all true... what he has been telling me?" |
27925 | Then the next question is: is it worth while to make inquiries among the Irish, his friends and neighbors, the people that knew the real Dillon? |
27925 | Then why keep up the movement, if nothing is to come of it? |
27925 | Then you are to stand in my way too? |
27925 | Then you do not desire the nomination of Tammany Hall? |
27925 | Then you have suffered too? 27925 Then you''ve done with fighting, uncle?" |
27925 | Then, you are prepared to convince Mrs. Endicott that she has more to lose than to gain by bringing you into her divorce suit? |
27925 | This for the beginning? |
27925 | This is your child? |
27925 | To the question: how do you hope to woo and win Everard? |
27925 | Tut, tut,said Monsignor,"are you not as good as the best, with the blood of the Montgomerys and the Haskells in your veins? |
27925 | Want to know why, stupid? 27925 Was there any money awaiting Tom? |
27925 | Was there any reason alleged for the remarkable disappearance of the young man? 27925 Was your husband a speaker?" |
27925 | We do it in America, and why not here? 27925 Well, are you surprised? |
27925 | Well, is n''t she able to recognize her own husband? 27925 Well, what do you think of my acquaintance with your history?" |
27925 | Well? |
27925 | Were they so considerate when our moments were trying and they could embarrass us? |
27925 | Were you blessed with fluency in-- your earlier years? |
27925 | Were your troubles very great, mother? |
27925 | What are you raving about, Artie? |
27925 | What blood do you think there''s in him? |
27925 | What can I do,he whispered to Anne,"since it''s plain he wants me to give in-- no, to avoid the comic papers?" |
27925 | What do you know of my lovely Honora? |
27925 | What do you mean? |
27925 | What do you think I can do for you? |
27925 | What do you think of it? 27925 What do you think of it?" |
27925 | What do you wish me to do? |
27925 | What does it mean that an Irish army on Irish soil should have for its leader a brilliant general like Sheridan? |
27925 | What does that mean? |
27925 | What effect would these notifications have? |
27925 | What have I to do with the doubts of an escaped nun, and of Mrs. Endicott? 27925 What have we to do with the past? |
27925 | What is the meaning of it, Louis? |
27925 | What is the meaning of it? |
27925 | What is to be done? |
27925 | What shall we do? |
27925 | What sort of a boy was-- was I at that age, mother? |
27925 | What was the baby doing when you left the house? |
27925 | What''s he got to do with it? |
27925 | What''s his little game? |
27925 | What''s their game? 27925 What''s to be done?" |
27925 | What''s up? |
27925 | What''s wrong with Everard? |
27925 | What''s wrong with our representative? |
27925 | When did you evolve this new fallacy? |
27925 | When, where, with what title, binding and so forth? |
27925 | Where did you get your artiste, August? |
27925 | Where do the frowsy children come in? |
27925 | Where is she? 27925 Who are the people interested in Ledwith, may I ask?" |
27925 | Who are these people, these Americans, do you know, Captain? 27925 Who are you, anyway?" |
27925 | Who are you? |
27925 | Who could insult the author of the_ Confessions_? 27925 Who is he?" |
27925 | Who that knew Horace Endicott would look for him in a popular Tammany orator? 27925 Who would n''t? |
27925 | Why are you so sure of that? |
27925 | Why beyond them? |
27925 | Why do you let him talk to me so? |
27925 | Why do you think him so clever? 27925 Why do you think so?" |
27925 | Why has that name a familiar sound? |
27925 | Why should he neglect them like that? |
27925 | Why should n''t I think well of it? 27925 Why should n''t I? |
27925 | Why should n''t she enjoy herself in her own way? |
27925 | Why should you mind it so, after a year? |
27925 | Why, how can that be? |
27925 | Will that impress John Everard? |
27925 | Will you have a fit if I come any nearer? |
27925 | With you there is always an increasing hatred of England? |
27925 | With you to defend me? |
27925 | Would you go to Washington if you were sure Livingstone backed Sister Claire? |
27925 | Would you go to Washington if you were sure he backed the woman? |
27925 | You are going to bring Sonia down, then? |
27925 | You are not aware, then, that he has provided the money for your enterprise? |
27925 | You are one of those that can prove anything----"If you were sure of his responsibility, would you go to Washington? |
27925 | You are to compose and to read the poem on the Pilgrim Fathers? |
27925 | You have fair evidence I suppose that he is Horace Endicott, madam? |
27925 | You have made a great hit in this city, Sister Claire,he began----"And you think I am about to ruin my chances of a fortune?" |
27925 | You have recognized him? |
27925 | You heard of Fritters? |
27925 | You knew Horace Endicott? |
27925 | You may be very tired before our little talk is concluded----"Am I to receive your insults as well as your agent''s? |
27925 | You saw how well she dances, hey? 27925 You think she''s the hinge of the great scheme?" |
27925 | You will stay with your father of course? |
27925 | You would be willing then to declare that Arthur Dillon----"Is Mrs. Dillon''s son? 27925 You would not like the case to come to trial?" |
27925 | You, Arthur, you the victim of that shameful story? |
27925 | Am I not patient? |
27925 | An appeal to the people on the score of humanity, brotherhood, progress, what you please? |
27925 | An''d''ye think people that thraveled five thousan''miles to spind a few dollars on yer miserable country wud luk at the likes o''ye? |
27925 | An''is there a woman in the whole world that''s had greater luck than yerself?" |
27925 | An''was there a day afther that I did n''t have something to do wid ye? |
27925 | And did n''t I witness the whole scene from the point yonder? |
27925 | And how did he come to be lost?" |
27925 | And how did you come to see the Pope so easy, and it in the summer time?" |
27925 | And if you do n''t object I''ll stay... by the way, where is her office?" |
27925 | And is n''t he to be the next ambassador, and more power to him?" |
27925 | And the English friends who are to take up my duties where I desert them?" |
27925 | And to the applause of the crowd, were n''t you? |
27925 | And to the cause of a nation, were n''t you? |
27925 | And what would induce me to expose her to the public gaze as the chief victim, or the chief plotter in a fraud? |
27925 | And who are we that you need care? |
27925 | And who is Lord Constantine? |
27925 | And who is the crowd?" |
27925 | And, by the way, do n''t you remember old Ledwith, the red- hot lecturer on the woes of Ireland? |
27925 | Anne has the pride in her, an''she wants all the world to believe he kem home of himself, d''ye see? |
27925 | Are the courts goin''crazy?" |
27925 | Are there any mementoes of his past in his private boxes? |
27925 | Are yez fit for that great city? |
27925 | Are you going to make your famous speech over again?" |
27925 | Are you more willing to believe in it when it says: Arthur Dillon is Horace Endicott?" |
27925 | Are you satisfied, Colette, that this time everything must be done as I have ordered?" |
27925 | Are you short on self- respect? |
27925 | Are you to make strange with all this magnificence, as if you were Indians seeing it for the first time?" |
27925 | Arthur continued to adore at her shrine as he had done for years, and she studied him with the one thought: how will he bear new sorrow? |
27925 | As the life which is past fades, for all its reality, into the mist- substance of dreams, why should not the reverse action occur? |
27925 | Before we start for California?" |
27925 | Between them what becomes of the alliance? |
27925 | But how go on for a month in dread of what was to come? |
27925 | But the question now is, what are we to do with the magistrate? |
27925 | But this dear Colette, she is to be my good angel and lead me to success, are n''t you, little devil? |
27925 | But what can a mother do? |
27925 | But what use to curse, to look and curse again? |
27925 | But what''s the use o''talkin''? |
27925 | But will it do any good, and may n''t it do harm? |
27925 | But you can not say that I have not atoned for them as nearly as one man can?" |
27925 | By the way, what became of the boy?" |
27925 | Ca n''t a blind man see they wor made to be man an''wife? |
27925 | Ca n''t you see that this Horace went to the very place where you were sure he would not go?" |
27925 | Ca n''t you see yet the wonderful''cuteness of this man, Endicott? |
27925 | Can any one expect that the first glance will pierce his disguise? |
27925 | Can even this perverse man deny me? |
27925 | Can your hate add anything to the joy of the blessed, or the woe of the lost?" |
27925 | Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased, Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow? |
27925 | Colette reminded him of a face, which he had seen... no, not a face but a voice... or was it a manner?... |
27925 | Could Horace Endicott have ever descended to this view of his world, this rawness of thought, sentiment, and expression? |
27925 | Could any worker ask more of life? |
27925 | Could he be surprised into admissions of his real character by some trick, such as bringing him face to face on a sudden with Sonia? |
27925 | Could he by any fatality descend to this shame? |
27925 | Could her belief and her delight in that holy life have been dim for an instant? |
27925 | Could it be that my boy played Horace Endicott in Boston and married that woman, and then came back to me?" |
27925 | Could n''t any wan see that I accepted him as my son? |
27925 | Could this passionless stranger, this Irish politician, looking at her as indifferently as the judge on the bench, be Horace? |
27925 | Curran?" |
27925 | Curran?" |
27925 | Did I ever hesitate when it was a question of money, or life, or danger, or suffering for her sake?" |
27925 | Did I not tell you I would be in the hall? |
27925 | Did he discover therein any selfishness? |
27925 | Did it explain that suffering so clearly marked on his face? |
27925 | Did n''t I hould ye in me own two arrums the night you were born? |
27925 | Did n''t I watch for years, so that I might find out what was wrong with him, and make some money?" |
27925 | Did n''t you know her?" |
27925 | Did n''t you play on her doorstep in Madison street, and treat her to Washington pie?" |
27925 | Did she know of Lady Cruikshank''s effort to file off the Dublin brogue?" |
27925 | Did she rage at the depths of that sea which in an instant had engulfed her fool- husband and his fortune? |
27925 | Did the scamp need much persuading? |
27925 | Did you ever hear of Jezebel and her fate? |
27925 | Did you ever in your life see such a daughter and such a father?" |
27925 | Did you ever show mercy to any one? |
27925 | Did you notice her?" |
27925 | Did you tell them what we think of Artie? |
27925 | Dillon?" |
27925 | Do n''t you believe that Livingstone is the patron of Sister Claire? |
27925 | Do n''t you think I have a chance?" |
27925 | Do n''t you think, Dicky dear, I can do the dying act to perfection?" |
27925 | Do you know Horace Endicott?" |
27925 | Do you know Lord Constantine?" |
27925 | Do you know that I hate that fat fool, that wretched cuckold who had not sense enough to discover what the uninterested knew about that woman? |
27925 | Do you know that he is n''t a Catholic? |
27925 | Do you know that he never goes to communion? |
27925 | Do you know that he''s strange to all Catholic ways? |
27925 | Do you not see, Monsignor, that the same reasons which sent me out of it hold good to keep me out of it?" |
27925 | Do you remember on the_ Arrow_ Captain Curran''s story of Tom Jones?" |
27925 | Do you remember this?" |
27925 | Do you see the point? |
27925 | Do you see? |
27925 | Do you see? |
27925 | Do you think Conny was as secret as you? |
27925 | Do you think that a fair average?" |
27925 | Do you think we can get on his trail right away, Curran?" |
27925 | Do you understand? |
27925 | Do you wish to be made sure of this man''s atrocious guilt and your own folly?" |
27925 | Does he talk in his sleep? |
27925 | Does the Monsignor still hold his interest in me?" |
27925 | Edith Conyngham? |
27925 | Endicott?" |
27925 | Fine? |
27925 | For him, no; but for them? |
27925 | Had Arthur Dillon, always a strange fellow, gone mad? |
27925 | Had Louis kept his engagement and received the vows and the confession of the audacious tool of Livingstone? |
27925 | Had he made the dreadful mistake of losing a grand opportunity for his brother, soon to undertake a laborious mission? |
27925 | Had he omitted any point in the fight? |
27925 | Had present comfort shaken her resolution? |
27925 | Had she been to blame? |
27925 | Had she blundered as well as the detective? |
27925 | Had she not made him live over again the late reception by her questions as to what was done, what everybody said, and what the ladies wore? |
27925 | Had she not suggested this very suspicion to Anne? |
27925 | Had this sad- hearted man ever known that blissful state? |
27925 | Has he any money?" |
27925 | Has he looked at a girl in that way since he came back from California? |
27925 | Has she become reconciled to her small income, I wonder? |
27925 | Have I your promise to be silent?" |
27925 | Have n''t I seen her look at him, when she dared to say a sharp thing? |
27925 | Have n''t you had a lot of them?" |
27925 | Have they ever regarded me as sane?" |
27925 | Have you a copy of this? |
27925 | Have you any copies of them?" |
27925 | Have you no manhood left in you? |
27925 | Have you thought of that? |
27925 | He can give a good imitation maybe, d''ye hear? |
27925 | He has removed the birthmarks and peculiarities of Horace, and adopted those of Arthur? |
27925 | He was a fool in love, was n''t he? |
27925 | He was in another man''s shoes; would they fit him? |
27925 | He was never found?" |
27925 | Her anxiety to find him is very properly to get her lawful share in that property, that is, alimony with her divorce?" |
27925 | Her pity for him grew, and prompted deeper tenderness; and how could she know, who had been without experience, that pity is often akin to love? |
27925 | His was a lover''s story, clear, yet broken with phrases of love; for was he not speaking to the heart, half his own, that beat with his in unison? |
27925 | How can I help but listen?" |
27925 | How can any one prove themselves to be themselves, Misther Curran? |
27925 | How can that be got, and keep away from the courts?" |
27925 | How could I have asked any other love? |
27925 | How could he bind her in bonds at the very moment of their bitter separation? |
27925 | How could he keep so high a courage with the end so dark and so near? |
27925 | How could he shatter their dreams? |
27925 | How could she be happy and he suffering without the convent gates? |
27925 | How could the poor man help himself? |
27925 | How did it get there? |
27925 | How did we know, Miss Cleverly? |
27925 | How did you ever get over it, mother?" |
27925 | How did you leave the baby?" |
27925 | How did you suspect my acquaintance with a man whom I met so casually? |
27925 | How do I know? |
27925 | How do you think these people would stand questioning as to who your little boy, called Horace Endicott, really is?" |
27925 | How have all these wonders come about?" |
27925 | How is he spending it just now? |
27925 | How much did you, with all your cleverness, get out of him in the last five years?" |
27925 | How would politics in New York suit you?" |
27925 | However pleasant these things looked to the Minister, of what account could they be to a mere citizen returning to private life in New York? |
27925 | I can appeal to you as did Augustus to his friends on his dying- bed: have I not played well the part?" |
27925 | I can make another sacrifice, but is n''t it now her turn? |
27925 | I cried my eyes out night after night... and your poor mother... and indeed all of us... how could you do it? |
27925 | I felt no need of them, for was I not rich, and happily married? |
27925 | I have n''t time to explain them..."Arthur grinned..."but they make imperative a certain way of acting, d''ye see? |
27925 | I mean those just now stopping with the Countess of Skibbereen?" |
27925 | I presume you know something about the Endicott disappearance?" |
27925 | I saw Pat sick once at the same age... Pat was his father, d''ye see?... |
27925 | I''m not sorry they can stand up for themselves, are you? |
27925 | If I am Horace Endicott, as you pretend to believe, do I not know the difference between my own child and another''s? |
27925 | If I could tell my son after ten years, when he had grown to be a man, ca n''t she tell her own husband after a few years? |
27925 | If not Arthur Dillon, who was he? |
27925 | If we had not God to lift us up, and repay us for our suffering, to what would we come? |
27925 | If you ca n''t see any resemblance between Arthur and the pictures of Horace Endicott, what can Sonia see?" |
27925 | In a convent, there will be no man, no Ireland, and no crowd, will there? |
27925 | In particular his last words... what were those last words? |
27925 | In what circumstances had Hamlet been brought up, that religious feeling should have so serious an effect upon him? |
27925 | Is it his plan to sink the Mayor deeper in his own mud?" |
27925 | Is n''t it a fair release?" |
27925 | Is n''t it fair to think that you are going mad, Everard?" |
27925 | Is n''t that enough?" |
27925 | Is n''t that one fact, that the priest knew Horace Endicott, worth all your foolish reasonings? |
27925 | Is n''t that quare now?" |
27925 | Is n''t that what an alliance must depend on? |
27925 | Is she changed?" |
27925 | Is that true?" |
27925 | Is the prize worth the pain?" |
27925 | Is there not enough bigotry now?" |
27925 | Is this the man?" |
27925 | It looks like a trap, does n''t it? |
27925 | It was not in his mind ten years back?" |
27925 | It''s a troublesome time, d''ye see? |
27925 | Judy in the kitchen, Mona in the nursery, Louis in the parlor, Arthur on the lawn?" |
27925 | Know him to be Pat''s son? |
27925 | Looking upon its majestic beauty, who could doubt their powers, though the books printed English slanders in letters of gold? |
27925 | May I introduce to you my friend, Miss Edith Conyngham?" |
27925 | Meanwhile what of the world and the woman he had left behind? |
27925 | My friend, young Everard?" |
27925 | Naturally the next question would be, have you seen the young man since that time? |
27925 | Not here, Honora?" |
27925 | Nothing wrong, I hope?" |
27925 | Now is n''t that McMeeter all over? |
27925 | Now who would mourn over the diatribes of such cats?" |
27925 | Now why do you trouble this poor girl, after her scene with the Englishman, with hints of Arthur? |
27925 | Now, will you coax Sonia Endicott down here to have a look at this Arthur Dillon? |
27925 | O, God, ruling in heaven, but not on earth, why do you torture us so? |
27925 | Oh, how can this be?" |
27925 | Oh, you recall how the dogs worried her bones, do you? |
27925 | On the contrary the search of a clever detective... he''s really clever, is n''t he, Edith?... |
27925 | Or do men ever really love the object of passion? |
27925 | Or even his uncle? |
27925 | Or was this scene a hint of murder? |
27925 | Or, that he had been overthrown? |
27925 | Out of what depths had this new personality been conjured up? |
27925 | Says I,''Wud ye insult the Pope be shakin''a milliner''s bill in his face as ye go in the dure?'' |
27925 | Shall I have long to wait? |
27925 | Shall I tell you what Horace knew?" |
27925 | Shall I tell you? |
27925 | Shall I translate the praises of these great men for you? |
27925 | She may have good reason for playing the part... she may have suffered?" |
27925 | She never answered me, but walked in an''presented her bill to a Mounsinnyory----""What''s that?" |
27925 | She was lingering still? |
27925 | She wishes to make sure of the existence or non- existence of her husband before entering upon this other marriage?" |
27925 | Should not love, the best of God''s gifts, be wisdom too? |
27925 | Since these are well paid for their trouble, why should they not keep on?" |
27925 | So you saw the Pope?" |
27925 | Suffer? |
27925 | Surely he had never read this play before? |
27925 | Tell me, what became of Curran?" |
27925 | The Brand who held forth at the gospel hall? |
27925 | The boy that ran away must have had some marks.... Judy Haskell would know... are they on Endicott''s body?" |
27925 | The childlike eyes, the beautiful, lovable face, the modest glance, the innocent blushes-- had nature such masks for her vilest offspring? |
27925 | The description I have just given you of your life and mine is also----""One moment-- pardon me,"said Horace,"how did you know I was married?" |
27925 | The enemy we fight sacrifices the flower of English youth to maintain its despotism; why should we shrink from sacrifice?" |
27925 | The loom ceased its working a while, and the thought rose up, is vengeance worth the trouble? |
27925 | The love of Arthur, fame as a singer, beauty, and a passion for the perfect life? |
27925 | The next question is: how many people know at this moment who Dillon really is?" |
27925 | The question now is, can we persuade the Irish to overlook his peculiarities about the green and St. Patrick''s Day?" |
27925 | The trap? |
27925 | The woman who had led him into the pit, what of her? |
27925 | The wretched woman has sought him long----""Why do n''t you put her on the track?" |
27925 | Then a suspicion overcame him, and he cried out bitterly:"Do you say the same, Artie?" |
27925 | Then a trainman came running, white and broken- tongued, crying out:"There was a priest on the train-- who has seen him?" |
27925 | Then did you ever meet a merrier lad? |
27925 | Then it would never do for me, with my little career in California unexplained, to have stories of a double identity... is that what you call it?... |
27925 | Then the fact of my wife''s existence did not disturb you at all?" |
27925 | Then the first question I ask myself is: who helped Horace Endicott to become Arthur Dillon?" |
27925 | This fact the nun emphasized by whispering to him as she was about to leave:"I hope you have not neglected your religious duties?" |
27925 | Though certain Edith''s theory was wrong, why should he act like a donkey in disproving it? |
27925 | To change the unchangeable? |
27925 | To whom could he confide him? |
27925 | To- morrow I seek the seclusion of the convent at Park Square-- isn''t_ seclusion_ good? |
27925 | Took a cramp, I reckon?" |
27925 | Was Edith Conyngham the third?" |
27925 | Was he conscious of his own motives? |
27925 | Was it not an American bishop who protested in behalf of the Chinese of San Francisco that they were more desirable immigrants than the sodden Irish? |
27925 | Was it not the rotten reed which he had leaned upon, the woman Sonia, rather than these? |
27925 | Was it possible that the exterior man had changed so thoroughly to match the inner personality which had grown up in him? |
27925 | Was it wonderful that she left the cathedral drawn to her hero as never before? |
27925 | Was n''t that beautiful now? |
27925 | Was she planning for his career? |
27925 | Was sin such a magician that in a day it could evolve out of merry Horace and innocent Sonia two such wretches? |
27925 | Was that her theme?" |
27925 | Was there any straw afloat which could be of service? |
27925 | Was there ever such luck? |
27925 | Was this the grief which made the parting moment terrible? |
27925 | We can see to the first, who will be the other?" |
27925 | Well, why do n''t you speak?" |
27925 | Well,"waking up suddenly to business,"are you all ready for the_ grand coup_--press, manager, all details?" |
27925 | Well,"with a sigh of pleasure,"if that does n''t take among the Methodists and the general public out West and down South, what will?" |
27925 | Were not all Livingstone''s friends on the committee which exposed Sister Claire?" |
27925 | Were not these same sorrows, from their constancy and from repetition, become the joke of the world? |
27925 | What are love and loving without God? |
27925 | What are yer wages here? |
27925 | What are you going to do in a case of that kind? |
27925 | What business had Honora with so much luck? |
27925 | What can he do but kill me?" |
27925 | What can the cleverest man discover, when he''s sure beforehand that there''s nothing to discover?" |
27925 | What can you expect?" |
27925 | What cared the officials for mere cries of rage? |
27925 | What chance has the alliance of success? |
27925 | What conscience flamed so dimly in the Danish prince that he could hesitate before his opportunity? |
27925 | What could a man want to deceive a poor mother so? |
27925 | What could be more sensible than his speech? |
27925 | What could she do but accept his terms, protesting that death was preferable? |
27925 | What course of thought, what set of circumstances, could turn the Puritan mind in the Celtic direction? |
27925 | What crowd?" |
27925 | What d''ye think she''s planning now? |
27925 | What did he care that his enemies had triumphed? |
27925 | What did it matter just then? |
27925 | What did she think of Mona''s remarks?" |
27925 | What did you do for the scattered children of the household? |
27925 | What do they say?" |
27925 | What do you know about her motives? |
27925 | What do you say, Curran?" |
27925 | What do you say? |
27925 | What do you think of it, Senator?" |
27925 | What do you want it for?" |
27925 | What had she to tell? |
27925 | What had we done?" |
27925 | What have I not done to do away with it? |
27925 | What if Claire appeared tall, portly, resonant, youthful, abounding in life, while Edith seemed mute, old, thin, feeble? |
27925 | What if Honora refused this gift laid so reverently at her feet? |
27925 | What if he should decide against you? |
27925 | What if he should scorn it?" |
27925 | What if she should decide against you?" |
27925 | What is doing against it?" |
27925 | What is life without love and loving? |
27925 | What is she to sing?" |
27925 | What is the future but a bare plain with no emphasis at all? |
27925 | What is the meaning of it? |
27925 | What is the past after all but a vague horizon made emphatic by the peaks of memory? |
27925 | What is to be the end of it?" |
27925 | What is your plan?" |
27925 | What land was like this country of the West? |
27925 | What made this strange man so unlike all other men? |
27925 | What more could I ask?" |
27925 | What need to disturb the Irish by naming a man who had always irritated and even insulted them? |
27925 | What remains? |
27925 | What should the third room be? |
27925 | What standard of womanhood and wifehood remained to such men? |
27925 | What tragedy had driven him from one life into another? |
27925 | What would Grahame here, Sullivan, Senator Dillon, or myself have been at this moment had we remained in Ireland? |
27925 | What would be the effect of his disappearance on Sonia and her lover? |
27925 | What would be the effect upon himself? |
27925 | What would be the end of it? |
27925 | What would your superiors say?" |
27925 | What wud yez be doin''in New York, wid yer clothes thrun on yez be a pitchfork, an''lukkin''as if they were made in the ark? |
27925 | What''s all this to do with Ledwith?" |
27925 | What''s the reason for the independent ticket? |
27925 | What''s your aim anyway?" |
27925 | Where do you go now?" |
27925 | Where does Arthur Dillon keep his money? |
27925 | Where had he seen and heard this woman before? |
27925 | Where was it kept before that? |
27925 | Which would cause more pain, to give up your art and your cause, or to give up the convent?" |
27925 | Who asked you to tremble? |
27925 | Who but Horace Endicott could know her crimes? |
27925 | Who but you could play so many parts at once?" |
27925 | Who can follow the way of the world? |
27925 | Who can measure the mind? |
27925 | Who can say? |
27925 | Who could resist the delight of these things? |
27925 | Who could tell when she was not acting? |
27925 | Who discovered it? |
27925 | Who is at the bottom of this thing?" |
27925 | Who knows what is best in this world of change? |
27925 | Who was he to be dealing with such a character as this dubious and disreputable woman? |
27925 | Who was he? |
27925 | Who was to blame? |
27925 | Who would regret the sorrow which led to such a revealing of hearts? |
27925 | Who''s within? |
27925 | Whose hands raised it? |
27925 | Why could he not leave the matter untouched and keep up appearances before the world? |
27925 | Why do men care for us poor creatures so much, Mona?" |
27925 | Why do n''t you go and talk with Artie about it?" |
27925 | Why do you say,''triumph''?" |
27925 | Why do you throw doubt upon it?" |
27925 | Why go back on your own work? |
27925 | Why had she delayed her entrance into the convent a year beyond the time? |
27925 | Why not, if nothing else could be done, go and set fire to Claire''s office, the bishop''s house, and the Livingstone mansion? |
27925 | Why should n''t you say it for yourself? |
27925 | Why should you want to kill her, and put the trail of blood over it all?" |
27925 | Will it be too painful for you to hear the story? |
27925 | Will the lawyers do any better?" |
27925 | Will you ever forget it, Monsignor dear, the night that Honora sang as the Genius of Erin? |
27925 | With all his confidence in Anne''s cleverness, how could he expect her to do the impossible? |
27925 | With all their beauty, what do these abstract loves bring us? |
27925 | Would his own mother mistake him? |
27925 | Would it be his fate to lose Arthur to Ireland by consideration for others? |
27925 | Would it not be better to live under his own name in remote countries, and thus be ready, if fate allowed, to return home at the proper time? |
27925 | Would it not be better to settle forever the last doubts in so peculiar a matter?" |
27925 | Would n''t that be worth seeing? |
27925 | Would n''t you venture on a little protest against his exposing himself to needless danger?" |
27925 | Would she retire to the convent, or find her vocation in the world? |
27925 | Yet were you free, where would be the advantage? |
27925 | You know the marks on Endicott''s body, birthmarks and the like... are they on Dillon''s body? |
27925 | You may remember the effective Sister Claire?" |
27925 | You think, then, that she... but what could be her motive?" |
27925 | You, the clever one? |
27925 | am I to tremble at your frown----?" |
27925 | are you fighting over it already? |
27925 | or was it her look, which seemed intimate, as of earlier acquaintance?... |
27925 | that all the neighbors accepted him? |
27925 | that he does n''t know how to hear Mass, to kneel when he enters a pew, to bless himself when he takes the holy water at the door? |
27925 | that he is indirectly responsible for that scandal?" |
27925 | what makes you think you know it?" |
27925 | what was it? |
27925 | when I am a success?" |
27925 | would I let you mesmerize her at the start by telling her how little you think of my idea and my plans? |
27925 | you spoke of a child?" |
6483 | But how shall we get there, gentlemen? 6483 Have you not found him at this play all along? |
6483 | His Majesty then said, Will you hear me a word, Sir? 6483 That which fits a_ man_ to perform"are the words of the definition; and to perform what? |
6483 | That''tis lawful for women to preach; and why should they not, having gifts as well as men? |
6483 | What friends? |
6483 | Why then should we admit them to the Alphabet, but afterwards debar them from Books? 6483 ( 4)_ Fourth Class or Stage_(_ Ã ¦ tat._ 19- 21? 6483 ( Richard Overton, or Clement Wrighter? 6483 ), and playfully entrust the arrangement of the future means of correspondence to Dati himself, as master of the services of this person?] 6483 --Well, but how did Hartlib stand in the great controversy between the Independents and the Presbyterians? 6483 13- 16? 6483 16- 19? 6483 1? 6483 4:Where the word of a King is, there is power; and who may say unto him, What dost thou?" |
6483 | Actually on Christmas- day 1643( who would have thought it?) |
6483 | All this while, what of the poor girl whose hard fate it was to occasion this experience in the life of a man too grandly and sternly her superior? |
6483 | An Ordinance against Heresies and Blasphemies would make them perfect, and till that came were there not substitutes? |
6483 | And can we hope that the branches of Wisdom can be torn asunder with safety to their life, that is to truth? |
6483 | And do not all men acknowledge him most exquisite at it?" |
6483 | And how had they taught this precious and eternal Latin of theirs? |
6483 | And how had this slaying of books, and even the prevention of their birth, by a Censorship, grown up? |
6483 | And then would there not be more music, mingled with talk perhaps about the Bridgewater family, while Mrs. Milton sat by and listened? |
6483 | And were not the means at hand? |
6483 | And what are Nature''s principles, as transferable into the Art of Education? |
6483 | And what is the Peace thereof but a fleeting dream, thine ape and counterfeit? |
6483 | And what now that the sentence had been pronounced, and Charles in St. James''s was making ready for his doom? |
6483 | And what of surrounding London, what of England, what of the three kingdoms, and the world beyond the seas? |
6483 | And what sort of things may be thus wisely neglected? |
6483 | And what was the opposition? |
6483 | And what were the errors, heresies, and blasphemies, thus publicly certified against by these London divines and the rest? |
6483 | And what, after all, and in precise practical form,_ was_ this tremendous proposition of Milton respecting Divorce? |
6483 | And which of all Milton''s friends was_ not_ willing? |
6483 | And who was he? |
6483 | And who was the friend addressed? |
6483 | And why? |
6483 | And why? |
6483 | Are these the Presbyterians only? |
6483 | At length, on the 13th of October, the Seven presented to the Assembly-- what? |
6483 | At what point, in the course of religious dissent, did a man become a"bad subject?" |
6483 | But how about the command of this Army and the government of Ireland while it should be serving there? |
6483 | But in Holland, where the cowardly Apologists had preferred to stay, what had they been doing? |
6483 | But the real question in every such case is, Does the proposal contain some important improvement which_ is_ practicable? |
6483 | But then who were to ordain? |
6483 | But to what proportion? |
6483 | But was it not the main end of the Covenant that Presbyterial Government should be legally settled in England? |
6483 | But was there no remedy? |
6483 | But what had happened? |
6483 | But what of Fleetwood and Cromwell, left in their places in the House of Commons? |
6483 | But what of Milton? |
6483 | But what within that island itself? |
6483 | But would there ever be such a contest? |
6483 | Can her name have been Miss Davis? |
6483 | Can one be a Natural Philosopher who is not also a Metaphysician? |
6483 | Colonel BARCLAY; Lieutenant- Colonel EWINS( INNES? |
6483 | Could anything more gracefully express Milton''s intention in the volume? |
6483 | Could the King lawfully do what was required of him? |
6483 | Dear Truth, what is the Earth but a dungeon of darkness, where Truth is not? |
6483 | Did Milton refer to some Florentine"Jacopo,"a bookseller( the publisher of Dati''s_ Esequie_? |
6483 | Did Mr. Thomas Edwards in all this represent the whole body of the Presbyterians of his time? |
6483 | Did his Majesty really believe that Episcopacy only was_ jure divino_, and that there could be no true Church without Bishops? |
6483 | Did there not remain for England a tremendous and long- postponed duty beyond her own bounds? |
6483 | Do we fear their rashness? |
6483 | Does it move in the right direction? |
6483 | Environed by such a sea of Presbyterian excitement, what could the Parliament do? |
6483 | For of what use a great Scottish victory would have been at that time to the cause of Presbyterianism? |
6483 | From Sept. 1643, onwards for some years, the test of being a Parliamentarian in England was"Have you signed the Covenant?" |
6483 | Good your worship, look a little more upon your rhetoric in this one piece, shall I say of nonsense? |
6483 | Had Pym and Hampden been alive, what would have been the honours voted for them? |
6483 | Had he a commission from Fairfax? |
6483 | Had he any commission at all? |
6483 | Had her offer to England been"Presbytery with a Toleration,"who knows what a different shaping subsequent events might have assumed? |
6483 | Had not Parliament itself lapsed from those honest No- Address Resolutions of ten months ago which expressed the true sense of the Concordat? |
6483 | Had not the Marquis of Ormond, for example, effected a landing in Wexford, with a view to a junction with the Irish Roman Catholic Confederates? |
6483 | Had not their infamous doctrine become one of the heresies of the age, counting other unblushing exponents, and not a few practical adherents? |
6483 | Had they any trade dislike to Hartlib? |
6483 | Had they not been the nurseries of Episcopacy, and of other things and principles of which England was now declaring herself impatient? |
6483 | Here, at length, in the eleventh chapter, we arrive at the great question, Has such a system of schools been anywhere established? |
6483 | How else can we account for this other Sonnet? |
6483 | How far were the congregations or parishioners to have a voice in the election of their pastors? |
6483 | How is this to be explained? |
6483 | How should an old man judge in such a case? |
6483 | How were they to manage when they were in London? |
6483 | How would that war end? |
6483 | How, in the terms of the new Law, is such licence to sheer libertinism to be avoided? |
6483 | If the Apostle could not suffer it, into what mould is he mortified that can? |
6483 | If there were a league between the two kingdoms for their civil liberties, would not a uniformity in Church matters naturally follow? |
6483 | If they dare not, how can they now make_ that_ licentious doctrine in another which was never blamed or confuted in Bucer or in Fagius? |
6483 | In a case where divorce is desired by the man only, what is to become of the divorced wife? |
6483 | In any lull of war with the Titans what is Jove doing? |
6483 | In spite of the existing Censorship, were not Royalist libels against the Parliament in everybody''s hands in London every week, wet from the press? |
6483 | In the midst of the universal joy, why dwell on a difference between the City and Parliament as to the details of the Presbyterian mechanism? |
6483 | In what dark corner of the world, sweet Peace, are we two met? |
6483 | Is not the damage of her prospects by the fact that she has once been married, if but for a month, something to be taken into account? |
6483 | It is a far cry to Lochawe, as you know; how shall we find the passes, and where shall we find food as we go?" |
6483 | John 3, 10: Art thou a teacher in Israel, and know''st not these things? |
6483 | Kindly talk was all very well: but was there any unmarried lady willing to take the place of the deserter, if asked to do so? |
6483 | Might it not have been better to have written his treatise in Latin? |
6483 | Might not something come out of that? |
6483 | Might not that be found out most easily by trying both? |
6483 | Might not the Scots retrieve their character in this business? |
6483 | Might not the disbanding of this army be so managed as to be at once a deliverance of England from a great danger and the salvation of Ireland? |
6483 | Might not the little knot of Independents fighting within the Assembly represent an amount of opinion out of doors too large to be trifled with? |
6483 | Might there not be a Toleration_ with_ an Established or State Church? |
6483 | Might there not be a temporizing method? |
6483 | Much more in the same strain; and S. H.[ Samuel Hartlib] added,''_ Quo, moriture, ruis? |
6483 | My Lord of Essex.--Who redeemed you? |
6483 | Now at length, now at length, was there not leisure to attend to the case of unhappy Ireland? |
6483 | Now, what were the languages pointed out by this principle as apt for the purposes of education? |
6483 | Officially attached to his Majesty''s household and service, what else could they be? |
6483 | Ought not Comenius to be on the spot? |
6483 | Out of what within Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was the practical form of the idea bred? |
6483 | Parliament, receiving these propositions, would have passed them with alacrity; and what could the English nation have done but acquiesce? |
6483 | Quid gaudia nostra moraris? |
6483 | Reserving this liberty of going farther for themselves, how could they refuse toleration for those who had already gone farther? |
6483 | Shall we be less merciful than the Turks? |
6483 | Should the new Presbyterian State Church of England be established with or without a liberty of dissent from it? |
6483 | Since the Irish Rebellion the fixed residence of herself and her husband had been in( Pall Mall?) |
6483 | So much for a review of his past acts; but what were his_ present_ grounds? |
6483 | Such being the programme, what was the performance? |
6483 | That is settled; and the question is, What Church Reformation shall there now be? |
6483 | That the Commons might not be left in the vague, a Mr. Picot in Guernsey, and a Mr. Knolles, recently in Cornwall( Hanserd Knollys? |
6483 | The King being then at Newcastle with the Scots, where were the other chief Royalists? |
6483 | Then, should there be children, what are to be the arrangements? |
6483 | They said, What were the Lords of England but William the Conqueror''s colonels, or the Barons but his majors, or the Knights but his captains? |
6483 | This is the question to be asked respecting Milton''s plan for a Reformed Education, How does Dr. Johnson answer it? |
6483 | Waller.--Who sanctified and preserved you? |
6483 | Was Charles to be taken at his word? |
6483 | Was Miss Davis to be persuaded to be mistress of this new house? |
6483 | Was Plurality one of the very few institutions of Prelacy which Presbyterian godliness was willing to preserve? |
6483 | Was Rush worth the reporter?] |
6483 | Was all this to last? |
6483 | Was it not unfair to Presbyterianism thus to anticipate so ostentatiously that there would be many whom it would not satisfy? |
6483 | Was not Milton pursuing a new method with his pupils, between which and the method of Comenius there were points in common? |
6483 | Was not the Religious question the main one, the_ unum necessarium,_ deserving the first place in any national negotiation? |
6483 | Was not the great Mr. Selden understood to hold opinions on Marriage and Divorce very much the same as those Mr. Milton had published? |
6483 | Was the Army to let itself be disbanded without due security on these points? |
6483 | Was the Covenant to be voted out of date, and buried in the ashes of oblivion? |
6483 | Was there accessible any lady in whom the two indispensable conditions of fitness and willingness could be found united? |
6483 | Was there no exception? |
6483 | Was there then to be no arrest, might there be no delay? |
6483 | Was there to be any discretion; or was the State to regulate what offences should be punished by excommunication? |
6483 | Was there to be no check to this Presbyterian inquisitorship? |
6483 | Were not these acts, though done in England, outrages on Scotland as well, and against the obligations of the Covenant? |
6483 | Were the Nineteen Propositions to be flung overboard, and the Army Proposals publicly brought forward instead? |
6483 | Were they not still in circulation, doing infinite harm? |
6483 | What amount of progress had they made at the date at which we have now arrived? |
6483 | What are the facts? |
6483 | What are we to make of this discrepancy? |
6483 | What but Presbytery and Anti- Toleration? |
6483 | What could Lord Lisle do without troops? |
6483 | What could a man require more from a Nation so pliant and so prone to seek after knowledge? |
6483 | What could be done with such a man? |
6483 | What could the poor House of Commons do? |
6483 | What did he want to make of Scotland? |
6483 | What did it all mean? |
6483 | What do we see? |
6483 | What does such a fellow know of Christ''s meaning? |
6483 | What had become of this Accommodation Order? |
6483 | What had been his behaviour? |
6483 | What had been the appearances? |
6483 | What had been the hindrances to its attainment? |
6483 | What had happened in the Aldersgate household in the interval? |
6483 | What if it never be made up with him? |
6483 | What if the plight in which he found himself were no necessary and irremediable evil? |
6483 | What if the principle of State- licensing were carried out? |
6483 | What if these Austro- Slavic dreams of his should be realized on the banks of the Thames? |
6483 | What is the consequence? |
6483 | What might not be hoped for from the Parliament if they were fitly addressed on such a theme? |
6483 | What might not be in agitation under this proposal of a removal of the King to Oatlands? |
6483 | What might that chance be, and what worse chances might come of the siege itself? |
6483 | What next? |
6483 | What of England and London? |
6483 | What of it? |
6483 | What provision is to be made for this? |
6483 | What real political intention lay under the meteor- like track of his marches and battles? |
6483 | What safe retirement for literary leisure could you suppose given one among so many battles of a civil war, slaughters, flights, seizures of goods? |
6483 | What should he do? |
6483 | What that was, who needed to be told? |
6483 | What then were his thoughts when the news of Naseby reached him? |
6483 | What then will become of all our legal and judicial proceedings? |
6483 | What though there are bad and mischievous books? |
6483 | What thought Traquair, Carnwath, Annandale, and Roxburgh? |
6483 | What was Montrose''s meaning? |
6483 | What was he to do? |
6483 | What was that? |
6483 | What was the last news that had reached London? |
6483 | What was the upshot? |
6483 | What was to be done? |
6483 | What was to be done? |
6483 | What was to be the ceremonial of ordination? |
6483 | What was to come of it all? |
6483 | What was winter, snow more or less upon the mountains, ice more or less upon the lakes, to those hardy Highlanders? |
6483 | What was_ his_ offence? |
6483 | What were the remedies? |
6483 | What were to be the powers of the parochial consistories and the other church courts respectively? |
6483 | What were to be the qualifications for being ordained to the pastoral office? |
6483 | What will all the Christian Churches through the world, to whose notice these lines shall come, think of our woeful degeneration,& c."? |
6483 | What, in particular, had made Scotland the country it was, pure in faith, united in action, and with a Church"terrible as an army with banners"? |
6483 | What, then, were they to do? |
6483 | What, though London was staunchly and all but universally Presbyterian? |
6483 | When he wrote thus, to what did he look forward, and to what might others have looked forward for him? |
6483 | When the wicked plot against the just and gnash upon him with their teeth, doth not the Lord laugh at them and see that their day is coming? |
6483 | Whence could a check come? |
6483 | Where was it first to be employed? |
6483 | Where was the younger Sir Harry Vane? |
6483 | Where was toleration to stop? |
6483 | Which course would be the best? |
6483 | Which if we admit from all and sundry, why not from men of mature wisdom and heroic reason?'' |
6483 | Which of the two should it be? |
6483 | Which part of the conjoint army had behaved best in the battle, and to which general did the chief honours of the day belong? |
6483 | While these were the descending or vanishing stars of the English firmament, who were the stars that had risen in their places? |
6483 | While they were slowly working it out, what could he do but occupy himself, as patiently as possible, with his books and studies? |
6483 | Who but Alcuin and Wicklif, our countrymen, opened the eyes of Europe, the one in Arts, the other in Religion? |
6483 | Who but the Northumbrian Willibrod and Winifrid of Devon, with their followers, were the first Apostles of Germany? |
6483 | Who can part with this father of one of the greatest of Englishmen without a last look of admiration and regret? |
6483 | Who could interfere with such a son, and why had God given them abundance but that such a son might have the leisure he desired? |
6483 | Who does not know the picturesque popular myth at this point of Cromwell''s biography? |
6483 | Who knew but his voice might be heard? |
6483 | Who that has read Scott''s_ Legend of Montrose_ but must be curious as to the facts of real History on which that romance was founded? |
6483 | Who was Joyce, and what had he done? |
6483 | Who was it but our English Constantine that baptized the Roman Empire? |
6483 | Who, then, is the_ fifty- ninth_? |
6483 | Why did he choose those particular Psalms? |
6483 | Why had it not been attained? |
6483 | Why is it harder, Sirs, than_ Gordon_,_ Colkitto_, or_ Macdonnell_, or_ Galasp_? |
6483 | Why not have a University in London? |
6483 | Why was all in vain? |
6483 | Will you allow an universal liberty of this? |
6483 | Will you grant them this liberty; or can you, without destroying all bonds of civil converse, and wholly overthrowing of all human judicature? |
6483 | Winter was their idlest time; they were ready for any enterprise: only what was it to be? |
6483 | Would Cromwell tolerate a Paul Best? |
6483 | Would he have carried the mass of the Presbyterians with him? |
6483 | Would it not be a service of moment to England? |
6483 | Would it not be more than a revenge if Milton were to express his thoughts on this subject? |
6483 | Would its advocates be so good as to think of its operation in the concrete? |
6483 | Would not this in itself be an attraction to Hartlib? |
6483 | Yes, but_ was_ Cromwell the hero of Marston Moor, or_ had_ Marston Moor been won mainly by the Independents? |
6483 | Yet why should it have been impossible in consistency even with that belief? |
6483 | [ no farther indication of the person addressed: was it Sir Thomas Roe?] |
6483 | [_ Potesne contradicentem ferre_?]'' |
6483 | _ King_: No, Sir? |
6483 | and is it come to this? |
6483 | but would it ever be delivered to the Scots? |
6483 | but, whoever were the inventors, might not the invention itself be good? |
6483 | can doubt that he had carried in his mind while alive some profound and peculiar form of the idea of Toleration? |
6483 | l2-l3? |
6483 | minoraque viribus audes_?'' |
6483 | or a Logician who has no knowledge of real matters? |
6483 | or a Theologian, a Jurisconsult, or a Physician, who is not first a Philosopher? |
6483 | or an Ethical Thinker who does not know something of Physical Science? |
6483 | or an Orator or Poet who is not all things at once? |
6483 | or shall we learn the Turks to persecute Christians? |
6483 | or would they have deposed him from the leadership? |
6483 | p. 23)? |
6483 | where is the promise of the God of Heaven, that Righteousness and Peace shall kiss each other? |
6946 | & ca n''t our Soisety go in free? |
6946 | ''Green turtle soup, first?'' 6946 A Capting?" |
6946 | A Colonial? |
6946 | A Gen''ral? |
6946 | A Majer? |
6946 | A leftenant? |
6946 | A whichist? |
6946 | After all,he sed,"you have sum people at the North who air not wholly loathsum beasts?" |
6946 | Ai n''t we at the Spotted Boar? |
6946 | Ai n''t you afraid if you set this example be4 him he''ll cum to a bad end? |
6946 | Ai n''t you proud of your orfurn boy? |
6946 | Air you a Orangeman? |
6946 | Air you a Shaker, sir? |
6946 | Air you a painter and glazier, sir? |
6946 | Air you a preacher, sir? |
6946 | Air you gone, William? |
6946 | Air you in the show bizniz, William? |
6946 | Air you well, sir? |
6946 | And how ist with you? |
6946 | And how many is there of she? |
6946 | And so,I said,"thou hast no ear for sweet melody?" |
6946 | And the passengers? |
6946 | And this Mr. Cromwell-- is he dead? |
6946 | And who be you? |
6946 | And your Master,sed Philander,"where is he?" |
6946 | And,continued the old man, in a voice husky with emotion,"are you in favor of a vigorous prosecution of the war?" |
6946 | Are you ready? |
6946 | But soft: methinks report-- perchance unjustly-- hast spoken suspiciously of thee, most Royal d''Sardine? 6946 But,"I said,"do n''t you know he was the greatest Poit that ever lived? |
6946 | But,sez he,"you hav feelins into you? |
6946 | Buy Napoleon? |
6946 | Can I see her? |
6946 | Dew you know who we air? |
6946 | Did Bill belong to it? |
6946 | Did it fit him well? 6946 Do I feel for it?" |
6946 | Do n''t I? |
6946 | Do you call such conduck as THOSE a little excentrissity? |
6946 | Do you feel for the down- trodden? |
6946 | Do you know the Gin''ral? |
6946 | Do you see them beans, old man? |
6946 | Do you see''em? |
6946 | Do you wish to impede the progress of this procession, sah? |
6946 | Does he? 6946 Dost not the actors all call it Juke?" |
6946 | Dost thou not know? |
6946 | Duz the old man take his Lager beer reglar? |
6946 | Eagle? 6946 Elder, I spect?" |
6946 | Father livin? |
6946 | Got any Uncles? |
6946 | Got what? |
6946 | Hallo, Sal,I hollered,"ca n''t you measure me a quart of them best melasses? |
6946 | Hast been gathering shells from youth to age, and then leaving them like a che- eild? 6946 Hast thou not yearned for me?" |
6946 | Have you anything to say? |
6946 | Have you sons grown up, sir? |
6946 | Hello, old Beeswax,he bellered;"how''s yer grandmams? |
6946 | Helth''s good, I reckon? |
6946 | How do you like it as far as you hev got? |
6946 | How is that? |
6946 | How is that? |
6946 | How kin I ever repay you, Mr. Ward, for your kindness? |
6946 | How kin I ever repay you, sir? |
6946 | How much do you ax for a man breathin in this equinomikal tarvun? |
6946 | How much giv- ee? |
6946 | How''bout my Cabinit, Mister Ward? |
6946 | How''s Lewis? |
6946 | How''s things, daddy? |
6946 | How, Sir? |
6946 | I am Lonely sints My Mother- in- law Died;"Dear Mother, What tho''the Hand that Spanked me in my Childhood''s Hour is withered now?" |
6946 | I am here, your daughter''s equal and yours? |
6946 | I beg pardon,said the Squire,"for the remark; you are sober; but what on airth are you drivin at?" |
6946 | I''m sorry for that,said the lan''lord with a sigh,"but you think he was a man who would wish to see licensed vittlers respected in their rights?" |
6946 | If I may be so bold, kind sir, what''s the price of that pecooler kind of weskit you wear, incloodin trimmins? |
6946 | If the storm continners there''ll be a mess underfoot, hay? |
6946 | Inasmuch as to how? |
6946 | Inasmuch as to which? |
6946 | Is Mr. Greeley on board? |
6946 | Is he? |
6946 | Is it not beautiful, papa? 6946 Is it the coat of a young man secreted in this here cabin?" |
6946 | Is it to stay at home& darn stockins& be the ser- LAVE of a domineerin man? 6946 Is n''t Grant here?" |
6946 | Is the Sperret of William Tompkins present? |
6946 | Is this roll- book to be filled up with the names of men or wimin? |
6946 | Is your liver all right? 6946 It''s onpleasant when there''s a mess underfoot?" |
6946 | Know you, you old fool? 6946 Measured for what?" |
6946 | Mister Ward, do n''t your blud bile at the thawt that three million and a half of your culled brethren air a clankin their chains in the South? |
6946 | Mr. Linkin, who do you spect I air? |
6946 | Mrs. Ward,said the editor of the Bugle--"Mrs. WARD and ladies, what means this extr''ord''n''ry demonstration?" |
6946 | My brother,I sed,"air you aware that you''ve bin mancipated? |
6946 | My colored fren,I said to the negro, kindly,"what is it all about?" |
6946 | My pretty dears,sez I,"shall we YAY agin?" |
6946 | My young friend,said I, in a loud voice,"whose store do you sell tape in? |
6946 | Never seen Ward? |
6946 | No,sez I, getting up and lookin under the seet,"whare is she?" |
6946 | Not by no means,he answered, and then he said,"And what is your opinyin of the present crisis?" |
6946 | Now, Sir,I proudly said,"you know me?" |
6946 | Of whom dost thow speak-- Brother Uriah? |
6946 | Oh,she said,"it''s you, is it? |
6946 | Sakes alive, what air you doin? |
6946 | Since you air so solicitous about France and the Emperor, may I ask you how your own country is getting along? |
6946 | Sir,said Mr. Greeley,"are you aware that I must be at Placerville at 7 o''clock to- night?" |
6946 | Sir,sed he, turnin as red as a biled beet,"do n''t you know that the rules of our Church is that I, the Profit, may hev as meny wives as I wants?" |
6946 | Sir? |
6946 | So I see,she said;"where''s the mules?" |
6946 | The foreman? |
6946 | The little birds,continued the female,"dost not love to gaze onto them?" |
6946 | The sexes liv strickly apart, I spect? |
6946 | The umbreller? |
6946 | Themwas not grammatical, but why care for grammar as long as we are good? |
6946 | Then thou ist what the cold world calls marrid? |
6946 | There''s a putty big crop of patrits this season, ai n''t there, Squire? |
6946 | There, gentleMEN, what do you think them gentlemen say? 6946 To be sure,"said Abe--"what was it? |
6946 | To see Albert Edard the Prince of Wales,sez I;"who are you?" |
6946 | Too old? 6946 Wall, whot upon arth duz she doo it fur?" |
6946 | Wall,sez I,"Albert Edard, how''s the old folks?" |
6946 | Was it in the Crimea, comrade? 6946 Well,"said the lan''lord,"why do n''t you go to the willins about it? |
6946 | Whar away? |
6946 | Whar''s the old man? |
6946 | Whare bowts? |
6946 | What do you expect will come of this kind of doin''s? 6946 What do you follow, sir?" |
6946 | What has ruffled your spirits, friend? |
6946 | What is my Spear? |
6946 | What time does this string of second- hand coffins leave? |
6946 | What under the son are you abowt? |
6946 | What upon arth is that? |
6946 | What wessel''s that air? |
6946 | What wouldst thou, seafaring man? |
6946 | What you bowt, sah? 6946 What you doin, Betsy?" |
6946 | What''s Old Revelashun got to do with my show? |
6946 | What''s that? |
6946 | What''s the matter with him? |
6946 | What''s the matter with the eminent physician? |
6946 | What''s the matter with you? |
6946 | What''s the wages of a Elder, when he understans his bizness-- or do you devote your sarvices gratooitus? |
6946 | What''s them? 6946 What''s your weight, parson?" |
6946 | What? |
6946 | Where hast thou been? |
6946 | Where is that? |
6946 | Which? |
6946 | Which? |
6946 | Who trod on him? |
6946 | Whose coat is this? |
6946 | Why do you allow your pashuns to run away with you in this onseemly stile, my misgided frend? |
6946 | Why do you sink yourself to the Beasts of the field? |
6946 | Why not, my parient? |
6946 | Why not? |
6946 | Why this jumpin up and singin? 6946 Will they probly continner on in that stile to any grate extent, Sir?" |
6946 | Wiltist thou not tarry here in the promist Land? |
6946 | Wo n''t you let my darter in? |
6946 | Wot''d you git? |
6946 | Yes; for the oppressed, the benighted? |
6946 | You air a marrid man, Mister Yung, I bleeve? |
6946 | You are old pie, ai n''t you? |
6946 | You have no Tower in America? |
6946 | You know Bill Spikes? |
6946 | You see this man? |
6946 | You see what I''m drivin at, do n''t you, Cap? |
6946 | You will throw off eight hundred dollars-- you will? |
6946 | You''re in favor of the war? |
6946 | & is it cum to this? |
6946 | & what more do you want? |
6946 | 1,"did you railly sell that kickin''spavin''d critter to mother? |
6946 | 2, who was a quieter sort of person,"have you no sentiment-- no poetry in your soul-- no love for the beautiful? |
6946 | A solum female, lookin sumwhat like a last year''s beanpole stuck into a long meal bag, cum in axed me was I athurst and did I hunger? |
6946 | A voice--"Why do n''t you go yourself, you old blowhard?" |
6946 | Am I right? |
6946 | And I said--"Why is this thus? |
6946 | And a voice said:"Who is it?" |
6946 | And what upon airth do the people of Concord, N.H., want a Muslum of Harts for? |
6946 | And, Moses,"she continnered, layin her he d confidinly agin his weskit,"dost know I sumtimes think thou istest of noble birth?" |
6946 | Are the Mormon women happy? |
6946 | As I was peroosin the bill a grave young man who sot near me axed me if I''d ever seen Forrest dance the Essence of Old Virginny? |
6946 | At last Philander found his utterance, and said,"Do they think of me at Home, do they ever think of me?" |
6946 | At that tender age I writ a Essy for a lit''ry Institoot entitled,"Is Cats to be Trusted?" |
6946 | Blarst my hize, sir, did I understan you to say that you was actooally goin into the presents of his Royal Iniss?" |
6946 | But I ax your pardon-- how''s things?" |
6946 | But I have time to look around sum& how do I find things? |
6946 | But I said:"What name?" |
6946 | But does this bold young Hibernian forsake her? |
6946 | But hav''you seen the Grate Orgin?" |
6946 | But we''ve got the Afrikan, or ruther he''s got us,& now what air we going to do about it? |
6946 | But, Mr. Ward, wo n''t you eat suthin?'' |
6946 | But, my liege,"and the brave Hellitysplit eyes flashed fire,"myself and sword are at thy command?" |
6946 | CHAPTER II.--WAS MOSES Of NOBLE BIRTH? |
6946 | Ca n''t it be done?" |
6946 | Caesar made it lively for the boys in Gaul, did n''t he? |
6946 | D''ye hear?" |
6946 | DID you ever?" |
6946 | DR. S.--Have you a banquet spread in the house? |
6946 | Did he go to"the Lodge"on nites when there was n''t any Lodge? |
6946 | Do I miss the glare and crash of the imperial thoroughfare? |
6946 | Do n''t you see he''s worrid most to death? |
6946 | Do you know a eppylit from a piece of chalk? |
6946 | Do you realize how glorus it is to be free? |
6946 | Do you s''pose a sculper would send for me for that purpose onless he knowd I was overflowing with innocency? |
6946 | Do you think the Mormons would be as good a subject to the Londoners as Mont Blanc was?" |
6946 | Does he not, by this simple yit tuchin gesture, welcum me to England? |
6946 | Does n''t he? |
6946 | Does this proposition strike you? |
6946 | Dost never go into the green fields to cull the beautiful flowers?" |
6946 | Doth it breathe and have a being? |
6946 | During the evening he asked Mr. Evarts, of New York,"why Chicago was like a hen crossing the street?" |
6946 | FOOLISH LITTLE GIRL:--"Thank you, sir; but I have a sister at home as foolish as I am; ca n''t you give me a dollar for her?" |
6946 | Ha, what is this? |
6946 | Ha- awe you per- aged to- night? |
6946 | Haave you per- ayed tonight?" |
6946 | Hain''t you got the State House now? |
6946 | Hav you ever heard of Ginral Price of Missouri, and can you avoid simler accidents in case of a battle? |
6946 | Have you a dagerretype of Wendell Phillips about your person? |
6946 | Have you a doughnut or a piece of custard pie about you?" |
6946 | Have you ever had the measles, and if so, how many? |
6946 | Have you got it very bad?" |
6946 | He came forward, and cried,"What do I see? |
6946 | He frowned on me, and sed, kinder scornful,"So, Sir-- you come here to taunt us in our hour of trouble, do you?" |
6946 | He pawsed a minit and then sed,"Air yu aware, Sir, that the krisis is with us?" |
6946 | He sed,"Do you want to be ground to powder?" |
6946 | He smilt& sed praps I was rite, tho it was ellermunts instid of ellerfunts that he was alludin to,& axed me what was my prinserpuls? |
6946 | He was a able- bodied young man, and, remoovin his coat, he enquired if I wanted to be ground to powder? |
6946 | How air you now? |
6946 | How could I? |
6946 | How did he repay me for this kindness? |
6946 | How do yer git along?" |
6946 | How do you like that air perfumery?" |
6946 | How does that strike you for a joke?" |
6946 | How is this? |
6946 | How long has she bin in that way?" |
6946 | How shall I treat the subject? |
6946 | How was I to be greeted by the Mormons? |
6946 | How''s that?" |
6946 | How''s your koff?" |
6946 | I continnered, warmin up considerable,"ca n''t you giv Abe a minit''s peace? |
6946 | I cood not stay in the west room only a minit, so strong was my feelings, so I rusht out and ceased my dubbel barrild gun"What on airth ales the man?" |
6946 | I forgot Betsy Jane in my rapter, and sez I,"my pretty dears, how air you?" |
6946 | I had other adventers of a startlin kind, but why continner? |
6946 | I have always come back safely heretofore, and why should I fear? |
6946 | I return to the Atlantic States after a absence of ten months,& what State do I find the country in? |
6946 | I said,"Oh, had n''t I?" |
6946 | I said,"Why these weeps?" |
6946 | I saw the landlord and sed,"How d''ye do, Square?" |
6946 | I was drawin near to the Prince when a red- faced man in Millingtery close grabd holt of me and axed me whare I was goin all so bold? |
6946 | I''m''fraid I did git half asleep, for on hearin the minister ask,"Why was man made to mourn?" |
6946 | If I trust you with a real gun, how many men of your own company do you speck you can manage to kill durin the war? |
6946 | If you ask me, How pious is he? |
6946 | If you decline paying this price, as you undoubtedly will if you are right in your head, he again asks,"how much giv- ee?" |
6946 | Is it a go?" |
6946 | Is it a newspaper yarn? |
6946 | Is it alive? |
6946 | Is it cavilry?" |
6946 | Is it some dreams? |
6946 | Is there a sister in these keers that has her proper Spear?" |
6946 | Is this Boy as I nurtered with a Parent''s care into his childhood''s hour-- is he goin''to be a Grate American humorist? |
6946 | It is now some two thousand years--""Is it, indeed?" |
6946 | It was of that onprincipled taler, and I said,"Has my clothin''a Welchy appearance?" |
6946 | Knowest thou aught of these things, most noble Hellitysplit?" |
6946 | Landing, he at once imprinted a conservative kiss on the Canada Line, and feelingly asked himself,"Who will care for Mother now? |
6946 | Looking at these girls reminds me that I, too, was once young and where are the friends of my youth? |
6946 | McFadden?'' |
6946 | Meetin a young married couple, they asked me if I could direct them to the hotel which Washington Irving used to keep? |
6946 | Must I kill a man every time I come to Carson?" |
6946 | Must we be ever ground under by the iron heel of despotic Briton? |
6946 | My bloomin young daughter, Sarah Ann, bothered me summut by singin,"Why do summer roses fade?" |
6946 | Or is it my Spear to vote& speak& show myself the ekal of a man? |
6946 | Over five hundred persons have seen this wonderful BEING this mornin, and they said as they come out,''What can these''ere things be? |
6946 | Owdashus man, who air you?" |
6946 | Peasly, air you a parent?" |
6946 | Philander Reed loved Mabel Tucker, and Ever of her was Fondly Dreaming; and she used to say,"Will you love me Then as Now?" |
6946 | Rubbin his hot face with a red handkercher, he said,"Is the strange bein a American?" |
6946 | Says the man who was fixed out to kill in his Boston dressin'',''Where''s them mules?'' |
6946 | Sed I,"2 be shure I see her-- is she mutch sick?" |
6946 | Sez I,"Albert Edard, is that you?" |
6946 | Sez I,"Fair youth, do you know what I''d do with you if you was my sun?" |
6946 | Sez I,"My frends, dostest think I''d stoop to that there?" |
6946 | Sez I,"Square, you would n''t take a small post- offiss if you could git it, would you?" |
6946 | Sez I,"What duz it siggerfy?" |
6946 | Sez I,"Which?" |
6946 | Sez I,"William, how goze it, Old Sweetness?" |
6946 | Sez I,"William, how so?" |
6946 | Sez I,"William, my luvly friend, can you pay me that 13 dollars you owe me?" |
6946 | Sez he,"How fares the Ship of State in yure regine of country?" |
6946 | Shall I write it? |
6946 | Shall one brother put the knife to the throat of anuther brother? |
6946 | Shall the star spangled Banner be cut up into dishcloths? |
6946 | Shall we make a 2nd Mexico of ourselves? |
6946 | Shall we mix our whisky with each other''s blud? |
6946 | Shall we sell our birthrite for a mess of potash? |
6946 | She eyed me over very sharp, and then startin back she sed, in a wild voice:"Ah, can it be?" |
6946 | She grabd me vilently by the coat collar, and brandishin her umbreller wildly round, exclaimed:"Air you a man?" |
6946 | She said:"Drat you, what do you come a- chaffin me for?" |
6946 | She sez,"And can it be so? |
6946 | So sez I,"marrige is agin your rules, I bleeve, marm?" |
6946 | Sumtimes I ax myself"is it not a dream?" |
6946 | Sure nothin do n''t ail your liver?" |
6946 | Take, do n''t you? |
6946 | Tell me, my dear brother, does it not seem like some dreams, or do you realize the great fact in all its livin''and holy magnitood?" |
6946 | The Committee were lost in admiration for a few moments, when they recovered, and asked one of Honest Old Abe''s boys whose boy he was? |
6946 | The follerin was among the varis questions which I put to recroots: Do you know a masked battery from a hunk of gingerbread? |
6946 | The leader was on horseback,& ridin up to me he sed,"Air you Orange?" |
6946 | The milkman, the fiery, untamed omnibus horses, the soda fountains, Central Park, and those things? |
6946 | The pint is, can I hav your Hall by payin a fair price? |
6946 | The remembrance often makes me ask--"Where are the boys of my youth?" |
6946 | Then I axed him was Lewis a good provider? |
6946 | Then throwing considerable pathos into my voice, I said: Then throwing considerable pathos into my voice I said,"You have a mother?" |
6946 | Then why this hulla- balloo about freein Ireland? |
6946 | Then, with patriotic jocularity, he inquired,"How is your High Daddy in the Morning?" |
6946 | There was an execution in Ohio one day, and the Sheriff, before placing the rope round the murderer''s neck, asked him if he had any remarks to make? |
6946 | They are cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?" |
6946 | They said--"Doth not like us?" |
6946 | They sed the Postles did n''t wear boots,& why should they? |
6946 | They seemed deeply impressed by the remark, and wantid to know if I had seen the Grate Orgin? |
6946 | They then said--"Wilt not marry us?" |
6946 | This long weskit bizniss, and this anty- matrimony idee? |
6946 | This made a few ignent and low- mindid persons larf; but what was the fate of that young man? |
6946 | This was more than the young Englishman could stand, and rising from his bed he asked us if New Grenada was n''t a Republic? |
6946 | Throughout all this have you been loyal?" |
6946 | To which I pleasantly replied,"How''l you have your tripe?" |
6946 | To which the Chinaman excitedly cried,"No have got-- how can do?" |
6946 | Too old?" |
6946 | True, a musket is a little heavier than a yardstick, but is n''t it a rather more manly weapon?" |
6946 | Turning to Mr. Hingston one day he asked:"What sort of a man is Albert Smith? |
6946 | WHAT''S UP?" |
6946 | Ward?" |
6946 | Was he measured for it?" |
6946 | Was it custom made? |
6946 | Was this Cromwell a licensed vittler?" |
6946 | Whare bowts can George''s ekal be found? |
6946 | What air you here for?" |
6946 | What are your sentiments?" |
6946 | What could I do but modestly get up and express a fervint hope that the Atlantic Cable would bind the two countries still more closely together? |
6946 | What could I do?--What could a poor old orphan do? |
6946 | What d''ye say?" |
6946 | What did he say to me? |
6946 | What did the grizzly old cuss do, however, but commence darncin and larfin in the most joyous manner? |
6946 | What do you think of that?" |
6946 | What good was it,"I cried,"for Sebastopol to fall down without enwelopin in its ruins that viper?" |
6946 | What is the reason of this thusness?" |
6946 | What is this grate meetin drivin at? |
6946 | What particler Loonatic Asylum hev you& yure frends escaped frum, ef I may be so bold?" |
6946 | What say?" |
6946 | What should be the subject of my lecture? |
6946 | What the debble you doin, sah?" |
6946 | What then? |
6946 | What wages does a man git for a glorious career, when he finds himself?" |
6946 | What will become of Mormonism? |
6946 | What will you charge, sir,"I continued,"to throw some soul into my fence?" |
6946 | What''ll yer poison yourself with?" |
6946 | What''s all the grate Finian meetins drivin at all over the country? |
6946 | What''s the good of continnerly stirrin him up with a ten- foot pole? |
6946 | What''s up in Terry Hawt?" |
6946 | When the fair Elizy recovered from her delight at meetin Moses, she said:--"How hast the battle gonest? |
6946 | When we broke up, sez I,"my pretty dears, ear I go you hav no objections, hav you, to a innersent kiss at partin?" |
6946 | When you goin''to feed your stuffed animils?" |
6946 | When, in the broad glare of the noonday sun, a speckled jackass boldly and maliciously kicks over a peanut- stand, do we"reason"with him? |
6946 | Which? |
6946 | Who ar you?" |
6946 | Who can save our national capeetle? |
6946 | Who''d you sell her to?" |
6946 | Why broil in my rooms? |
6946 | Why did his rockets go down instead of up? |
6946 | Why do n''t you behave desunt like other folks? |
6946 | Why do n''t you show us a statesman who can rise up to the Emergency, and cave in the Emergency''s head? |
6946 | Why do n''t you show us a statesman-- sumbody who can make a speech that will hit the pop''lar hart right under the great Public weskit? |
6946 | Why do you come here tellin us niggers is our brothers, and brandishin your umbrellers round us like a lot of lunytics? |
6946 | Why lasserate the Public Boozum with these here things? |
6946 | Why stay in New York when I had a village green? |
6946 | Why these Sadfulness?" |
6946 | Why this tremors? |
6946 | Will a troo history of your sufferins ever be written? |
6946 | Will the peple of my native town be proud of me in three hundred years? |
6946 | Will you join me, fellow- citizens, in a glorious career? |
6946 | With his hand upon the door- latch, he turns and once more asks,"how much giv- ee?" |
6946 | With our resunt grate triumps on the Mississippi, the Father of Waters( and them is waters no Father need feel''shamed of-- twig the wittikism?) |
6946 | Wonder ef it will mend a sinner''s wickid waze? |
6946 | Wonder if the Editor of the Eagle of Freedom sees it?" |
6946 | Wonder whether a certain editor''s wife thinks she can palm off a brass watch- chain on this community for a gold one?" |
6946 | Would thow like to be a Shaker?" |
6946 | YOU here again?" |
6946 | You cimpathize with the misfortunit, the loly& the hart- sick, do n''t you?" |
6946 | You slid into the world all ready grow''d, did n''t you? |
6946 | ansered the lan''lord, in a puzzled voice--"do I feel for it?" |
6946 | cried I. Sez he,"What did you bring this pussylanermus cuss here fur?" |
6946 | did he cum home arly nites? |
6946 | did he hav a extensiv acquaintance among poor young widders whose husbands was in Californy? |
6946 | did he often hav to go down town to meet a friend? |
6946 | did he perfoom her bedroom at a onseasonable hour with gin and tanzy? |
6946 | do me eyes deceive me earsight? |
6946 | does he?" |
6946 | he replied;"kin I sell you a razor strop?" |
6946 | how much giv- ee?" |
6946 | my friends-- what is home without a family? |
6946 | said the lan''lord--"is he? |
6946 | screamed Pettingill, wild with rage;"do n''t you think I do?" |
6946 | sed one of the wimin-- a tall and feroshus lookin critter, with a blew kotton umbreller under her arm--"do you know who we air, Sir?" |
6946 | sed the Secky, risin hastily and glarin wildly at me,"what do you mean?" |
6946 | sez I;"do n''t his vittles sit well on his stummick?" |
48213 | ''But whence, O Socrates,''he said,''can we procure a skillful charmer for such a case, now you are about to leave us?'' 48213 And I should like to know if father has found out the answer to that hard question I gave him last Sunday?" |
48213 | And Jesus cried and said, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
48213 | And are they all dust? 48213 And do you find this effort a restraint on your enjoyment?" |
48213 | And she called the name of the Lord that spake unto her, Thou God seest me; for she said, Have I also here looked after him that seeth me? |
48213 | And what if their God were present? |
48213 | And what is that? |
48213 | And why may we not be at feasts where libations are made to Apollo or Jupiter? |
48213 | And you, from your own feelings, avoid what is indelicate and impure in conversation, and yet feel it no restraint? |
48213 | And, mother, you will tell us some more about Solomon''s temple and his palaces, wo n''t you? |
48213 | Art thou bewildered by contesting voices,-- Sick to thy soul of party noise and strife? 48213 Besides,"said Helen,"are not people sometimes repelled from religion by a want of cheerfulness in its professors?" |
48213 | But are not foolish talking and jesting expressly forbidden? |
48213 | But do you suppose,said I,"that the_ common_ class of minds, with ordinary advantages, can do what you have done?" |
48213 | But does not the holy Paul say,''Be not conformed to this world''? |
48213 | But is there not great danger of becoming light and trifling if one allows this? |
48213 | But really, Mary,said the young man,"is n''t three dollars very high?" |
48213 | But tell me, my dear children, are you sure that you are quite ready for the Sabbath? 48213 But what good does it do, uncle?" |
48213 | But why should our courtly circle To the thought give further place? 48213 But, mother, I''m cold,"says a little voice from the scanty bed in the corner;"may n''t I get up and come to the fire?" |
48213 | But, mother,says little Henry,"wo n''t God send us something to eat to- morrow?" |
48213 | But, mother,says little Mary,"if God is our Father, and loves us, what does he let us be so poor for?" |
48213 | But, uncle, will not such carefulness destroy all freedom in conversation? |
48213 | But, uncle,said Helen,"what does that text mean that we began with? |
48213 | But,said I,"would not the Sunday- school library answer all the purpose of this?" |
48213 | Ca n''t you think of anything more, doctor? |
48213 | Cold, cold is the night wind, Our hearts have no cheer, Our Lord and our Leader, When wilt thou appear? |
48213 | Do you not often complain of coldness and deadness in your religious feelings? 48213 Father and mother are both gone out; but I guess, sir, they will be home in a few moments: wo n''t you walk in?" |
48213 | Forever more beside us on our way, The unseen Christ doth move, That we may lean upon his arm and say,''Dost thou, dear Lord, approve?'' |
48213 | How are we ever to reclaim the heathen, if we do not mingle among them? |
48213 | How is it,she says,"that thou, a Jew, askest drink of me, a woman of Samaria?" |
48213 | How knoweth this man letters? |
48213 | How often have I told you, young ones, not to stay out after sundown on Saturday night? 48213 I have washed my hands,"said Pilate,"And what is the Jew to me?" |
48213 | I suppose I need not ask you,said Mrs. Fletcher,"whether you have fully learned your Sunday- school lessons?" |
48213 | If you are talking with a beloved friend, Helen, do you not use an instinctive care to avoid all that might pain that friend? |
48213 | Is your father at home? |
48213 | Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? 48213 Lord, how often shall my brother transgress and I forgive him?" |
48213 | Nay, how should he,said Thalia,"shut up day and night with that old papyrus of St. Luke and Paul''s Epistles? |
48213 | Now, William,said I,"do you know that you were the last boy of whom such an enterprise in Sabbath- keeping as this was to have been expected? |
48213 | Oh, Henry, do n''t you wish that Saturday afternoons lasted longer? |
48213 | Oh, and papa will show us the pictures in those great books that he brought home for us last Monday, will he not? |
48213 | Oh, by the bye, my dear, what did you give for those hams Saturday? |
48213 | Oh, mother, what should we do without the Bible? |
48213 | Papa,said a little boy,"what does this verse mean? |
48213 | Shall we be warm there all day? |
48213 | Then can you tell me now what the passage means that I have been reading to you? |
48213 | These roots are dry, and brown, and sere; Why plant them here? |
48213 | Was he, mother? |
48213 | Well, supposing we do; where''s the harm? |
48213 | Well,replied Miss B.,"is not duty always hard and strait? |
48213 | What do you think of this, Uncle C.? |
48213 | What is this life? 48213 What manner of man is this?" |
48213 | What,he asks,"shall the Lord of the vineyard do to these husbandmen?" |
48213 | Whence art thou? 48213 Where is that Charmer whom thou bidst us seek? |
48213 | Where''s the good? |
48213 | Who is this Jesus-- is he not the carpenter? 48213 Why ca n''t you, mother? |
48213 | Why did they all look so blank? 48213 Why did you not tell me of it before?" |
48213 | Why may we not wear the golden ornaments and images which have been consecrated to heathen goddesses? |
48213 | Why not,suggests the tempter,"descend from the pinnacle of the temple upborne by angels? |
48213 | Why should we be singular, mother? |
48213 | Why, Cousin Anna,replied a sprightly young lady opposite,"what do you mean by_ idle words_?" |
48213 | Why? 48213 Woman, what have I to do with thee? |
48213 | You admit, then, that some things, which are not instructive in themselves considered, are to be said to keep up the intercourse of society? |
48213 | ***** What is practically the meaning of the precept,"Be not conformed to the world"? |
48213 | 3- 9) thus speaks to those who depreciate the new temple by comparing it with the old:--"Who is left among you that saw this house in her first glory? |
48213 | 47, we are told that after the raising of Lazarus the chief priests and Pharisees gathered a council and said,"What do we? |
48213 | A man clothed in soft raiment? |
48213 | Ah, has it not always been so? |
48213 | Alcibiades asks,"When, O Socrates, shall that time come, and who will be the Teacher? |
48213 | Alone? |
48213 | And God heard the voice of the lad, and the angel of the Lord called to Hagar out of heaven, saying, What aileth thee, Hagar? |
48213 | And Manoah said, What is thy name? |
48213 | And Pilate says,"Answerest thou nothing? |
48213 | And during these hidden years what was Jesus doing? |
48213 | And he said, What is thy name? |
48213 | And he said, Wherefore is it that thou dost ask after my name? |
48213 | And he turned to the woman and said unto Simon, Seest thou this woman? |
48213 | And if we have no real enemies, are there any bound to us in the relations of life whose habits and ways are annoying and distasteful to us? |
48213 | And is it worse to burn it in one place than another?" |
48213 | And is there one parent in a hundred that could do the same? |
48213 | And now, here comes this Jesus and professes to be the long- promised leader; and what does he teach? |
48213 | And the Hereafter? |
48213 | And the angel of the Lord said unto him, Why askest thou my name, seeing that it is secret? |
48213 | And the music that ariseth, Who can utter or divine it? |
48213 | And they that sat at meat began to say within themselves, Who is this that forgiveth sins also? |
48213 | And was he of God forsaken? |
48213 | And what did Jesus say to them? |
48213 | And what do you suppose it was? |
48213 | And what was He thinking of, as he came thus for the last time to the chosen city? |
48213 | And when he came and lived a mortal life what did he show the divine nature to be? |
48213 | And whence comes it? |
48213 | And where is the harm of burning exquisite perfume? |
48213 | And where is there not a touchstone to try every theory of atonement? |
48213 | And why have we not such a baptism and such a power? |
48213 | And yet what can she do? |
48213 | Are there any traces of this mysterious Word, this divine Son, this Revealer of God in the Old Testament? |
48213 | Are there memories of cruel scorn? |
48213 | Are these, then, idle words?" |
48213 | Are we never to say anything that has not for its direct and specific object the benefit of others or of ourselves?" |
48213 | Art thou dead? |
48213 | Art, they tell us, is waking in America; a love of the beautiful is beginning to unfold its wings; but what kind of art, and what kind of beauty? |
48213 | As for the flowers, are they not simply the most appropriate ornament? |
48213 | As the time drew near, he said,"Now is my soul troubled, and what shall I say? |
48213 | Behold, he taketh away, and who can hinder him? |
48213 | Boys, have you looked over your Sunday- school lesson?" |
48213 | But how shall we get this gift? |
48213 | But how, then, does she know that it is true? |
48213 | But is it, then, fiction? |
48213 | But say some,"Do you suppose if you go to God about everything that troubles you it will do any good? |
48213 | But was there no message? |
48213 | But where have we such a church? |
48213 | But, it may be asked, what was the result of all this strictness? |
48213 | Can any but a child look so pretty, even in its naughtiness? |
48213 | Can we avoid harsh judgments, and harsh speech, and the making known to others our annoyance? |
48213 | Can we bear with them in love? |
48213 | Can we conceive what this mob was, that led Jesus forth to death? |
48213 | Can we in silent offices of love wash their feet as our Master washed the feet of Judas? |
48213 | Can you drink of the cup that I shall drink, and be baptized with my baptism?" |
48213 | Christ says of John the Baptist,"What went ye out for to see? |
48213 | Could she give the arguments from miracles and prophecy? |
48213 | Could we through storms of obloquy and evil report keep calmly on in duty, unruffled in love, and commending ourselves to the judgment of God? |
48213 | Did ever a son so cruelly die, But did he die in vain? |
48213 | Did it not disgust you with the Sabbath and with religion? |
48213 | Did not Jesus love them? |
48213 | Did she know that to be nearest to him was to suffer most? |
48213 | Did she know what she was asking? |
48213 | Did she open? |
48213 | Did their talisman work, or did it fail? |
48213 | Did ye not know that I must be about my Father''s business?" |
48213 | Do departed spirits in verity retain any knowledge of what transpires in this world, and take any part in its scenes? |
48213 | Do n''t you know it''s the same as Sunday, you wicked children, you? |
48213 | Do the majority of Christians have it? |
48213 | Do they ever resolve on an act of oppression or cruelty, calling it by its right name? |
48213 | Do we ask, Why did they not remember the words of Jesus, that he should rise again? |
48213 | Do you feel kindly and pleasantly towards everybody?" |
48213 | Does it dry our tears? |
48213 | Does it make the return to our desolated home any less dreadful? |
48213 | Does not the very text we are speaking of show that we have an account to give in the day of judgment for all this trifling, useless conversation?" |
48213 | Does revelation, which gives so many hopes which nature had not, give none here? |
48213 | Doth she? |
48213 | EARTHLY CARE A HEAVENLY DISCIPLINE"Why should these cares my heart divide, If Thou, indeed, hast set me free? |
48213 | Each one said tremblingly,"Lord, is it I?" |
48213 | Father, save me from this hour? |
48213 | Feels he the rough hand on his garment? |
48213 | For what hope, what help, what salvation can there be for those who can not be reached by His love? |
48213 | For who would our God deliver, If he would not deliver him? |
48213 | Had God forgotten to be gracious? |
48213 | Had he in anger shut up his tender mercy? |
48213 | Had he not power to heal? |
48213 | Had ye ever a son like Jesus To give to a death of pain? |
48213 | Hast thou no_ time_ for all this wondrous show,-- No thought to spare? |
48213 | Hath not my hand made all these things?" |
48213 | Have n''t you brought the basket?" |
48213 | Have not gales and breezes of sweet and healing thought been wafted over us, as if an angel had shaken from his wings the odors of paradise? |
48213 | Have we ever pondered these as they were spoken in their order in the words of the simple Gospel narrative? |
48213 | Have we in heaven a friend who knew us to the heart''s core? |
48213 | Have we not memories which correspond to such a belief? |
48213 | Have ye ever thought that all the hopes That make our earth- life fair, Were born in those three bitter days Of Mary''s deep despair? |
48213 | He asks them, What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
48213 | He asks them:--"What think ye of the Messiah? |
48213 | He has but to inquire of any scene or employment,"Should I be well pleased to meet my Saviour there? |
48213 | He said to Stephen, with a semblance of moderation and justice,"Are these things so?" |
48213 | He still there? |
48213 | Hears he the roar of the mob? |
48213 | How am I to make friends with it or of it? |
48213 | How can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
48213 | How does she know that she has warm life- blood in her heart? |
48213 | How does she know that there is such a thing as air and sunshine? |
48213 | How is it possible that human features and human lineaments essentially alike can be wrought into such heaven- wide contrast? |
48213 | How is it? |
48213 | How many men should we find in the church now that would do the same? |
48213 | How shall the disposition of the weight be altered so as to press the spirit upward towards God, instead of downward and away? |
48213 | How then shall I answer him and choose out words to reason with him?" |
48213 | How was this man educated? |
48213 | How, say you? |
48213 | How, then, shall earthly care become heavenly discipline? |
48213 | How, then, shall the well- disposed person know where to stop, and how to strike the just medium? |
48213 | I am defeated and overthrown, and who cares for me now? |
48213 | I ask thee, O God, O thou my God, where art thou? |
48213 | I can turn it easier than that,"said the boy, snapping his fingers;"have you got them all in?" |
48213 | I suppose you remember Sunday at''the old place''?" |
48213 | I wonder John and Henry are not up yet: Hannah, did you speak to them?" |
48213 | If David then call him Lord, how is he his son?" |
48213 | If God_ could_ not deliver,--what hope then? |
48213 | If Jesus Christ deemed so much time spent in prayer needful to his work, what shall we say of ourselves? |
48213 | If all Christians were like us, would the world ever be converted to God? |
48213 | If he_ would_ not,--who ever shall dare To be firm in his service hereafter? |
48213 | If now it be asked, Why was all this so? |
48213 | If the example of Jesus is to be the rule by which our attainments are finally to be measured, who can stand in the judgment? |
48213 | If they have seen and hated both him and his Father-- what remains? |
48213 | If this means, Will God always give you the blessing you want, or remove the pain you feel, in answer to your prayer? |
48213 | If we are to have a ministering spirit, who better adapted? |
48213 | If you do ask him for help, will you get it?" |
48213 | In what did this favor consist? |
48213 | Is it by reasoning that the frightened child, bewildered in the dark, knows its mother''s voice? |
48213 | Is it good that thou shouldest oppress, that thou shouldest despise the work of thy hands?" |
48213 | Is it likely, then, that, in selecting subordinate agencies, this so necessary a requisite of a human life and experience is overlooked? |
48213 | Is it not better to be a Moses than to be a Michael Angelo making statues of Moses? |
48213 | Is it that human Friend-- that divine Jehovah? |
48213 | Is no one in our day put to this test? |
48213 | Is not the life of Paul a sublimer work of art than Raphael''s cartoons? |
48213 | Is not this indeed the Christ-- the Son of God? |
48213 | Is not this lifelong temptation which Christ overcame one that meets us all every day and hour? |
48213 | Is not this rest of the soul, this perfect peace, worth having? |
48213 | Is not this the Christ?" |
48213 | Is not this the carpenter?" |
48213 | Is our Venus to be the frail, ensnaring Aphrodite, or the starry, divine Urania? |
48213 | Is our faith what it should be,--our zeal, our devotion? |
48213 | Is the crown of thorns before you? |
48213 | Is the star of Judah dim? |
48213 | Is there a gift of spiritual power and constancy of faith to be had in answer to fervent prayer? |
48213 | Is there in fact such a thing as an attainable habit of mind that can remain at peace, no matter what external circumstances may be? |
48213 | Is there no rest from tossing,--no repose? |
48213 | Is there no sober certainty to correspond to the inborn and passionate craving of the soul? |
48213 | Is there, then, no God in Jacob? |
48213 | It seemed to say,"Why be alarmed? |
48213 | Judas expostulates,"To what purpose is this waste?" |
48213 | Knocking, knocking, ever knocking? |
48213 | Knocking, knocking, ever knocking? |
48213 | Knowest thou not that I have power to crucify thee and power to release thee?" |
48213 | LINES TO THE MEMORY OF"ANNIE,"WHO DIED AT MILAN, JUNE 6, 1860"Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? |
48213 | LITTLE EDWARD Were any of you born in New England, in the good old catechising, church- going, school- going, orderly times? |
48213 | Love not the world, neither the things of the world"? |
48213 | Many a one, we are confident, can remember such things-- and whence come they? |
48213 | May we look among the band of ministering spirits for our own departed ones? |
48213 | Might we not all, in view of his example, address to him the same prayer? |
48213 | Might we not think that now the man Jesus Christ would feel fully prepared to begin at once the work to which God so visibly called him? |
48213 | Mobs in our day are brutal, but what were they then? |
48213 | Now, to those who say this we must ask the question with which Socrates of old pursued the sophist: What is beauty? |
48213 | Now, what do you mean by that? |
48213 | Now, what do you suppose you shall do?" |
48213 | O God, what a shaft of anguish Was that dying voice from the tree!-- From Him the only spotless,--"Why hast Thou forsaken me?" |
48213 | O city of prophets and martyrs, O shrines of the sainted dead, When, when shall the living day- spring Once more on your towers be spread? |
48213 | O mourning mothers, so many, Weeping o''er sons that are dead, Have ye thought of the sorrows of Mary''s heart, Of the tears that Mary shed? |
48213 | O my own, my heart''s belovèd, Vainly have I wept above thee? |
48213 | Of hunger and thirst and bitter cold That your belovèd have borne? |
48213 | On what far shores may his sweet voice be heard? |
48213 | Or are they living in some unknown clime? |
48213 | Or moss- wreaths whitening to stone? |
48213 | Other martyrs have died, bravely and tenderly, in their last hours"bearing witness of the godlike"that is in man; but who so remembers them? |
48213 | Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
48213 | Shall we not do it? |
48213 | Shall we regain them in that far- off home, And live anew beyond the waves of time? |
48213 | So, when they ask the question,"Which is the greatest commandment of all?" |
48213 | Speakest thou not to me? |
48213 | Still there? |
48213 | Such things were common in those days-- they were possible and too probable-- and what father would not pray as Jacob prayed? |
48213 | Such were the seven"last utterances"of Jesus-- and when can we hope to attain to what they teach? |
48213 | THE OLD PSALM TUNE You asked, dear friend, the other day, Why still my charmèd ear Rejoiceth in uncultured tone That old psalm tune to hear? |
48213 | That stranger-- who was he? |
48213 | The Jews asked him,"Art thou greater than our father Abraham?" |
48213 | The angel said to her,"Woman, why weepest thou? |
48213 | The only comment we read of as being made by the Lord was this:"Then said Jesus to the twelve: Will ye also go away?" |
48213 | Then Jesus turned and said,"What seek ye?" |
48213 | Then Judas, still keeping up the show of innocence, said, like the rest,"Master, is it I?" |
48213 | Then said Peter:"Lord, to whom should we go? |
48213 | There was the door, freely open, would they, too, go? |
48213 | They ask, appalled with dread; Is evil crowned and triumphant, And goodness vanquished and dead? |
48213 | They did not say,"How can this be?" |
48213 | They pull away the scholar''s pen, tumble about his paper, make somersets over his books; and what can he do? |
48213 | They question in an undertone,"Hath any one brought him aught to eat?" |
48213 | They said,"How knoweth this man letters? |
48213 | They said,"Master, where dwellest thou?" |
48213 | This Moses, whom they refused, saying,"Who made thee a ruler and a judge?" |
48213 | Those fountains of strange weird sculpture, With lichens and moss o''ergrown, Are they marble greening in moss- wreaths? |
48213 | Thou hast asked,"Why?" |
48213 | Through her tears she sees the pitying angels, who ask her as they might often ask us,"Why weepest thou?" |
48213 | To how many hearts does this reproof apply? |
48213 | To live an unworldly life; never to seek place or power or wealth by making the least sacrifice of conscience or principle; is it easy? |
48213 | To trust in his wisdom or care? |
48213 | To whom is any one of them a living presence, a life, and all? |
48213 | Was the Messiah to be the King of the Jews alone? |
48213 | We ask why not? |
48213 | We say it, and we think we believe it; but does it really then cheer us? |
48213 | Were there not doubts-- wonderings? |
48213 | Wert_ thou_ forsaken in thy deadly strife? |
48213 | What are idle words?" |
48213 | What did the Apostles do? |
48213 | What did the Lord Jesus intend by it? |
48213 | What followed on this? |
48213 | What hand of power and love will take ours in the last darkness, when we have let go all others? |
48213 | What hast thou seen? |
48213 | What is beauty? |
48213 | What is it? |
48213 | What is secure from the land- dashing wave? |
48213 | What is the glory of the Son of God? |
48213 | What progress would he make in instructing them? |
48213 | What should we have expected of divine wisdom when the glorious hour approached? |
48213 | What sign does he show? |
48213 | What then? |
48213 | What to her is the deriding mob, the coarse taunt, the brutal abuse? |
48213 | What visions fair, what glorious life, Where thou hast been? |
48213 | What was that dread strait that either the divine One must thus suffer, or man be lost, who knoweth? |
48213 | What was that glory of God? |
48213 | What work of art can compare with a lofty and heroic life? |
48213 | What''s the hour? |
48213 | When Jesus knew in himself that his disciples murmured, he said: Doth this offend you?... |
48213 | When all these strangers heard the shouting, it is said the"whole city was moved, saying, Who is this? |
48213 | When our dearest friends are taken from us, when those we love are in deadly danger from hour to hour, is it possible still to be in peace? |
48213 | When our plans of life are upset, when fortune fails, when debt and embarrassment come down, is it possible to be at peace? |
48213 | When our soul has been cast down, has never an invisible voice whispered,"There is lifting up"? |
48213 | When shall pity and prayer be the only spontaneous movement of our hearts when most hurt and injured-- pierced in the tenderest nerve? |
48213 | When shall these questions of our yearning souls Be answered by the bright Eternal Word?" |
48213 | When shall these weary wanderings be o''er, And I be gathered back to stray no more? |
48213 | When shall thoughtfulness for others, and divine pity for degraded natures, be the immovable habit of our souls? |
48213 | When suddenly called to die, or to face sorrows that are worse than death, is it possible still to be at peace? |
48213 | When the Jews tauntingly said to him,"Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham?" |
48213 | Whence came we? |
48213 | Where hast thou been this year, beloved? |
48213 | Where is the harm of an elegant statue, considered merely as a consummate work of art? |
48213 | Where shall we find a haven and a shore? |
48213 | Wherefore, with that knocking dreary Scare the sleep from one so weary? |
48213 | Which of the prophets have not your fathers persecuted? |
48213 | While the shadows of the great darkness were gathering around his cross he cried,"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
48213 | Who can hear it? |
48213 | Who fights, who conquers for me? |
48213 | Who is there? |
48213 | Who shall stand when He appeareth? |
48213 | Who so loves them? |
48213 | Who will feel that to be affliction which each spirit feels to be so? |
48213 | Who will go with us into that future where no friend, however dear, can accompany the soul? |
48213 | Who? |
48213 | Whom would God be more likely to send us? |
48213 | Whom, then, shall the soul turn to? |
48213 | Whose son is safe? |
48213 | Why am I thus, if Thou hast died-- If Thou hast died to ransom me?" |
48213 | Why are you not gone? |
48213 | Why did God permit it? |
48213 | Why is the physical system of man arranged with such daily, oft- recurring wants? |
48213 | Why not the direct road of power, using the worldly forces first, and afterwards the spiritual?" |
48213 | Why seek ye the living among the dead? |
48213 | Why the cross and the grave? |
48213 | Why then had he suffered this? |
48213 | Why this care, this peculiar reticence, on the Master''s part? |
48213 | Why this conflict with the world? |
48213 | Why this long, slow path of patience and self- denial? |
48213 | Why was not a miracle wrought, if need were, to save him? |
48213 | Why wilt Thou vex me, Coming ever to perplex me? |
48213 | Will she? |
48213 | Wilt thou forever be With thy last year''s dry flower- stalk and dead leaves, And no new shoot or blossom on thy tree? |
48213 | Would he plead against me with his great power? |
48213 | Would it not lengthen the days and strengthen the health of many a man and woman if they could attain it? |
48213 | Wouldst thou know, O parent, what is that faith which unlocks heaven? |
48213 | XX THE CHURCH OF THE MASTER What is the true idea of a Christian church, and what the temper and spirit in which its affairs should be conducted? |
48213 | XXVIII THE DARKEST HOUR_ Good Friday Evening_ What is the darkest hour to us when our friends die? |
48213 | You say you have put away the books and the playthings; have you put away, too, all wrong and unkind feelings? |
48213 | a friend to whom we have unfolded our soul in its most secret recesses? |
48213 | and dust must we become? |
48213 | and should we not seek it as they did? |
48213 | and what to us is death? |
48213 | and where are those Who, in a moment stricken from our side, Passed to that land of shadow and repose? |
48213 | and with what other and sublimer spirit could we meet them? |
48213 | are they much cheaper?" |
48213 | could ye not watch with me one hour? |
48213 | is it common? |
48213 | is not this my Father''s house; is not this study of his law my proper work; and where should I be but here?" |
48213 | of lifelessness and want of interest?" |
48213 | said another son;"did not our Master eat with publicans and sinners?" |
48213 | said the sons;"so long as we do not consent to it or believe in it, will our faith be shaken thereby?" |
48213 | said the sprightly Thalia;"surely none others are to be bought, and are we to do altogether without?" |
48213 | says Peter;"till seven times?" |
48213 | says the little boy earnestly;"and shall we have enough to eat?" |
48213 | since the dawn of time Was ever love, was ever grief, like thine? |
48213 | still knocking? |
48213 | this night shall thy soul be required of thee-- then whose shall those things be that thou hast provided?" |
48213 | to whom we have confessed our weaknesses and deplored our griefs? |
48213 | what do you think of that, now?" |
48213 | when shall I look on you? |
48213 | when shall it fall, That we may see? |
48213 | whither go? |
48213 | who hath warned_ you_ to flee from the wrath to come?" |
48213 | who will say unto him, What doest thou? |
48213 | whom seekest thou? |
48213 | whom seekest thou? |
48213 | whose brother, and whose home? |
48213 | whose son is he? |
44280 | ''And you, rich men, wherefore do you hoard your silver? 44280 ''O false and hollow Christians, of what avail will it be that you have done many things? |
44280 | And is dear brother Howell Harris yet alive in body and soul? 44280 DEAR BROTHER WESLEY,--What mean you by disputing in all your letters? |
44280 | DEAR SIR,--What shall I say? 44280 Do you believe a judgment to come?" |
44280 | Do you believe the Holy Scriptures? |
44280 | God will work, and who shall hinder? 44280 HONOURED SIR-- Does Mr. Mayor do well to be angry? |
44280 | Honoured sir, how could you tell that some who came to you''were in a good measure sanctified?'' 44280 I then asked,"says Whitefield,"where he thought he would go after death? |
44280 | If your lordship should ask, What evil have I done? 44280 Is not bankruptcy reckoned too small a crime amongst the Dissenters, as well as amongst their neighbours? |
44280 | Many, last winter, used tauntingly to say of Mr. Whitefield,''If he will convert heathens, why does he not go to the colliers of Kingswood?'' 44280 O ye Pharisees, what fruits do ye bring forth? |
44280 | P.S.--Is it expedient to go into priest''s orders? 44280 Shall I address myself with freedom to the parents and governors of families? |
44280 | Think ye, O ye drunkards, that you shall be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light? 44280 This caused no small triumph amongst the collegians, who began to cry out,''What is his fasting come to now?'' |
44280 | What good can proceed from play- houses, where God is profaned, the devil honoured, your time misspent, your souls endangered? 44280 Will you be pleased to fix a time, sir?" |
44280 | You will naturally ask,''Where hath it pleased God to settle you?'' 44280 [ 218] Who was Joseph Humphreys? |
44280 | [ 248][ 247] Query: Did Warburton suggest to Bishop Lavington the idea of writingThe Enthusiasm of Methodists and Papists compared"? |
44280 | [ 72][ 72]Further Account of God''s Dealings with George Whitefield, 1747,"p. 9. Who were the youths in question? |
44280 | [ 76] What happened during this brief interval of nineteen days? 44280 ''And what do you think of them?'' 44280 ''But where,''said I,''is the justice of this?'' 44280 ''Do n''t you think they are d-- n''d ca nt, enthusiasm, from end to end? 44280 ''Shall I burn this book? 44280 ''What truth?'' 44280 ''Yes,''he answered; and I replied,''Because he believeth not what?'' 44280 )[ 437]and urged him with this dilemma:''For what did God make this reprobate-- to be damned, or to be saved?'' |
44280 | AND DEAR SIR,--And is one of the priests also obedient to the word? |
44280 | Again, dost not thou find in thyself the seeds of malice, revenge, and all uncharitableness? |
44280 | Am I more meek and patient? |
44280 | An explanatory Sermon on that mistaken text,''Be not righteous over- much, neither make thyself over- wise: why shouldest thou destroy thyself?'' |
44280 | And are you, can you be so easily caught? |
44280 | And can_ we_ dwell with everlasting burnings more than_ they_? |
44280 | And do you grudge me this? |
44280 | And do you not long, my brethren, to join this heavenly choir? |
44280 | And has not God set His seal to our ministry in an extraordinary manner? |
44280 | And has not this been manifestly followed by a great increase of great wickedness and violence among the lower people? |
44280 | And have their lordships, the bishops, insisted that no person shall ever preach occasionally without such special license? |
44280 | And have you made due restitution to those you have wronged? |
44280 | And now, brethren, what shall I say more? |
44280 | And shall not we, who are on earth, be often exercised in this Divine employ with the glorious company of''the spirits of just men made perfect''?" |
44280 | And what about the ensuing Sunday, June 24, when Charles Wesley dared to copy John''s example? |
44280 | And what about the preacher? |
44280 | And what are these but the very tempers of the devil? |
44280 | And what is this but the very nature of the beasts that perish? |
44280 | And what reason can be assigned for it? |
44280 | And where will you be, my hearers, when your lives have passed away like that dark cloud? |
44280 | And who unhappily falls in your way but another son of Anak, the author of the''Whole Duty of Man''? |
44280 | And why must this false prophet suffer thy people to believe a lie, because they have held the truth in unrighteousness? |
44280 | And will He not take care of negroes? |
44280 | And, agreeably to this, Mr. Whitefield put the question, Whether Presbyterian government be that which is agreeable to the pattern shewn in the mount? |
44280 | And,''Are you called according to the will of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the laws of this realm?'' |
44280 | Are all the grand deceiver''s promises come to this? |
44280 | Are there not too many among you, who scarce ever call upon God in their families at all, unless it be perhaps on a Lord''s- day evening? |
44280 | Are they not unique? |
44280 | Are we now to be converted to Christianity, from Judaism or heathenism, as people were in those days? |
44280 | Are you as solicitous to keep up the seasons of worship in your households as your fathers were? |
44280 | Are you influenced by the faith, you say you have, to stand up and confess the Lord Jesus before men? |
44280 | Are you seeking where to wash? |
44280 | Are you yet the Lord''s prisoner? |
44280 | As the hart panteth after the water- brooks, do not your souls so long after the blessed company of these sons of God? |
44280 | Be gentle towards the"( Moravians?) |
44280 | Brother H----"( Humphreys?)" |
44280 | But how shall we_ distinguish_? |
44280 | But is it any wonder, that those who loved us should no longer choose to hear him? |
44280 | But may I not reply to you, as St. Bernard did once on a like occasion,''Will your curate be damned for you?'' |
44280 | But might not one such conquest have sufficed you, as it did young David? |
44280 | But must I live for ever tormented in these flames? |
44280 | But the question is, what this_ belief_ may be? |
44280 | But what can I say? |
44280 | But what difference is there between the king on the throne and the beggar on the dunghill, when God demands their breath? |
44280 | But what diversion ought a Christian or a clergyman to know, or speak of, but that of doing good? |
44280 | But what need is there of miracles, such as healing sick bodies, when we see greater miracles every day done by the power of God''s Word? |
44280 | But what shall I begin with first? |
44280 | But what shall I say concerning them? |
44280 | But what shall we say? |
44280 | But what then? |
44280 | But whither am I going? |
44280 | But, I fear, taking it for granted, it was not, you only enquired, whether you should be silent, or preach and print against it? |
44280 | Can a tasteless palate relish the richest dainties? |
44280 | Can not their righteous souls be saved? |
44280 | Can you be amazed at it, in an age''when all manner of vice abounds to a degree almost unheard of''? |
44280 | Can you bear the inclemencies of the air, both as to cold and heat, in a foreign climate? |
44280 | Can you point to no persons, who are members of Dissenting churches, who entice their acquaintance to these vanities? |
44280 | Can you say it has been your whole endeavour to mortify the flesh, with its affections and lusts? |
44280 | Can you see the necessity of being born again, by following horse- racing, and by seeing a poor abused creature carrying its rider faster into hell? |
44280 | Can you succeed in that attempt? |
44280 | Can you undertake to help a husband in the charge of a family, consisting perhaps of a hundred persons? |
44280 | Charles then proceeded to preach to a congregation of some hundreds, from the words,"If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
44280 | Consolation and thunder were intermixed in all his discourses, so that numbers were made to cry out,''What shall we do to be saved?'' |
44280 | Dare any of you who profess Christianity, frequent these places? |
44280 | Did he deserve it? |
44280 | Did the bishop ordain us, my dear friend, to write bonds, receipts, etc., or to preach the Gospel? |
44280 | Do not force me to say,''Who has believed my report?'' |
44280 | Do not you think, my dear brethren, I must be as much concerned for truth, or what I think truth, as you? |
44280 | Do not your hearts burn within you? |
44280 | Do play- houses, horse- racing, balls, and assemblies tend to promote the glory of God? |
44280 | Do such complaints become a meek disciple of Christ? |
44280 | Do the other clergy bring forth such fruit? |
44280 | Do you give alms of all things that you possess? |
44280 | Do you know no mothers who lead their little daughters thither, nor fathers who permit their sons to go without control? |
44280 | Do you live in love? |
44280 | Do you strive together with me in your prayers? |
44280 | Do you suspect the contrary? |
44280 | Do you think, my brethren, there is one merry heart in hell? |
44280 | Does Bethesda answer its name? |
44280 | Does God take care of oxen? |
44280 | Does my practice correspond with my knowledge? |
44280 | Does your faith work by love, so that you conscientiously lay up, according as God hath prospered you, for the support of the poor? |
44280 | Dost thou not find that, by nature, thou art prone to pride? |
44280 | Doth not the workman''s pow''r extend O''er all the mass, which part to choose, And mould it for a nobler end, And which to leave for viler use? |
44280 | For instance, what delight can the most harmonious_ music_ afford a_ deaf_ man; or what pleasure the most excellent_ picture_ give a_ blind_ one? |
44280 | Further, I asked him,''Why does God command all men everywhere to repent? |
44280 | Harris asked him if he was accustomed to read the Act at"cock- matches"? |
44280 | Has not God, by our ministry, raised many dead souls to a spiritual life? |
44280 | Hath God said it, and shall He not do it? |
44280 | Have not many that were spiritually blind received their sight? |
44280 | Have not some of us been_ allowed_ to preach in Georgia and other places, by no other than our general commission? |
44280 | Have not the deaf heard? |
44280 | Have the bishops, from whom alone he ought to take directions,_ commanded_ him to turn_ mountebank_? |
44280 | Have we not done greater things than these? |
44280 | Have you heard where Mr. Whitefield and Mr. Wesley are to preach this week? |
44280 | Have you learned to change the course of nature, to turn night into day, and day into night? |
44280 | Have you lost your good name? |
44280 | Have you sold your glory for the indulgence of the follies and vanities of life? |
44280 | Having shewn him his"Georgia Accounts,"he asked,"Can there be any just objection against my preaching in churches for the Orphan House?" |
44280 | He has given me Himself; will He not then freely give me all things besides? |
44280 | He has given me my brother Benjamin, and will He not give me my brother Thomas also? |
44280 | He likewise wished to know whether, being discharged, he might,"without offence to the gospel of Jesus Christ, follow the business of an attorney?" |
44280 | He writes:"Who can express the joy with which I was received? |
44280 | He writes:--"Who made the division? |
44280 | He wrote:--"Were I to give so much encouragement to those convulsions as you have given, how many would cry out every night? |
44280 | His attack on young Whitefield had been fierce, almost savage; Whitefield''s retaliatory attack was what? |
44280 | His power has been frequently made known in the great congregation, and many come to me daily, crying out,''What shall I do to be saved?'' |
44280 | How can I act consistently, unless I receive and love all the children of God, whom I believe to be such, of whatever denomination they may be? |
44280 | How can I employ them better than in writing you? |
44280 | How can dead men beget living children? |
44280 | How can it be otherwise, when teachers do not think and speak the same things? |
44280 | How can they stand, who never felt themselves condemned criminals? |
44280 | How can we know God''s power, unless we try it? |
44280 | How can you escape the damnation of hell? |
44280 | How did Whitefield succeed? |
44280 | How did he employ his time, and what were the results? |
44280 | How did he spend the ensuing week,--the last in the memorable year 1738? |
44280 | How did he spend the interval? |
44280 | How did the matter end? |
44280 | How did the young preacher regulate his large family? |
44280 | How does your father? |
44280 | How frequent is it for the poor and illiterate people to be drawn away more by example than by precept? |
44280 | How long will ye pervert the right ways of the Lord? |
44280 | How should his publication be treated? |
44280 | How stands the case? |
44280 | How was Whitefield himself affected? |
44280 | How was Whitefield welcomed? |
44280 | How was it that he was not the means of leading the Wesley brothers into the enjoyment of the same Divine blessing? |
44280 | How will you be apt to teach hereafter, unless you begin to teach now? |
44280 | I asked again,''but the truth of the gospel of_ their_ salvation? |
44280 | I asked him,''Why do you think so?'' |
44280 | I asked his lordship whether any objection could be made against my doctrine? |
44280 | I asked his lordship whether he would grant me a license? |
44280 | I asked them for what purpose? |
44280 | I asked, why only for them? |
44280 | I began singing--''Shall I, for fear of feeble man, Thy Spirit''s course in me restrain?'' |
44280 | I began to reason as they did[ and to ask why God had given me passions, and not permitted me to gratify them? |
44280 | I came, I saw, but what? |
44280 | I do want_, but where among the corrupt sons and daughters of Adam am I to find it? |
44280 | I have a body of sin, which, at times, makes me cry out,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
44280 | I hear there is a woman among you, who pretends to the spirit of prophecy; and, what is more unaccountable, I hear that Brother B----( Bray?) |
44280 | I immediately waited upon his lordship, and enquired whether any complaint of this nature had been lodged against me? |
44280 | I pray God to put a stop to it; for what good end will it answer? |
44280 | I replied,''Then your lordship will not forbid me?'' |
44280 | I talked lately with Mr. H----,"( Humphreys? |
44280 | I then asked them seriously, what they would have me to do? |
44280 | I then asked whether he believed a hell? |
44280 | I then exhorted Tooanahowi( who is a tall proper youth) not to get drunk, and asked him whether he believed a heaven? |
44280 | I think I had rather die, than see a division between us; and yet, how can we walk together, if we oppose each other? |
44280 | I used to ask people,''Pray can I be a player, and yet go to sacrament, and be a Christian?'' |
44280 | If Mr.---- is actuated by a good spirit, why is he not patient of reproof? |
44280 | If by a good Spirit, why do not the clergy and the rest of the Pharisees believe our report? |
44280 | If it be enquired of you,''By what authority you sometimes pray without a premeditated form of words?'' |
44280 | If not, why do they not confess and own us? |
44280 | If one of them would enlarge a little on the vanity of worldly pleasures, who knows how God may work by them? |
44280 | If people ask my opinion, what shall I do? |
44280 | If so, whether you will be pleased to give me leave to propose marriage unto her? |
44280 | If the reader asks why I have dared to add to the number of these biographies? |
44280 | If we have done anything worthy of the censures of the Church, why do not the Right Reverend the Bishops call us to a public account? |
44280 | If you go on thus, honoured sir, how can I concur with you? |
44280 | If you say by an evil spirit, I answer in our Lord''s own words,''If Satan be divided against Satan, how can his kingdom stand?'' |
44280 | In a letter to Mr. Hutchins, one of the Oxford Methodists, Whitefield wrote:--"And how does my dear Mr. Hutchins? |
44280 | In another letter were these words--''Do you ask me what you shall have? |
44280 | Is Christianity now in its infancy, as it was then? |
44280 | Is Liddiard meant? |
44280 | Is he compelled by military force, or by the violence of the people, to mount the stage? |
44280 | Is he yet commenced a field- preacher? |
44280 | Is it fair that Whitefield''s sermonising abilities should be determined by these juvenile productions? |
44280 | Is it not high time for the true ministers of Jesus Christ to lift up their voices as a trumpet, and cry aloud against the diversions of the age? |
44280 | Is it not inconsistent with all goodness for ministers to frequent play- houses, balls, masquerades? |
44280 | Is it not misspending your precious time, which should be spent in working out your salvation with fear and trembling? |
44280 | Is it not the highest ingratitude, as well as cruelty, not to let your poor slaves enjoy some fruits of their labour? |
44280 | Is it so now? |
44280 | Is it, indeed, a house of mercy? |
44280 | Is not Sunday become a day of diversion to the great ones, and a day of laziness to the little ones? |
44280 | Is not our producing our Letters of Orders_ always judged sufficient_? |
44280 | Is not this, then, most_ hellish hurt_, which they acquire in countenancing him?" |
44280 | Is such behaviour the mark of a dutiful and true son of the Church of England? |
44280 | Is there any other man, except Whitefield, whose diary, for nineteen consecutive days, contains a series of statements like the foregoing? |
44280 | Is this the voice of my brother, my son, Whitefield?" |
44280 | It may reasonably be asked, what was there in this youthful evangelist to draw around him such prodigious congregations? |
44280 | It will naturally be asked, if Whitefield was so happy in his work in Georgia, why did he so soon leave it? |
44280 | Let these be your daily questions,''Am I more like Christ? |
44280 | Lord, what is man? |
44280 | Lord, what is man? |
44280 | May not the sov''reign Lord on high Dispense His favours as He will; Choose some to life, while others die, And yet be just and gracious still? |
44280 | Meantime, was it we that turned their hearts against him? |
44280 | Must I weep over you, as our Saviour did over Jerusalem? |
44280 | My only scruple at present is,''whether you approve of taking the sword in defence of your religious rights?'' |
44280 | Next I asked,''Whether he that believeth not shall be damned, because he believeth not?'' |
44280 | Now there was a crowd-- of whom? |
44280 | O Christian simplicity, whither art thou fled? |
44280 | O love-- true, simple, Christian, undissembled love-- whither art thou fled?" |
44280 | O my Lord, why should we, who are pilgrims, mind earthly things? |
44280 | O what plea can you make before the Judge of the whole earth? |
44280 | Of what use can an hospital be in a desert and abandoned country? |
44280 | On receiving it, something, as it were, said to me,''Can not that God who sent this person to give thee this guinea, make it up fifteen hundred?'' |
44280 | On the contrary, does he not put out_ bills_ in the daily papers, and invite people to assemble together contrary to law? |
44280 | Or dare we not trust God to provide for our relations, without endangering, or at least retarding, our spiritual improvement? |
44280 | Or if we were, are such false and spurious apostles as these able to convert us? |
44280 | Or shall I search it?'' |
44280 | Otherwise, wherefore art thou now offended? |
44280 | Pray, sir, why did you not ask the Irish clergyman this question, who preached for you last Thursday?" |
44280 | Query: Was this Charles Morgan the Oxford Methodist? |
44280 | Referring to his printed sermons for his principles, Whitefield asked,"Why am I singled out?" |
44280 | Shall I keep to my vow that he should not return? |
44280 | Shall I throw it down? |
44280 | Shall man reply against the Lord, And call his Maker''s way unjust, The thunder of whose dreadful word Can crush a thousand worlds to dust?" |
44280 | Shall man the exception make? |
44280 | Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? |
44280 | Shall the thing formed say to Him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
44280 | Suppose you had one monthly at Bethesda? |
44280 | The following is the concluding paragraph:--"Our Saviour tells us, that every tree is known by its fruit; and what are the fruits of the Spirit? |
44280 | The hearers seemed startled, and, after sermon, enquiry was made, who I was? |
44280 | The letter concludes thus:--"And now, my dear friend, have I been rash in my censure of the Archbishop, or not? |
44280 | The next extract also expresses the same sentiments:--"What was there in you, and in me, that should move God to choose us before others? |
44280 | The next quotation is a good specimen of Whitefield''s fiery denunciation:--"Are there any enemies of God here? |
44280 | The stony ground received the word with joy; but how did those hearers stand in the day of temptation? |
44280 | Then, reading part of the Ordination Office, and the canons forbidding ministers to preach in private houses, he asked,"What do you say to these?" |
44280 | Then, turning to me, she said,''Will you go to Oxford, George?'' |
44280 | There has been such little opposition, that I have been almost tempted to cry out,''Satan, why sleepest thou?'' |
44280 | They call for our compassion and prayers; for who has made the difference? |
44280 | They desire to know by what authority we preach, and ask, What sign shewest thou that thou doest these things? |
44280 | This put me upon enquiry what were my motives in going? |
44280 | This was exceedingly irregular; but, looking at results, who will say that it was wrong? |
44280 | This was plain speaking; but who will say that it was not needed? |
44280 | Two days before his death, Whitefield asked him,"Do you believe Jesus Christ to be God, the one Mediator between God and man?" |
44280 | Was busied all the morning in directing those to believe in Jesus Christ, who came asking me what they should do to be saved? |
44280 | Was it not_ himself_?'' |
44280 | Was it right, was it fair, to treat him with so much contempt and ridicule? |
44280 | Was the Church then established as it is now? |
44280 | Was there any fitness foreseen in us, except a fitness for damnation? |
44280 | Was there ever love like Thine? |
44280 | Watchman, what of the night? |
44280 | Were not your sighs on Sunday last some infant strugglings after the_ new birth_? |
44280 | Were you ever made willing to own, and humble yourselves for, your past offences? |
44280 | Wesley had laid the foundation of the great Methodist communities now existing; but what of Whitefield? |
44280 | What about others? |
44280 | What are their frequent prayers, but for damnation? |
44280 | What availed his telling them that, for_ aught he knew_, they might be_ all_ elect? |
44280 | What did Whitefield say? |
44280 | What do you mean by going about, alienating the people''s affections from their proper pastors? |
44280 | What do you think of Patrick on the Proverbs? |
44280 | What fruits could be produced in one night''s time? |
44280 | What good can come from a horse- race, from abusing God Almighty''s creatures, and putting them to a use He never designed them? |
44280 | What great things may we not now expect to see in New England, since it hath pleased God to work so remarkably among the sons of the prophets? |
44280 | What has Satan gained by turning him out of the churches? |
44280 | What ill consequences may we not dread from so_ bold_ an invader, from so_ unreasonable_ a separatist?" |
44280 | What is a little scourge of the tongue? |
44280 | What is become of this your reputation? |
44280 | What is his testimony on this grave and momentous subject? |
44280 | What is the common language of these polite entertainments, but the language of hell? |
44280 | What is this but acting conformably to his principle, that_ all Christians must have to do with some vanities_? |
44280 | What ought to be said respecting this remarkable publication? |
44280 | What pleasure is there in spending several hours at cards? |
44280 | What proof, my lord, does the doctor require? |
44280 | What said Edwards himself? |
44280 | What shall I do? |
44280 | What signifies all your malice? |
44280 | What think you? |
44280 | What was Whitefield to do next? |
44280 | What was their condition when he commenced his ministry? |
44280 | What were the results of Whitefield''s preaching in the capital of New England, and in its immediate vicinity? |
44280 | What will be the consequences but controversy? |
44280 | What will those avail, if you are not rich towards God? |
44280 | What would the self- righteous Pharisees of this generation give for this pearl of inestimable price when God takes away their souls? |
44280 | What, if to make His terror known, He lets His patience long endure, Suff''ring vile rebels to go on, And seal their own destruction sure? |
44280 | When God has taught us mutual forbearance, long- suffering, and love, who knows but He may bring us into an exact agreement in all things? |
44280 | When God invites, shall man repel? |
44280 | When I came forth, one of the pupils asked me what was the matter with me? |
44280 | When shall I see Him as He is? |
44280 | When the clergy become teachers of worldly maxims, what can be expected from the laity?" |
44280 | Where then must the sinner and the ungodly appear?" |
44280 | Wherefore count the price you have received for Him whom you every day crucify in your love of gain? |
44280 | Whitefield?'' |
44280 | Who are you that persecute the children of the ever- blessed God? |
44280 | Who can doubt which of the two Oxford Methodists was right? |
44280 | Who can estimate what would have been the consequences of Whitefield''s yielding to Wesley''s wish? |
44280 | Who committed to him the care of_ all_ the churches? |
44280 | Who could have adequately appreciated Wesley''s character, labours, and success, without his_ Journals_? |
44280 | Who hath pains in the head? |
44280 | Who hath redness of eyes? |
44280 | Who hath rottenness in the bones? |
44280 | Who knows but you may, under God, keep up religion in Gloucester? |
44280 | Who made him universal pastor? |
44280 | Who then is chargeable with the contention and division that ensued? |
44280 | Who wants charity, you or I? |
44280 | Who was the piously pert neophyte writing in a strain like this? |
44280 | Why did he marry? |
44280 | Why did you print that sermon against predestination? |
44280 | Why did you, in particular, my dear brother Charles, affix your hymn, and join in putting out your late hymn- book? |
44280 | Why do you go about making a disturbance?" |
44280 | Why does He call, and offer His grace to, reprobates? |
44280 | Why does His Spirit strive with every child of man for_ some_ time, though not always?'' |
44280 | Why does he fly into a passion when contradicted? |
44280 | Why does he pretend to be infallible, and that God always speaks in him? |
44280 | Why is not that put in execution?" |
44280 | Why should I despair of any? |
44280 | Why should I distrust Omnipotence? |
44280 | Why should doctors of divinity, and the writers of anonymous articles in the Church of England newspaper, dare to hinder him? |
44280 | Why should we be dwarfs in holiness? |
44280 | Why should we confine_ all_ religion, and_ all_ learning, and_ all_ knowledge to our_ own_ Church? |
44280 | Why should we dispute when there is no probability of convincing? |
44280 | Why should we not tell one another what God has done for our souls? |
44280 | Why should we tempt God in requiring further signs? |
44280 | Why should we, who are soldiers, entangle ourselves with the things of this life? |
44280 | Why shouldest thou destroy thyself?'' |
44280 | Why then should we dispute, when there is no probability of convincing? |
44280 | Why was this? |
44280 | Why was this? |
44280 | Why will not the clergy speak the truth? |
44280 | Why will you compel me to write thus? |
44280 | Why will you dispute? |
44280 | Why? |
44280 | Will dear Mr. Charles take a bed with me at Mr. Harris''s? |
44280 | Will these polite and fashionable entertainments bring you to Jesus Christ? |
44280 | Will they make you sensible of the need you have of Him? |
44280 | Will they then wantonly sport with the name of their Maker, and call upon the King of all the earth to damn them any more in jest? |
44280 | Will this be our glory, to imitate the heathen philosophers, and to drop the gospel of the Son of God? |
44280 | Will this find you in prison, or not? |
44280 | Wilt thou presume to arraign the Almighty at the bar of thy shallow reason? |
44280 | Would he have been angry, if any one had told him, that, by nature, he was half a devil and half a beast? |
44280 | Would he have us raise dead bodies? |
44280 | Would it be best to be silently contemptuous? |
44280 | Would it not be more agreeable to the temper of the blessed Jesus, to be going about doing good, than going about setting evil examples? |
44280 | Would it not better become them to visit the poor of their flock, to pray with them, and to examine how it stands with God and their souls? |
44280 | Would this publican have been offended, if any minister had told him he deserved to be damned? |
44280 | Would you be willing to be found at a play, or reading one, when God demands your souls? |
44280 | Would you be willing to have your souls demanded of you while you are at one of those places? |
44280 | You have read my sermon"( on"What think ye of Christ?") |
44280 | You say you have faith; but how do you prove it? |
44280 | You say, my dear brother, that''if a man who believes in Christ, and obeys God, is not a Christian, what is Christianity?'' |
44280 | [ 186] Harris says,"The first question Mr. Whitefield asked me was this,''Do you know that your sins are forgiven?'' |
44280 | [ 196] As soon as the young preacher presented himself, the learned Don angrily exclaimed,"Have you, sir, a name in any book here?" |
44280 | [ 261][ 261]"The title, in the collected works, is,"What think ye of Christ?" |
44280 | [ 41] What is meant by this? |
44280 | [ 426] What was this, but drawing the sword, and throwing away the scabbard? |
44280 | _ C._"Why does not somebody lodge complaints? |
44280 | _ Chancellor._"By what authority do you preach in the diocese of Bristol without a license?" |
44280 | and am I a light to enlighten and inflame all that are around me?''" |
44280 | and how does your little sister? |
44280 | and, supposing that it is, whether it excluded a toleration of such as Independents, Anabaptists, and Episcopalians, among whom there are good men? |
44280 | are these the men who are charging others with making too great a noise about religion?" |
44280 | are these the wages, the effects of sin? |
44280 | are you, too, become one of his disciples?'' |
44280 | from a babbler, as the world is pleased to term me? |
44280 | from a mountebank? |
44280 | how can a drunkard enter there? |
44280 | how does my dear brother Charles? |
44280 | my brother, do you not know that the Socinians allow no redemption at all? |
44280 | my dear brethren, what have you been doing? |
44280 | one pleasing countenance? |
44280 | or a filthy swine be pleased with a garden of flowers? |
44280 | or how can such a house be maintained in that situation, exposed to Spaniards, Indians, and runaway negroes?" |
44280 | or jesting, scoffing, swearing tongue? |
44280 | or shall I break it? |
44280 | or, with the trembling jailor,''Men and brethren, what shall we do to be saved?''" |
44280 | that you have attended religious duties, and appeared holy in the eyes of men? |
44280 | that you have made long prayers? |
44280 | that you have read much in the sacred Word? |
44280 | the dead been raised? |
44280 | the lepers been cleansed? |
44280 | thought I,''if this be not religion, what is?'' |
44280 | what are they? |
44280 | what evil have I done? |
44280 | what further sign would they require? |
44280 | what is a thrusting out of the synagogues? |
44280 | what room can there be for God, when a rival has taken possession of the heart? |
44280 | what shall I say? |
44280 | what the best of men? |
44280 | what will become of their bravery then? |
44280 | when''the land is full of adulterers,''and when,''because of swearing, the land mourneth''? |
44280 | who can hope to be justified by his works? |
44280 | who can wear out whole hours in these foolish and perilous recreations, and complain they have no time for prayer? |
44280 | who spend those seasons in late visits and private balls, or at cards, whereby evening devotion is utterly excluded? |
44280 | who were never truly burdened with a sense, not only of their actual but of original sin, especially the damning sin of unbelief? |
44280 | who would not leave their few ragged, tattered nets to follow Jesus Christ? |
44280 | yet trust them within the sound of predestination? |
9607 | ''Why not?'' 9607 And I am to board with him, also, if I understand you, father?" |
9607 | And came all the way from Boston alone? |
9607 | And have poverty for our capital? |
9607 | And he owes you for board and lodgings? |
9607 | And how about money? 9607 And only seventeen years old now?" |
9607 | And spurious religion is all religion that he do not believe in, I suppose,suggested John,"come from above or below? |
9607 | And starve, too? |
9607 | And what are your prospects at Keimer''s? |
9607 | And what is that? 9607 And what was your father''s business, if I may be permitted to ask? |
9607 | And when will you return? |
9607 | Any whistles? |
9607 | Are all Americans like you? |
9607 | Are you acquainted with him? |
9607 | Are you bringing forth more poetry? |
9607 | Are you hungry? |
9607 | Are you the young man who has opened this printing house? |
9607 | Because Philadelphia is degenerating, and half the people are now bankrupt, or nearly so, and how can they support so many printers? |
9607 | Because you think it is wicked to kill harmless animals of any kind? |
9607 | Been to see the governor, hey? |
9607 | Benjamin,said Mr. Franklin, after a little,"where were you last evening?" |
9607 | Boston, hey? 9607 But I suppose you want to go to work at your old trade? |
9607 | But are there such men as these in thee, O New England? 9607 But can you tell me what selfish end he has in view, for Keimer would never come down like that unless he had an axe to grind?" |
9607 | But dost thou love life? 9607 But how am I going to get along without you, Ben? |
9607 | But how can I get aboard? 9607 But how do you propose to reach the public, and interest them in your plan?" |
9607 | But if we sinners do not object, why should you saints? 9607 But will you not allow some comfort to hard- working men?" |
9607 | But you did not work at the candle business long, if you became a printer at twelve? |
9607 | But, do you notice,added one of the club,"that no one but James Franklin is forbidden to publish the_ Courant_? |
9607 | Ca n''t you see it? |
9607 | Can I find employment in your printing office? |
9607 | Can I see him? |
9607 | Can I see him? |
9607 | Can any one particular form of government suit all mankind? 9607 Can it be you, my son? |
9607 | Can it be you? |
9607 | Can that be? |
9607 | Can you give me any idea of the time it will take, after you return, to get a printing house in running order? |
9607 | Can you take a friend of mine to New York? |
9607 | Can you take me in? 9607 Can you teach my two sons the art at once?" |
9607 | Come here dead broke? 9607 Come, Ben, let us row him; he do n''t know what he is about,"said one of the other boys;"what signifies it?" |
9607 | Did he say so? |
9607 | Did they belong to you? |
9607 | Did you ask the price of it? |
9607 | Do n''t that sound well, my boy? 9607 Do n''t they smell good?" |
9607 | Do n''t you ever drink it? |
9607 | Do n''t_ you_ eat fish? |
9607 | Do you find all the books you want to read? |
9607 | Do you know him? |
9607 | Do you know his name? |
9607 | Do you like it well enough to choose it, Benjamin? |
9607 | Do you propose to raise the money yourself? |
9607 | Do you think I pay more for your board than it is worth? |
9607 | Do you think I should be likely to find work at some other printing office in town? |
9607 | Do you think he means to make Philadelphia his home in the future? |
9607 | Do you understand a printing press well enough to repair it? |
9607 | Do you understand all parts of it so that you can go on with it? |
9607 | Do you understand that part of the business? |
9607 | Does Mr. Keimer suspect that any thing in particular is on the tapis? 9607 Does your father know about it?" |
9607 | Each man to arm himself at his own expense, I suppose? |
9607 | Employ you? |
9607 | Goin''to stop some time in Philadelphy? |
9607 | Going back? |
9607 | Going out for your employer? |
9607 | Going? |
9607 | Good pay? |
9607 | Got brothers and sisters? |
9607 | Got friends in Philadelphia? |
9607 | Had any ill- luck on your way? |
9607 | Has the governor of the Massachusetts Province sent for you? |
9607 | Have any trouble to accomplish it? 9607 Have you a subject to suggest?" |
9607 | Have you spoken with your father about it? |
9607 | He does; do you wish to see him? |
9607 | Here, Jake, where are you? |
9607 | How about articles for it? 9607 How can you expect to get all the business when there is another printer here, who has been established some time?" |
9607 | How did they feel about your going so far from home? |
9607 | How do you propose to get to New York? 9607 How does Philadelphia compare with Boston?" |
9607 | How does it happen, then, that some of their works are so popular? |
9607 | How expensive will such a measure be? 9607 How far is it to Philadelphia?" |
9607 | How in the world did he happen to come here with you? |
9607 | How is James? 9607 How is that, Ben? |
9607 | How is that? 9607 How is that? |
9607 | How is that? 9607 How is that?" |
9607 | How large is the place? |
9607 | How long have you worked at the business? |
9607 | How long shall I have to wait? |
9607 | How long will you be gone? |
9607 | How many copies shall you publish in the first issue? |
9607 | How many copies will you print? |
9607 | How many members should the organization embrace? |
9607 | How many subscribers have you? |
9607 | How may smoky chimneys be best cured? 9607 How may the phenomenon of vapors be explained? |
9607 | How may the possession of the lakes be improved to our advantage? 9607 How much did you give for the whistle?" |
9607 | How much further you going? |
9607 | How much money have you? |
9607 | How old are you? |
9607 | How old? |
9607 | How so? |
9607 | How so? |
9607 | How so? |
9607 | How so? |
9607 | How so? |
9607 | How soon will the sloop sail? |
9607 | How soon will you return? |
9607 | How soon will you want the inventory of articles? |
9607 | How will it do for me to return with you? |
9607 | How would this plan do? |
9607 | How would you like to learn the printer''s trade with your brother James? |
9607 | How would you like to return to Philadelphia? |
9607 | How, then, can you meet the difficulty? |
9607 | How? |
9607 | I am a stranger in this town; arrived here this morning; can you tell me where I can get a night''s lodging? |
9607 | I am booked for the mercantile business in Philadelphia"How is that? 9607 I shall like that,"answered Benjamin;"but why can I not attend school until I am old enough to help you?" |
9607 | I should like to know what? |
9607 | I want to see him; will you call him? |
9607 | I would like to know where you discover evidence of it? |
9607 | If you know, why have you not disclosed it before? |
9607 | Is he a young man of standing and good habits? |
9607 | Is it inconsistent with the principles of liberty in a free government, to punish a man as a libeller when he speaks the truth? |
9607 | Is self- interest the rudder that steers mankind, the universal monarch to whom all are tributaries? 9607 Is that so? |
9607 | Is that so? |
9607 | Is the emission of paper money safe? 9607 Is there a man at work in your printing house by the name of Franklin-- Benjamin Franklin?" |
9607 | May I have some? |
9607 | May not a military force carry the Stamp Act into execution? |
9607 | Mr. Franklin, what is the lowest price you will take for this book? |
9607 | No work in Boston, I s''pose, hey? 9607 No work in New York, hey? |
9607 | No; I have followed the land mostly; but there are hard storms on the land, are there not? |
9607 | Not just now,replied Benjamin;"but what chance is there for landing on such a rocky shore?" |
9607 | Of what use are Rhetoric and Logic? 9607 One dollar,"repeated the lounger;"ca n''t you take less than that?" |
9607 | Only ninety? |
9607 | Perhaps Boston is tired of him-- is that so? 9607 Pray, tell us how? |
9607 | Raising money for the same by subscription, do you mean? |
9607 | Second- hand, I conclude? |
9607 | Shall I do it immediately? |
9607 | Suppose a military force sent into America; they will find nobody in arms; what are they, then, to do? 9607 That is very kind on your part; but is it not true, that two printing houses are as many as this town can support well?" |
9607 | That is what I want,he said to the boy;"where did you get that?" |
9607 | That is, become a water- drinker, you mean, Ben? |
9607 | That is, you propose to board me for one shilling and sixpence a week? |
9607 | The printing business bring you that? |
9607 | Thee going to remain here some time? |
9607 | Then he could not take the concern into his own hands for you to run? |
9607 | Then he ran away from Boston? |
9607 | Then he was a minister, was he? |
9607 | Then you are a poet are you? |
9607 | Then you do n''t believe a man can do more work for drinking strong beer? |
9607 | Then you do n''t think I am good enough to go back with you? |
9607 | Then you do n''t want I should go with you? |
9607 | Then you do not consider it a complete success? |
9607 | Then you do not now believe all that you have been taught about religion, if I understand you? |
9607 | Then you had to resort to falsehood to carry your point, did you? 9607 Then you have followed the sea, have you?" |
9607 | Then you stole them, did you? |
9607 | Then you think more of the style than you do of the matter? |
9607 | Then you will sell out your interest to me, if I understand you? |
9607 | Then, we are to understand that his name is Benjamin? |
9607 | Then, why is not the whole subject fairly before us? |
9607 | There is another printer here, is there not? |
9607 | There, are you all right now? |
9607 | Think you can do better in trading than printing? |
9607 | Want more gingerbread? |
9607 | Well, Philadelphy is a great place for work; what sort of work do you want? |
9607 | Well, what do you think of the plan? |
9607 | What are the body of the people in the Colonies? |
9607 | What are you going to buy, Ben? |
9607 | What book have you there, Ben? |
9607 | What can the governor want of that boy? |
9607 | What could possibly be your object in doing so? |
9607 | What did you build it with? |
9607 | What did you come here for? |
9607 | What do you propose to do if you leave your brother? |
9607 | What do you say to taking that, Ralph? |
9607 | What do you say, Ralph? |
9607 | What do you suppose that fellow has done? 9607 What do you think of my going to Philadelphia with you?" |
9607 | What do you think of my prospects here, sir? |
9607 | What do you think of the idea of taking this baby into the house of God to- day, and consecrating him to the Lord? |
9607 | What do you want of such a book as that? |
9607 | What does he do that is so bad? |
9607 | What else would you like to do? |
9607 | What experience have you had? |
9607 | What has happened now, Ben? |
9607 | What have you there, Ben? |
9607 | What have you there, Ben? |
9607 | What have you to propose? 9607 What in the world could suggest such a_ nom de plume_ to a writer?" |
9607 | What is cruel? |
9607 | What is it? |
9607 | What is it? |
9607 | What is that? |
9607 | What is that? |
9607 | What is the conveyance there? |
9607 | What is the reason that men of the greatest knowledge are not the most happy? 9607 What is the reason that the tides rise higher in the Bay of Fundy than the Bay of Delaware? |
9607 | What is there about it that interests you so much? |
9607 | What is your opinion of my article? |
9607 | What kind of a place is it? |
9607 | What kind of money do you have there? |
9607 | What makes you think he has gambled? |
9607 | What makes you think so? |
9607 | What now? |
9607 | What of that? |
9607 | What put such a queer notion as that into your head? |
9607 | What sort of an invention? 9607 What was your business?" |
9607 | What were you doing there? |
9607 | What would you have if you could get it; roast chicken and plum pudding? |
9607 | What ye goin''to Philadelphy for? |
9607 | What you got there? |
9607 | When shall I begin? |
9607 | When will you go? |
9607 | When will you let us see it on trial? |
9607 | Where are you from, young man? |
9607 | Where are you from? |
9607 | Where are you from? |
9607 | Where did you come from? |
9607 | Where did you get your stones? |
9607 | Where have you been, Ben? |
9607 | Where have you been? |
9607 | Where will you get your lumber? |
9607 | Where? |
9607 | Wherein is my reasoning illogical or incorrect? |
9607 | Whether it ought to be the aim of philosophy to eradicate the passions? 9607 Which is the best form of government, and what was that form which first prevailed among mankind? |
9607 | Which is the least criminal, a_ bad_ action joined with a_ good_ intention, or a_ good_ action with a_ bad_ intention? 9607 Who is Governor Burnet, that he should want to see me?" |
9607 | Who is your friend? 9607 Who is''Silence Dogood''?" |
9607 | Why are tumultuous, uneasy sensations united with our desires? 9607 Why did you think so?" |
9607 | Why do n''t you learn? 9607 Why does n''t he find work in Boston? |
9607 | Why does the flame of a candle tend upwards in a spire? 9607 Why not get into one of the other printing offices in town? |
9607 | Why not? 9607 Why so, father? |
9607 | Why, then, did you take them in the evening, after the workmen had gone home? 9607 Why?" |
9607 | Will the Americans consent to pay the stamp duty if it is lessened? |
9607 | Will you employ me as journeyman printer? |
9607 | Will you row now? |
9607 | Will you row, John? |
9607 | Will you tell who the author is now? |
9607 | Would n''t it be a joke on those fellows if they should find their pile of stones missing in the morning? |
9607 | Would n''t you like to go, Ben? |
9607 | Would the people of Boston discontinue their trade? |
9607 | Would they suffer the produce of their lands to rot? |
9607 | Would you be willing that I should exchange Bunyan''s works for them? |
9607 | Writing a sermon or your will? 9607 Yes, there''s three- penny worth; that is what you said, was it not?" |
9607 | You are the author of a pamphlet called,and he gave the title,"are you?" |
9607 | You did not know that man, did you? |
9607 | You have a purse, I understand, made of the_ asbestos_, which purifies by fire? |
9607 | You have no idea who wrote it, then? |
9607 | You have? 9607 You think that Sir William Keith is reliable, do you?" |
9607 | You will give him an education, I suppose? |
9607 | You will not take him out of school until John leaves, will you? |
9607 | Your father and mother living? |
9607 | Your work is increasing, I suppose? |
9607 | ''_ Sells_ hats?'' |
9607 | A member raised the question,"Can another printing house prosper in town?" |
9607 | All that?" |
9607 | And have we now forgotten that powerful Friend? |
9607 | And he is settled now in Philadelphia?" |
9607 | And in what fair, likely way may we endeavor it? |
9607 | And why, Benjamin, do you deem an engagement necessary in the circumstances?" |
9607 | And, if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probably that an empire can rise without his aid? |
9607 | Are you a printer?" |
9607 | Are you acquainted here?" |
9607 | Benjamin? |
9607 | But I shall want to hear from you, Ben,--can''t you write?" |
9607 | But I wanted to ask you about your Boston experience in a printing office; what office was you in?" |
9607 | But are you not a little odd in discarding what nearly every one uses?" |
9607 | But does it work easy?" |
9607 | But he inquired:"How about the price to be paid for the passage?" |
9607 | But how about Shaftesbury? |
9607 | But how could he prove it? |
9607 | But how should he disclose? |
9607 | But how will you dispose of it?" |
9607 | But how will you get along with your indenture if you leave him?" |
9607 | But just what will you do at your public meeting?" |
9607 | But must I discard it because some men use it to their injury?" |
9607 | But suppose the captain is very inquisitive about me, how will you get along with the case? |
9607 | But the senior broke the silence by saying:"You write for the press? |
9607 | But what sort of a swimming apparatus have you in mind?" |
9607 | But why do you seek work in this country?" |
9607 | By changing the name of the paper?" |
9607 | Ca n''t you make it go?" |
9607 | Can I look them over for my letters?" |
9607 | Can we not arrange to go into business together?" |
9607 | Could n''t you turn your hand to something else?" |
9607 | Could she believe her eyes? |
9607 | Could we get work at our business?" |
9607 | Could we, who were lookers on, think it real? |
9607 | Denham?" |
9607 | Did I not prophesy that he would make his mark in manhood?" |
9607 | Did I not say that Benjamin would not always make candles? |
9607 | Do n''t he think they are worthy of print?" |
9607 | Do we know of any person languishing under sore and sad affliction; and is there any thing we can do for the succor of such an afflicted neighbor? |
9607 | Do you love truth for truth''s sake; and will you endeavor impartially to find and receive it yourself, and communicate it to others? |
9607 | Do you mean to say that you wrote those articles?" |
9607 | Do you sincerely declare that you love mankind in general, of what profession or religion soever? |
9607 | Do you think any person ought to be harmed in his body, name, or goods, for mere speculative opinion, or his external way of worship? |
9607 | Does James know how you feel about it?" |
9607 | Does there appear any instance of oppression or fraudulence in the dealings of any sort of people that may call for our essays to get it rectified? |
9607 | Entering the bake- shop, he inquired:"Have you biscuit?" |
9607 | Expect that your brother will lay violent hands upon you to prevent?" |
9607 | Finally, however, James''curiosity grew to such proportions that he inquired one day,--"Ben, how much do you make by boarding yourself?" |
9607 | Got any plans ahead?" |
9607 | Had they not bound themselves by solemn covenant to aid the devil in destroying human souls and afflicting the elect? |
9607 | Has not Captain Homes told you where I was?" |
9607 | Have you any other pieces?" |
9607 | Have you any particular disrespect to any present member? |
9607 | He ventured to inquire:"What can you tell me about Mrs. Read and her daughter?" |
9607 | How about your books-- can you sell them?" |
9607 | How can I make the best on''t?" |
9607 | How can you tell whether they are mentally inferior or not, until they are permitted to enjoy equal advantages?" |
9607 | How can you want to leave your good home, and all your friends, to live in a ship, exposed to storms and death all the time?" |
9607 | How did Captain Homes discover his place of residence? |
9607 | How is that?" |
9607 | How long have you been on the way?" |
9607 | How long since you left?" |
9607 | How long will it take to learn the trade?" |
9607 | How much will he pay for his passage?" |
9607 | How was that, John?" |
9607 | How would that do?" |
9607 | How would you like to number Sir Isaac Newton among your friends?" |
9607 | How would you like your Cousin Samuel''s business?" |
9607 | I can tell better when have looked in upon other trades When shall we go?" |
9607 | I suppose he is at the printing office? |
9607 | I would like to educate you for the ministry if I could; how would you like that?" |
9607 | If beer imparts the strength you imagine, any one of you ought to do more work and lift more than I can; is n''t that so?" |
9607 | In his walk he came around to the river, and, as he approached it, he discovered a boat with several people in it, and he hailed them:"Whither bound?" |
9607 | Is it not enough that we have lost one son in that way? |
9607 | Is there any matter to be humbly moved unto the Legislative Power, to be enacted into a Law for the public benefit? |
9607 | Is there any other conveyance to Philadelphia?" |
9607 | Is there any remarkable disorder in the place that requires our endeavor for the suppression of it? |
9607 | Is there any sort of officers among us to such a degree unmindful of their duty that we may do well to mind them of it? |
9607 | Is there any special service to the interest of Religion which we may conveniently desire our ministers to take notice of? |
9607 | Is there any thing more I can do for you?" |
9607 | Is there any thing we may do well to mention unto the justices for the further promoting good order? |
9607 | It requires activity of thought-- but without that what is any reading but mere passive amusement? |
9607 | May I have some, pa?" |
9607 | Now, honestly, is not this much better for me, or for yourself, than the same amount of filthy beer?" |
9607 | On returning, one of the gentlemen said:"Franklin, why can you not give us an exhibition of your antics in the water?" |
9607 | One day a lounger stepped into his shop, and, after looking over the articles, asked:"What is the price of that book?" |
9607 | One of the first questions that Benjamin asked was:"How did you learn that I was living in Philadelphia?" |
9607 | Or, are there any contending persons whom we should admonish to quench their contentions? |
9607 | People on every hand inquired,"Who is_ Busy Body_?" |
9607 | The editor had some trouble with the Government, did he not?" |
9607 | The following are some of the questions discussed by members of the Junto:"Is sound an entity or body? |
9607 | The governor of New York sent for me-- Governor Burnet-- what do you think of that?" |
9607 | Then Benjamin would cry out:"Will you row now, John?" |
9607 | They are for my good; and, besides, what are the pains of a moment in comparison with the pleasures of eternity?" |
9607 | This forward spring foretells a plenteous crop; For, if the bud bear grain, what will the top? |
9607 | Waiting a few moments, and still looking over the book, he said, at length:"Is Mr. Franklin at home?" |
9607 | Was it any wonder? |
9607 | Watts?" |
9607 | Were they not in league with Satan, the arch- enemy of God and man? |
9607 | Were you not a printer in London?" |
9607 | What does paving cost a square yard?" |
9607 | What has he written?" |
9607 | What is the matter with it?" |
9607 | What is your name?" |
9607 | What kin ye du?" |
9607 | What should he do? |
9607 | What sort of a boy must he be? |
9607 | What sort of work do you do, that you find it so scarce?" |
9607 | What will you have done?" |
9607 | What would you advise me to do?" |
9607 | What, then, is the use of that word?'' |
9607 | When will you begin to keep your boarder?" |
9607 | Where is your home?" |
9607 | Whether it was so or not, his father replied:"I should like to read it; what is it about?" |
9607 | Who can be so thoughtless?" |
9607 | Who can it be?" |
9607 | Why did you not go after them when the workmen were all there? |
9607 | Will you have any trouble about getting articles?" |
9607 | Will you learn a lesson from this, and never do the like again?" |
9607 | With an effort to conceal his surprise and interest, he asked:"For whom does he work?" |
9607 | You ask what I mean? |
9607 | You can teach two as well as one, ca n''t you?" |
9607 | You did not awaken his suspicion, did you?" |
9607 | Your parents living?" |
9607 | all you have?" |
9607 | back again?" |
9607 | can it be you?" |
9607 | continued his mother;"Something to make us crazy?" |
9607 | exclaimed John with surprise,"did you give all your money for that little concern?" |
9607 | exclaimed his father,"can that be you?" |
9607 | exclaimed the captain;"how you goin''to eat''em before you catch''em?" |
9607 | or do we imagine we no longer need his assistance? |
9607 | poetry is it?" |
9607 | responded Potts, who had listened to Franklin''s plan;"is that all it will cost?" |
13310 | Are you the landlord? |
13310 | Jest as I''m mind to, Obed; how do you? |
13310 | ''Ai nt you a buster?'' |
13310 | ''And I, do I not twirl from left to right For conscience''sake? |
13310 | ''And who were they,''I mused,''that wrought Through pathless wilds, with labor long, The highways of our daily thought? |
13310 | ''Angel,''asked I humbly then,''Weighest thou the souls of men? |
13310 | ''But what''s that? |
13310 | ''Did he think I had given him a book to review? |
13310 | ''God of all the olden prophets, Wilt thou speak with men no more? |
13310 | ''Hath he let vultures climb his eagle''s seat To make Jove''s bolts purveyors of their maw? |
13310 | ''Have ye founded your thrones and altars, then, On the bodies and souls of living men? |
13310 | ''I ask no ampler skies than those His magic music rears above me, No falser friends, no truer foes,-- And does not Doña Clara love me? |
13310 | ''I was the chosen trump wherethrough Our God sent forth awakening breath; Came chains? |
13310 | ''Jes''to hold on till Johnson''s thru An''dug his Presidential grave is, An''_ then!_--who knows but we could slew The country roun''to put in----? |
13310 | ''Let the South hev her rights?'' |
13310 | ''Oh, did it seem''z ef Providunce_ Could_ ever send a second Tyler? |
13310 | ''Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love, But why did you kick me down stairs?'' |
13310 | ''Pray, why, if in Arcadia once, Need one so soon forget the way there? |
13310 | ''Say, Obed, wut ye got? |
13310 | ''Talented young parishioner''? |
13310 | ''The earth,''they murmur,''is the tomb That vainly sought his life to prison; Why grovel longer in the gloom? |
13310 | ''These buttercups shall brim with wine Beyond all Lesbian juice or Massic; May not New England be divine? |
13310 | ''These loud ancestral boasts of yours, How can they else than vex us? |
13310 | ''Tis a face that can never grow older, That never can part with its gleam,''Tis a gracious possession forever, For is it not all a dream? |
13310 | ''Twun''t pay to scringe to England: will it pay 190 To fear thet meaner bully, old''They''ll say''? |
13310 | ''WHAT WERE I, LOVE, IF I WERE STRIPPED OF THEE?'' |
13310 | ''Wall, no; I come designin''--''''To see my Ma? |
13310 | ''We knowed wut his princerples wuz''fore we sent him''? |
13310 | ''What boot your many- volumed gains, Those withered leaves forever turning, To win, at best, for all your pains, A nature mummy- wrapt to learning? |
13310 | ''What make we, murmur''st thou? |
13310 | ''What mean,''I ask,''these sudden joys? |
13310 | ''What means that star,''the Shepherds said,''That brightens through the rocky glen?'' |
13310 | ''Where lies the capital, pilgrim, seat of who governs the Faithful?'' |
13310 | ''Where lies the capital, pilgrim, seat of who governs the Faithful?'' |
13310 | ''Who''d have thought she was near it? |
13310 | ''Wut_ is_ there lef I''d like to know, Ef''tain''t the defference o''color, To keep up self- respec''an''show 400 The human natur''of a fullah? |
13310 | ''You want to see my Pa, I s''pose?'' |
13310 | ''You want to see my Pa, I spose?'' |
13310 | ( Perhaps the pump and trough would do, If painted a judicious blue?) |
13310 | (?) |
13310 | --''My_ wut?_''sez I.--''Your gret- gret- gret,''sez he:''You would n''t ha''never ben here but for me. |
13310 | 10 Then all was silent, till there smote my ear A movement in the stream that checked my breath: Was it the slow plash of a wading deer? |
13310 | 10 Who ever''d ha''thought sech a pisonous rig Would be run by a chap thet wuz chose fer a Wig? |
13310 | 10 Why make we moan For loss that doth enrich us yet With upward yearning of regret? |
13310 | 10''What''s Beauty?'' |
13310 | 120 An''why should we kick up a muss About the Pres''dunt''s proclamation? |
13310 | 120 XVI''Do souls alone clear- eyed, strong- kneed, To Him true service render, And they who need his hand to lead, Find they his heart untender? |
13310 | 130 What the full summer to that wonder new? |
13310 | 130_ Wut_''ll make ye act like freemen? |
13310 | 140 Be patient, and perhaps( who knows?) |
13310 | 140 In fields their boyish feet had known? |
13310 | 150 Rightly? |
13310 | 180 Was I too bitter? |
13310 | 190 Here is no singer; What should they sing of? |
13310 | 20 A loneliness that is not lone, A love quite withered up and gone, A strong soul ousted from its throne, What wouldst thou further, Rosaline? |
13310 | 20 Ai nt princerple precious? |
13310 | 20 D''ye spose the Gret Foreseer''s plan Wuz settled fer him in town- meetin''? |
13310 | 20 Did Jehovah ask their counsel, or submit to them a plan, Ere He filled with loves, hopes, longings, this aspiring heart of man? |
13310 | 20 Himself had loved a theme like this; Must I be its entomber? |
13310 | 20 Never could mortal ear nor eye By sound or sign suspect them nigh, Yet why may not some subtler sense Than those poor two give evidence? |
13310 | 200''Work? |
13310 | 210 But_ are_ they lies? |
13310 | 210 Wut''s your name? |
13310 | 220 Did he set tu an''make it wut it is? |
13310 | 220 Passionless, say you? |
13310 | 230 An''is the country goin''to knuckle down To hev Smith sort their letters''stid o''Brown? |
13310 | 230 Dare I think that I cast In the fountain of youth The fleeting reflection Of some bygone perfection That still lingers in me? |
13310 | 240 Ai n''t_ this_ the true p''int? |
13310 | 250"Can I have lodging here?" |
13310 | 270 Ef they warn''t out, then why,''n the name o''sin, Make all this row''bout lettin''of''em in? |
13310 | 30 But why this praise to make you blush and stare, And give a backache to your Easy- Chair? |
13310 | 30 Can I look up with face aglow, And answer,''Father, here is gold''? |
13310 | 30 Comes not to all some glimpse that brings Strange sense of sense- escaping things? |
13310 | 30 III Tell me, young men, have ye seen Creature of diviner mien For true hearts to long and cry for, Manly hearts to live and die for? |
13310 | 30 Is not here some other''s image, dark and sullied though it be, In this fellow- soul that worships, struggles Godward even as we? |
13310 | 30''What helpeth lightness of the feet?'' |
13310 | 330 Is old Religion but a spectre now, Haunting the solitude of darkened minds, Mocked out of memory by the sceptic day? |
13310 | 40 Ask I no more? |
13310 | 40 Think you Truth a farthing rushlight, to be pinched out when you will With your deft official fingers, and your politicians''skill? |
13310 | 40 Who never turned a suppliant from her door? |
13310 | 40''Is there no hope?'' |
13310 | 400 XVI What fear could face a heaven and earth like this? |
13310 | 490 Where would departed spinsters dwell? |
13310 | 50 And a toast,--what should that, be? |
13310 | 50 And are these tears? |
13310 | 50 Hain''t we saved Habus Coppers, improved it in fact, By suspendin''the Unionists''stid o''the Act? |
13310 | 50 What wonder if, with protest in my thought, Arrived, I find''twas only love I brought? |
13310 | 500 If so, then where most torture fell? |
13310 | 510 Did primitive Christians ever train? |
13310 | 520 Was Junius writ by Thomas Paine? |
13310 | 590 It was the first man''s charter; why not mine? |
13310 | 60 Is it illusion? |
13310 | 60''Is the doom sealed for Hesper? |
13310 | 670 Delight like this the eye of after days Brightening with pride that here, at least, were men Who meant and did the noblest thing they knew? |
13310 | 70 Could eighteen years strike down no deeper root? |
13310 | 80 I write of one, While with dim eyes I think of three; Who weeps not others fair and brave as he? |
13310 | 80 One needs something tangible, though, to begin on,-- A loom, as it were, for the fancy to spin on; What boots all your grist? |
13310 | 80 THE MONIMENT You know them envys thet the Rebbles sent, An''Cap''n Wilkes he borried o''the Trent? |
13310 | 80 What''s watching her slow flock''s increase To ventures for the golden fleece? |
13310 | 80 Why more exotics? |
13310 | 80''Come, Joan, your arm; we''ll walk the room-- The lane, I mean-- do you remember? |
13310 | 9 You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
13310 | ;''and in Beaumont and Fletcher''s''Wit without Money,''Valentine says,''Will you go drink, And let the world slide?'' |
13310 | A cynic? |
13310 | A juggle of that pity for ourselves In others, which puts on such pretty masks And snares self- love with bait of charity? |
13310 | A new strait- waistcoat for the human mind; Are you not limbed, nerved, jointed, arteried, juiced, As other men? |
13310 | A rapier thrusts coat- skirt aside, My rough Tweeds bloom to silken pride,-- Who was it laughed? |
13310 | A sweetness intellectually conceived In simpler creeds to me impossible? |
13310 | A wildness rushing suddenly, A knowing some ill shape is nigh, A wish for death, a fear to die, Is not this vengeance, Rosaline? |
13310 | ANTI- APIS Praisest Law, friend? |
13310 | Adam, eldest son of, respected, his fall, how if he had bitten a sweet apple? |
13310 | After all, what is it but another form of_ straightway_? |
13310 | Ai n''t the laws free to all? |
13310 | Ai n''t the safeguards o''freedom upsot,''z you may say, Ef the right o''rev''lution is took clean away? |
13310 | Ai n''t_ sech_ things wuth secedin''for, an''gittin''red o''you Thet waller in your low idees, an''will tell all is blue? |
13310 | Ai nt it cute to see a Yankee Take sech everlastin''pains, All to get the Devil''s thankee Helpin''on''em weld their chains? |
13310 | Alas, who ever answer heard From fish, and dream- fish too? |
13310 | Albeit I follow fast, Who cometh over the hills, Who does his duty is a question, Who hath not been a poet? |
13310 | All things wuz gin to man for''s use, his sarvice, an''delight; 39 An''do n''t the Greek an''Hebrew words thet mean a Man mean White? |
13310 | Am I tagging my rhymes to a legend? |
13310 | Among the Arts whereof thou art_ Magister_, does that of_ seeing_ happen to be one? |
13310 | An''ai n''t thet sunthin''like a right divine To cut up ez kentenkerous ez I please, An''treat your Congress like a nest o''fleas?'' |
13310 | An''ca n''t we spell it in thet short- han''way Till th''underpinnin''s settled so''s to stay? |
13310 | An''doosn''t the right primy- fashy include The bein''entitled to nut be subdued? |
13310 | An''then, agin, wut airthly use? |
13310 | And are those visioned shores I see But sirens''islands? |
13310 | And by what College of Cardinals is this our God''s- vicar, our binder and looser, elected? |
13310 | And canst not uncover, Enchantedly sleeping, The old shade of thy lover? |
13310 | And chase to dreamland back thy gods dethroned? |
13310 | And dear Brer Rabbit, can I forget him? |
13310 | And if pure light, as some deem, be the force That drives rejoicing planets on their course, Why for his power benign seek an impurer source? |
13310 | And is man wiser? |
13310 | And should we not rate more cheaply any honor that men could pay us, if we remembered that every day we sat at the table of the Great King? |
13310 | And think ye that building shall endure, Which shelters the noble and crushes the poor? |
13310 | And what gift bring I to this untried world? |
13310 | And what greater phonetic vagary( which Dryden, by the way, called_ fegary_) in our_ lingua rustica_ than this_ ker_ for_ couvre_? |
13310 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
13310 | And when she came, how earned I such a gift? |
13310 | And which of us now would not feel wisely grateful, If his rhymes sold as fast as the Emblems of Quarles? |
13310 | And who are they but who forget? |
13310 | And why not_ illy_? |
13310 | And with commissioned talons wrench From thy supplanter''s grimy clench His sheath of steel, his wings of smoke and flame? |
13310 | And would you know who his hearers must be? |
13310 | And yet what is viler than the universal_ Misses_(_ Mrs._) for_ Mistress_? |
13310 | And, strangest of all, is not this singular person anxious to have me informed that he has received a fresh supply of Dimitry Bruisgins? |
13310 | Another star''neath Time''s horizon dropped, Are we, then, wholly fallen? |
13310 | Approaches, premonitions, signs, Voices of Ariel that die out In the dim No Man''s Land of Doubt? |
13310 | Are not here two who would have me know of their marriage? |
13310 | Are not my earth and heaven at strife? |
13310 | Are our morals, then, no better than_ mores_ after all? |
13310 | Are these Night''s dusky birds? |
13310 | Are those, I muse, the Easter chimes? |
13310 | Are we pledged to craven silence? |
13310 | Are, then, our woods, our mountains, and our streams, Needful to teach our poets how to sing? |
13310 | Art thou sound and whole? |
13310 | As horses with an instant thrill Measure their rider''s strength of will? |
13310 | Ask rather could he else have seen at all, Or grown in Nature''s mysteries an adept? |
13310 | Asked South demurely;''as agreed, The land is open to your seed, And would you fain prevent my pigs From running there their harmless rigs? |
13310 | At other times it has the sound of_ t_ in_ tough_, as_ Ware ye gain''tu? |
13310 | Beckonings of bright escape, of wings Purchased with loss of baser things? |
13310 | Behold here a force which I will make dig and plant and build for me''? |
13310 | Biglow? |
13310 | Blithe truancies from all control Of Hylë, outings of the soul? |
13310 | But du pray tell me,''fore we furder go, How in all Natur''did you come to know''bout our affairs,''sez I,''in Kingdom- Come?'' |
13310 | But if bearing a grudge be the sure mark of a small mind in the individual, can it be a proof of high spirit in a nation? |
13310 | But is that a mountain playing cloud, 180 Or a cloud playing mountain, just there, so faint? |
13310 | But of what use to discuss the matter? |
13310 | But surely I shall admit the vulgarity of slurring or altogether eliding certain terminal consonants? |
13310 | But then the question come, How live together''thout losin''sleep, nor nary yew nor wether? |
13310 | But thet''s nothin''to du with it; wut right he d Palfrey To mix himself up with fanatical small fry? |
13310 | But what shall we make of_ git, yit_, and_ yis_? |
13310 | But whence came that ray? |
13310 | But, after the shipwreck, tell me What help in its iron thews, Still true to the broken hawser, Deep down among sea- weed and ooze? |
13310 | By whom, in fact, was Morgan slain? |
13310 | Callilate to stay? |
13310 | Came death? |
13310 | Can Summer fill the icy cup, Whose treacherous crystal is but Winter''s? |
13310 | Can our religion cope with deeds like this? |
13310 | Choice seems a thing indifferent: thus or so, What matters it? |
13310 | Come, neighbor, you do n''t understan''-- THE BRIDGE How? |
13310 | Comes there a prince to- day? |
13310 | Conciliate? |
13310 | Could longing, though its heart broke, give Trances in which we chiefly live? |
13310 | Could matter ever suffer pain? |
13310 | Could she partake, and live, our human stains? |
13310 | Could the world stir''thout she went, tu, ez nus? |
13310 | Cuckoo!_ Still on it went, With hints of mockery in its tone; How could such hoards of time be spent By one poor mortal''s wit alone? |
13310 | D''you think they''ll suck me in to jine the Buff''lo chaps, an''them Rank infidels thet go agin the Scriptur''l cus o''Shem? |
13310 | DAS EWIG- WEIBLICHE How was I worthy so divine a loss, Deepening my midnights, kindling all my morns? |
13310 | DE R. Why should I seek her spell to decompose Or to its source each rill of influence trace That feeds the brimming river of her grace? |
13310 | Daily such splendors to confront Is still to me and you sent? |
13310 | Did Ensign mean to marry Jane? |
13310 | Did Jubal, or whoever taught the girls thrumming, Make the patriarchs deaf at a dollar the hour? |
13310 | Did Le Sage steal Gil Blas from Spain? |
13310 | Did dancing sentence folks to hell? |
13310 | Did ghosts, to scare folks, drag a chain? |
13310 | Did he always feel the point of what was said to himself? |
13310 | Did he diskiver it? |
13310 | Did he lose all the fathers, brothers, sons? |
13310 | Did he put thru the rebbles, clear the docket, An''pay th''expenses out of his own pocket? |
13310 | Did it ever enter that old bewildered head of thine that there was the_ Possibility of the Infinite_ in him? |
13310 | Did n''t I love to see''em growin'', Three likely lads ez wal could be, Hahnsome an''brave an''not tu knowin''? |
13310 | Did none have teeth pulled without payin'', Ere ether was invented? |
13310 | Did spirits by Webster''s system spell? |
13310 | Did spirits have the sense of smell? |
13310 | Did the Rebs accep''''em? |
13310 | Do n''t your memory fail? |
13310 | Do we not know from Josephus, that, careful of His decree, a certain river in Judaea abstained from flowing on the day of Rest? |
13310 | Do ye not hear, as she comes, 20 The bay of the deep- mouthed guns, The gathering rote of the drums? |
13310 | Do you ask me to make such? |
13310 | Does he think he can be Uncle Sammle''s policeman, An''wen Sam gits tipsy an''kicks up a riot, Lead him off to the lockup to snooze till he''s quiet? |
13310 | Donne, you forgive? |
13310 | Dost thou not know me, that I am thy brother? |
13310 | Doth he not claim a broader span For the soul''s love of home than this? |
13310 | Doth my heart overween? |
13310 | Doth narrow search show thee no earthly stain? |
13310 | Doth not the yearning spirit scorn In such scant borders to be spanned? |
13310 | Dream- stuff? |
13310 | E''en if won, what''s the good of Life''s medals and prizes? |
13310 | E''er longed to mingle with a mortal fate Intense with pathos of its briefer date? |
13310 | Earth''s mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?'' |
13310 | Ef nut, whose fault is''t thet we hevn''t kep''em? |
13310 | Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, 20 Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait an''sue their heirs? |
13310 | Even it indicted, what is that but fudge To him who counted- in the elective judge? |
13310 | Excalibur and Durandart are swords of price, but then Why draw them sternly when you wish to trim your nails or pen? |
13310 | Experience( so we''re told), Time''s crucible, turns lead to gold; Yet what''s experience won but dross, Cloud- gold transmuted to our loss? |
13310 | FACT OR FANCY? |
13310 | FANCY UNDER THE OCTOBER MAPLES What mean these banners spread, These paths with royal red So gaily carpeted? |
13310 | FREEDOM Are we, then, wholly fallen? |
13310 | FRIENDSHIP AGASSIZ Come Dicesti_ egli ebbe?_ non viv''egli ancora? |
13310 | FRIENDSHIP AGASSIZ Come Dicesti_ egli ebbe?_ non viv''egli ancora? |
13310 | Fact or Fancy? |
13310 | Farther and farther back we push From Moses and his burning bush; Cry,''Art Thou there?'' |
13310 | Felt they no pang of passionate regret For those unsolid goods that seem so much our own? |
13310 | Fie, for shame, brother bard; with good fruit of your own, Ca n''t you let Neighbor Emerson''s orchards alone? |
13310 | Fit for a queen? |
13310 | Fly thither? |
13310 | Fly thither? |
13310 | For their edict does the soul wait, ere it swing round to the pole Of the true, the free, the God- willed, all that makes it be a soul? |
13310 | For what but a dealer in this article was that Æolus who supplied Ulysses with motive- power for his fleet in bags? |
13310 | For would n''t the Yankees hev found they''d ketched Tartars, Ef they''d raised two sech critters as them into martyrs? |
13310 | For, through my newspaper here, do not families take pains to send me, an entire stranger, news of a death among them? |
13310 | Forever must one be taken?'' |
13310 | Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file For him, life''s morn yet golden in his hair? |
13310 | Give to Cæsar what is Cæsar''s? |
13310 | God bends from out the deep and says,''I gave thee the great gift of life; Wast thou not called in many ways? |
13310 | Gone who so swift as he? |
13310 | Good Man all own you; what is left me, then, To heighten praise with but Good Citizen? |
13310 | Ha''n''t they made your env''ys w''iz? |
13310 | Ha''n''t they sold your colored seamen? |
13310 | Had I not been doing in my study precisely what my boy was doing out of doors? |
13310 | Had he who drew such gladness ever wept? |
13310 | Had my thoughts any more chance of coming to life by being submerged in rhyme than his hair by soaking in water? |
13310 | Had she beauty? |
13310 | Hain''t we rescued from Seward the gret leadin''featurs Thet makes it wuth while to be reasonin''creators? |
13310 | Ham''s seed wuz gin to us in chairge, an''should n''t we be li''ble In Kingdom Come, ef we kep''back their priv''lege in the Bible? |
13310 | Hardest heart would call it very awful When thou look''st at us and seest-- oh, what? |
13310 | Has Spring, on all the breezes blown, At length arrived? |
13310 | Hast thou chosen, O my people, on whose party thou shalt stand, Ere the Doom from its worn sandals shakes the dust against our land? |
13310 | Hath Good less power of prophecy than Ill? |
13310 | Hath he the Many''s plaudits found more sweet Than Wisdom? |
13310 | Have I heard, have I seen All I feel, all I know? |
13310 | Have I not as truly served thee As thy chosen ones of yore? |
13310 | Have no heaven- habitants e''er felt a void In hearts sublimed with ichor unalloyed? |
13310 | Have we not from the earth drawn juices Too fine for earth''s sordid uses? |
13310 | Have you not made us lead of gold? |
13310 | He blew a whiff, and, leaning back his head,"You come a piece through Bailey''s woods, I s''pose, Acrost a bridge where a big swamp- oak grows? |
13310 | He gropes for his remaining hairs,-- Is this a fleece that feels so curly? |
13310 | He haint, though? |
13310 | He haint, though? |
13310 | He thinks secession never took''em out, An''mebby he''s correc'', but I misdoubt? |
13310 | Help came but slowly; surely no man yet Put lever to the heavy world with less: What need of help? |
13310 | Her passion, purified to palest flame, Can it thus kindle? |
13310 | Hey? |
13310 | Hez act''ly nothin''taken place sence then To larn folks they must hendle fects like men? |
13310 | Hez he? |
13310 | Hez he? |
13310 | His nights of the rueful countenance;''I thought most folks,''one neighbor said,''Gave up the ghost when they were dead?'' |
13310 | His was a spirit that to all thy poor Was kind as slumber after pain: Why ope so soon thy heaven- deep Quiet''s door And call him home again? |
13310 | How baldness might be cured or foiled? |
13310 | How could poet ever tower, If his passions, hopes, and fears, If his triumphs and his tears, Kept not measure with his people? |
13310 | How forfeit? |
13310 | How heal diseased potatoes? |
13310 | How is it with thee? |
13310 | How keep reproach at bay? |
13310 | How known? |
13310 | How many educated men pronounce the_ t_ in_ chestnut_? |
13310 | How seen? |
13310 | How shall you speak to urge your right, Choked with that soil for which you lust? |
13310 | How stands the account of that stewardship? |
13310 | How tell to what heaven- hallowed seat The eagle bent his courses? |
13310 | How yield I back The trust for such high uses given? |
13310 | How? |
13310 | Hung o''er the ocean afar? |
13310 | I come dasignin''--''To see my Ma? |
13310 | I count to learn how late it is, Until, arrived at thirty- four, I question,''What strange world is this Whose lavish hours would make me poor?'' |
13310 | I feel it and know it, Who doubts it of such as she? |
13310 | I gave thee of my seed to sow, Bringest thou me my hundredfold?'' |
13310 | I once asked a stage- driver if the other side of a hill were as steep as the one we were climbing:''Steep? |
13310 | I seem to see this; how shall I gainsay What all our journals tell me every day? |
13310 | I therefore leave it with a? |
13310 | I went to a free soil meetin''once, an''wut d''ye think I see? |
13310 | I''d make such proceeding felonious,-- Have they all of them slept in the cave of Trophonius? |
13310 | I''ve tried to define it, but what mother''s son Could ever yet do what he knows should be done? |
13310 | I''ve wished her healthy, wealthy, wise, What more can godfather devise? |
13310 | II As I read on, what changes steal O''er me and through, from head to heel? |
13310 | II Can, then, my twofold nature find content In vain conceits of airy blandishment? |
13310 | II Do you twit me with days when I had an Ideal, And saw the sear future through spectacles green? |
13310 | IX But is there hope to save Even this ethereal essence from the grave? |
13310 | If Earth were solid or a shell? |
13310 | If Goddess, could she feel the blissful woe That women in their self- surrender know? |
13310 | If I with staff and scallop- shell should try my way to win, Would Bonifaces quarrel as to who should take me in? |
13310 | If I, with too senescent air, Invade your elder memory''s pale, You snub me with a pitying''Where Were you in the September Gale?'' |
13310 | If Paine''s invention were a sell? |
13310 | If Saturn''s rings were two or three, And what bump in Phrenology They truly represented? |
13310 | If life''s true seat were in the brain? |
13310 | If mortal merely, could my nature cope With such o''ermastery of maddening hope? |
13310 | If not, what counsel to retain? |
13310 | If only dear to Him the strong, That never trip nor wander, Where were the throng whose morning song Thrills his blue arches yonder? |
13310 | If the late Zenas Smith were well? |
13310 | If to be the thrall Of love, and faith too generous to defend Its very life from him she loved, be sin, What hope of grace may the seducer win? |
13310 | If ye do not feel the chain, When it works a brother''s pain, Are ye not base slaves indeed, Slaves unworthy to be freed? |
13310 | Immortal? |
13310 | In household faces waiting at the door Their evening step should lighten up no more? |
13310 | In six months where''ll the People be, Ef leaders look on revolution 90 Ez though it wuz a cup o''tea,-- Jest social el''ments in solution? |
13310 | In trees their fathers''hands had set, And which with them had grown, Widening each year their leafy coronet? |
13310 | In what river Selemnus has Mr. Sawin bathed, that he has become so swiftly oblivious of his former loves? |
13310 | Indeed, why should not_ sithence_ take that form? |
13310 | Irving? |
13310 | Is a thrush gurgling from the brake? |
13310 | Is earth too poor to give us 70 Something to live for here that shall outlive us? |
13310 | Is her purpose this? |
13310 | Is it Fancy''s play? |
13310 | Is it Fancy''s play? |
13310 | Is it Thor''s hammer Rays in his right hand? |
13310 | Is it a type, since Nature''s Lyre Vibrates to every note in man, Of that insatiable desire, Meant to be so since life began? |
13310 | Is it alone where freedom is, Where God is God and man is man? |
13310 | Is it not better here to be, Than to be toiling late and soon? |
13310 | Is it not possible that the Shakers may intend to convey a quiet reproof and hint, in fastening their outer garments with hooks and eyes? |
13310 | Is it where he by chance is born? |
13310 | Is not a''sleeveless errand''one that can not be unravelled, incomprehensible, and therefore bootless? |
13310 | Is our_ gin_ for_ given_ more violent than_ mar''l_ for_ marvel_, which was once common, and which I find as late as Herrick? |
13310 | Is that no work? |
13310 | Is there no corner safe from peeping Doubt, Since Gutenberg made thought cosmopolite And stretched electric threads from mind to mind? |
13310 | Is there none left of thy stanch Mayflower breed? |
13310 | Is there nothing more divine Than the patched- up broils of Congress, venal, full of meat and wine? |
13310 | Is there, say you, nothing higher? |
13310 | Is this Atlantis? |
13310 | Is this ere pop''lar gov''ment thet we run A kin''o''sulky, made to kerry one? |
13310 | Is this wise? |
13310 | Is true Freedom but to break Fetters for our own dear sake, And, with leathern hearts, forget That we owe mankind a debt? |
13310 | Is your God a wooden fetish, to be hidden out of sight That his block eyes may not see you do the thing that is not right? |
13310 | It is perhaps a_ pis aller_, but is not_ No Thoroughfare_ written up everywhere else? |
13310 | It is the tyrants who have beaten out Ploughshares and pruning- hooks to spears and swords, And shall I pause and moralize and doubt? |
13310 | It''s a fact o''wich ther''s bushils o''proofs; Fer how could we trample on''t so, I wonder, Ef''t worn''t thet it''s ollers under our hoofs?'' |
13310 | It''s there we fail; Weak plans grow weaker yit by lengthenin'': Wut use in addin''to the tail, When it''s the head''s in need o''strengthenin''? |
13310 | It''s you thet''s to decide; 110 Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
13310 | Italy? |
13310 | Kind hearts are beating on every side; Ah, why should we lie so coldly curled Alone in the shell of this great world? |
13310 | Knew you what silence was before? |
13310 | L''ENVOI TO THE MUSE Whither? |
13310 | LAST POEMS HOW I CONSULTED THE ORACLE OF THE GOLDFISHES What know we of the world immense Beyond the narrow ring of sense? |
13310 | LONGING Of all the myriad moods of mind That through the soul come thronging, Which one was e''er so dear, so kind, So beautiful as Longing? |
13310 | LOVE AND THOUGHT What hath Love with Thought to do? |
13310 | Law is holy: ay, but what law? |
13310 | Light of those eyes that made the light of mine, Where shine you? |
13310 | Little I ask of Fate; will she refuse Some days of reconcilement with the Muse? |
13310 | Make not youth''s sourest grapes the best wine of our life? |
13310 | Man who takes His consciousness the law to be Of all beyond his ken, and makes God but a bigger kind of Me? |
13310 | May not the reason of this exceptional form be looked for in that tendency to dodge what is hard to pronounce, to which I have already alluded? |
13310 | Methinks an angry scorn is here well- timed: Where find retreat? |
13310 | Moments that darken all beside, Tearfully radiant as a bride? |
13310 | More men? |
13310 | More''n this,--hain''t we the literatoor an science, tu, by gorry? |
13310 | Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?'' |
13310 | Must I go huntin''round to find a chap To tell me when my face hez he d a slap? |
13310 | Must it be thus forever? |
13310 | Must we forever, then, be alone? |
13310 | Must we suppose, then, that the profession of Christianity was only intended for losels, or, at best, to afford an opening for plebeian ambition? |
13310 | My ode to ripening summer classic? |
13310 | Nature? |
13310 | Nay, after the Fall did the modiste keep coming With the last styles of fig- leaf to Madam Eve''s bower? |
13310 | Nay, did Faith build this wonder? |
13310 | Nay, did he not even( shall I dare to hint it?) |
13310 | Nay, how can you ask me, sweet? |
13310 | Nay, what though The yellow blood of Trade meanwhile should pour Along its arteries a shrunken flow, And the idle canvas droop around the shore? |
13310 | Nay, when, once paid my mortal fee, Some idler on my headstone grim Traces the moss- blurred name, will he Think me the happier, or I him? |
13310 | Need he reckon his date by the Almanac''s measure Who is twenty life- long in the eyes of his wife? |
13310 | New men come as strong, And those sleep nameless; or renown in war? |
13310 | Nex''thing to knowin''you''re well off is_ nut_ to know when y''ai n''t; An''ef Jeff says all''s goin''wal, who''ll ventur''t''say it ai n''t? |
13310 | No spark among the ashes of thy sires, Of Virtue''s altar- flame the kindling seed? |
13310 | No? |
13310 | Non fiere gli occhi suoi lo dolce lome? |
13310 | Not there, amid the stormy wilderness, 180 Should we learn wisdom; or if learned, what room To put it into act,--else worse than naught? |
13310 | Not thinking,"Are we worthy?" |
13310 | Not understan''? |
13310 | Nothing? |
13310 | Now is there anythin''on airth''ll ever prove to me Thet renegader slaves like him air fit fer bein''free? |
13310 | Nymph of the unreturning feet, How may I win thee back? |
13310 | O Duty, am I dead to thee In this my cloistered ecstasy, In this lone shallop on the sea That drifts tow''rd Silence? |
13310 | O my life, have we not had seasons That only said, Live and rejoice? |
13310 | O''er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn? |
13310 | Oh, whither, whither, glory- wingèd dreams, From out Life''s, sweat and turmoil would ye bear me? |
13310 | On little toes or great toes? |
13310 | On what happier fields and flowers? |
13310 | Once more tug bravely at the peril''s root, Though death came with it? |
13310 | One that will wash, I mean, and wear, And wrap us warmly from despair? |
13310 | Or Judge self- made, executor of laws By him not first discussed and voted on? |
13310 | Or are we, then, arrived too late, Doomed with the rest to grope disconsolate, Foreclosed of Beauty by our modern date? |
13310 | Or could it have been Long ago? |
13310 | Or evade the test If right or wrong in this God''s world of ours Be leagued with mightier powers? |
13310 | Or is political information expected to come Dogberry- fashion in England, like reading and writing, by nature? |
13310 | Or shall we try the experiment of hiding our Jonah in a safe place, that none may lay hands on him to make jetsam of him? |
13310 | Or thet ther''d ben no Fall o''Man, Ef Adam''d on''y bit a sweetin''? |
13310 | Or was it not mere sympathy of brain? |
13310 | Or was it some eidolon merely, sent By her who rules the shades in banishment, To mock me with her semblance? |
13310 | Or why, once there, be such a dunce As not contentedly to stay there?'' |
13310 | Or with gladness are they full, For the night so beautiful, And longing for those far- off spheres? |
13310 | Or would my pilgrim''s progress end where Bunyan started his on, And my grand tour be round and round the backyard of a prison? |
13310 | Our legends from one source were drawn, I scarce distinguish yours from mine, And_ do n''t_ we make the Gentiles yawn With''You remembers?'' |
13310 | PRISON OF CERVANTES Seat of all woes? |
13310 | Pickenses, Boggses, Pettuses, Magoffins, Letchers, Polks,-- Where can you scare up names like them among your mudsill folks? |
13310 | Poured our young martyrs their high- hearted blood That we might trample to congenial mud 170 The soil with such a legacy sublimed? |
13310 | Pure Mephistopheles all this? |
13310 | Put before such a phrase as''How d''e do?'' |
13310 | Quem patronum rogaturus? |
13310 | Quid sum miser tunc dicturus? |
13310 | Quis se pro patria curavit impigre tutum? |
13310 | Quisnam putidius( hic) sarsuit Yankinimicos, Sæpius aut dedit ultro datam et broke his parolam? |
13310 | Recollect wut fun we he d, you''n''I an''Ezry Hollis, Up there to Waltham plain last fall, along o''the Cornwallis? |
13310 | Resolves, do you say, o''the Springfield Convention? |
13310 | Said the King to his daughters three;''For I to Vanity Fair am bound, Now say what shall they be?'' |
13310 | Saint Ambrose affirms, that_ veritas a quocunque_( why not, then,_ quomodocunque?) |
13310 | Say it or sing it? |
13310 | See ye not that woman pale? |
13310 | Shakespeare pronounced_ kind__ k[)i]nd_, or what becomes of his play on that word and_ kin_ in''Hamlet''? |
13310 | Shall I confess? |
13310 | Shall he divine no strength unmade of votes, Inward, impregnable, found soon as sought, 620 Not cognizable of sense, o''er sense supreme? |
13310 | Shall it be love, or hate, John? |
13310 | Shall we to more continuance make pretence? |
13310 | Shall we treat Him as if He were a child That knew not his own purpose? |
13310 | She, the last ripeness of earth, Beautiful, prophesied long? |
13310 | She_ is_ some punkins, thet I wun''t deny,( For ai n''t she some related to you''n''I?) |
13310 | Shoe it or wing it, So it may outrun or outfly ME, Merest cocoon- web whence it broke free? |
13310 | Should we be nothing, because somebody had contrived to be something( and that perhaps in a provincial dialect) ages ago? |
13310 | Show Made of the wish to have it so? |
13310 | Shut in what tower of darkling chance Or dungeon of a narrow doom, Dream''st thou of battle- axe and lance That for the Cross make crashing room? |
13310 | Simply? |
13310 | Since we love, what need to think? |
13310 | So our world is made Of life and death commingled; and the sighs Outweigh the smiles, in equal balance laid: What compensation? |
13310 | Soll sie darum unsere Schriften eben so schaal und falsch machen als unsern Umgang?'' |
13310 | Some folks''ould call thet reddikle, do you? |
13310 | Some more substantial boon Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune''s fickle moon? |
13310 | Speechisque articulisque hominum quis fortior ullus, Ingeminans pennæ lickos et vulnera vocis? |
13310 | Spose not; wal, the mean old codger went An''offered-- wut reward, think? |
13310 | Spurn you more wealth than can be told, The fowl that lays the eggs of gold, Because she''s plainly clad, man?'' |
13310 | Step up an''take a nipper, sir; I''m dreffle glad to see ye:''110 But now it''s''Ware''s my eppylet? |
13310 | TELEPATHY''And how could you dream of meeting?'' |
13310 | THE BRIDGE Wal, neighbor, tell us wut''s turned up thet''s new? |
13310 | THE FATHERLAND Where is the true man''s fatherland? |
13310 | THE FLYING DUTCHMAN Do n''t believe in the Flying Dutchman? |
13310 | THE LANDLORD What boot your houses and your lands? |
13310 | THE PARTING OF THE WAYS GODMINSTER CHIMES WRITTEN IN AID OF A CHIME OF BELLS FOR CHRIST CHURCH, CAMBRIDGE Godminster? |
13310 | THE PARTING OF THE WAYS Who hath not been a poet? |
13310 | THE SECRET I have a fancy: how shall I bring it Home to all mortals wherever they be? |
13310 | THE SINGING LEAVES A BALLAD I''What fairings will ye that I bring?'' |
13310 | Take nary man? |
13310 | Taste and be humanized: what though the cup, With thy lips frenzied, shatter? |
13310 | Tell me, ye who scanned The stars, Earth''s elders, still must noblest aims Be traced upon oblivious ocean- sands? |
13310 | That asked not for causes and reasons, But made us all feeling and voice? |
13310 | That light dare not o''erleap the brink Of morn, because''tis dark with you? |
13310 | That many blamed me could not irk me long, But, if you doubted, must I not be wrong? |
13310 | That soul so softly radiant and so white 210 The track it left seems less of fire than light, Cold but to such as love distemperature? |
13310 | That''s the way metters stood at fust; now wut wuz I to du, But jes''to make the best on''t an''off coat an''buckle tu? |
13310 | The Earth has drunk the vintage up; What boots it patch the goblet''s splinters? |
13310 | The South says,''_ Poor folks down!_''John, 100 An''''_ All men up!_''say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee? |
13310 | The cusses an''the promerses make one gret chain, an''ef You snake one link out here, one there, how much on''t ud be lef''? |
13310 | The minute the old chap arrived, you see, Comes the Boss- devil to him, and says he,''What are you good at? |
13310 | The moral? |
13310 | The old_ porcos ante ne projiciatis_ MARGARITAS, for him you have verified gratis; What matters his name? |
13310 | The ship- building longer and wearier, The voyage''s struggle and strife, And then the darker and drearier Wreck of a broken life? |
13310 | The verses? |
13310 | The winding stair that steals aloof To chapel- mysteries''neath the roof? |
13310 | Them spoons, were they by Betty ta''en? |
13310 | Then rang a clear tone over all,--''One plea for him allow me: I once heard call from o''er me,"Saul, Why persecutest thou me?"'' |
13310 | Therein lies much, nay all; for what truly is this which we name_ All_, but that which we do_ not_ possess?... |
13310 | They dreamed not what a die was cast With that first answering shot; what then? |
13310 | They, the unresting? |
13310 | Thine eyes are full of tears; Are they wet Even yet With the thought of other years? |
13310 | Think you it were not pleasanter to speak Smooth words that leave unflushed the brow and cheek? |
13310 | Think''st thou that score of men beyond the sea Claim more God''s care than all of England here? |
13310 | This feeling fresher than a boy''s? |
13310 | This is no age to get cathedrals built: Did God, then, wait for one in Bethlehem? |
13310 | Those deep, dark eyes so warm and bright, Wherein the fortunes of the man Lay slumbering in prophetic light, In characters a child might scan? |
13310 | Thou find''st it not? |
13310 | Thou shudder''st, Ovid? |
13310 | To carve thy fullest thought, what though Time was not granted? |
13310 | To feed your crucible, not sold Our temple''s sacred chalices?'' |
13310 | To him Philemon:''I''ll not balk Thy will with any shackle; Wilt add a harden to thy walk? |
13310 | To him the in- comer,"Perez, how d''ye do?" |
13310 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men Thet rived the Rebel line asunder? |
13310 | To learn such a simple lesson, Need I go to Paris and Rome, That the many make the household, But only one the home? |
13310 | To thee, quite wingless( and even featherless) biped, has not so much even as a dream of wings ever come? |
13310 | Transfuse the ferment of their being Into our own, past hearing, seeing, As men, if once attempered so, Far off each other''s thought can know? |
13310 | Turn those tracks toward Past or Future that make Plymouth Rock sublime? |
13310 | Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,''Father, who makes it snow?'' |
13310 | V How looks Appledore in a storm? |
13310 | V O Broker- King, is this thy wisdom''s fruit? |
13310 | V Whither leads the path To ampler fates that leads? |
13310 | VI Why cometh she hither to- day To this low village of the plain Far from the Present''s loud highway, From Trade''s cool heart and seething brain? |
13310 | VII And yet who would change the old dream for new treasure? |
13310 | VII Is here no triumph? |
13310 | VII Think you these felt no charms In their gray homesteads and embowered farms? |
13310 | VIII Is love learned only out of poets''books? |
13310 | VILLA FRANCA 1859 Wait a little: do_ we_ not wait? |
13310 | Voted agin him? |
13310 | Voted agin him? |
13310 | Wait a little: do_ we_ not wait? |
13310 | Want to tackle_ me_ in, du ye? |
13310 | Warn''t there_ two_ sides? |
13310 | Warn''t we gittin''on prime with our hot an''cold blowin'', Acondemnin''the war wilst we kep''it agoin''? |
13310 | Was I then truly all that I beheld? |
13310 | Was I, then, more than mortal made? |
13310 | Was Jonas coming back again? |
13310 | Was Sir John Franklin sought in vain? |
13310 | Was Socrates so dreadful plain? |
13310 | Was Uncle Ethan mad or sane, And could his will in force remain? |
13310 | Was dying all they had the skill to do? |
13310 | Was it a sin to be a belle? |
13310 | Was it mine eyes''imposture I have seen Flit with the moonbeams on from shade to sheen Through the wood- openings? |
13310 | Was she not born of the strong? |
13310 | Was she not born of the wise? |
13310 | Was the Earth''s axis greased or oiled? |
13310 | Was vital truth upon the wane? |
13310 | Was''t he thet shou''dered all them million guns? |
13310 | We begin to think it''s nater To take sarse an''not be riled;-- 30 Who''d expect to see a tater All on eend at bein''biled? |
13310 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round,( do n''t you?) |
13310 | We each are young, we each have a heart, Why stand we ever coldly apart? |
13310 | We knew you child and youth and man, A wonderful fellow to dream and plan, With a great thing always to come,--who knows? |
13310 | We trusted then, aspired, believed That earth could be remade to- morrow; Ah, why be ever undeceived? |
13310 | We were ready to come out next mornin''with fresh ones; Besides, ef we did,''twas our business alone, Fer could n''t we du wut we would with our own? |
13310 | Were ducks discomforted by rain? |
13310 | Were it thus, How''scape I shame, whose will was traitorous? |
13310 | Were spirits fond of Doctor Fell? |
13310 | Were they, or were they not? |
13310 | What Time''s fruitless tooth With gay immortals such as you Whose years but emphasize your youth? |
13310 | What all our lives to save thee? |
13310 | What archer of his arrows is so choice, Or hits the white so surely? |
13310 | What are you doing, madman? |
13310 | What bands of love and service bind This being to a brother heart? |
13310 | What brings us thronging these high rites to pay, And seal these hours the noblest of our year, 230 Save that our brothers found this better way? |
13310 | What countless years and wealth of brain were spent,''What fairings will ye that I bring?'' |
13310 | What does it mean, The world- old quarrel? |
13310 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
13310 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
13310 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
13310 | What ever''scaped Oblivion''s subtle wrong Save a few clarion names, or golden threads of song? |
13310 | What has the Calendar to do With poets? |
13310 | What hath Love with Thought to do? |
13310 | What hath she that others want? |
13310 | What if all The scornful landscape should turn round and say,"This is a fool, and that a popinjay"? |
13310 | What is passion for But to sublime our natures and control, To front heroic toils with late return, Or none, or such as shames the conqueror? |
13310 | What lurking- place, thought we, for doubts or fears, When, the day''s swan, she swam along the cheers Of the Alcalá, five happy months ago? |
13310 | What makes this line, familiar long, New as the first bird''s April song? |
13310 | What matters the ashes that cover those? |
13310 | What need To know that truth whose knowledge can not save? |
13310 | What now were best? |
13310 | What profits me, though doubt by doubt, As nail by nail, be driven out, 170 When every new one, like the last, Still holds my coffin- lid as fast? |
13310 | What puff the strained sails of your praise will you furl at, if The calmest degree that you know is superlative? |
13310 | What remedy would bugs expel? |
13310 | What romance would be left?--who can flatter or kiss trees? |
13310 | What shall compensate an ideal dimmed? |
13310 | What shape by exile dreamed elates the mind Like hers whose hand, a fortress of the poor, No blood in vengeance spilt, though lawful, stains? |
13310 | What silveriest cloud could hang''neath such a sky? |
13310 | What teamster guided Charles''s wain? |
13310 | What then? |
13310 | What though his memory shall have vanished, Since the good deed he did survives? |
13310 | What throbbing verse can fitly render 60 That face so pure, so trembling- tender? |
13310 | What was it ailed Lucindy''s knee? |
13310 | What was snow- bearded Odin, trow, The mighty hunter long ago, Whose horn and hounds the peasant hears Still when the Northlights shake their spears? |
13310 | What was the family- name of Cain? |
13310 | What were our lives without thee? |
13310 | What wonder if Sir Launfal now Remembered the keeping of his vow? |
13310 | What would n''t I give if I never had known of her? |
13310 | What would take out a cherry- stain? |
13310 | What''s Knowledge, with her stocks and lands, To gay Conjecture''s yellow strands? |
13310 | What''s this? |
13310 | What, for example, is Milton''s''_ edge_ of battle''but a doing into English of the Latin_ acies? |
13310 | When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud, The time- old web of the implacable Three: Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud? |
13310 | When we went with the winds in their blowing, When Nature and we were peers, And we seemed to share in the flowing Of the inexhaustible years? |
13310 | Whence? |
13310 | Where on airth else d''ye see Every freeman improvin''his own rope an''tree? |
13310 | Where were your dinner orators When slavery grasped at Texas? |
13310 | Where''d their soles go tu, like to know, ef we should let''em ketch Freeknowledgism an''Fourierism an''Speritoolism an''sech? |
13310 | Where''s Peace? |
13310 | Wherefore? |
13310 | Whether Noah was justifiable in preserving this class of insects? |
13310 | Whether folks eat folks in Feejee? |
13310 | Whether mankind would not agree, 530 If the universe were tuned in C? |
13310 | Whether my heart hath wiser grown or not, Whether the idle prisoner through his grate, While the slow clock, as they were miser''s gold, Whither? |
13310 | Whether_ his_ name would end with T? |
13310 | Which do I most feel As I read on? |
13310 | Which? |
13310 | While in and out the verses wheel The wind- caught robes trim feet reveal, Lithe ankles that to music glide, But chastely and by chance descried; Art? |
13310 | Whither? |
13310 | Who are those two that stand aloof? |
13310 | Who asks for a prospec''more flettrin''an''bright, When from here clean to Texas it''s all one free fight? |
13310 | Who cares for the Resolves of''61, Thet tried to coax an airthquake with a bun? |
13310 | Who cleaned the moon when it was soiled? |
13310 | Who dare again to say we trace 330 Our lines to a plebeian race? |
13310 | Who else like you Could sift the seedcorn from our chaff, And make us with the pen we knew Deathless at least in epitaph? |
13310 | Who ever wooed As in his boyish hope he would have done? |
13310 | Who gets a hair''s- breadth on by showing That Something Else set all agoing? |
13310 | Who hath not, With life''s new quiver full of wingèd years, Shot at a venture, and then, following on, Stood doubtful at the Parting of the Ways? |
13310 | Who his phrase can choose That sees the life- blood of his dearest ooze? |
13310 | Who is it hath not strength to stand alone? |
13310 | Who is it needs such flawless shafts as Fate? |
13310 | Who is it thwarts and bilks the inward MUST? |
13310 | Who is it will not dare himself to trust? |
13310 | Who knows but from our loins may spring( Long hence) some winged sweet- throated thing As much superior to us As we to Cynocephalus? |
13310 | Who knows, thought I, but he has come, By Charon kindly ferried, To tell me of a mighty sum Behind my wainscot buried? |
13310 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win,--ditto tails?_''J.B.'' |
13310 | Who owns this country, is it they or Andy? |
13310 | Who picked the pocket of Seth Crane, Of Waldo precinct, State, of Maine? |
13310 | Who reared those towers of earliest song That lift us from the crowd to peace Remote in sunny silences?'' |
13310 | Who says this? |
13310 | Who says thy day is o''er? |
13310 | Who sit where once in crowned seclusion sate The long- proved athletes of debate 210 Trained from their youth, as none thinks needful now? |
13310 | Who taught him to exhort men to prepare for eternity, as for some future era of which the present forms no integral part? |
13310 | Who was our Huldah''s chosen swain? |
13310 | Who was the nymph? |
13310 | Who wuz the''Nited States''fore Richmon''fell? |
13310 | Whose conquests are the gains of all mankind? |
13310 | Whose ever such kind eyes That pierced so deep, such scope, save his whose feet By Avon ceased''neath the same April''s skies? |
13310 | Why art thou made a god of, thou poor type Of anger, and revenge, and cunning force? |
13310 | Why be glum? |
13310 | Why cometh she? |
13310 | Why give up faith for sorrow? |
13310 | Why more than those Phantoms that startle your repose, Half seen, half heard, then flit away, And leave you your prose- bounded day? |
13310 | Why not, when it comes from_ holà_? |
13310 | Why should we any more be alone? |
13310 | Why should we fly? |
13310 | Why should_ you_ stand aghast at their fierce wordy war, if You scalp one another for Bank or for Tariff? |
13310 | Why spend on me, a poor earth- delving mole, The fireside sweetnesses, the heavenward lift, The hourly mercy, of a woman''s soul? |
13310 | Why waste such precious wood to make my cross, Such far- sought roses for my crown of thorns? |
13310 | Why, when we have a kitchen- range, insist that we shall stop, And bore clear down to central fires to broil our daily chop? |
13310 | Why, where in thunder was his horns and tail?" |
13310 | Why, wut''s to hender, pray? |
13310 | Why? |
13310 | Wich of our onnable body''d be safe?'' |
13310 | Will any one familiar with the New England countryman venture to tell me that he does_ not_ speak of sacred things familiarly? |
13310 | Will any scientific touch With my worn strings achieve as much? |
13310 | Will what our ballots rear, responsible To no grave forethought, stand so long as this? |
13310 | Will your Excellency permit me to say I think it may be of ill consequence? |
13310 | Would earth- worm poultice cure a sprain? |
13310 | Would it not be convenient, if your Excellency should forbid the Printers''inserting such news?'' |
13310 | Would the Sanctifier and Setter- apart of the seventh day have assisted in a victory gained on the Sabbath, as was one in the late war? |
13310 | Wraiths some transfigured nerve divines? |
13310 | Wut good in bein''white, onless It''s fixed by law, nut lef''to guess, We''re a heap smarter an''they duller? |
13310 | Wut shall we du? |
13310 | Wut wuz there in them from this vote to prevent him? |
13310 | Wut''s the sweetest small on airth?'' |
13310 | Wut''s the use o''meetin''-goin''Every Sabbath, wet or dry, 50 Ef it''s right to go amowin''Feller- men like oats an''rye? |
13310 | Wut? |
13310 | Wut? |
13310 | Wut? |
13310 | Wut_ is_ the news? |
13310 | Wuz the South needfle their full name to spell? |
13310 | X Who now shall sneer? |
13310 | XXII Why follow here that grim old chronicle Which counts the dagger- strokes and drops of blood? |
13310 | XXXII How should she dream of ill? |
13310 | Yea, what art thou, blind, unconverted Jew, That with thy idol- volume''s covers two Wouldst make a jail to coop the living God? |
13310 | Yet if life''s solid things illusion seem, Why may not substance wear the mask of dream? |
13310 | Yet who dare call it blind, Knowing what life is, what our human- kind? |
13310 | Yet will some graver thoughts intrude, And cares of sterner mood; They won thee: who shall keep thee? |
13310 | You didn''chance to run ag''inst my son, A long, slab- sided youngster with a gun? |
13310 | [ 22] You say,''We''d ha''seared''em by growin''in peace, A plaguy sight more then by bobberies like these''? |
13310 | [ Footnote 22: Jortin is willing to allow of other miracles besides those recorded in Holy Writ, and why not of othere prophecies? |
13310 | [ Those have not been wanting( as, indeed, when hath Satan been to seek for attorneys?) |
13310 | _ Bobolink_: is this a contraction for Bob o''Lincoln? |
13310 | _ Did_ the bull toll Cock- Robin''s knell? |
13310 | _ How_ did Britannia rule the main? |
13310 | _ Quare fremuerunt gentes?_ Who is he that can twice a week be inspired, or has eloquence(_ ut ita dicam_) always on tap? |
13310 | _ Quare fremuerunt gentes?_ Who is he that can twice a week be inspired, or has eloquence(_ ut ita dicam_) always on tap? |
13310 | _ Wut_''ll git your dander riz? |
13310 | _ You_ with the elders? |
13310 | _''Long on_ for_ occasioned by_(''who is this''long on?'') |
13310 | a mass- meeting? |
13310 | ai nt it terrible? |
13310 | an''do n''t it stend to reason Thet this week''s''Nited States ai n''t las''week''s treason? |
13310 | analysis? |
13310 | and When? |
13310 | and shall we see Those sibyl- leaves of destiny, Those calm eyes, nevermore? |
13310 | and what are we? |
13310 | and when he visiteth, what shall I answer him?'' |
13310 | are ye fit to be Mothers of the brave and free? |
13310 | do not let my loved one die, God makes sech nights, all white an''still, God sends his teachers unto every age, Godminster? |
13310 | does he take me for a rose?'' |
13310 | drop the final_ d_ as the Yankee still does? |
13310 | hear ye not her tread, Sending a thrill through your clay, Under the sod there, ye dead, Her nurslings and champions? |
13310 | held Opinion''s wind for Law? |
13310 | how bring that to pass In our bleak clime save under double glass? |
13310 | is thy morning- dew So gory red? |
13310 | mused I;''is it told By synthesis? |
13310 | must we wriggle back Into th''ole crooked, pettyfoggin''track, When our artil''ry- wheels a road hev cut Stret to our purpose ef we keep the rut? |
13310 | my parched ears what runnels slake? |
13310 | nor dare trust The Rock of Ages to their chemic tests, Lest some day the all- sustaining base divine Should fail from under us, dissolved in gas? |
13310 | or she Less than divine that she might mate with me? |
13310 | or, How d''ye do_? |
13310 | recks He less his form express, The soul his own deposit? |
13310 | says Nature,--what have you produced? |
13310 | shall one monk, scarce known beyond his cell, Front Rome''s far- reaching bolts, and scorn her frown? |
13310 | that transcends Laws of cotton texture, wove by vulgar men for vulgar ends? |
13310 | the Sea- Queen''s isle? |
13310 | the vulgar nature jeers? |
13310 | then, who''s goin''to use it Wen there''s resk o''some chap''s gittin''up to abuse it? |
13310 | they ha''n''t hanged''em? |
13310 | they said,''Oblivion runs with swifter foot than they; Or strength of sinew? |
13310 | warn''t it, then, To settle, once for all, thet men wuz men? |
13310 | what that Ericus, King of Sweden, who is said to have kept the winds in his cap? |
13310 | what, in more recent times, those Lapland Nornas who traded in favorable breezes? |
13310 | when, deposed in other hands? |
13310 | where shall I flee to? |
13310 | whose boast it is that ye Come of fathers brave and free, If there breathe on earth a slave, Are ye truly free and brave? |
13310 | whose shadows block the door? |
13310 | with your toe?) |
13310 | wut Nothun town d''ye know Would take a totle stranger up an''treat him gratis so? |
13310 | yes, but tell me, if you can, Is this superscription Cæsar''s here upon our brother man? |
13310 | yet who believes That ye can shut out heaven? |
7400 | A crash, as when some swollen cloud Cracks o''er the tangled trees With side to side, and spar to spar, Whose smoking decks are these? 7400 About those conditions?" |
7400 | Agnes-- is her name? 7400 And are we then so soon forgot?" |
7400 | And what is that, pray tell me, love, that paddles off so fast? |
7400 | And where is my cat? |
7400 | And who is Avis? |
7400 | But is there nothing in thy track, To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day? |
7400 | Etiam si,-- Eh b''en? |
7400 | For whom this gift? |
7400 | Hans Breitmann gif a barty,--vhere is dot barty now? |
7400 | Is it loaded? |
7400 | QUI VIVE? |
7400 | Qui vive? |
7400 | Qui vive? |
7400 | Qui vive? |
7400 | Shall I not weep my heartstrings torn, My flower of love that falls half blown, My youth uncrowned, my life forlorn, A thorny path to walk alone? |
7400 | Shot? |
7400 | Tell us, tell us why you look so? |
7400 | The Boyswe knew,--but who are these Whose heads might serve for Plutarch''s sages, Or Fox''s martyrs, if you please, Or hermits of the dismal ages? |
7400 | The Boyswe knew-- can these be those? |
7400 | To whom? |
7400 | Were there ever such sweethearts? |
7400 | What if it does? |
7400 | What is thy creed? |
7400 | When often by our feet has past Some biped, Nature''s walking whim, Say, have we trimmed one awkward shape, Or lopped away one crooked limb? 7400 Where are our broomsticks?" |
7400 | Where have ye laid him? |
7400 | Who are you, giants, whence and why? |
7400 | Who gave to thee the glittering bands That lace thine azure veins? 7400 Why strikest not? |
7400 | Why wo n''t he stop writing? |
7400 | Will you? 7400 Yes, where are our cats?" |
7400 | ''T is but the fool that loves excess; hast thou a drunken soul? |
7400 | ( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--"Gambrel?--Gambrel?" |
7400 | ( Our"poet''s corner"may I not expect My kindly reader still may recollect?) |
7400 | ( we could hardly speak, we shook so),"Are they beaten? |
7400 | (?) |
7400 | (?) |
7400 | --Nay, ruler of the rebel deep, What matters wind or wave? |
7400 | A BIRTHDAY TRIBUTE TO J. F. CLARKE WHO is the shepherd sent to lead, Through pastures green, the Master''s sheep? |
7400 | A FAMILIAR LETTER TO SEVERAL CORRESPONDENTS YES, write, if you want to, there''s nothing like trying; Who knows what a treasure your casket may hold? |
7400 | A query checks him:"Is he quite exact?" |
7400 | A sigh for transient power? |
7400 | A whisper trembled through the crowd, Who could the stranger be? |
7400 | ARE they beaten?" |
7400 | Ah, Lord of life, though spectres pale Fill with their threats the shadowy vale, With Thee my faltering steps to aid, How can I dare to be afraid? |
7400 | Ah, comrades dear, Are not all gathered here? |
7400 | Ah, pensive scholar, what is fame? |
7400 | Ah, who shall count a rescued nation''s debt, Or sum in words our martyrs''silent claims? |
7400 | Ah, who that shares in toils like these Will sigh not to prolong Our days beneath the broad- leaved trees, Our nights of mirth and song? |
7400 | Ah, wilt thou yet return, Bearing thy rose- hued torch, and bid thine altar burn? |
7400 | All these have left their work and not their names,-- Why should I murmur at a fate like theirs? |
7400 | Amid our slender group we see; With him we still remained"The Class,"-- Without his presence what are we? |
7400 | An idol? |
7400 | And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong,-- What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done? |
7400 | And all are yet too few? |
7400 | And art thou, then, a world like ours, Flung from the orb that whirled our own A molten pebble from its zone? |
7400 | And bast thou cities, domes, and towers, And life, and love that makes it dear, And death that fills thy tribes with fear? |
7400 | And can we smile when thou art dead? |
7400 | And dost thou, my brother, remember indeed The days of our dealings with Willard and Read? |
7400 | And how the seats would slam and bang? |
7400 | And is Sir Isaac living? |
7400 | And is it really so? |
7400 | And is the old flag flying still That o''er your fathers flew, With bands of white and rosy light, And field of starry blue? |
7400 | And is there none with me to share The glories of the earth and sky? |
7400 | And is thy bosom decked with flowers That steal their bloom from scalding showers? |
7400 | And lay in the silent sea, And the Lily had folded her satin leaves, For a sleepy thing was she; What is the Lily dreaming of? |
7400 | And suspect the azure blossom that unfolds upon a shoot, As if wisdom''s old potato could not flourish at its root? |
7400 | And that look of delight which would angels beguile Is the deaf man''s prolonged unintelligent smile? |
7400 | And was he noted in his day? |
7400 | And was it true, then, what the story said Of Oxford''s friar and his brazen head? |
7400 | And was she very fair and young, And yet so wicked, too? |
7400 | And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather,--"Please to tell us what his name was?" |
7400 | And what if court or castle vaunt Its children loftier born?-- Who heeds the silken tassel''s flaunt Beside the golden corn? |
7400 | And what is all the man has done To what the boy may do? |
7400 | And what shall I say, if a wretch should propose? |
7400 | And what shall I sing that can cheat you of smiles, Ye heralds of peace from the Orient isles? |
7400 | And what would happen to the land, And how would look the sea, If in the bearded devil''s path Our earth should chance to be? |
7400 | And which was the muster- roll- mention but one-- That missed your old comrade who carries the gun? |
7400 | And who was on the Catalogue When college was begun? |
7400 | And who will be awhile content To hunt our woodland game, And leave the vulgar pack that scent The reeking track of fame? |
7400 | And who will leave the grave debate That shakes the smoky town, To rule amid our island- state, And wear our oak- leaf crown? |
7400 | And whose the chartered claim to speak The sacred grief where all have part, Where sorrow saddens every cheek And broods in every aching heart? |
7400 | And whose the home that strews in black decay The one green- glowing island of the bay? |
7400 | And why at our feast of the clasping of hands Need we turn on the stream of our lachrymal glands? |
7400 | And yet-- I ca n''t help it-- perhaps-- who can tell? |
7400 | And you, our quasi Dutchman, what welcome should be yours For all the wise prescriptions that work your laughter- cures? |
7400 | Another string of playday rhymes? |
7400 | Are angels more true? |
7400 | Are the outside winds too rough? |
7400 | Are these old tricks, King Solomon, We lying moderns claim? |
7400 | Are these"The Boys"our dear old Mother knew? |
7400 | Are they beaten? |
7400 | Are they not here, our spirit guests, With love still throbbing in their breasts? |
7400 | Are they palsied or asleep? |
7400 | Are they panic- struck and helpless? |
7400 | Are we less earthly than the chosen race? |
7400 | Are we the youths with lips unshorn, At beauty''s feet unwrinkled suitors, Whose memories reach tradition''s morn,-- The days of prehistoric tutors? |
7400 | Are we"The Boys"that used to make The tables ring with noisy follies? |
7400 | Art thou the last of all mankind to know That party- fights are won by aiming low? |
7400 | Art thou, too, dreaming of a mortal''s kiss Amid the seraphs of the heavenly sphere? |
7400 | As for himself, he seems alert and thriving,-- Grubs up a living somehow-- what, who knows? |
7400 | Ask the worldly schools, And all will tell thee knaves are busier fools; Prudent? |
7400 | Ask you what name this prisoned spirit bears While with ourselves this fleeting breath it shares? |
7400 | At Israel''s altar still we humbly bow, But where, oh where, are Israel''s prophets now? |
7400 | At twoscore, threescore, is he then full grown? |
7400 | B."? |
7400 | Besides-- my prospects-- don''t you know that people wo n''t employ A man that wrongs his manliness by laughing like a boy? |
7400 | Boatswain, lifting one knowing lid, Hitches his breeches and shifts his quid"Hey? |
7400 | Borrow some title? |
7400 | Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal? |
7400 | But as for Pallas,--how to tell In seemly phrase a fact so shocking? |
7400 | But say what next? |
7400 | But stay!--his mother''s haughty brow,-- The pride of ancient race,-- Will plighted faith, and holy vow, Win back her fond embrace? |
7400 | But what if the joy of the summer is past, And winter''s wild herald is blowing his blast? |
7400 | But what if the stormy cloud should come, And ruffle the silver sea? |
7400 | But what is stable in this world below? |
7400 | But what to them the dirge, the knell? |
7400 | But whence and why, our trembling souls inquire, Caught these dim visions their awakening fire? |
7400 | But where are the Tutors, my brother, oh tell!-- And where the Professors, remembered so well? |
7400 | But who is he whose massive frame belies The maiden shyness of his downcast eyes? |
7400 | But who the Youth his glistening axe that swings To smite the pine that shows a hundred rings? |
7400 | But who would dream our sober sires Had learned the old world''s ways, And warmed their hearths with lawless fires In Shirley''s homespun days? |
7400 | Can Freedom breathe if ignorance reign? |
7400 | Can I believe it? |
7400 | Can I forget the wedding guest? |
7400 | Can Seer or Sibyl read thee now? |
7400 | Can a simple lay, Flung on thy bosom like a girl''s bouquet, Do more than deck thee for an idle hour, Then fall unheeded, fading like the flower? |
7400 | Can it be a cabbage? |
7400 | Can it be one of Nature''s benevolent tricks That you grow hard of hearing as I grow prolix? |
7400 | Canvas, or clouds,--the footlights, or the spheres,-- The play of two short hours, or seventy years? |
7400 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
7400 | Come tell me, gray sages, for mischief and noise Was there ever a lot like us fellows,"The Boys"? |
7400 | Could Williams make the hidden causes clear Of the Dark Day that filled the land with fear? |
7400 | Could you have spectroscoped a star? |
7400 | Crabs? |
7400 | Cuprum,(?) |
7400 | Dead? |
7400 | Did Katy love a naughty man, Or kiss more cheeks than one? |
7400 | Did Tarshish telegraph to Tyre? |
7400 | Did his wounds once really smart? |
7400 | Do I see her afar in the distance? |
7400 | Do n''t you love a cushioned seat__ In a corner, by the fireside, with your slippers on your feet?__ Do n''t you wear warm fleecy flannels? |
7400 | Do n''t you love a cushioned seat__ In a corner, by the fireside, with your slippers on your feet?__ Do n''t you wear warm fleecy flannels? |
7400 | Do such still live? |
7400 | Do you know me, dear strangers-- the hundredth time comer At banquets and feasts since the days of my Spring? |
7400 | Do you know whom we send you, Hidalgos of Spain? |
7400 | Do you know your old friends when you see them again? |
7400 | Does He behold with smile serene The shows of that unending scene, Where sleepless, hopeless anguish lies, And, ever dying, never dies? |
7400 | Does all that made us human fade away With this dissolving clay? |
7400 | Does any man presume?-- Toadstool? |
7400 | Does beauty slight you from her gay abodes? |
7400 | Does not meek evening''s low- voiced Ave blend With the soft vesper as its notes ascend? |
7400 | Does not the sunshine call us to rejoice? |
7400 | Does praise delight thee? |
7400 | Down the chill street that curves in gloomiest shade What marks betray yon solitary maid? |
7400 | Either were charming, neither will refuse; But choose we must,--what better can we do Than take the younger of the youthful two?" |
7400 | FOR THE MEETING OF THE NATIONAL SANITARY ASSOCIATION 1860 WHAT makes the Healing Art divine? |
7400 | Farewell!--I turn the leaf I read my chiming measure in; Who knows but something still is there a friend may find a pleasure in? |
7400 | For the rest, they take their chance,-- Some may pay a passing glance; Others,-well, they served a turn,-- Wherefore written, would you learn? |
7400 | For who can tell by what he likes what other people''s fancies are? |
7400 | Go, little book, whose pages hold Those garnered years in loving trust; How long before your blue and gold Shall fade and whiten in the dust? |
7400 | Had but those boundless fields of blue One darkened sphere like this; But what has heaven for thee to do In realms of perfect bliss? |
7400 | Had he no secret grief he nursed alone? |
7400 | Had the world nothing she might live to care for? |
7400 | Hark!--''t is the south- wind moans,-- Who are the martyrs down? |
7400 | Has Bowdoin found his all- surrounding sphere? |
7400 | Has Gannett tracked the wild Aurora''s path? |
7400 | Has earth a nobler name? |
7400 | Has he not his thorn? |
7400 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of men? |
7400 | Has language better words than these? |
7400 | Has not every lie its truthful side, Its honest fraction, not to be denied? |
7400 | Has our love all died out? |
7400 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
7400 | Hast thou no life, no health, to lose or save? |
7400 | Have I not loved thee long, Though my young lips have often done thee wrong, And vexed thy heaven- tuned ear with careless song? |
7400 | Have its altars grown cold? |
7400 | Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed? |
7400 | Have such e''er been? |
7400 | Have the pale wayside weeds no fond regret For him who read the secrets they enfold? |
7400 | Have those majestic eyes Lost their proud fire for such a vulgar prize? |
7400 | Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?" |
7400 | Have we a nation to save? |
7400 | Have ye not secrets, ye refulgent spheres, No sleepless listener of the starlight hears? |
7400 | Have you met with that dreadful old man? |
7400 | Have you noticed, pray, An earthly belle or dashing bride walk, And how her flounces track her way, Like slimy serpents on the sidewalk? |
7400 | He lived alone,--who would n''t if he might, And leave the rogues and idiots out of sight? |
7400 | He told his love,--her faith betrayed; She heard with tearless eyes; Could she forgive the erring maid? |
7400 | He? |
7400 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
7400 | Her pale lip quivered, and the light Gleamed in her moistening eyes;-- I asked her how she liked the tints In those Castilian skies? |
7400 | Her twofold Saint''s- day let our England keep; Shall warring aliens share her holy task?" |
7400 | Here''s the cousin of a king,-- Would I do the civil thing? |
7400 | Here, take the purse I hold, There''s a tear upon the gold-- It was mine- it is thine-- A''n''t we BOYS OF''29?" |
7400 | His Majesty? |
7400 | His figure shows but dimly, his face I scarce can see,-- There''s something that reminds me,--it looks like-- is it he? |
7400 | His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it; This little speck the British Isles? |
7400 | His labors,--will they ever cease,-- With hand and tongue and pen? |
7400 | His morning glory shall we e''er forget? |
7400 | His noontide''s full- blown lily coronet? |
7400 | His secret? |
7400 | Hope you do.-- Born there? |
7400 | How all men think the best of wives their own particular Nancies are? |
7400 | How are you, Joe? |
7400 | How can he feel the petty stings of grief Whose cheering presence always brings relief? |
7400 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When through a double convex lens She just makes out to spell? |
7400 | How can such fools Ask men to vote for woman suffrage?" |
7400 | How can we praise the verse whose music flows With solemn cadence and majestic close, Pure as the dew that filters through the rose? |
7400 | How can we sorrow more? |
7400 | How could a ruined dwelling last so long Without its legends shaped in tale and song? |
7400 | How from Rebellion''s broken reed We saw his emblem fall, As soon his cursed poison- weed Shall drop from Sumter''s wall? |
7400 | How long before his book shall die? |
7400 | How long stir the echoes it wakened of old, While its strings were unbroken, untarnished its gold? |
7400 | How many, brothers, meet to- night Around our boyhood''s covered embers? |
7400 | How shall he travel who can never go Where his own voice the echoes do not know, Where his own garden flowers no longer learn to grow? |
7400 | How shall our smooth- turned phrase relate The little suffering outcast''s ail? |
7400 | How shall we thank him that in evil days He faltered never,--nor for blame, nor praise, Nor hire, nor party, shamed his earlier lays? |
7400 | How the black war- ships came And turned the Beaufort roses''bloom To redder wreaths of flame? |
7400 | How will he feel when he gets marching orders, Signed by his lady love? |
7400 | I am loath to shirk; But who will listen if I do, My memory makes such shocking work? |
7400 | I beg to inquire If the gun that I carry has ever missed fire? |
7400 | I blush for my race,--he is showing his white Such spinning and wriggling,--why, what does he wish? |
7400 | I from my clinging babe was rudely torn; His tender lips a loveless bosom pressed; Can I forget him in my life new born? |
7400 | I have come to see one whom we used to call"Jim,"I want to see-- oh, do n''t I want to see him? |
7400 | I hear the hissing fry The beggars know where they can go, But where, oh where shall I? |
7400 | I know Saint George''s blood- red cross, Thou Mistress of the Seas, But what is she whose streaming bars Roll out before the breeze? |
7400 | I like full well the deep resounding swell Of mighty symphonies with chords inwoven; But sometimes, too, a song of Burns-- don''t you? |
7400 | I own the weakness of the tuneful kind,-- Are not all harpers blind? |
7400 | I rise-- I rise-- with unaffected fear,( Louder!--speak louder!--who the deuce can hear?) |
7400 | I sang too early, must I sing too late? |
7400 | I think him dead? |
7400 | IDOLS BUT what is this? |
7400 | If any, born of kindlier blood, Should ask, What maiden lies below? |
7400 | If every year that brings us here Must steal an hour from me? |
7400 | If only the Jubilee-- Why did you wait? |
7400 | If the men were so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
7400 | If what my Rabbi tells me is the truth Why did the choir of angels sing for joy? |
7400 | In that stern faith my angel Mary died; Or ask if mercy''s milder creed can save, Sweet sister, risen from thy new- made grave? |
7400 | In vain a fresher mould we seek,-- Can all the varied phrases tell That Babel''s wandering children speak How thrushes sing or lilacs smell? |
7400 | Industrious? |
7400 | Is Jackson not President?--What was''t you said? |
7400 | Is every rascal clown Whose arm is stronger free to knock us down? |
7400 | Is he not here whose breath of holy song Has raised the downcast eyes of Faith so long? |
7400 | Is it an idle dream that nature shares Our joys, our griefs, our pastimes, and our cares? |
7400 | Is it for this the immortal Artist means These conscious, throbbing, agonized machines? |
7400 | Is it the God that walked in Eden''s grove In the cool hour to seek our guilty sire? |
7400 | Is life a task? |
7400 | Is one in sorrow''s blinding storm? |
7400 | Is one in sunshine''s ray? |
7400 | Is that a swan that rides upon the water? |
7400 | Is the breakfast- hour past? |
7400 | Is the world not wide enough? |
7400 | Is there a world of blank despair, And dwells the Omnipresent there? |
7400 | Is there no meaning in the storm- cloud''s voice? |
7400 | Is there no summons when, at morning''s call, The sable vestments of the darkness fall? |
7400 | Is there no whisper in the perfumed air When the sweet bosom of the rose is bare? |
7400 | Is this''sixty- eight? |
7400 | It ca n''t be; you''re joking; what,--all of''em dead? |
7400 | Its sturdy driver,--who remembers him? |
7400 | Jack, said my lady, is it grog you''ll try, Or punch, or toddy, if perhaps you''re dry? |
7400 | Jim,--Harry,--Fred,--Isaac,--all gone from our side? |
7400 | Jove, Juno, Venus, where are you? |
7400 | Know old Cambridge? |
7400 | L''INCONNUE Is thy name Mary, maiden fair? |
7400 | LINES 1860 I''m ashamed,--that''s the fact,--it''s a pitiful case,-- Wo n''t any kind classmate get up in my place? |
7400 | Leeches, for instance,--pleasing creatures quite; Try them,--and bless you,--don''t you find they bite? |
7400 | Let my free soul, expanding as it can, Leave to his scheme the thoughtful Puritan; But Calvin''s dogma shall my lips deride? |
7400 | Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you, Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations? |
7400 | Lo, the pictured token Why should her fleeting day- dreams fade unspoken, Like daffodils that die with sheaths unbroken? |
7400 | MY ANNUAL 1866 How long will this harp which you once loved to hear Cheat your lips of a smile or your eyes of a tear? |
7400 | Made one by a lifetime of sorrows and joys, What lips have such sounds as the poorest of these, Though honeyed, like Plato''s, by musical bees? |
7400 | Mars, Mercury, Phoebus, Neptune, Saturn? |
7400 | May I thy peril share? |
7400 | Men and devils both contrive Traps for catching girls alive; Eve was duped, and Helen kissed,-- How, oh how can you resist? |
7400 | My coat? |
7400 | My stick? |
7400 | No angry passion shakes the state Whose weary servant seeks for rest; And who could fear that scowling hate Would strike at that unguarded breast? |
7400 | No matter; while our home is here No sounding name is half so dear; When fades at length our lingering day, Who cares what pompous tombstones say? |
7400 | No second self to say her evening prayer for? |
7400 | No silent message when from midnight skies Heaven looks upon us with its myriad eyes? |
7400 | Now when a doctor''s patients are perplexed, A consultation comes in order next-- You know what that is? |
7400 | O Thou who carest for the falling sparrow, Canst Thou the sinless sufferer''s pang forget? |
7400 | O guardian of the starry gate, What coin shall pay this debt of mine? |
7400 | O landsman, art thou false or true? |
7400 | ONCE MORE ONCE MORE 1868"Will I come?" |
7400 | Of all the guests at life''s perennial feast, Who of her children sits above the Priest? |
7400 | Of all the joys of earthly pride or power, What gives most life, worth living, in an hour? |
7400 | Of course some must speak,--they are always selected to, But pray what''s the reason that I am expected to? |
7400 | Oh say, can you look through the vista of age To the time when old Morse drove the regular stage? |
7400 | Oh tell me where did Katy live, And what did Katy do? |
7400 | Oh, when love''s first, sweet, stolen kiss Burned on my boyish brow, Was that young forehead worn as this? |
7400 | Oh, who forgets when first the piercing thought Through childhood''s musings found its way unsought? |
7400 | Old Marcus Reemie, who was he? |
7400 | Old Parr was in his lusty prime when he was older far, And where will you be if I live to beat old Thomas Parr? |
7400 | Once more,--once only,--- we must stop so soon: What have we here? |
7400 | One and another have come to grief, How have you dodged by rock and reef?" |
7400 | One figure still my vagrant thoughts pursue; First boy to greet me, Ariel, where are you? |
7400 | Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the acarus bred in Crosse''s flint- solution? |
7400 | Or a pious, painful preacher, holding forth from year to year Till his colleague got a colleague whom the young folks flocked to hear? |
7400 | Or bow with the children of light, as they call On the Judge of the Earth and the Father of All? |
7400 | Or gaze upon yon pillared stone, The empty urn of pride; There stand the Goblet and the Sun,-- What need of more beside? |
7400 | Or is he a_ mythus_,--ancient word for"humbug"-- Such as Livy told about the wolf that wet- nursed Romulus and Remus? |
7400 | Or is thy dread account- book''s page so narrow Its one long column scores thy creatures''debt? |
7400 | Or rolls a sphere in each expanding zone, Crowned with a life as varied as our own?" |
7400 | Or some gray wooer''s, whom a girlish frown Chased from his solid friends and sober town? |
7400 | Or some plain tradesman''s, fond of shade and ease, Who sought them both beneath these quiet trees? |
7400 | Or some quiet, voiceless brother in whose lonely, loving breast Fond memory broods in silence, like a dove upon her nest? |
7400 | Or the old landlord, saturnine and grim, Who left our hill- top for a new abode And reared his sign- post farther down the road? |
7400 | Out spoke the ancient fisherman,--"Oh, what was that, my daughter?" |
7400 | PART SECOND THE MAIDEN Why seeks the knight that rocky cape Beyond the Bay of Lynn? |
7400 | PART THIRD THE CONQUEST"Who saw this hussy when she came? |
7400 | PROGRAMME READER-- gentle-- if so be Such still live, and live for me, Will it please you to be told What my tenscore pages hold? |
7400 | PROLOGUE A PROLOGUE? |
7400 | Per contra,--ask the moralist,--in sooth Has not a lie its share in every truth? |
7400 | Pray what has she to do?" |
7400 | Pray, did you ever hear, my love, Of boys that go about, Who, for a very trifling sum, Will snip one''s picture out? |
7400 | QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 1852 WHERE, oh where are the visions of morning, Fresh as the dews of our prime? |
7400 | Questioning all things: Why her Lord had sent her? |
7400 | REMEMBER-- FORGET 1855 AND what shall be the song to- night, If song there needs must be? |
7400 | RIGHTS WHAT am I but the creature Thou hast made? |
7400 | Read, but not to praise or blame; Are not all our hearts the same? |
7400 | Read, flattered, honored? |
7400 | Remember, remember, thou silly one, How fast will thy summer glide, And wilt thou wither a virgin pale, Or flourish a blooming bride? |
7400 | Say, does He hear the sufferer''s groan, And is that child of wrath his own? |
7400 | Say, does Heaven degrade The manly frame, for health, for action made? |
7400 | Say, pilot, what this fort may be, Whose sentinels look down From moated walls that show the sea Their deep embrasures''frown? |
7400 | Say, shall I wound with satire''s rankling spear The pure, warm hearts that bid me welcome here? |
7400 | Say, shall it ring a merry peal, Or heave a mourning sigh O''er shadows cast, by years long past, On moments flitting by? |
7400 | Say, shall the Muse with faltering steps retreat, Or dare these names in rhythmic form repeat? |
7400 | Science has kept her midnight taper burning To greet thy coming with its vestal flame; Friendship has murmured,"When art thou returning?" |
7400 | See the banquet''s dead bouquet, Fair and fragrant in its day; Do they read the selfsame lines,-- He that fasts and he that dines? |
7400 | Shake from thy sense the wild delusive dream Without the purple, art thou not supreme? |
7400 | Shall Commerce thrive where anarchs rule? |
7400 | Shall I die forgiven? |
7400 | Shall I the poet''s broad dominion claim Because you bid me wear his sacred name For these few moments? |
7400 | Shall colts be never shod or haltered? |
7400 | Shall grown- up kittens chase their tails? |
7400 | Shall mouldering page or fading scroll Outface the charter of the soul? |
7400 | Shall priesthood''s palsied arm protect The wrong our human hearts reject, And smite the lips whose shuddering cry Proclaims a cruel creed a lie? |
7400 | Shall rosy daybreak make us all forget The golden sun that yester- evening set? |
7400 | Shall the proud spangles of the field forget The verse that lent new glory to their gold? |
7400 | Shall they bask in sunny rays? |
7400 | Shall they feed on sugared praise? |
7400 | Shall they stick with tangled feet On the critic''s poisoned sheet? |
7400 | Shall we always be youthful, and laughing, and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
7400 | Shall wearied Nature ask release At threescore years and ten? |
7400 | Shalt thou be honest? |
7400 | Should I be I, or would it be One tenth another, to nine tenths me? |
7400 | Slowly the stores of life are spent, Yet hope still battles with despair; Will Heaven not yield when knees are bent? |
7400 | Smiling he listens; has he then a charm Whose magic virtues peril can disarm? |
7400 | Some brooding poet''s, sure of deathless fame, Had not his epic perished in the flame? |
7400 | Some dark- browed pirate''s, jealous of the fate That seized the strangled wretch of"Nix''s Mate"? |
7400 | Some forger''s, skulking in a borrowed name, Whom Tyburn''s dangling halter yet may claim? |
7400 | Some wan- eyed exile''s, wealth and sorrow''s heir, Who sought a lone retreat for tears and prayer? |
7400 | Sometimes a sunlit sphere comes rolling by, And then we softly whisper,--can it be? |
7400 | Still in the waters of the dark Shawshine Do the young bathers splash and think they''re clean? |
7400 | Stranger, whose eyes the shadowy isle survey, As the black steamer dashes through the bay, Why ask his buried secret to divine? |
7400 | Such task demands a readier pen than mine,-- What if I steal the Tutor''s Valentine? |
7400 | TARTARUS WHILE in my simple gospel creed That"God is Love"so plain I read, Shall dreams of heathen birth affright My pathway through the coming night? |
7400 | THE ANGEL And whence thy sadness in a world of bliss Where never parting comes, nor mourner''s tear? |
7400 | THE BOYS 1859 HAS there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? |
7400 | THE FLOWER OF LIBERTY WHAT flower is this that greets the morn, Its hues from Heaven so freshly born? |
7400 | THE LOVER''S SECRET WHAT ailed young Lucius? |
7400 | THE OLD MAN OF THE SEA A NIGHTMARE DREAM BY DAYLIGHT Do you know the Old Man of the Sea, of the Sea? |
7400 | THE SECRET OF THE STARS Is man''s the only throbbing heart that hides The silent spring that feeds its whispering tides? |
7400 | THE SHADOWS 1880"How many have gone?" |
7400 | THE STATESMAN''S SECRET WHO of all statesmen is his country''s pride, Her councils''prompter and her leaders''guide? |
7400 | TO R. B. H. AT THE DINNER TO THE PRESIDENT, BOSTON, JUNE 26, 1877 How to address him? |
7400 | TOO YOUNG FOR LOVE Too young for love? |
7400 | Tell us, ye sovereigns of the new domain, Are you content- or have we toiled in vain? |
7400 | Tell where the market used to be That stood beside the murdered tree? |
7400 | That buried passions wake and pass In beaded drops of fiery dew? |
7400 | That fellow''s the"Speaker,"--the one on the right;"Mr. Mayor,"my young one, how are you to- night? |
7400 | That whisper,--"Where is Mary''s boy?" |
7400 | The God who dealt with Abraham as the sons Of that old patriarch deal with other men? |
7400 | The answer hardly needs suggestion; Of course it was the Wandering Jew,-- How could you put me such a question? |
7400 | The basso''s trump before he sang? |
7400 | The bell-- can you recall its clang? |
7400 | The bitter drug we buy and sell, The brands that scorch, the blades that shine, The scars we leave, the"cures"we tell? |
7400 | The breakers roar,--how bears the shore? |
7400 | The breathing blossoms stir my blood, Methinks I see the lilacs bud And hear the bluebirds sing, my boys; Why not? |
7400 | The hues of all its glowing beds are ours, Shall you not claim its sweetest- smelling flowers? |
7400 | The jealous God of Moses, one who feels An image as an insult, and is wroth With him who made it and his child unborn? |
7400 | The long, long years with horrors overcast, Or the sweet promise of the day new- born? |
7400 | The minute draws near,--but her watch may go wrong; My heart will be asking, What keeps her so long? |
7400 | The mystery and the fear When the dread question, WHAT HAS BROUGHT ME HERE? |
7400 | The night of anguish or the joyous morn? |
7400 | The pleasures thou hast planned,-- Where shall their memory be When the white angel with the freezing hand Shall sit and watch by thee? |
7400 | The power that living hearts obey Shall lifeless blocks withstand? |
7400 | The rest that earth denied is thine,-- Ah, is it rest? |
7400 | The sky grows dark,-- Was that the roll of thunder? |
7400 | The snows may clog life''s iron track, But does the axle tire, While bearing swift through bank and drift The engine''s heart of fire? |
7400 | The sturdy old Grecian of Holworthy Hall, And Latin, and Logic, and Hebrew, and all? |
7400 | The thistle falls before a trampling clown, But who can chain the flying thistle- down? |
7400 | The veteran of the sea? |
7400 | The viol and its bow? |
7400 | The voices high and low? |
7400 | Their cheeks with morning''s blush were painted;-- Where are the Harrys, Jims, and Joes With whom we once were well acquainted? |
7400 | Then tread away, my gallant boys, And make the axle fly; Why should not wheels go round about, Like planets in the sky? |
7400 | These are around her; but where are her foes? |
7400 | These moments all are memory''s; I have come To speak with lips that rather should be dumb; For what are words? |
7400 | They are dead, do you tell me?--but how do you know? |
7400 | They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--But stay-- Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day? |
7400 | They''ll pile up Freedom''s breastwork, They''LL scoop out rebels''graves; Who then will be their owner And march them off for slaves? |
7400 | This wreath of verse how dare I offer you To whom the garden''s choicest gifts are due? |
7400 | Those eyes,--among thine elder friends Perhaps they pass for blue,-- No matter,--if a man can see, What more have eyes to do? |
7400 | Thou hast united us, who shall divide us? |
7400 | Thou, stamped by Nature with her royal sign, That party- hirelings hate a look like thine? |
7400 | Throbbed such passion in my heart? |
7400 | Too old grew Britain for her mother''s beads,-- Must we be necklaced with her children''s creeds? |
7400 | Too young for love? |
7400 | Too young for love? |
7400 | Too young for love? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Tower- like he stands in life''s unfaded prime; Ask you his name? |
7400 | Two friendly people, both disposed to smile, Who meet, like others, every little while, Instead of passing with a pleasant bow, And"How d''ye do?" |
7400 | Use well the freedom which thy Master gave,( Think''st thou that Heaven can tolerate a slave?) |
7400 | Vain? |
7400 | WHERE are you going, soldiers, With banner, gun, and sword? |
7400 | WHERE is this patriarch you are kindly greeting? |
7400 | WRITTEN AT SEA THE WASP AND THE HORNET"QUI VIVE?" |
7400 | WRITTEN AT SEA THE WASP AND THE HORNET"QUI VIVE?" |
7400 | Warmed with God''s smile and wafted by his breath, To weave in ceaseless round the dance of Death? |
7400 | Was ever pang like this? |
7400 | Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty? |
7400 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
7400 | Was ocean ploughed with harnessed fire? |
7400 | Was that flushed cheek as now? |
7400 | We knew him not? |
7400 | We praise him, not for gifts divine,-- His Muse was born of woman,-- His manhood breathes in every line,-- Was ever heart more human? |
7400 | We''re marching South to Canaan To battle for the Lord What Captain leads your armies Along the rebel coasts? |
7400 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But_ all_ must be of buhl? |
7400 | Well may they ask, for what so brightly burns As a dry creed that nothing ever learns? |
7400 | Well, this is modest;--nothing else than that? |
7400 | Well, who the changing world bewails? |
7400 | Well,_ one_ we have with us( how could he contrive To deal with us youngsters and still to survive?) |
7400 | Were nations coupled with a wire? |
7400 | Were school- boys ever half so wild? |
7400 | Were that wild pulse and throbbing heart Like these, which vainly strive, In thankless strains of soulless art, To dream themselves alive? |
7400 | Were there no damsels willing to attend And do such service for a suffering friend? |
7400 | What are those lone ones doing now, The wife and the children sad? |
7400 | What cares a witch for a hangman''s noose? |
7400 | What chance his wayward course may shape To reach its village inn? |
7400 | What change has clothed the ancient sire In sudden youth? |
7400 | What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
7400 | What does his saddening, restless slavery buy? |
7400 | What does n''t it hold? |
7400 | What echoes are these? |
7400 | What flag is this you carry Along the sea and shore? |
7400 | What fold is this the sweet winds kiss, Fair- striped and many- starred, Whose shadow palls these orphaned walls, The twins of Beauregard? |
7400 | What guerdon shall repay His debt of ransomed life? |
7400 | What guileless"Israelite indeed"The folded flock may watch and keep? |
7400 | What had she to sell? |
7400 | What have I rescued from the shelf? |
7400 | What have I save the blessings Thou hast lent? |
7400 | What hope I but thy mercy and thy love? |
7400 | What if the green leaves fall? |
7400 | What if the storm- clouds blow? |
7400 | What if, to make the nicer ears content, We say His Honesty, the President? |
7400 | What is a Prologue? |
7400 | What is it? |
7400 | What is the wench, and who?" |
7400 | What magic power has changed the faded mime? |
7400 | What makes thy cheek so pale? |
7400 | What name? |
7400 | What need of idle fancy to adorn Our mother''s birthplace on her birthday morn? |
7400 | What next? |
7400 | What of our duck? |
7400 | What phrases mean you do not need to learn; We must be civil, and they serve our turn"Your most obedient humble"means-- means what? |
7400 | What question puzzles ciphering Philomath? |
7400 | What save a right to live, a chance to die,-- To live companion of disease and pain, To die by poisoned shafts untimely slain? |
7400 | What say ye to the lovesick air That brought the tears from Marian''s eyes? |
7400 | What shall I give thee? |
7400 | What sign hast thou to show? |
7400 | What soil the enchanted clusters grew? |
7400 | What song is this you''re singing? |
7400 | What though the rose leaves fall? |
7400 | What though we perish ere the day is won? |
7400 | What tongue talks of battle? |
7400 | What troop is this that follows, All armed with picks and spades? |
7400 | What ugly dreams can trouble his repose Who yields himself to soothe another''s woes? |
7400 | What voice is so sweet and what greeting so dear As the simple, warm welcome that waits for us here? |
7400 | What was it who was bound to do? |
7400 | What was the Flying Dutchman''s name? |
7400 | What was the last prescription in his case? |
7400 | What were our life, with all its rents and seams, Stripped of its purple robes, our waking dreams? |
7400 | What were the glory of these festal days Shorn of their grand illumination''s blaze? |
7400 | What were these torturing gifts, and wherefore lent her? |
7400 | What wizard fills the wondrous glass? |
7400 | What''s the man about? |
7400 | What, Pope? |
7400 | What, and whence? |
7400 | When Canaan''s hosts are scattered, And all her walls lie flat, What follows next in order? |
7400 | When Lyon told tales of the long- vanished years, And Lenox crept round with the rings in his ears? |
7400 | When paper money became so cheap, Folks would n''t count it, but said"a heap,"A certain RICHARDS,--the books declare,--( A. M. in''90? |
7400 | When the battle is fought and won, What shall be told of you? |
7400 | When the brown soldiers come back from the borders, How will he look while his features they scan? |
7400 | When the twentieth century''s sunbeams climb the far- off eastern hill, With his ninety winters burdened, will he greet the morning still? |
7400 | When thy last page of life at length is filled, What shall thine heirs to keep thy memory build? |
7400 | When"Dolly"was kicking and running away, And punch came up smoking on Fillebrown''s tray? |
7400 | Where are the Marys, and Anns, and Elizas, Loving and lovely of yore? |
7400 | Where are they? |
7400 | Where in my list of phrases shall I seek The fitting words of NUMBER FIVE to speak? |
7400 | Where in the realm of thought, whose air is song, Does he, the Buddha of the West, belong? |
7400 | Where is he? |
7400 | Where is his seat? |
7400 | Where is the Eden like to thee? |
7400 | Where is the charm the weird enchantress weaves? |
7400 | Where is the meddling hand that dares to probe The secret grief beneath his sable robe? |
7400 | Where is the patriarch time could hardly tire,-- The good old, wrinkled, immemorial"squire"? |
7400 | Where is the sibyl with her hoarded leaves? |
7400 | Where lives the memory of the dead, Who made their tomb a toy? |
7400 | Where now are all the mighty deeds that Herod boasted loudest of? |
7400 | Where now the flashing jewelry the tetrarch''s wife was proudest of? |
7400 | Where shall she find an eye like thine to greet Spring''s earliest footprints on her opening flowers? |
7400 | Where shall the singing bird a stranger be That finds a nest for him in every tree? |
7400 | Where the gray colts and the ten- year- old fillies, Saturday''s triumph and joy? |
7400 | Where the tough champion who, with Calvin''s sword, In wordy conflicts battled for the Lord? |
7400 | Where was it old Judge Winthrop sat? |
7400 | Where''s Cotton Mather? |
7400 | Where, oh where are life''s lilies and roses, Nursed in the golden dawn''s smile? |
7400 | Where, tell me, was the Deacon''s pew? |
7400 | Which is the dream, the present or the past? |
7400 | Which of our two''Annexes''shall we choose? |
7400 | Which wears the garland that shall never fade, Sweet with fair memories that can never die? |
7400 | While other doublets deviate here and there, What secret handcuff binds that pretty pair? |
7400 | While tasks like these employ his anxious hours, What if his cornfields are not edged with flowers? |
7400 | While wondering Science stands, herself perplexed At each day''s miracle, and asks"What next?" |
7400 | Who Can guess beforehand what his pen will do? |
7400 | Who asks if his comrade is battered and tanned When he feels his warm soul in the clasp of his hand? |
7400 | Who asks to have it stay unaltered? |
7400 | Who bade thee lift those snow- white hands We bound in gilded chains?" |
7400 | Who broods in silence till, by questions pressed, Some answer struggles from his laboring breast? |
7400 | Who but myself shall cloud my soul with fear? |
7400 | Who but their Maker is to blame?" |
7400 | Who can thy unborn meaning scan? |
7400 | Who cares that his verse is a beggar in art If you see through its rags the full throb of his heart? |
7400 | Who fishes in the Frog- pond still? |
7400 | Who forged in roaring flames the ponderous stone, And shaped the moulded metal to his need? |
7400 | Who found the seeds of fire and made them shoot, Fed by his breath, in buds and flowers of flame? |
7400 | Who gave the dragging car its rolling wheel, And tamed the steed that whirls its circling round? |
7400 | Who is he, The one ye name and tell us that ye serve, Whom ye would call me from my lonely tower To worship with the many- headed throng? |
7400 | Who is our brother? |
7400 | Who is this preacher our Northampton claims, Whose rhetoric blazes with sulphureous flames And torches stolen from Tartarean mines? |
7400 | Who knew so well their pleasant tales, And all those livelier freaks could tell Whose oft- told story never fails? |
7400 | Who knows a woman''s wild caprice? |
7400 | Who knows this ancient graduate of fourscore years and ten,-- What place he held, what name he bore among the sons of men? |
7400 | Who knows what change the passing day, The fleeting hour, may bring? |
7400 | Who knows? |
7400 | Who loved our boyish years so well? |
7400 | Who ordered bathing for his aches and ails? |
7400 | Who says we are more? |
7400 | Who sees unmoved, a ruin at his feet, The lowliest home where human hearts have beat? |
7400 | Who shakes the senate with the silver tone The groves of Pindus might have sighed to own? |
7400 | Who shall our heroes''dread exchange forget,-- All life, youth, hope, could promise to allure For all that soul could brave or flesh endure? |
7400 | Who shall say? |
7400 | Who then is left to rend the future''s veil? |
7400 | Who wants an old receipted bill? |
7400 | Who was she? |
7400 | Who was this man of whom they tell the lies? |
7400 | Who were the brothers Snow? |
7400 | Who wore the last three- cornered hat? |
7400 | Who''s next? |
7400 | Who, in these days when all things go by steam, Recalls the stage- coach with its four- horse team? |
7400 | Who-- who that has loved it so long and so well-- The flower of his birthright would barter or sell? |
7400 | Who? |
7400 | Whom do we trust and serve? |
7400 | Whose God will ye serve, O ye rulers of men? |
7400 | Whose ashes press that nameless bed? |
7400 | Whose cry shall be answered? |
7400 | Whose deep- lunged laughter oft would shake The ceiling with its thunder- volleys? |
7400 | Whose dog to church would go? |
7400 | Whose hair was braided in a queue? |
7400 | Whose hand protect me from myself but thine? |
7400 | Whose smile is that? |
7400 | Whose voice may sing his praises? |
7400 | Why ca n''t a fellow hear the fine things said About a fellow when a fellow''s dead? |
7400 | Why crisp the waters blue? |
7400 | Why deem that Heaven denies? |
7400 | Why doubt for a moment? |
7400 | Why floats the amaranth in eternal bloom O''er Ilium''s turrets and Achilles''tomb? |
7400 | Why follows memory to the gate of Troy Her plumed defender and his trembling boy? |
7400 | Why lingers fancy where the sunbeams smile On Circe''s gardens and Calypso''s isle? |
7400 | Why mourn that we, the favored few Whom grasping Time so long has spared Life''s sweet illusions to pursue, The common lot of age have shared? |
7400 | Why name his countless triumphs, whom to meet Is to be famous, envied in defeat? |
7400 | Why not as boldly as from Homer''s lips The long array, of Argive battle- ships? |
7400 | Why not? |
7400 | Why plead with the deaf for the cause of mankind? |
7400 | Why question mutes no question can unlock, Dumb as the legend on the Dighton rock? |
7400 | Why question? |
7400 | Why should I call her gracious, winning, fair? |
7400 | Why should he talk, whose presence lends a grace To every table where he shows his face? |
7400 | Why should we look one common faith to find, Where one in every score is color- blind? |
7400 | Why take your arm? |
7400 | Why tell each idle guess, each whisper vain? |
7400 | Why tell the lordly flatterer''s art, That won the maiden''s ear,-- The fluttering of the frightened heart, The blush, the smile, the tear? |
7400 | Why that ethereal spirit''s frame describe? |
7400 | Why tremble? |
7400 | Why with the loveliest of her sex compare? |
7400 | Why, for pity''s sake, Not try an adder or a rattlesnake? |
7400 | Why, who am I, to lift me here And beg such learned folk to listen, To ask a smile, or coax a tear Beneath these stoic lids to glisten? |
7400 | Why, why call me up with your battery of flatteries? |
7400 | Will Faith her half- fledged brood retain If darkening counsels cloud the school? |
7400 | Will he answer to the summons when they range themselves in line And the young mustachioed marshal calls out"Class of''29"? |
7400 | Will he be some veteran minstrel, left to pipe in feeble rhyme All the stories and the glories of our gay and golden time? |
7400 | Will he stand with Harvard''s nurslings when they hear their mother''s call And the old and young are gathered in the many alcoved hall? |
7400 | Will his dwelling be a mansion in a marble- fronted row, Or a homestead by a hillside where the huckleberries grow? |
7400 | Will it be a rich old merchant in a square- tied white cravat, Or select- man of a village in a pre- historic hat? |
7400 | Will it be some old Emeritus, who taught so long ago The boys that heard him lecture have heads as white as snow? |
7400 | Will piles of stone in Auburn''s mournful shade Save from neglect the spot where thou art laid? |
7400 | Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood? |
7400 | Will she come? |
7400 | Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood? |
7400 | Will the needle swing back from the east or the west? |
7400 | Will the ring- dove return to her nest? |
7400 | Will ye build you new shrines in the slave- breeder''s den? |
7400 | Wilt thou not hear us while we raise, In sweet accord of solemn praise, The voices that have mingled long In joyous flow of mirth and song? |
7400 | With burning star and flaming band It kindles all the sunset land Oh tell us what its name may be,-- Is this the Flower of Liberty? |
7400 | Without thee what were life? |
7400 | Would I polish off Japan? |
7400 | Would he turn his eye from the distant sky, To smile on a thing like thee? |
7400 | Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
7400 | Yet what has holy page more sweet, Or what had woman''s love more fair, When Mary clasped her Saviour''s feet With flowing eyes and streaming hair? |
7400 | Yet why with coward lips complain That this must lean, and that must fall? |
7400 | Yet why with flowery speeches tease, With vain superlatives distress him? |
7400 | You have your judgment; will you trust to mine? |
7400 | You remember Rossini-- you''ve been at the play? |
7400 | You were a school- boy-- what beneath the sun So like a monkey? |
7400 | You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL? |
7400 | _ Ah well,--I know,--at every age life has a certain charm,_--_ You''re going? |
7400 | _ Are you quite as quick of hearing?_ Please to say that once again. |
7400 | _ Can you read as once you used to?_ Well, the printing is so bad, No young folks''eyes can read it like the books that once we had. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you cry a little easier than some twenty years ago?_ Well, my heart is very tender, but I think''t was always so. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you find it sometimes happens that you ca n''t recall a name?_ Yes, I know such lots of people,--but my memory''s not to blame. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you get a little sleepy after dinner every day?_ Well, I doze a little, sometimes, but that always was my way. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you hate to tie your shoe- strings?_ Yes, I own it-- that is true. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you stay at home of evenings? |
7400 | _ Do n''t you stoop a little, walking?_ It''s a way I''ve always had, I have always been round- shouldered, ever since I was a lad. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you tell old stories over?_ I am not aware I do. |
7400 | _ Not_ encore? |
7400 | a hundred lips inquire;"Thou seekest God beneath what Christian spire?" |
7400 | and can it be Those two familiar faces we never more may see? |
7400 | and must it be? |
7400 | and was it so long ago? |
7400 | and why Doomed to such menial place? |
7400 | and"Wherefore did I come?" |
7400 | and,"What will his mother do?" |
7400 | are the southern curtains drawn? |
7400 | awkward, it is true Call him"Great Father,"as the Red Men do? |
7400 | but where was thine? |
7400 | can say farewell to thee? |
7400 | do n''t they charm the sick? |
7400 | fill a fresh bumper, for why should we go While the nectar( logwood) still reddens our cups as they flow? |
7400 | for too often the death- bell has tolled, And the question we ask is,"How many are left?" |
7400 | for"What?" |
7400 | heard I not that ringing strain, That clear celestial tone? |
7400 | heard you not Port Royal''s doom? |
7400 | mussels? |
7400 | my boots? |
7400 | my gloves? |
7400 | my hat? |
7400 | my pantaloons? |
7400 | not a line to keep our souls alive?" |
7400 | off they go!-- How are you, Bill? |
7400 | or"How''s your uncle now?" |
7400 | tell us, who is he? |
7400 | the folks all mad with joy Each fond, pale mother thinking of her boy; Old gray- haired fathers meeting--"Have-- you-- heard?" |
7400 | the vacant chairs tell sadly we are going, going fast, And the thought comes strangely o''er me, who will live to be the last? |
7400 | thou dost not fear To clasp a spectre''s tail?" |
7400 | unloved of Amaryllis-- Nature''s last blossom- need I name The wreath of threescore''s silver lilies? |
7400 | we ask, Or, traced by knowledge more divine, Some larger, nobler task? |
7400 | we ask; and is it true The sunshine falls on nothing new, As Israel''s king declared? |
7400 | we remember that angels have wings,-- What story is this of the day of his birth? |
7400 | what blossom shall I bring, That opens in my Northern spring? |
7400 | what foe shall assail thee, Bearing the standard of Liberty''s van? |
7400 | what is this my frenzy hears? |
7400 | what is this that rises to my touch, So like a cushion? |
7400 | what more shall honor claim? |
7400 | where is she, so frail, so fair, Amid the tumult wild? |
7400 | will you join in the strife For country, for freedom, for honor, for life? |
7400 | you Boatswain that walks the deck, How does it happen you''re not a wreck? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? 28020 And what are they going to do in Kansas?" |
28020 | Are there to be_ two_ World''s Conventions? |
28020 | But, Mrs. Nichols, you would not have women go down into the muddy pool of politics? |
28020 | Could it then,said she,"be a Church of Christ?" |
28020 | Den dey talks''bout dis ting in de head; what dis dey call it? |
28020 | Did Dr. Hewitt rule out from office Mr. Barnum on the ground that he( Mr. Barnum) was an infidel? |
28020 | Did Mayor Barstow occasion the schism in the temperance ranks, by refusing to recognize the feminine element in the movement? |
28020 | Did you hear the cheering? |
28020 | Do you love peace as well as Christ loved it, and can you do thus? |
28020 | Do you think,says one,"that Christ would have done so?" |
28020 | Hannah, Hannah,cried her husband,"do you not see these are no questions for you? |
28020 | How can the proposed Convention be a_ World''s_ Convention, if women and all who do not belong to a particular Church are to be excluded? |
28020 | How many have you? |
28020 | If women are, according to your admission, fitted for the higher plane, why keep them on the lower? |
28020 | If you complain of education in sons, what shall I say in regard to daughters, who every day experience the want of it? |
28020 | Is it equal to that of man? |
28020 | Is not our conduct mean and dastardly? 28020 Is she not my wife?" |
28020 | Ladies,I said,"it takes me no longer to speak than you to listen; what have you done with your children the two hours you have been sitting here? |
28020 | Madam,he inquired,"can you tell me where all these people are from, and where they are going?" |
28020 | On what subjects? |
28020 | Rachel,said the astonished husband,"where is that ninepence I gave thee day before yesterday?" |
28020 | Sir, we have got along for eighteen hundred years, and shall we change now? 28020 Some one remarked to her one day,''Are you sure your men vote as they promise?'' |
28020 | That is not it,do you say? |
28020 | The call is unexceptionably broad,we were reminded,"it invites all and excludes nobody, then why not accept it and hold but one Convention?" |
28020 | The grandfather made legal custodian by the father, was he? 28020 Then?" |
28020 | Well, in what way can you better the cause? 28020 Well, is it not?" |
28020 | What does it all mean? |
28020 | What greater cause could there be? 28020 What is it?" |
28020 | What is the use of Conventions? 28020 What, Anna, does thee go to hear that Fanny Wright?" |
28020 | Who can that creature be? |
28020 | Who is it? |
28020 | Who votes under it? |
28020 | Why do you women meddle in politics? |
28020 | Why,I asked,"are they bad men?" |
28020 | Will they the felon fox restrain, And yet take oft the tiger''s chain? |
28020 | Will you sign one if drawn up? |
28020 | You do n''t say anything about slavery in your woman''s rights''lectures, do you? |
28020 | ... What do we toil for? |
28020 | 1.--Have you tried your experiment of education on any little nigger yet? |
28020 | A laborer to whom the architect showed it, said:"Do n''t she know e''en as much as some men?" |
28020 | A lady who was among the audience said to me afterward,"How could you do it? |
28020 | Accordingly, you submit your Constitution for ratification-- to whom? |
28020 | After a moment of silence, he said:"Were any of your family up, Lydia, on the night when I received my company here?" |
28020 | After this, should I very handsomely make an exception in favor of Mr. Saxe, would he feel complimented? |
28020 | Again I ask, is it possible to discuss all the laws of a relation, and not touch the relation itself? |
28020 | Agitation? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? |
28020 | And a''n''t, I a woman? |
28020 | And after dinner, she says to her husband,"Where shall we go this evening?" |
28020 | And as to the disorder which prevailed throughout the Convention, who made that disorder? |
28020 | And do you ask for fortitude, energy, and perseverance? |
28020 | And do you ask, did this not retard the cause of Temperance? |
28020 | And do you call yourselves republicans? |
28020 | And do you think these labors will be in vain? |
28020 | And if she is, what right has man to deprive her of her natural and inalienable rights? |
28020 | And if they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how much more them of his household? |
28020 | And now, added the old gentleman,"I would like to hear what Mrs. Nichols has to say on this point?" |
28020 | And pray, why should he not have chastised her? |
28020 | And shall she still continue the wife? |
28020 | And shall such women be denied seats in this Convention? |
28020 | And shall such women be refused seats here in a Convention seeking the emancipation of slaves throughout the world? |
28020 | And was the material for God''s image all worked up in creating Adam? |
28020 | And what are these female delegates? |
28020 | And what are those obligations? |
28020 | And what are ye who strive with God Against the ark of His salvation, Moved by the breath of prayer abroad, With blessings for a dying nation? |
28020 | And what fitter occasion could occur? |
28020 | And what follows, as a natural result? |
28020 | And what has been the consequence? |
28020 | And what has it to do with the question of her intellectual equality, that she was created_ afterward_? |
28020 | And what is our position politically? |
28020 | And what is the characteristic glory of the nineteenth century? |
28020 | And what is the result? |
28020 | And what of your experiment, what of your wives, your homes? |
28020 | And what woman of them all has shown so much"dare- devil independence"as Jane G. Swisshelm? |
28020 | And wherefore? |
28020 | And who were these women? |
28020 | And who would blame them? |
28020 | And why is not a like provision made for the girls? |
28020 | And why with reckless hand I plant A nettle on the graves ye honor? |
28020 | And why, in the name of reason and justice, why should she not have the same rights? |
28020 | And why? |
28020 | And will ye ask me, why this taunt Of memories sacred from the scorner? |
28020 | And yet is injustice to a colored man a greater sin than to a woman? |
28020 | And yet, with a free platform, where is the human being who cares to argue the question? |
28020 | And, also, how many rights has any woman? |
28020 | And, on the other hand, can not men"nurse"the babies, or preside at the wash- tub, or boil a pot as safely and as well as women? |
28020 | Another voice chimes in with:"Do you love the Temperance cause? |
28020 | Another"Friend,"seeing her frequently pass, hailed her on one occasion, and said,"Anna, where does thee go every day?" |
28020 | Any evidence that we are wrong, or that slavery is a good and wholesome institution? |
28020 | Are all the duties of husband and father to be made subservient to those of statesman and politician? |
28020 | Are not the natural wants and emotions of humanity common to, and shared equally by, both sexes? |
28020 | Are not these delicate matters left wholly to the discretion of courts? |
28020 | Are not these fair subjects for discussion? |
28020 | Are not women under the special leading and direction of their clergymen? |
28020 | Are the former good Samaritans, pouring into my wounded heart the oil and the wine? |
28020 | Are there to be no more children? |
28020 | Are they orthodox in religion? |
28020 | Are we meting out fair and equal justice?... |
28020 | Are we not entitled to their superior light? |
28020 | Are we to put the stamp of truth upon the libel here set forth, that men and women, in the matrimonial relation, are to be equal? |
28020 | Are we, sir, to give the least countenance to claims so preposterous, disgraceful, and criminal as are embodied in this address? |
28020 | Are women, in New York, persons, people, citizens, members of the State? |
28020 | As citizens of a republic, which should we most highly prize, social privileges or civil rights? |
28020 | As regards voting, why should not women go to the polls? |
28020 | As to moral equality, has she not conquered it by the power of sentiment? |
28020 | Because I can not make a steam engine, shall all other men be denied that right? |
28020 | Because I can not stand on my head, shall we deny that right to all acrobats in our circuses? |
28020 | Because all men can not stand on a platform and make a speech, shall I be denied the exercise of that right? |
28020 | Because she is woman? |
28020 | Because they know nothing of governments, or rights, and therefore ask nothing, shall my petitions be unheard? |
28020 | But Mr. Greeley asks,"How could the mother look the child in the face, if she married a second time?" |
28020 | But are they equal in rights? |
28020 | But can it be that here, too, there are tyrants who violate the individual right to express opinions on any subject? |
28020 | But do not women_ now_ work right earnestly? |
28020 | But elevation, instead of destroying, show? |
28020 | But for your club- houses and newspapers, what would social life be to you? |
28020 | But has the law the right to be prejudiced-- ought it not to stand pure, and noble, and magnanimous, founded on the natural rights of the human soul? |
28020 | But here is a petition to which I am adding names as I find opportunity; will you place your name on the roll of honor?" |
28020 | But how comes it that the author of the bill of 1860, residing at the capital, never heard of its repeal? |
28020 | But how is it now? |
28020 | But how much worse would it have been for those women to have gone to the polls with a brother or husband, instead of with this man? |
28020 | But if they are dead, what then? |
28020 | But if women can conduct their own business, by means of presidents and secretaries of their own sex, can he tell us why they should not? |
28020 | But is it so? |
28020 | But is this the state of things? |
28020 | But it had always been a question among metaphysicians, which was really the most natural condition for man-- the savage or the civilized state? |
28020 | But it is said by some, our"books and papers do not speak the truth"; why, then, do they not contradict what we say? |
28020 | But she pushed him gently back, saying to the startled group:"Have you made your decision, gentlemen? |
28020 | But suppose we had done nothing but talk? |
28020 | But what becomes of the union divinely instituted, which death only should part? |
28020 | But what can we do now, when even the motion to retain the mother''s joint guardianship is voted, down? |
28020 | But what has induced them, what has enabled them, to do that work? |
28020 | But what is marriage? |
28020 | But what is property without the right to protect that property by law? |
28020 | But what is she worth as a nurse of the sick without a knowledge of the art of healing? |
28020 | But what is the present remedy? |
28020 | But what of that? |
28020 | But what right, I ask, has the law to presume at all on the subject? |
28020 | But what was the honorable gentleman''s reply? |
28020 | But what was the primary cause of that tragic end? |
28020 | But what were our reasons for going to that Convention? |
28020 | But what''s all dis here talkin''''bout? |
28020 | But where shall be the battle- ground for this indispensable self- conquest? |
28020 | But while prizes continue to be awarded, can any good reason be given why the name of the girl should not be published as well as that of the boy? |
28020 | But who does not revolt at the idea of perpetuating a race inferior to ourselves? |
28020 | But why attack the Church? |
28020 | But, admitting it to be a political question, have we no interest in the welfare of our country? |
28020 | But, say you, are not all women sufficiently represented by their fathers, husbands, and brothers? |
28020 | But, say you, does not separation cover all these difficulties? |
28020 | But,"in the settlement of national difficulties,"it is said,"the last resort is war; shall we summon our wives and mothers to the battle- field?" |
28020 | Came it from nature? |
28020 | Can a Convention be called for a nobler purpose? |
28020 | Can antiquity make wrong right? |
28020 | Can any human being be benefited by such gross violations of humanity? |
28020 | Can his soul writhe in more bitter agony under the consciousness of evil or wrong? |
28020 | Can injustice go beyond this? |
28020 | Can man ever raise them to that lofty height? |
28020 | Can noble men be born of infirm women? |
28020 | Can not women fill an office, or cast a vote, or conduct a campaign, as judiciously and vigorously as men? |
28020 | Can one man in his brief hour hope to see the beginning and end of any reform? |
28020 | Can the father annul the relation which exists between himself and his child? |
28020 | Can the mother ever destroy the relation which exists between herself and her child? |
28020 | Can woman then receive evil from this rule, and man receive good? |
28020 | Can woman watch the large, the all- absorbing interest she has at stake? |
28020 | Can you continue here and see all this confusion prevailing around you? |
28020 | Can you deny it? |
28020 | Charles the First refused to recognize the competency of the tribunal which condemned him: For how, said he, can subjects judge a king? |
28020 | Could I aid in taking down that magnificent entablature from its proud elevation, and placing it in the dust and dirt that surround the pedestal? |
28020 | Did Elizabeth Fry lose any of her feminine qualities by the public walk into which she was called? |
28020 | Did he meet it openly and fairly? |
28020 | Did it ever enter into the mind of man that woman too had an inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of her individual happiness? |
28020 | Did not our petitions last winter cause a bill for its prohibition to be reported in the Legislature, which was lost in the House by a small majority? |
28020 | Did one ever trust in God and meet with disappointment? |
28020 | Did she inherit from her husband his great intellect? |
28020 | Did she lose the delicacy of woman by her acts? |
28020 | Did she stand beside her sisters who were laboring for the right? |
28020 | Did the flowing robes of Christ Himself render His life less grand and beautiful? |
28020 | Did the hearts of our fathers fail? |
28020 | Did we go there to forward the cause of Temperance or to forward the cause of woman, or what were our motives in going? |
28020 | Did woman meet with him in council and voluntarily give up all her claim to be her own law- maker? |
28020 | Did you ever hear of the old man who went to the doctor, and asked him to teach him to speak prose? |
28020 | Did you meet to settle doctrines, or to conspire against slavery? |
28020 | Do I believe that the wife ought to take her own earnings, as her own earnings? |
28020 | Do husbands toil through a life- time to support their aunts, and uncles, and cousins? |
28020 | Do not sound philosophy and long experience teach us that man and woman should be educated together? |
28020 | Do not the German women and our market women labor right earnestly? |
28020 | Do not the above citations clearly prove inequality? |
28020 | Do not the majority of women in every town support themselves, and very many their husbands, too? |
28020 | Do not the men of this nation know ever since the landing of the pilgrims, that they are wrong in making subject one- half of the people? |
28020 | Do not the wives of our farmers and mechanics toil? |
28020 | Do we really think so badly of our mothers, wives, sister, daughters? |
28020 | Do we shrink from reading the announcement that Mrs. Somerville is made an honorary member of a scientific association? |
28020 | Do wise, Christian legislators need any arguments to convince them that the sacredness of the family relation should be protected at all hazards? |
28020 | Do women encounter no such evils in their homes? |
28020 | Do you ask me why I have dwelt on this Institution for Social Science, cataloguing the noble names that do it honor? |
28020 | Do you ask, then,"What has the North to do?" |
28020 | Do you ask,"What has the North to do with slavery?" |
28020 | Do you feel you are doing any good?" |
28020 | Do you know what a country we come from? |
28020 | Do you laugh? |
28020 | Do you not hear the cry which, in New England, a woman is raising in the world''s ears against the foul wrong which America is working in the world? |
28020 | Do you not see that you are making yourself ridiculous?" |
28020 | Do you suppose they would dare to tell me how they charge that work on their slowly- paying customer''s bills? |
28020 | Do you tell me that the Bible is against our rights? |
28020 | Do you tell me what Paul or Peter says on the subject? |
28020 | Do you think the women of Boston would shut a bright boy out of the High- School or Latin- School, because he was black in the face? |
28020 | Do you want the compliments of the satanic press,_ The New York Times_,_ Express_, and_ Herald_? |
28020 | Does Mrs. Stanton not know that nunneries belong to a past age, that people who had nothing to do might go there and try to expiate their own sins? |
28020 | Does a woman desire a_ thorough_ medical education, where is the institution fully and property endowed to receive her? |
28020 | Does any respectable woman keep house so badly as the United States? |
28020 | Does he claim it under law of the land? |
28020 | Does he draw his authority from God, from the language of holy writ? |
28020 | Does he love and hate, hope and fear, joy and sorrow more than woman? |
28020 | Does his heart thrill with a deeper pleasure in doing good? |
28020 | Does it cost too much to educate the future mothers of this nation in the science of life? |
28020 | Does it pertain to the city of New York, or to the Empire State? |
28020 | Does man hunger and thirst, suffer cold and heat more than woman? |
28020 | Does not the abuse of the religious element in woman demand our earnest attention and investigation? |
28020 | Does not the morality of our politics demonstrate a great want of the two qualities so characteristic of woman, heart and conscience? |
28020 | Does not the same interest, the same strong tie, bind the mother to her children, that bind the father? |
28020 | Does not this apply to the latest period? |
28020 | Does not this nation know how great its guilt is in enslaving one- sixth of its people? |
28020 | Does she eat at the same table? |
28020 | Does she sit in the same room with you? |
28020 | Does that prove they should be deprived of all civil rights? |
28020 | Does that reason not hold as good in the case of the husband as in that of the wife? |
28020 | Does the Christian, in his love to all mankind, wait for the majority of the benighted heathen to ask him for the gospel? |
28020 | Does the State wait for the criminal to ask for his prison- house? |
28020 | Does the accident of sex place woman outside of all ordinary principles of law and justice? |
28020 | Does woman? |
28020 | Does your literature complain of it-- of the waste of human life, the slaughter of human souls, the butchery of woman? |
28020 | Duty is the professed object of the pulpit, and if it does not teach that, what in Heaven''s name does it teach? |
28020 | E. H. Chapin, on the ground that he was a Universalist?" |
28020 | ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH: My friends, do we realize for what purpose we are convened? |
28020 | Echo answers,"what?" |
28020 | Fathers and brothers, shall woman in her agony, and man in his degradation, appeal to you in vain? |
28020 | Fathers, do you say, let your daughters pay a life- long penalty for one unfortunate step? |
28020 | For how much is really covered by that duty? |
28020 | For how, said they, can a king judge rebels? |
28020 | For instance: What is the right to property without the right to protect it? |
28020 | For is woman not included in that phrase,"all men are created free and equal"? |
28020 | For the sake of argument admitting this to be true, what then? |
28020 | For what is life without liberty, and what is liberty without equality of rights? |
28020 | For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at the pleasure of another?" |
28020 | From Coke down to Kent, who can cite one clause of the marriage contract where woman has the advantage? |
28020 | From time to time I put these questions to myself: How is it that woman can longer silently consent to her present false position? |
28020 | From what power the vested right to place woman-- his partner, his companion, his helpmeet in life-- in an inferior position? |
28020 | Grew married a second time? |
28020 | Grew say that woman can not preach, in the face of such a preacher as LUCRETIA MOTT? |
28020 | Had she not a perfect right to do so? |
28020 | Had that helpless child no claims on his protection? |
28020 | Hannah Arnett listened in silence until the last abject word was spoken, when she rapidly inquired:"But what if we should live after all?" |
28020 | Has God led us thus far to desert us now? |
28020 | Has a single church denied his degrading theory? |
28020 | Has any Woman''s Rights Convention been a failure? |
28020 | Has any one the right to condemn such a man unproved? |
28020 | Has nature thus merged it? |
28020 | Has she a right to sit there? |
28020 | Has she been wanting in ardor and enthusiasm? |
28020 | Has she ceased to exist and feel pleasure and pain? |
28020 | Has she not mingled her blood with that of her husband, son, and sire? |
28020 | Has she not the same capacity to teach them that the father has? |
28020 | Has woman then been idle during the contest between"right and might"? |
28020 | Hath He not joined in each human being necessities and ability to supply them? |
28020 | Hath He not joined mother and child in body and spirit? |
28020 | Have men ever aimed so high? |
28020 | Have protests against his blasphemous doctrine been made by his brother clergymen? |
28020 | Have the women put their faith And philosophy to shame? |
28020 | Have they disgraced themselves or the Society which has confided in them? |
28020 | Have they proved by their follies, their extravagances, their unwomanly boldness and want of a just sense of decorum that these great men were wrong? |
28020 | Have we not given £ 20,000,000 of our money for the purpose of doing away with the abominations of slavery? |
28020 | Have you chosen the part of men, or traitors?" |
28020 | Have you done justice? |
28020 | Have you ever seen a little boy running along the street, and carefully dodging between two big boys? |
28020 | Have you loved mercy? |
28020 | Having discarded the idea of the oneness of the sexes, how can man judge of the needs and wants of a being so wholly unlike himself? |
28020 | Having the public ear one- seventh part of the time, if the men of the pulpit do not educate the public mind, who does educate it? |
28020 | He asked whether the claims of woman, which had been stated and advocated in the Convention, were founded on Nature or Revelation? |
28020 | He can spend all she has at the gaming- table, and who can hinder him? |
28020 | He is admitted into Legislative halls, and to all places where men"most do congregate;"why, then, should she not admit him to her parlor? |
28020 | He said: Gentlemen, the question before you is, Shall the women of Massachusetts have equal rights with the men? |
28020 | He seriously declared that on more than one occasion he had heard an American woman say to her husband,"Dear, will you bring me my shawl?" |
28020 | Here they expect to find freedom of speech; here, for if we can not claim it here, where should we go for it? |
28020 | Hewitt''s?" |
28020 | His peers made the law, and shall law- makers lay nets for those of their own rank? |
28020 | Horace Greeley once said to Margaret Fuller:"If you should ask a woman to carry a ship round Cape Horn, how would she go to work to do it? |
28020 | How came I, she asks, to be excluded from all these precious privileges? |
28020 | How can a mother, who does not understand, and therefore can not appreciate the rights of humanity, train up her child in the way it should go? |
28020 | How can he judge of the agonies of soul that impelled her to such an outrage of maternal instincts? |
28020 | How can he make laws for his own benefit and woman''s too at the same time? |
28020 | How can man enter into the feelings of that mother? |
28020 | How can she calmly contemplate the barbarous code of laws which govern her civil and political existence? |
28020 | How can she tolerate our social customs, by which womankind is stripped of all true virtue, dignity, and nobility? |
28020 | How can society be otherwise than a gainer by the increased moral and mental influence of one- half of its members? |
28020 | How can the servant, bound hand and foot by the master, do the bidding of the tyrant? |
28020 | How can the weak control the strong? |
28020 | How can we discuss all the laws and conditions of marriage, without perceiving its essential essence, end, and aim? |
28020 | How can woman have a right to her children when the right to herself is taken away? |
28020 | How can you expect, from such women, any nobleness or appreciation of nobleness? |
28020 | How cogent the eloquent appeal of Macaulay:"What right have we to take this question for granted? |
28020 | How could man ever look thus on woman? |
28020 | How did woman first become subject to man as she now is all over the world? |
28020 | How do we know them? |
28020 | How does the objector know that women do not desire equality of freedom? |
28020 | How does this happen? |
28020 | How has this Woman''s Rights movement been treated in this country, on the right hand and on the left? |
28020 | How is that? |
28020 | How is woman fulfilling her divine mission? |
28020 | How long will they consent to be poor? |
28020 | How many of these husbands return to their homes as happy and contented, as pure and loving, as when they left? |
28020 | How many of you have ever read even the laws concerning them that now disgrace your statute- books? |
28020 | How much do fathers generally do toward bringing them up? |
28020 | How much of this waste of treasure is traceable to defective family government? |
28020 | How old is the oppression which we have met to look in the face? |
28020 | How shall I earn bread?" |
28020 | How shall we open for woman''s energies new spheres of well remunerated industry? |
28020 | How stands it now? |
28020 | How, I ask you, can that be called justice, which makes such a distinction as this between man and woman? |
28020 | I ask for her liberty to do whatever moral and useful deed she proves able to do-- why should I ask in vain? |
28020 | I ask you, fathers and brethren, tell me what you would do in my place? |
28020 | I ask, are we to depend on a Christianity like that to restore woman her rights? |
28020 | I ask, did God give woman aspirations which it is a sin for her to gratify? |
28020 | I asked why there should be this difference made; why the girls too should not have the black- board? |
28020 | I did not make all the use I might of the opportunity; but when are we ever wise enough to do it? |
28020 | I have no time to question; but should not a Christian community offer womanly ministrations to its imprisoned women? |
28020 | I heard of the circumstance of your exclusion at a distance, and immediately said:"Excluded on the ground that they are women?" |
28020 | I know that, but what is it that educates? |
28020 | I said,''do women vote here?'' |
28020 | I wonder if the Judge-- he is that now, and a benedict-- remembers? |
28020 | I would ask if such a code of laws does not require change? |
28020 | If Mrs. Fry felt that she had a higher truth, how did she know that she might not influence Mrs. Mott for good? |
28020 | If a contract, why is there no remedy for its violation either in law or equity, as is the case with other contracts? |
28020 | If a woman can thus have the highest right conceded to her, why should not woman have a lower? |
28020 | If anger and turbulence disgrace woman, what can they add to the dignity of man? |
28020 | If deception and intrigue, the elements of political craft, be degrading to woman, can they be ennobling to man? |
28020 | If it be proper for a woman to open her lips in jubilee to sing nonsense, how can it be improper for her to open them and speak sense? |
28020 | If it be unwomanly for a girl to have a whole education, why is it not unwomanly for her to have even a half one? |
28020 | If marriage be a contract, why is it not governed by the same rules that govern other contracts? |
28020 | If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint, and yourn holds a quart, would n''t ye be mean not to let me have my little half- measure full?" |
28020 | If nature has not made the sex so clearly defined as to be seen through any disguise, why should we make the difference so striking? |
28020 | If patience and forbearance adorn a woman, are they not equally essential to a manly character? |
28020 | If politics are necessarily corrupting, ought not good men, as well as good women, to be exhorted to quit voting? |
28020 | If prosecuted under the law of libel before a court of women for his late remarks, does he think he would get his deserts? |
28020 | If she desires a course of thorough disciplinary study for any purpose whatsoever, where is she to find means or the institution to receive her? |
28020 | If she did not, what is the common sense of such a statute? |
28020 | If so, by what occult power do we understand that different nature to dictate by metes and bounds its wants and spheres? |
28020 | If such a condition of the wife in society does not claim redress? |
28020 | If that be the heavenly order, is it not our duty to render earth as near like heaven as we may? |
28020 | If the Bible is against woman''s equality, what are you to do with it? |
28020 | If the few only, or no one, is really married, why do you object to a law that shall acknowledge the fact? |
28020 | If the power is a just one, from what source did they derive it? |
28020 | If the pulpit should speak out fully and everywhere, upon this subject, would not woman obey it? |
28020 | If there is none such, can you tell me of any paper that advocates our claims more warmly than the_ North Star_? |
28020 | If there is, it is unfair to have one determine both; if there is not, why does tyrannous custom separate her? |
28020 | If they are not literary, artistic, or philanthropic, what can they do? |
28020 | If they are not, then why are they numbered in the census, taxed by assessors, and subjected to legal penalties? |
28020 | If they are unsuccessful in married life, who suffers more the bitter consequences of poverty than the wife? |
28020 | If they are, then why is authority exercised over them without their consent asked or granted? |
28020 | If this question is not legitimate, what is? |
28020 | If we have private griefs( and what human heart, in a large sense, is without them? |
28020 | If woman''s judgment were exercised, why might she not aid in making the laws by which she is governed? |
28020 | If you admit the construction put upon the Bible by friend Barker, to be a false one, or Miss Brown''s construction to be the true one, what then? |
28020 | If you answer, as you must, that it is done in violation of all law, then we ask you, when and how is this great wrong to be righted? |
28020 | In answer to the popular query,"Why should woman desire to meddle with public affairs?" |
28020 | In case of separation, why should the children be taken from the protecting care of the mother? |
28020 | In finding duties abroad, has any"refined man felt that something of beauty has gone forth from her"? |
28020 | In marriage, the man offers love for love and hand for hand, but what is the consideration for those personal rights of which he dispossesses her? |
28020 | In the time of Luther, it was a question:"Can a woman choose her own creed?" |
28020 | In your own circle of friends, do you not know refined women, whose whole lives are darkened and saddened by gross and brutal associations? |
28020 | Indeed, I would ask, if this modesty is not attractive also, when manifested in the other sex? |
28020 | Inferior in what? |
28020 | Is Dorothea Dix throwing off her womanly nature and appearance in the course she is pursuing? |
28020 | Is God the impartial Father of humanity? |
28020 | Is He no respecter of persons? |
28020 | Is any land so lost in self- respect-- so sunk in infamy-- that God- defying, Bible- abhorring sacrilege will be civilly allowed? |
28020 | Is his post profitable? |
28020 | Is it a new thing in this country to allow civil rights to a woman? |
28020 | Is it a wonder that women are driven to prostitution? |
28020 | Is it any wonder, then, that woman regards herself as a mere machine, a tool for men''s pleasure? |
28020 | Is it because a lady''s"Yes"is always so fixed a certainty, that it never can be transformed to a"No,"at a later period? |
28020 | Is it because they have not as much power to understand what is true and right as man? |
28020 | Is it consistent with the profession; and, if there were no profession, is it right, is it just? |
28020 | Is it easy for women to break the way into new avenues? |
28020 | Is it he who has all his knowledge at second- hand, rather than she who has it in all her consciousness? |
28020 | Is it here only that woman can touch man''s sympathy? |
28020 | Is it just, politic, and wise, that universities and colleges endowed by Government should be open only to men? |
28020 | Is it local? |
28020 | Is it necessary to explode a volcano under the foundation of the family union?" |
28020 | Is it not a reasonable request which women make, when they ask for something to do? |
28020 | Is it not a shame it should happen first in a slave State? |
28020 | Is it not legitimate in this to discuss the social degradation, the legal disabilities of the drunkard''s wife? |
28020 | Is it of to- day? |
28020 | Is it true that there is known neither male nor female in Christ Jesus? |
28020 | Is it wise in policy? |
28020 | Is it young in years, or is it as old as the world itself? |
28020 | Is not a beautiful mind and a retiring modesty still conspicuous in her? |
28020 | Is not everything managed by female influence? |
28020 | Is not our conduct on this head ungenerous and ignoble to the other sex? |
28020 | Is not such injustice as grievous to woman as man? |
28020 | Is not that proof that we are in earnest about it? |
28020 | Is not that self- evident? |
28020 | Is not the aid of man equally important in the family, and would his necessary duties in the home conflict with his duties as a citizen and a patriot? |
28020 | Is not the light all around us? |
28020 | Is not the question a fair one,--how many women have any rights? |
28020 | Is not the work of the_ mothers_ in our land as important as that of the father? |
28020 | Is not this one reason amply sufficient for any honest- minded man? |
28020 | Is not, then, the fault in thee?" |
28020 | Is she compromising her womanly dignity in going forth to seek to better the condition of the insane and afflicted? |
28020 | Is she not beloved, honored, guarded, cherished? |
28020 | Is she not included in that expression? |
28020 | Is she then not included in that declaration? |
28020 | Is she, the most interested party, to have no voice in the solution of a question which is to her of such overwhelming interest? |
28020 | Is that a marriage which must not be dissolved? |
28020 | Is that the union which"death only should part"? |
28020 | Is the fault to be charged to the removal of the restraint; or is it to be charged to the first imposition of the restraint? |
28020 | Is the public mind sufficiently enlightened to accept a constitution recognizing the right of women to vote and hold office? |
28020 | Is the world to be depopulated? |
28020 | Is there any worthy woman who rules her household as wickedly as the nations are ruled? |
28020 | Is this as it should be? |
28020 | Is this asking too much? |
28020 | Is this indeed so? |
28020 | Is this the welcome you give her to the shores of republican America? |
28020 | Is woman really the creator of the sentiment? |
28020 | Is woman represented? |
28020 | Is woman taxed? |
28020 | It does not satisfy us to assert that they proceed from the depravity of man; how came he depraved? |
28020 | It has never been asserted that man and woman are alike; if they were, where would be the necessity for urging the claims of the one? |
28020 | It is also often asked if women want more rights, why do they not take them? |
28020 | It is asked of a lady,"Has she married well?" |
28020 | It is not sufficient to say that these are consequences of human imperfection; that we know; but whence arises the imperfection? |
28020 | It is often asked,"if political equality would not rouse antagonisms between the sexes?" |
28020 | It is said that a tacit consent has been hitherto given by the absence of open protest? |
28020 | It is very important in a republic, that the people should respect the laws, for if we throw them to the winds, what becomes of civil government? |
28020 | It will not be identical with the old one; but, even if it were, you propose to ask a renewed consent from men, and why not from women? |
28020 | It would be quite as sound logic to maintain, as some do, that, as last in the series which commenced in nothing(?) |
28020 | LYDIA JENKINS: Is there any law to prevent women voting in this State? |
28020 | Leave me for such a thing as this?" |
28020 | Let woman demand the highest education in our land, and what college, with the exception of Oberlin, will receive her? |
28020 | Life is valueless without liberty, and shall we not claim that which is dearer than life? |
28020 | Look next at the professional sphere of women, properly so called; and who shall deny her right and claim to that position? |
28020 | Man has assumed to himself the power of being"lord of creation"; yet what has he done for his kind? |
28020 | Many times and oft it has been asked us, with, unaffected seriousness,"What do you women want? |
28020 | May not the"ornament of a meek and quiet spirit"exist with an upright mind and enlightened intellect? |
28020 | May we not permit a thought to stray beyond the narrow limits of our own family circle and of the present hour? |
28020 | May we not then conclude that the fears which have been proved absolutely groundless in the one case, may be equally so in the other? |
28020 | Men say,"Why do you come here? |
28020 | Millions of dollars are paid for this education, and if they do not educate the public mind in its morals, what, I ask, are we paying our money for? |
28020 | Miss Brown was asked while standing on the platform,"Do you love the temperance cause?" |
28020 | Moreover, if it is fitting that woman should dress in every color of the rainbow, why not man also? |
28020 | Moreover, the South has entreated, nay, commanded us, to be silent; and what greater evidence of the truth of our publications could be desired? |
28020 | Mr. GARRISON said: The first pertinent question is, what has brought us together? |
28020 | Mr. Garrison made no resistance, and when released, he calmly surveyed his antagonist and said,"Do you feel better, my friend? |
28020 | Mr. Smith speaks of reforms as failures; what can he mean? |
28020 | Mr. Sully asked, when the two heads disagree, who must decide? |
28020 | Mrs. Gage also discussed the question so often put,"What has woman to do with politics?" |
28020 | Mrs. HALLOCK: Is n''t it a pity that our laws-- are they ours? |
28020 | Mrs. Stanton asks,"Would you send a young girl into a nunnery, when she has made a mistake?" |
28020 | Must you not? |
28020 | Now can anything be clearer than that? |
28020 | Now do you understand me? |
28020 | Now does this question grow legitimately out of the great question of woman''s equality? |
28020 | Now is this movement right in principle? |
28020 | Now what becomes of the"tenant for life"? |
28020 | Now, do you believe, men and women, that all these wretched matches are made in heaven? |
28020 | Now, do you candidly think these wives do not wish to control the wages they earn-- to own the land they buy-- the houses they build? |
28020 | Now, gentlemen, we would fain know by what authority you have disfranchised one- half the people of this State? |
28020 | Now, the question is, not whether the Jews are converted, or whether the Gospel ever reaches the islands, but, Does the agent flourish? |
28020 | Now, what is the remedy? |
28020 | Now, who is to educate them and control them? |
28020 | Now, why should that same law base their union or oneness on inequality or subjugation? |
28020 | Now, you men that hiss, you would like to have them help you elect your candidate this year, would n''t you? |
28020 | Of what advantage is it to us to live in a Republic? |
28020 | Of what rights is she deprived? |
28020 | Oh, brother- men, who make these things, is this a pleasant sight? |
28020 | On what else, I ask, are the hundreds of women depending, who this hour demand in our courts a release from burdensome contracts? |
28020 | On what principle is proscription on account of color more cruel than on account of sex? |
28020 | On what principle of republican government is one class of tax- payers thus defrauded of one of the most sacred rights of citizenship? |
28020 | Or are we to adopt the French mode, which is too well known to need explanation? |
28020 | Or that Miss Mitchell, of Nantucket, has lately discovered a planet, long looked for? |
28020 | Or to have deposited two votes in perhaps five minutes''time, than to have spent four hours in soliciting some other person to give one? |
28020 | Ought not we to raise him up; and is there one in this Hall who sees nothing for himself to do? |
28020 | Perhaps, had the person making this demand had this question put to him, namely:"What reasons are there why men should vote?" |
28020 | Pray what is it but superstition that could prompt him to such violation of benevolence and common- sense? |
28020 | Raising her voice still louder, she repeated,"Whar did your Christ come from? |
28020 | Recovering myself, I said,"Is it possible, Mrs. Seward, that you agree with me? |
28020 | Responsibilities indeed there are, if they but felt them; but as to burdens, what are they? |
28020 | Said I,"Suppose in spite of the vote of excommunication the Spirit should move you to speak, what could the chairman do, and which would you obey? |
28020 | Said the judge:"How can you allow it? |
28020 | Said the son,"Why did n''t you allow her to speak?" |
28020 | Say you,"These are but the opinions of men"? |
28020 | Say, delegates of the people of Indiana, answer and say whether you, whether those who sent you here are guiltless in this thing? |
28020 | Separate? |
28020 | Shall I be answered that woman''s home influence must keep her children and her husband in the paths of virtue and honor? |
28020 | Shall he therefore be put under guardianship, and forbidden to vote? |
28020 | Shall it be made in vain to you? |
28020 | Shall the Fultons say to the Raphaels, because you can not make steam engines, therefore you shall not vote? |
28020 | Shall we accept it, or shall we strive against it? |
28020 | Shall we block the way to any individual aspiration? |
28020 | Shall we not, then, at once demand of them-- demand of every sovereign State in the Union-- the elective franchise for woman? |
28020 | Shall we talk of failure, because forty, twenty, or seven years have not perfected all things? |
28020 | Shall we talk of the Anti- Slavery Cause as a"failure,"while our whole great nation is shaking as if an Etna were boiling below? |
28020 | She said to herself:"What is to hinder me from going into this business? |
28020 | Should she not be left where the Turkish women are left? |
28020 | Should the females of New York be placed on a level of equality with males before the law? |
28020 | Should the king of the United States be greater, or more crueler, or more harder? |
28020 | Should we then have to give these up? |
28020 | So they say; but why not hear her on the matter? |
28020 | Speaking to the men in a strangely quiet, voice, she said:"Can you not tell me? |
28020 | Suppose I should go to vote, and some man should push me back and say,"You want to be Governor, do n''t you?" |
28020 | Suppose woman, though equal, does differ essentially in her intellect from man, is that any ground for disfranchising her? |
28020 | Take the case of slavery: How has the anti- slavery cause been received? |
28020 | Tell me if Christianity has not ever held the reins in this country; and what has it done for woman? |
28020 | Tell me what you would wish the Church to do toward you, were you in my place? |
28020 | Tell me, Mr. C----, are you helping the other party as a favor, or in your official capacity? |
28020 | Tell me, is marriage to be merely a contract-- something entered into for a time, and then broken again-- or is the true marriage permanent? |
28020 | That Miss Herschel has made some discoveries, and is prepared to take her equal part in science? |
28020 | The President laid the request before the Convention, and asked, Will you remain? |
28020 | The Professor, more perplexed than before, said:"What is the pleasure of the Convention?" |
28020 | The ability of Napoleon-- what was it? |
28020 | The family, that great conservator of national virtue and strength, how can you hope to build it up in the midst of violence, debauchery, and excess? |
28020 | The general object of these conferences, as declared in her programme, was to supply answers to these questions:"What are we born to do?" |
28020 | The interests of marriage are such that they can not be destroyed, and the only question must be,"Has there been a marriage in this case or not?" |
28020 | The meeting of a convention of men to amend the Constitution of our(?) |
28020 | The other hundred dollars goes-- whither? |
28020 | The question is frequently asked,"What more do these women want?" |
28020 | The question is often asked of us on this platform, will the children of these reformers take up the work that falls from their hands? |
28020 | The question is often asked,"What does woman want, more than she enjoys? |
28020 | The question naturally suggests itself to any fair mind, why not deprive the men of the suffrage, and let the women vote themselves each one husband? |
28020 | The question naturally suggests itself, where are the young women of Ohio, who will take up this noble cause and carry it to its final triumph? |
28020 | The question simply is, shall this petition be received? |
28020 | The woman-- the crowning glory of the model republic among the nations of the earth-- what must she not be? |
28020 | The world still asks, What is Truth? |
28020 | The writer from whom we glean these facts, says:"Can you fancy the scene? |
28020 | Then do we not ask for laws which are not equal between man and woman? |
28020 | Then what is all your pettifogging about technicalities worth? |
28020 | Then why should she not be allowed to choose her party? |
28020 | Then why, when I was so hard pressed with foes on every side, did you not come to the defence? |
28020 | Then, can the father and mother annul the relation which exists between themselves, the parents of the child? |
28020 | There are those in our movement who ask,"What is the use of these Conventions? |
28020 | There has lately been a petition carried into the British Parliament, asking-- for what? |
28020 | There is no Lord Chancellor to whom to apply, and does not St. Paul strictly enjoin obedience to husbands, and that man shall be head of the woman? |
28020 | Think you she is not capable of as much justice, disinterested devotion, and abiding affection, as he is? |
28020 | Think you she would act less generously toward him, than he toward her? |
28020 | Think you, women_ thus_ educated would long remain the weak, dependent beings we now find them? |
28020 | This is law, but where is the justice of it? |
28020 | To her is presented, what kind of a life? |
28020 | To take that tailor by the throat, and gibbet him in_ The New York Tribune_? |
28020 | To the husband''s father or mother? |
28020 | To use the contemptuous word applied in the lecture alluded to, is she becoming"mannish"? |
28020 | True, he can, if he will, but does he? |
28020 | Two years ago Mr. Greeley said to one of the ladies,"Why do n''t you ladies go to work?" |
28020 | Until all this folly is unlearned, how can she be self- dependent and truly womanly? |
28020 | Was Christ less a Christ in His vesture, woven without a seam, than He would have been in the suit of a Broadway dandy? |
28020 | Was I grieved? |
28020 | Was I indignant? |
28020 | Was it best, under all the circumstances, to introduce it now? |
28020 | Was it not through this means, we obtained the law under which a vote of the majority excluded the sale of intoxicating liquors amongst us? |
28020 | Was it the love of the temperance cause that raised the outcry against her? |
28020 | Was it thus with those, your predecessors, Who sealed with racks, and fire, and ropes Their loving- kindness to transgressors? |
28020 | Was the gentleman answered? |
28020 | Was the old Roman in his toga less of a man than he now is in swallow- tail and tights? |
28020 | Was the old Roman less a man in his cumbrous toga, than Washington in his tights? |
28020 | Was there ever any story, which had such a hold upon the readers of a generation, as"Charlotte Temple"? |
28020 | We believe in woman''s rights; we have some conclusions(?) |
28020 | We have heard many instances of the tyranny inflicted on women; but is that a reason that they should vote? |
28020 | We often hear the question asked,"What shall we do?" |
28020 | Well, what would she see there? |
28020 | Whar did your Christ come from?" |
28020 | What all these advertisements in our public prints, these family guides, these female medicines, these Madame Restells? |
28020 | What are his arguments? |
28020 | What are the experiences of days and months and years in the lifetime of a mighty nation? |
28020 | What are the rights which can not rightfully be denied her? |
28020 | What are the strongest arguments, which one of the greatest champions on any question which he chooses to espouse, has brought forward? |
28020 | What are they? |
28020 | What are they? |
28020 | What are you aiming at?" |
28020 | What avails it that we point out the wrongs of woman in social life; the victim of passion and lust? |
28020 | What better are our Republican legislators? |
28020 | What but conscious guilt? |
28020 | What but the temperance cause had brought her to the Convention? |
28020 | What can they do now? |
28020 | What can woman want under such a government? |
28020 | What care we for her progress or her wrongs?" |
28020 | What could I say? |
28020 | What could have been more insulting than such a question as that at that moment? |
28020 | What did I meet with? |
28020 | What do our present divorce laws amount to? |
28020 | What do the leaders of the Woman''s Rights Convention want? |
28020 | What do we seek to overturn? |
28020 | What do you, the guides of our youth, say? |
28020 | What else? |
28020 | What evil-- what but good can come from enlarging woman''s power of usefulness? |
28020 | What father of a family, at the loss of his wife, has ever been able to meet his responsibilities as woman has done? |
28020 | What good are you going to do? |
28020 | What has Christianity done for woman for two hundred years past? |
28020 | What has a man at stake in society? |
28020 | What has all this to do with the meeting at the Brick Chapel? |
28020 | What has done it? |
28020 | What has he to risk by his ballot? |
28020 | What has man ever done, that woman, under the same advantages, could not do? |
28020 | What has this indicated on the part of the nation? |
28020 | What have we been doing here in New York State? |
28020 | What have we gained since 1855? |
28020 | What have women and negroes to do with rights? |
28020 | What is a mob? |
28020 | What is it that we oppose? |
28020 | What is it? |
28020 | What is she seeking to obtain? |
28020 | What is talk? |
28020 | What is the Spirit of God? |
28020 | What is the appropriate remedy? |
28020 | What is the result? |
28020 | What is the sphere of woman? |
28020 | What is the use of this constant iteration of the same things?" |
28020 | What is their design? |
28020 | What is there unfeminine or revolting in her preaching the truth which Jenny Lind may sing without objection and amid universal applause? |
28020 | What is there, for instance, in theology, which she should not strive to learn? |
28020 | What is this oppression of which we complain? |
28020 | What is this usurpation? |
28020 | What is woman? |
28020 | What kind of justice is that? |
28020 | What know they of government, war, or glory? |
28020 | What logical argument can be made to prove"the unreasonableness of this demand,"for one class above all others? |
28020 | What made that woman? |
28020 | What marvel, if at times they spurn The ancient yoke of your dominion? |
28020 | What marvel, if the people learn To claim the right of free opinion? |
28020 | What mean these asylums all over the land for the deaf and dumb, the maim and blind, the idiot and the raving maniac? |
28020 | What measure of content could you draw from the literature of the past? |
28020 | What moral reason is there for this, under the American idea? |
28020 | What more could be expected of a progeny of slaves? |
28020 | What mother can not bear me witness to untold sufferings which cruel, vindictive fathers have visited upon their helpless children? |
28020 | What mother, she asked, ever taught her son to drink rum, gamble, swear, smoke, and chew tobacco? |
28020 | What organization in the world''s history has not encumbered the unfettered action of those who created it? |
28020 | What particle of evidence is there then for supposing that in the parallel announcement He commanded man to rule over woman? |
28020 | What privileges are withheld from her?" |
28020 | What question of theology or any other department? |
28020 | What question was ever settled by the Bible? |
28020 | What reduces both the woman and the slave to this condition? |
28020 | What reform was ever yet begun and carried on with any reputation in the day thereof? |
28020 | What reform, however glorious and divine, was ever advocated at the outset with rejoicing? |
28020 | What right has the law to intrust the interest and happiness of one being into the hands of another? |
28020 | What right have the advocates of moral reform, woman''s rights, abolition, temperance, etc., to call in question any man''s religious opinions? |
28020 | What rights have either women or negroes that we have any reason to respect? |
28020 | What say you to facts like these? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What think you of a law like that, on the statute book of a civilized and a Christian land? |
28020 | What voice is strongest, raised in continental Europe, pleading for the oppressed and down- trodden? |
28020 | What was the expression of God to Adam? |
28020 | What was the result? |
28020 | What wildness, what fanaticism, what strange freaks will we not take on next? |
28020 | What worse can you say of any oligarchy? |
28020 | What would the levelling of this hall be? |
28020 | What''s dat got to do wid womin''s rights or nigger''s rights? |
28020 | What, but the stubble and the hay To perish, even as flax consuming, With all that bars His glorious way, Before the brightness of His coming? |
28020 | What, then, is the substance of our demand? |
28020 | When and where have they yet been recognized by society, or by themselves, as equals? |
28020 | When did the North ever stand, as now, defiant of slavery? |
28020 | When he supplies his wants, is it enough to satisfy her nature? |
28020 | When man rises in revolution, with the sword in his right hand, trembling wealth and conservatism say,"What do you want? |
28020 | When she breaks the moral laws, does he suffer the punishment? |
28020 | When she violates the laws of her being, does her husband pay the penalty? |
28020 | When you compare the public sentiment and social customs of our day with what they were fifty years ago, how can you despair of the temperance cause? |
28020 | Whence came they? |
28020 | Whence come these terrible crimes? |
28020 | Whence originates the necessity of a penal code? |
28020 | Where and when have the sexes yet been equal in physical or mental education, in position, or in law? |
28020 | Where are the crowds of educated dependents-- where the long line of pensioners on man''s bounty? |
28020 | Where are the loving friends who keep midnight vigils with young girls arraigned in the courts for infanticide? |
28020 | Where are the societies to rescue unfortunate women from the bondage they suffer under unjust law? |
28020 | Where are the underground railroads and watchful friends at every point to help fugitive wives from brutal husbands? |
28020 | Where are your beautiful women? |
28020 | Where are your philanthropic ladies who assist her? |
28020 | Where do we see, in Church or State, in school- house or at the fireside, the much talked- of moral power of woman? |
28020 | Where do you see it? |
28020 | Where does the wrong originate? |
28020 | Where have they made any provision for her to learn the laws? |
28020 | Where is he who by false vows thus blasted this trusting woman? |
28020 | Where is she to go when her work is done? |
28020 | Where is the Law School for our daughters? |
28020 | Where is the justice of this state of things? |
28020 | Where is the man who presents himself decently, and proffers a word of reasonable argument against our cause? |
28020 | Where shall we find it? |
28020 | Where the fruits of that victory that gave to the world the motto,"Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity"? |
28020 | Where the glory of the Revolution of 1848, in which shone forth the pure and magnanimous spirit of an oppressed nation struggling for Freedom? |
28020 | Where then did man get the authority that he now claims over one- half of humanity? |
28020 | Where, I again ask, is the result of those noble achievements, when woman, ay, one- half of the nation, is deprived of her rights? |
28020 | Where, under our Declaration of Independence, does the white Saxon man get his power to deprive all women and negroes of their inalienable rights? |
28020 | Where? |
28020 | Wherein are her rights infringed, or her liberties curtailed?" |
28020 | Wherein, your remonstrant would inquire, is the justice, equality, or wisdom of this? |
28020 | Which ground shall we take? |
28020 | Which of England''s kings has shown more executive ability than Elizabeth, or which has been more conscientious and discreet than Annie and Victoria? |
28020 | Which of the women of this Convention have sent their daughters as apprentices to a watchmaker? |
28020 | Who are the mothers of great men? |
28020 | Who are these women? |
28020 | Who are they? |
28020 | Who are_ they_? |
28020 | Who can estimate how much greater are the expenses incurred by our ignorant violation of the laws of health? |
28020 | Who cared for the husband of Jenny Lind, or of Mrs. Norton? |
28020 | Who could say, that if those women had been voters, they might not have reformed it? |
28020 | Who does not feel that this is intrinsically wrong? |
28020 | Who does not see gross injustice in this inequality of wages and violation of rights? |
28020 | Who does not see that their wages, social standing, and means of securing independence, would be far inferior to those they now enjoy? |
28020 | Who doubts the fate of the system under such legislation? |
28020 | Who ever dreamed of"dragging"Christianity here when they came to advocate the rights of woman in the name of Christ? |
28020 | Who ever saw a human being that would not abuse unlimited power? |
28020 | Who has a better right to them than she? |
28020 | Who has said a word about Church but this writer, and about excluding women from the Convention and all its entertainments? |
28020 | Who hath made us a judge betwixt her and her Maker? |
28020 | Who keeps, them there? |
28020 | Who knows but that if woman acted her part in governmental affairs, there might be an entire change in the turmoil of political life? |
28020 | Who make the laws? |
28020 | Who placed them in their present position? |
28020 | Who questions woman''s right to vote? |
28020 | Who shall say that mathematics are wasted on a woman after that? |
28020 | Who shall say that the just men of some State will not even accord to us the franchise we claim? |
28020 | Who so well fitted to fill the pulpits of our day as woman? |
28020 | Who would ever have expected it? |
28020 | Who, then, best knows those instincts and desires? |
28020 | Whose exploits leave the brightest lines of moral courage on the historic page? |
28020 | Whose hands and whose eyes so proper for this as his daughters? |
28020 | Why am I in the prime of life in such feeble health? |
28020 | Why are the press and the pulpit, with all their eulogiums of her virtues, so oblivious to the humiliating fact of her disfranchisement? |
28020 | Why are there so many women in the Church? |
28020 | Why did you make that issue at that time? |
28020 | Why do women talk thus? |
28020 | Why do you not do something?" |
28020 | Why does she claim them? |
28020 | Why go to the Bible to settle this question? |
28020 | Why go to the Bible? |
28020 | Why have they so little practical effect? |
28020 | Why have we come from the East and from the West, and from the North? |
28020 | Why is it brought here but to kindle up sectarian fires? |
28020 | Why is it that one- half the people of this nation are held in abject dependence-- civilly, politically, socially, the slaves of man? |
28020 | Why is it worse to go to the ballot- box with our male friends, than to the church, parties, or picnics, etc.? |
28020 | Why may not women claim to be tried by a jury of their peers, with exactly the same right as men claim to be and actually are? |
28020 | Why may she not obey this impulse, and bear the tidings of a world''s salvation to those perishing in darkness and sin? |
28020 | Why must they? |
28020 | Why not go to work?" |
28020 | Why not treat the subject with some show of honesty? |
28020 | Why not vote, then? |
28020 | Why proclaim our sex on the house- tops, seeing that it is a badge of degradation, and deprives us of so many rights and privileges wherever we go? |
28020 | Why refer this to the Bible? |
28020 | Why should it not be so? |
28020 | Why should not the polls, also, be civilized by her presence? |
28020 | Why should not wives, equally with husbands, be entitled to their own earnings? |
28020 | Why should not woman seek to be a reformer? |
28020 | Why should not woman''s work be paid for according to the quality of the work done, and not the sex of the worker? |
28020 | Why should she not be? |
28020 | Why should women vote? |
28020 | Why should women, any more than men, be taxed without representation? |
28020 | Why talk? |
28020 | Why then should the wife, at the death of her husband, not be his heir to the same extent that he is heir to her? |
28020 | Why, said he, are there no young women sitting at the reporters''desks, taking note of the proceedings of this Convention? |
28020 | Why? |
28020 | Why? |
28020 | Wider and deeper its ravages threaten to extend themselves; and to every benevolent mind comes the earnest question, What must now be done? |
28020 | Will He who led our fathers across the stormy winter seas forsake their children who have put their trust in Him? |
28020 | Will Mr. Beecher go to the Bible for his justification? |
28020 | Will Mr. Beecher limit his wife and sisters in the given case to their pens? |
28020 | Will he pay John fifty cents for cooking, and take the rest himself? |
28020 | Will it be answered that we are factious, discontented spirits, striving to disturb the public order, and tear up the old fastnesses of society? |
28020 | Will our American brethren put us in this position? |
28020 | Will that be, to us, an argument that the tyrant is in the right? |
28020 | Will you correct your error? |
28020 | Will you give me your authority?" |
28020 | Will you give me your reasons?" |
28020 | Will you go to St. Joseph and lecture on woman''s rights? |
28020 | Will you not teach them to do so? |
28020 | Will you permit me to answer and remark upon a few of his inquiries? |
28020 | Will you tell us, that women have no Newtons, Shakespeares, and Byrons? |
28020 | Wirt on this subject:"Is not_ our_ conduct toward this sex ill- advised and foolish in relation to our own happiness? |
28020 | With a humorous, give- it- up sort of laugh, he remarked, abruptly:"You are an editor; do you ever lecture?" |
28020 | With what decent show of justice, then, can man, thus dishonored, claim a continuance of this suicidal confidence? |
28020 | Woman is a part of the human commonwealth; why deprive her of a voice in its government? |
28020 | Would any gentleman like to have that law reversed? |
28020 | Would any of you like such power as that to be placed in our hands? |
28020 | Would he have taken the place he has now? |
28020 | Would he impose it? |
28020 | Would not one code answer for all of like needs and wants? |
28020 | Would not your whole soul revolt from such an union? |
28020 | Would you find room for some of my lucubrations? |
28020 | Yes, she can assert it, but does that assertion constitute a true marriage? |
28020 | Yet what is there in the highest range of intellectual pursuits, to which woman may not rightfully aspire? |
28020 | Yet, is it not as fair that married women should dispose of their property, as that married men should dispose of theirs? |
28020 | You ask, would you have woman, by engaging in political party bickerings and noisy strife, sacrifice her integrity and purity? |
28020 | You open to her the door of science: why should she enter? |
28020 | You say she_ can not_ do this and that, but if so, what need of a law to prevent her? |
28020 | Your pastoral rights and powers from harm, Think ye, can words alone preserve them? |
28020 | _ Reverend_ for what? |
28020 | _ Reverend_ for what? |
28020 | and often more? |
28020 | and yet shall she find there no woman''s face or voice to pity and defend? |
28020 | and"How shall we do it?" |
28020 | are there not sorrows enough in our best condition? |
28020 | do you hope thus to break the force of my argument?" |
28020 | have we not temptations strong enough within and without? |
28020 | is this not adding insult to injury? |
28020 | my dear Horace, it is done; now say, what shall woman: do next?" |
28020 | said I,"women?" |
28020 | that all these sad, miserable people are bound together by God? |
28020 | that under our present laws married women have no right to the wages they earn? |
28020 | the Spirit or the Convention?" |
28020 | the insane, the idiot, the deaf and dumb for his asylum? |
28020 | to have at their disposal their own children, without being subject to the constant interference and tyranny of an idle, worthless profligate? |
28020 | what are the motives that impel them to this course of action? |
28020 | what do they want? |
28020 | what does she do out?" |
28020 | what does the term mean? |
28020 | what would the breaking of every window be? |
28020 | where is the home- shelter that guards the delicacy of the drunkard''s wife and daughter? |
28020 | where is thy glory? |
28020 | where the law office, the bar, or the bench, now urging them to take part in the jurisprudence of the nation? |
28020 | who hires bullies to fight for her? |
28020 | with so much bribery, so much corruption, so much quarrelling in the domestic councils? |
28020 | would have made every thirty- fifth voter a rum- seller? |
28020 | your frail ones, taught to lean lovingly and confidingly on man? |
30863 | A coward? |
30863 | A difficulty? |
30863 | A gintleman, eh; an''ye live on yer own money? |
30863 | A guide? |
30863 | A passport? |
30863 | A priest? 30863 A risk?" |
30863 | A secret passage? |
30863 | A young priest? 30863 About myself? |
30863 | Across the Atlantic-- far away in Cuba? |
30863 | Afraid? 30863 Ah, Rita,"said"His Majesty"in Spanish,"where are you going in the dark?" |
30863 | Ah, señor, what do you mean? |
30863 | Ah, sire-- ah,''Your Majesty,''sighed Mrs. Russell,"I''m ready-- why not now?" |
30863 | All right? |
30863 | Am I really the woman for you? |
30863 | Am-- am I-- to-- to-- congratulate you-- and all that? |
30863 | An''can ye tell me anything about that other young man that was shtrivin''to join yer party? |
30863 | An''what do yez call rich? |
30863 | An''what is it all? 30863 And am I forgiven, Dolores?" |
30863 | And can-- can he-- will he-- will you let him? 30863 And did you observe my meeting with that gentleman? |
30863 | And did you really wander about so? 30863 And die for me?" |
30863 | And have I changed, señor? |
30863 | And have you been all through the vaults? |
30863 | And have you been in Madrid ever since? |
30863 | And how long is it since you last saw her? |
30863 | And may I,he said, in a low voice--"may I-- ask-- nothing from you-- when I give up-- honor, life, hope, all-- for your sake?" |
30863 | And must I? |
30863 | And must we now give one another up? |
30863 | And now will you take it? |
30863 | And now, Mr. Ashby,continued Harry,"as you say you have no pistol, is there anything else that you can suggest? |
30863 | And now, señor,said she, with a perceptible effort, as of one who approaches a disagreeable subject,"this beautiful Inglesa-- who is she?" |
30863 | And she? |
30863 | And so you let Lopez go, after all? |
30863 | And so you set out on your return home? |
30863 | And so you would really let me go? |
30863 | And stay here alone, in a new character, ignorant of the language, to face the return of the mad and furious crowd? |
30863 | And was n''t there any ghost at all? |
30863 | And was there much in it? |
30863 | And were you glad to see me? |
30863 | And what became of him? |
30863 | And what do you propose to do about it? |
30863 | And what will you do? |
30863 | And where would you like me to take you? |
30863 | And who has soul in her face and lightning in her glance? |
30863 | And who is this other? |
30863 | And who''s his friend-- the girl that was disguised as priest? |
30863 | And why ca n''t you do what he asks? |
30863 | And why not? 30863 And why not?" |
30863 | And wo n''t you let me call you''Katie,''said he,"just while we''re travelling together? |
30863 | And wo n''t you say that all again? |
30863 | And wo n''t you tell me all about it, please? |
30863 | And you are on your way back to England? |
30863 | And you did n''t think it worth while to write to us in all that long time? |
30863 | And you have come here to save me? |
30863 | And you propose to get it for me? |
30863 | And you think I am capable of going away? |
30863 | Another examination? |
30863 | Are n''t you going to take me, Your Sacred Majesty? 30863 Are they registered?" |
30863 | Are you a relative of the lady''s? |
30863 | Are you afraid? |
30863 | Are you running this risk for my sake? |
30863 | Are you sure? |
30863 | Are you, Brooke? |
30863 | As I have dropped the''Miss,''have you any objections to drop the''Mister,''and address me by the simple and unconventional name of''Brooke?'' 30863 As bad?" |
30863 | As priest, I suppose? |
30863 | Ashby, is it? |
30863 | Be aisy, now, will yez? |
30863 | Bear it? |
30863 | Believe you, señor? 30863 Bribe? |
30863 | Brooke,said Talbot,"will you not live?" |
30863 | Brooke,said she, at length,"what were they saying about Lopez going to rescue an English girl, this-- this person''s daughter? |
30863 | Bub- bub- bub- but how? |
30863 | But Mrs. Russell,he said;"how does she bear this horrible, calamity?" |
30863 | But do n''t you know,said he,"that these people are Republicans-- that they''re going to capture the castle, or try to? |
30863 | But do you, after all,said she--"do you, after all, care for me just a little bit, Harry?" |
30863 | But had n''t she promised in the boat? |
30863 | But have n''t you run too much risk in coming here? |
30863 | But how can I? 30863 But how can we get out? |
30863 | But how can we go? |
30863 | But how did you get here? |
30863 | But how do I know? |
30863 | But how shall we decide who is to fire first? |
30863 | But is n''t there any law among the Kik- kik- Carlists? 30863 But is n''t this a little too serious?" |
30863 | But shall I never see you again? |
30863 | But should n''t you like to get away out of this? |
30863 | But suppose I am tit- tit- taken away, and do n''t come back again? |
30863 | But suppose I do n''t want my freedom? |
30863 | But that must have been long ago? |
30863 | But the danger is too great, is it not? 30863 But then,"he continued,"what''s the use of that? |
30863 | But what am I to do? |
30863 | But what can I give? |
30863 | But what can we do? |
30863 | But what other clothes may I put on? |
30863 | But what shall I do if you do not return? |
30863 | But what will you do? |
30863 | But where in particular? |
30863 | But who was it? 30863 But why ca n''t we go now? |
30863 | But will you-- can you-- will you, really? |
30863 | But you!--how did you get here? |
30863 | But you, Katie-- how can you talk of such horrors in such a way? 30863 But, first, will you tell me in what room Señor Ashby is confined?" |
30863 | But, oh, dearest, sweetest Dolores, will you not let me tell you how I love you? |
30863 | But-- but-- mayn''t I have a private room? |
30863 | But-- but--"Well? |
30863 | But_ you_--_you_--_you_,said Katie, fiercely--"_you_ do not believe him guilty?" |
30863 | Ca n''t you see that it was n''t hunger at all? 30863 Called out? |
30863 | Can not? |
30863 | Can nothing move you? 30863 Can the priest officiate without the government license?" |
30863 | Can we come up to you? |
30863 | Can you be sure of yourself this day? 30863 Can you do nothing?" |
30863 | Can you not do what he requests? |
30863 | Can you think of any way by which I can hide these bonds? |
30863 | Captain Lopez,he began,"did you see a young English lady here last night-- a Miss Westlotorn?" |
30863 | Care for you? |
30863 | Conscience? 30863 Consent? |
30863 | Danger? 30863 Danger? |
30863 | Did n''t your-- your friend tell you? |
30863 | Did you come so far only to remain a week? |
30863 | Did you ever hear the death- song of Mullins Bryan? |
30863 | Did you really feel so badly? |
30863 | Did you really incur such danger? |
30863 | Did you see her last in Barcelona? |
30863 | Did you see me there? |
30863 | Did you understand who it was? 30863 Did you-- Is she-- What did-- When-- that is-- is she safe?" |
30863 | Did you? 30863 Did- did- do you think they''ll go so far as to pip- pup- plunder us?" |
30863 | Do n''t you believe me, Dolores? |
30863 | Do n''t you think that now, after what has happened, they might be far less strict, and be open to a moderate bribe? |
30863 | Do n''t you understand? 30863 Do they treat you well?" |
30863 | Do very well, is it? 30863 Do you ever think about yourself?" |
30863 | Do you feel lonely? 30863 Do you feel very much frightened at this adventure?" |
30863 | Do you forgive me for my share in bringing you into it? |
30863 | Do you intendar to keep you promeese? |
30863 | Do you know anything about such feelings, Dolores? |
30863 | Do you know of any? |
30863 | Do you like this? |
30863 | Do you love adventures? |
30863 | Do you mean it? |
30863 | Do you really wish that, Talbot? |
30863 | Do you smoke? |
30863 | Do you speak English, my dear? |
30863 | Do you speak English? |
30863 | Do you think I''ll survive you? |
30863 | Do you think they will let us, Mr. Rivers? 30863 Do you think they''re really Kik- kik- Carlists?" |
30863 | Do you think,said she,"that there are no other secret passages than that?" |
30863 | Do you understand the danger we are in? |
30863 | Do you wish his life? |
30863 | Do you? |
30863 | Do? 30863 Does any lady or gentleman present object to smoking?" |
30863 | Dolores,he said,"where are you? |
30863 | Dolores-- what? |
30863 | English? |
30863 | English? |
30863 | Escape? |
30863 | Excuse me,he continued;"you do n''t understand dog- Latin, do you, Talbot?" |
30863 | Father Brooke? |
30863 | Fly? |
30863 | Fly? |
30863 | Fond of me? 30863 For the quarrel?" |
30863 | For what purpose? |
30863 | French? |
30863 | Fuel? 30863 Fugitives from whom?" |
30863 | Fun? |
30863 | Get away? |
30863 | Gone? |
30863 | Gone?--gone where? |
30863 | Had I not better cut it off? |
30863 | Hang it, Ashby; do n''t you know me? 30863 Have I not already said all that can be said?" |
30863 | Have we nothing to eat? |
30863 | Have you a coin? |
30863 | Have you any plan to propose as to firing? |
30863 | Have you been asleep? |
30863 | Have you been lonely to- day, Katie? |
30863 | Have you been travelling alone? |
30863 | Have you ever been here before? |
30863 | Have you ever been there? |
30863 | Have you not seen her since? |
30863 | Have you noticed,said Talbot, at length,"that they have left the same small guard which they left before?" |
30863 | He join us? 30863 Her friends? |
30863 | Here? |
30863 | His life? 30863 Home?" |
30863 | How can you find the way? |
30863 | How can you? 30863 How did he get here?" |
30863 | How did you get here? |
30863 | How did you manage to hide yourself so at Burgos? |
30863 | How do I know? |
30863 | How do you think I look? |
30863 | How does that happen? |
30863 | How many? |
30863 | How, in the name of wonder,said Katie,"did you ever, ever manage to get here?" |
30863 | How? 30863 How? |
30863 | How? |
30863 | How? |
30863 | Hungria? |
30863 | I may stand at the window and look out, I suppose? |
30863 | I might accuse this señorita of high- traison,said"His Majesty,""but what''s the use?" |
30863 | I say, what do you do here? 30863 I suppose,"said the chief, after a pause,"that ye''ve got an ixtinsive acquaintince wid the nobility an''gintry an''all thira fellers?" |
30863 | I''ll do it; wo n''t you? |
30863 | I''m sure I should be only too glad to disguise myself, but where can I get the dress? |
30863 | I? 30863 I? |
30863 | If only your passage- way ran outside the building, would n''t it be nice? |
30863 | If you go on dying for people, what''ll become of you? |
30863 | In how much? |
30863 | In love with you? |
30863 | In that case,said Harry,"may I ask one favor?" |
30863 | In what part of the castle are you? |
30863 | Irish vagabond? 30863 Is he rich?" |
30863 | Is it possible,he thought,"that this is her English stubbornness? |
30863 | Is it possible? |
30863 | Is it your heart only, do you think, that is now almost breaking? |
30863 | Is it your ring, Talbot? 30863 Is n''t he?" |
30863 | Is n''t that enough? 30863 Is n''t this horrible?" |
30863 | Is she rich? |
30863 | Is the young gyerrul fond av him? |
30863 | Is there any way out? 30863 Is there anything to prevent our being taken there at once?" |
30863 | Is there-- is there-- no other way? |
30863 | Is-- is-- it gig-- gig-- gone? |
30863 | It''s better than the wagon, is n''t it? |
30863 | It? 30863 Katie''s money? |
30863 | Katie,said Ashby, in a tremulous voice--"little darling,"he continued, in a lower tone--"didn''t you know that I''d be here?" |
30863 | Keep them? 30863 Killed? |
30863 | Last? |
30863 | Lay down your life? |
30863 | Look here, Ashby,said he;"where in Heaven''s name have you hid yourself all the morning? |
30863 | Look? 30863 Look?" |
30863 | Lost your way? |
30863 | Love them? |
30863 | Master?--authority? |
30863 | May I ask,said Ashby,"upon what ground you propose to detain me?" |
30863 | May I inquire for what cause? |
30863 | May I join the other foreigners? |
30863 | Me frightened? |
30863 | Me lord,said"His Majesty,""is anything wanting? |
30863 | Mean it? 30863 Men or women?" |
30863 | Mr. Ashby, will you give me a frank answer to a fair question? 30863 Mr. Ashby,"said he,"are you ready? |
30863 | Mr. Russell? 30863 My clothes?" |
30863 | My danger? 30863 My man?" |
30863 | My name? |
30863 | Name? |
30863 | Nor a newspaper correspondent? |
30863 | Nor at Cadiz? |
30863 | Not even an artist? |
30863 | Not move an inch? |
30863 | Not speak a word? |
30863 | Not the English maiden? |
30863 | Not very good just now, hey? |
30863 | Not want it? 30863 Not want to go?" |
30863 | Nothing to do? 30863 Nothing?" |
30863 | Now, what emergency can possibly arise? |
30863 | Object, Brooke? 30863 Objection? |
30863 | Oh yes; but what of that? |
30863 | Oh, Brooke,said Talbot,"what are we to do?" |
30863 | Oh, Katie,said he,"ca n''t you do something with that wretched woman?" |
30863 | Oh, Sydney,said he,"what bitter, bitter fortune has brought you here to this horrible place-- to so much misery?" |
30863 | Oh, Talbot, Talbot, what do you mean? |
30863 | Oh, Talbot,said he,"if you do, what will become of you?" |
30863 | Oh, but you''re not married yet? |
30863 | Oh, do n''t you see? 30863 Oh, he does, does he?" |
30863 | Oh, it is n''t, is n''t it? |
30863 | Oh, quite,said Dolores;"and you, señor?" |
30863 | Oh, sir,said she,"do you know the way here? |
30863 | Oh, sir,she continued,"can you help me? |
30863 | Oh, wud ye have a receipt for toddy? 30863 Oh, you will, will you?" |
30863 | On a visit to friends? |
30863 | One pistol? 30863 Or else,"continued Lopez,"in the event of your refusal--""What? |
30863 | Ought I to keep my promise? |
30863 | Parcel? 30863 Pardon me-- rude? |
30863 | Preoccupied? 30863 Prisoners, eh? |
30863 | Prisoners? |
30863 | Really not? |
30863 | Ruin? |
30863 | Saved your life? |
30863 | Saw me? |
30863 | Señor,said he, feverishly and in a loud voice,"who is the lady?" |
30863 | Señor? |
30863 | Shall I? |
30863 | Shall we ever meet again? |
30863 | Shall we say twelve paces? |
30863 | Shall we what? |
30863 | Shall we, Brooke? |
30863 | She? 30863 She? |
30863 | She? 30863 Should you like Barcelona?" |
30863 | Should you really? |
30863 | Shure ai n''t I telling yez,said"His Majesty,""that I''m only goin''to get loights, an''that I''ll be back in a jiffy? |
30863 | Shure no; how could it have been? 30863 Sir,"said he to"His Majesty,""I suppose we must again consider ourselves your prisoners?" |
30863 | Sir,said he,"are we to be kept prisoners in this tower?" |
30863 | Sir,said he,"will you allow me to procure my ransom in the same way? |
30863 | So the step- mother approved, did she? |
30863 | So what do you say to gracefully giving way to necessity? |
30863 | So you are an attendant here, are you, Rita, my dear? |
30863 | Some one? |
30863 | Son? 30863 Songs?" |
30863 | Stay? |
30863 | Still, I should be sorry to add to your danger,she said, hesitatingly;"and if-- if--""Well,"said the priest, sharply,"if what?" |
30863 | Sympathy? |
30863 | Talbot,said Brooke, in a voice that was strangely sweet yet unutterably sad--"Talbot, do you want to break my heart?" |
30863 | Talbot,said he,"do n''t you think you can sleep a little?" |
30863 | Talbot? 30863 Tell me about them; what did they look like?" |
30863 | That''s pretty,said Dolores;"but do you not want to hear about the dear mamma?" |
30863 | The Carlists? |
30863 | The best part? 30863 The castle?" |
30863 | The ghost, is it? 30863 The one that you have?" |
30863 | The other? |
30863 | Then why not invent a name? 30863 Then you did not purposely-- avoid me?" |
30863 | Then you have your human weakness, after all, have you, Brooke? 30863 These Carlists? |
30863 | This arrangement is all very well; but what about the lady? 30863 This lady?" |
30863 | This tower, is it? |
30863 | This young priest is free, is he not? |
30863 | To see me? 30863 Twenty- four hours?" |
30863 | Undress here? |
30863 | Very well; and now which place will you take? |
30863 | Was it your intention to go among the Carlists before you met me? |
30863 | Was that the priest? |
30863 | Was there, then, so short a time until this new ordeal, with its new dangers? 30863 Was your train stopped by Carlists?" |
30863 | Well, I''ll ask only one question-- what is your calling in life? |
30863 | Well, but suppose that you were in an awful hurry to meet some one, and were stopped in this fashion? |
30863 | Well, now, Mr. Brooke,asked the lady, anxiously,"what are our prospects? |
30863 | Well, what if I have? |
30863 | Well, what if it is? |
30863 | Well, what''s the trouble? |
30863 | Well,asked Katie, as Harry paused,"was she there?" |
30863 | Well,said Talbot, mournfully,"do n''t you see what I mean? |
30863 | Well,said Talbot,"will you go?" |
30863 | Well-- but what does the scoundrel mean? |
30863 | Well? |
30863 | Well? |
30863 | Were n''t you-- your Majesty-- here-- just now? |
30863 | Were they not expecting you? |
30863 | What King? 30863 What are you doing here alone on this road?" |
30863 | What are you doing in this country? |
30863 | What are you doing? |
30863 | What can I do better? |
30863 | What can I do? |
30863 | What can we do? 30863 What do you mean?" |
30863 | What do you say to disguising yourself as a priest? |
30863 | What do you say? |
30863 | What do you want? |
30863 | What does he say? |
30863 | What does he want? |
30863 | What does the fellow mean? |
30863 | What does the priest say? |
30863 | What friends? |
30863 | What had she to complain of? 30863 What if you have? |
30863 | What in the name of Heaven is the meaning of all this? |
30863 | What is all this? |
30863 | What is it? |
30863 | What is it? |
30863 | What is she? 30863 What is that?" |
30863 | What is that? |
30863 | What is that? |
30863 | What is the matter with you? |
30863 | What noise? |
30863 | What objection is there to it? |
30863 | What of it, oh, thou searcher of hearts? 30863 What ought I to do?" |
30863 | What promise? |
30863 | What say ye, me fair one? |
30863 | What shall I do about it? |
30863 | What shall I do? 30863 What shall we do if they come here?" |
30863 | What will you do? |
30863 | What with? |
30863 | What''s all over? |
30863 | What''s that? |
30863 | What''s that? |
30863 | What''s the matter? |
30863 | What''s the matter? |
30863 | What''s the meaning of all this nonsense? |
30863 | What, Brooke? |
30863 | What, Brooke? |
30863 | What, here? |
30863 | What, when her husband lies murdered close by? 30863 What, with my hair? |
30863 | What? 30863 What?" |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | Whativer''s become av the señorita? |
30863 | When? |
30863 | Where are my friends? |
30863 | Where are they now? |
30863 | Where are they? 30863 Where are you going now?" |
30863 | Where are you? |
30863 | Where are you? |
30863 | Where can you go? |
30863 | Where did the Carlists go? |
30863 | Where did they go? |
30863 | Where did you come from last? |
30863 | Where is everybody now? |
30863 | Where is everybody? 30863 Where is he? |
30863 | Where''s Rita,cried"His Majesty,""that cook of cooks? |
30863 | Where-- when-- where? |
30863 | Where? 30863 Where?" |
30863 | Where? |
30863 | Which promise? |
30863 | Which promises, Brooke? |
30863 | Who are you? |
30863 | Who are you? |
30863 | Who are you? |
30863 | Who are you? |
30863 | Who are you? |
30863 | Who gave you this? |
30863 | Who goes there? |
30863 | Who goes there? |
30863 | Who is my master? 30863 Who iver says it is n''t? |
30863 | Who was it? 30863 Who was the man?" |
30863 | Who were they? |
30863 | Who would pursue us? |
30863 | Who''s that fellow? |
30863 | Who''s there? |
30863 | Who? 30863 Who?" |
30863 | Who? |
30863 | Why ca n''t you take them to that castle? 30863 Why did they let all the Spaniards go and kik- kik- capture us?" |
30863 | Why did you come here? |
30863 | Why did you not stay? |
30863 | Why did you not tell me who you were? |
30863 | Why did you put up with insults? |
30863 | Why do n''t you say, if I_ can_? |
30863 | Why do you not interpret? |
30863 | Why not? |
30863 | Why not? |
30863 | Why not? |
30863 | Why should I make this up? 30863 Why should he kill me?" |
30863 | Why should he take offence at such a simple remark? |
30863 | Why so? |
30863 | Why will you persist in talking in this way, and blight and shatter all my strength of soul? 30863 Why, because I do n''t object to smoking?" |
30863 | Why, what have you done with your hair? |
30863 | Why, where else could she have gone but home again? |
30863 | Why,said he,"where can you go?" |
30863 | Why-- why-- how can I help it? |
30863 | Why? 30863 Why?" |
30863 | Why? |
30863 | Why? |
30863 | Why? |
30863 | Will this do? |
30863 | Will you allow me now, Señor Captain,he said,"to join the other foreign prisoners? |
30863 | Will you be silent if I say something? |
30863 | Will you cut it? |
30863 | Will you do it? |
30863 | Will you help me to escape? |
30863 | Will you let me go free? |
30863 | Will you make him marry me? |
30863 | Will you name the sum? |
30863 | Will you really be my friend? |
30863 | Will you, really? |
30863 | Will you? |
30863 | Will you? |
30863 | Will you? |
30863 | Wo n''t I do? |
30863 | Would it be too much to ask-- if I were to ask-- if you would present me-- to-- to pay my respects to her, as an old friend? |
30863 | Would n''t you really? |
30863 | Write? |
30863 | Ye does n''t spake Spanish? |
30863 | Yes, if I could get off, and get you off too? |
30863 | Yes, of course-- why not? |
30863 | Yes,said Katie,"but suppose it does n''t come? |
30863 | Yes-- why not? |
30863 | Yis, his name; ye ca n''t guess it? 30863 You are a gran''nobile?" |
30863 | You can certainly kill me, Señor Captain, but what good will that do? |
30863 | You do not know the language? 30863 You do not mean to say that you will never come to me?" |
30863 | You have n''t carried any large sum of money with you, surely? |
30863 | You mus''disguisar,she said;"this is a woman dress--""A woman''s dress?" |
30863 | You not fly? 30863 You not want to fly? |
30863 | You promise? |
30863 | You were not acquainted with her at Madrid? |
30863 | You will not fly and leave me all alone? 30863 You will not forget?" |
30863 | You will see me again? |
30863 | You will see me as far as the tower? |
30863 | You will, now, wo n''t you? |
30863 | You!--here? |
30863 | You''re not mad? |
30863 | You-- you-- offered your life for me,said Katie, in tearful agitation,"and did n''t I almost give my life for you, you dear old boy? |
30863 | _ E ella Italiana_? |
30863 | _ Sind sie Deutsch_? |
30863 | _ Étez vous Française, mademoiselle_? |
30863 | A marriage? |
30863 | A marriage?--a marriage of this Spanish captain? |
30863 | A song, did you say? |
30863 | After all, what is that? |
30863 | Ah, what shall I say?" |
30863 | All his thoughts and all his soul were fixed on her, while he kept asking himself, What is this? |
30863 | Among them was your dear friend--""My dear friend? |
30863 | An''have yez been long in Spain, thin?" |
30863 | And Harry-- to which of these two was he making himself so infernally agreeable? |
30863 | And Katie? |
30863 | And Lopez-- why did you tell him he was free? |
30863 | And a jolly young cove fell in love with she, Says he,''My lass, will you marry me?'' |
30863 | And are there any here, dear? |
30863 | And are you alone?" |
30863 | And are you in an awful hurry to meet some one?" |
30863 | And did n''t John Bunyan prefer the House of Mirth to the House of Mourning? |
30863 | And do you think that I am so weak as to hesitate for a moment when your safety as well as my own is concerned? |
30863 | And does she return his passion? |
30863 | And for what? |
30863 | And for what? |
30863 | And how could Harry escape her? |
30863 | And how, señor-- for the better?" |
30863 | And how? |
30863 | And how? |
30863 | And if they were to fly, how could they hope to escape in a country swarming with roving bands of marauders belonging to both parties? |
30863 | And is this the bride-- Katie? |
30863 | And may I make one request?" |
30863 | And now what was he? |
30863 | And now wo n''t you eat, just for the sake of saving me from unnecessary fatigue?" |
30863 | And now, sir,"continued the lady, looking at the priest with intense earnestness,"can you help me? |
30863 | And now, what about this priest?" |
30863 | And now, will you try it?" |
30863 | And please, may n''t I be the best man?" |
30863 | And so suppose I drop the''Miss,''and call you simply''Talbot?''" |
30863 | And so, Rita, your friend is a Hungarian lady?" |
30863 | And so-- what do you say to my hunting up a hiding- place for the night?" |
30863 | And then what? |
30863 | And was Katie here? |
30863 | And was it my fault?" |
30863 | And what for? |
30863 | And what may be your particular duties in this establishment?" |
30863 | And what now? |
30863 | And what was that? |
30863 | And what would Harry want there, and what would he find? |
30863 | And what, pray, is to become of you?" |
30863 | And where was she now? |
30863 | And where was that? |
30863 | And why should a woman come? |
30863 | And why? |
30863 | And why? |
30863 | And why? |
30863 | And why? |
30863 | And why?" |
30863 | And yet do you ask this of me?" |
30863 | And yet here was one who held her promise, who could claim her as his own, who could take her away from Brooke; and what could she do? |
30863 | And yet was he not in honor bound to Dolores? |
30863 | And yet what could he accomplish by a refusal to interpret? |
30863 | And yet, if he loved another better, would it not be wrong to marry Sydney? |
30863 | And yet, what must her feelings be toward him, since she had come here to see him, venturing so far and risking so much? |
30863 | And you, señor-- are you going to England now?" |
30863 | And, moreover, as to nonsense, do n''t you know what the poet says? |
30863 | Are all the crowned heads thus?" |
30863 | Are you altogether candid now, and true to your better self? |
30863 | Are you going round the world in a bee- line? |
30863 | Are you house- keeper?" |
30863 | Are you mad?" |
30863 | Are you not commander here?" |
30863 | Are you walking for a wager? |
30863 | As for Talbot, she was to be the central figure, and how could she perform her part? |
30863 | At last he spoke:"What did- did- do you think they''re a- going to did- did- do?" |
30863 | At the priest''s question she paused thoughtfully for a short time, and then said,"My being with you will make a great difference to you?" |
30863 | At this Katie stopped breathing for a moment, and then she whispered, very softly,"Who are you?" |
30863 | At what distance?" |
30863 | Besides, had she not already discovered that this Spaniard had a heart full of noble and tender emotions? |
30863 | Besides, what could I do alone?" |
30863 | Brooke looked at her for a moment in silence, and then said,"You are not in earnest?" |
30863 | Brooke?" |
30863 | But come-- what is your business here? |
30863 | But did she leave no message for you?" |
30863 | But do you really mean to tell me that you do n''t regret what you have done?" |
30863 | But how can I do anything? |
30863 | But how could he get her help? |
30863 | But how would that be? |
30863 | But how, and why, and where would she have fled from him? |
30863 | But how? |
30863 | But how? |
30863 | But in what way? |
30863 | But is it really to be a runaway match?" |
30863 | But now, my boy, to come to the point, who is she?--her name?" |
30863 | But suppose I do not, how long will you wait here for me?" |
30863 | But tell me,"said she, looking up as though trying to see his face in the gloom,"who was it?" |
30863 | But that figure? |
30863 | But was Ashby there? |
30863 | But were you not afraid that it might be some one else?" |
30863 | But what about"His Majesty"and the royal attentions? |
30863 | But what did her friends say?" |
30863 | But what do you call her?" |
30863 | But what is that last act of yours? |
30863 | But when? |
30863 | But where is it all?" |
30863 | But where was Ashby? |
30863 | But who was that other one? |
30863 | But who was"the King?" |
30863 | But who were in this room? |
30863 | But why had his visitor failed to discover the package? |
30863 | But why? |
30863 | But why? |
30863 | But will you allow me to ask you one or two questions? |
30863 | But wo n''t Mr. Russell wake and miss you?" |
30863 | But wo n''t the others see you?" |
30863 | But, after all, what would be the good of that? |
30863 | But, all the same, you really mean what you say?" |
30863 | By an earthquake? |
30863 | By bribery? |
30863 | By- the- bye, ca n''t you sing something? |
30863 | By- the- bye, did you ever hear this? |
30863 | Ca n''t some one speak French?" |
30863 | Ca n''t we appeal to Did- did- Don Carlos?" |
30863 | Ca n''t you trust me, Rita, my dear?" |
30863 | Can I give you up? |
30863 | Can I go on by this road? |
30863 | Can I not read it in your eyes, Brooke, every time that you look at me? |
30863 | Can it not be put off-- for one day?" |
30863 | Can not you take refuge in some other thoughts? |
30863 | Can she have so much of that infernal English stolidity as to be able to conceal so perfectly her deepest feelings? |
30863 | Can she love? |
30863 | Can we fly?" |
30863 | Can you not do something?" |
30863 | Can you stand it?" |
30863 | Can you tell me why it is so, Brooke?" |
30863 | Can you think me capable of such utter baseness?" |
30863 | Come, why not marry this couple of cursed fools and have done with it?" |
30863 | Could anything be worse than this? |
30863 | Could he again break that word? |
30863 | Could he be what he had been? |
30863 | Could he come back to Dolores? |
30863 | Could he dare to say"No,"when Lopez and Rita and the priest and all the soldiers expected"Yes?" |
30863 | Could he desert his wife and leave her in such peril? |
30863 | Could he do such a deed as this, and sully his soul even for Talbot? |
30863 | Could he explain? |
30863 | Could he face the awful result of disobedience to Lopez, of defiance to Rita? |
30863 | Could he give up Talbot? |
30863 | Could he not, in some way, work upon her so as to attract her to his interests? |
30863 | Could he sacrifice his honor for good almost in the very presence of her whom he supposed to be his loving and faithful Dolores? |
30863 | Could he tell the story of his falsity to this noble lady, whom he had known only to love, whom he had known also to revere? |
30863 | Could she forgive herself? |
30863 | Could the castle have"settled?" |
30863 | Dared he venture? |
30863 | Did n''t I say as much?" |
30863 | Did n''t I say we were a surprised party? |
30863 | Did others know of the secret passage- way? |
30863 | Did she fall into the hands of the soldiers?" |
30863 | Did she not save my life? |
30863 | Did you consent?" |
30863 | Did you ever tell him your suspicions?" |
30863 | Did you know that I was looking for you? |
30863 | Did you say-- another hour?" |
30863 | Did you understand that?" |
30863 | Do n''t you believe it, when you see me here?" |
30863 | Do n''t you really know any way out?" |
30863 | Do n''t you think he''s some strolling Irish vagabond adventurer?" |
30863 | Do they have many of them here?" |
30863 | Do ye dance, me lord? |
30863 | Do ye know his name?" |
30863 | Do you carry a portable canoe?" |
30863 | Do you consent?" |
30863 | Do you hear, Dolores?" |
30863 | Do you hear? |
30863 | Do you know Italian?" |
30863 | Do you know anything about that parcel?" |
30863 | Do you know that? |
30863 | Do you know what I can do? |
30863 | Do you know what I wish to say?" |
30863 | Do you know what heartache is, darling? |
30863 | Do you know what it is to hunger and thirst and long and yearn after some one?" |
30863 | Do you know"--and he bent down low over her--"do you know how I tried to see you? |
30863 | Do you know, old chap, I do n''t dote on any of the Spanish wines-- do you? |
30863 | Do you men to say that you will not help those poor captives?" |
30863 | Do you not see that if you remain you will soon be alone in the world, and then-- who will defend you?" |
30863 | Do you suppose I was going to stand any nonsense from a tailor?" |
30863 | Do you suppose I''m to ask your permission where to go in this castle? |
30863 | Do you suppose that I may not be strong enough for the journey? |
30863 | Do you think it is becoming? |
30863 | Do you think me a savage, that you must pray to me for mercy? |
30863 | Do you understand me, Brooke?" |
30863 | Do you understand me?" |
30863 | Do you wish to save him?" |
30863 | Does n''t it strike you, señor, that you are trifling with us?" |
30863 | Does she love Ashby? |
30863 | Does she love anybody? |
30863 | Does ye wish for music? |
30863 | Duty? |
30863 | Else why should he make such a point about seeing her, and run such a risk, and make even the chance of his personal safety a secondary consideration? |
30863 | Even if he should become free, what was he to do? |
30863 | Fly? |
30863 | Fly? |
30863 | Follow? |
30863 | Fond of him? |
30863 | For such outraged love, such treachery, and such intolerable insult, what revenge could suffice? |
30863 | For what will life be worth then, when all its sunlight, and bloom, and sweetness, and joy are over, and when they are all past and gone forever? |
30863 | From such vows who could release them? |
30863 | Ha, señor?" |
30863 | Had all her love been feigned? |
30863 | Had she been captured? |
30863 | Had she fled? |
30863 | Had she understood that? |
30863 | Had that fiend Rita found them? |
30863 | Had that one found the package? |
30863 | Have you a knife?" |
30863 | Have you a pistol?" |
30863 | Have you been all this time in such ignorance?" |
30863 | Have you found out anything?" |
30863 | Have you nerve enough to perform the burial- service?" |
30863 | He had been removed-- but how? |
30863 | He had not intended it, but if Rita chose to misunderstand him, why should he try to undeceive her? |
30863 | He keep them?" |
30863 | He made a movement, then checked himself, and then said,"Are you? |
30863 | He saw-- what? |
30863 | He''s a gintleman, so he is, ivery inch av him; an''yit may I ax, madame, what made him praytind to be a British nobleman?" |
30863 | Her voice now returned, and, casting up her eyes, she ejaculated in low tones,"Oh, thank Heaven!--but where-- where-- has he gone?" |
30863 | Here? |
30863 | How are you, my boy? |
30863 | How can I?" |
30863 | How can both of us use one pistol?" |
30863 | How could Brooke decide? |
30863 | How could I expect to see you here, Dolores? |
30863 | How could I have the heart to ask you to help me, if I persisted in keeping up any kind of dress that might endanger both of us?" |
30863 | How could he leave that room?" |
30863 | How could he? |
30863 | How did you get on with your business in Italy? |
30863 | How had any one contrived to enter? |
30863 | How had she become acquainted with Katie? |
30863 | How much are they? |
30863 | How was it possible for such a rock to be thus dislodged? |
30863 | How was that possible? |
30863 | How?" |
30863 | I eat? |
30863 | I have your parcel?" |
30863 | I hope, señorita, that you have not suffered much while here a prisoner in the hands of these ruffians?" |
30863 | I may be taken away from this room, Dolores, or you may be taken to another room; and then how can you get to me? |
30863 | I never heard that you were here; why have n''t I seen you before?" |
30863 | I ought to be happy-- why am I not?" |
30863 | I should like to ask you if you have it?" |
30863 | I suppose ye''ve got a passport?" |
30863 | I wonder if you have felt as I have?" |
30863 | I''m a lady--""Spinster?" |
30863 | I, sir? |
30863 | I--""I ask you, did you pick up that parcel?" |
30863 | If a foe, why had she come? |
30863 | If a friend, why had she fled so hurriedly, without a sign or word? |
30863 | If so, then what could he do? |
30863 | If you could only let me have a bed to myself--""A bed to yerself? |
30863 | In the first place, his name and residence?" |
30863 | In the first place, where did you come from last?" |
30863 | In the first place, you have n''t been long in Spain, I take it?" |
30863 | Is he Lord John Russell?" |
30863 | Is he any worse than I have been? |
30863 | Is he yer son?" |
30863 | Is it a bargain?" |
30863 | Is it freedom to be locked up in a cell and cut off from all my friends?" |
30863 | Is it not enough for you Americans to intermeddle with our affairs in Cuba, and help our rebels there, but must you also come to help our rebels here? |
30863 | Is it not so?" |
30863 | Is it whiskey? |
30863 | Is n''t it enough for me to see your distress? |
30863 | Is not this man Ashby''s friend? |
30863 | Is she as indifferent to him as she is to me, and to Ashby? |
30863 | Is she safe? |
30863 | Is she-- Did-- Is-- is-- is she in-- in the castle?" |
30863 | Is that really so? |
30863 | Is that what he said, Brooke?" |
30863 | Is the English prisoner with you?" |
30863 | Is this, then, your opinion of me? |
30863 | It seemed to him to be safely hidden, beyond all possibility of discovery; for who could ever venture into this passage- way? |
30863 | It was evident that she was offended; and at what? |
30863 | It was manifestly so; and yet why had Katie consented? |
30863 | Know you? |
30863 | Marriage was, of course, impossible, for he had a wife already; but did Rita know this? |
30863 | May I ask if there is any place in particular to which you prefer going?" |
30863 | May I?" |
30863 | May they not detain you?" |
30863 | May Ï ask if she is a relative? |
30863 | Might it not be picked up by one of the waiting- women in the morning? |
30863 | Miss Talbot-- where is she? |
30863 | Most of all, can I not see how you love me when you fling your life away for me? |
30863 | Mourn over the departed one? |
30863 | Nay, would the world? |
30863 | Need I say that it was the lost package with the precious bonds? |
30863 | No bad luck, I hope?" |
30863 | No? |
30863 | Not''His Majesty?''" |
30863 | Now I''m quite ready to die, as I deserve, for getting you into danger; but the mischief of it is, what''s going to become of you? |
30863 | Now who could that have been? |
30863 | Now, what was Watts? |
30863 | Now, what was a high- toned woman to do under such circumstances? |
30863 | Odd, too, is n''t it?" |
30863 | Oh, Captain Lopez, can you not let him go?" |
30863 | Oh, she has money, then?" |
30863 | Oh, what can I ever say or do to express my gratitude? |
30863 | On the other hand, would Dolores be so gay, so happy, and so merry when torn from him? |
30863 | Only, what''s become av Lord Russell? |
30863 | Or shall we talk politics? |
30863 | Or the crops? |
30863 | Or was it his rival Lopez, with whom he had yet to stand in mortal conflict? |
30863 | Or was it some affection of his own disordered senses that had wrought out an apparition from his own fancy? |
30863 | Or, worse, could he leave those precious bonds, which he had so carefully hidden? |
30863 | Quick, now-- what do you say?" |
30863 | Regret it? |
30863 | Rivers?" |
30863 | Rivers?" |
30863 | Rivers?" |
30863 | Ruined? |
30863 | Say, shall I go to ruin? |
30863 | Say, will you give up as much for me as I am ready to give up for you? |
30863 | Say, will you save his life? |
30863 | See here-- can''t we manage to run away? |
30863 | Sha''n''t I get breakfast?" |
30863 | Shall I begin at the beginning, and tell you how I first became acquainted with her?" |
30863 | Shall I condut the mees?" |
30863 | Shall I measure the distance?" |
30863 | Shall I prove it to you and to all these gentlemen?" |
30863 | Shall we go out boldly through the gate?" |
30863 | She had been false to him for the sake of Rivers; was she also false to Rivers for the sake of Lopez? |
30863 | Should he do this? |
30863 | Should he ever see her again? |
30863 | Should he venture now, or wait longer? |
30863 | Should she leave the castle? |
30863 | Should she now, out of selfish private grief, deprive Spain of such an inestimable boon? |
30863 | Should she turn a deaf ear to that too, too eloquent tongue, dash down the crown of Spain, and busy herself in unavailing regrets for the lost one? |
30863 | Should you be able to recognize her, if you were to meet her in a crowd?" |
30863 | So now-- won''t you begin?" |
30863 | So she said, in an indifferent tone,"Mr. Ashby? |
30863 | So you have seen her? |
30863 | So you rather slighted the guardian, did you?" |
30863 | Still, answer me frankly, do you know any other secret passages?" |
30863 | Suppose I had been taken prisoner as he has been, shut up with her in a castle, then freed; would I not long to see her? |
30863 | Sure an''if I did n''t obey the law meself first an''foremost, me own mind''ud all revolt against me, an''thin where''d I be? |
30863 | Tell me-- would you rather be here or in the hands of the Carlists?" |
30863 | That Talbot would refuse to perform this ceremony he felt convinced, but what would be the consequences of such a refusal under such circumstances? |
30863 | That one was Ashby? |
30863 | That''s your name for it, is it? |
30863 | The Carlists, or the women attendants? |
30863 | The Queen of Spain would be the ex- Queen; the last King of Spain was now the ex- King Amadeus; but"the King"--who was he? |
30863 | The priest in return eyed the Carlist from head to foot, and then said, in a sharp, authoritative tone,"Your name and rank?" |
30863 | The weather? |
30863 | Then she said, in a low, stern voice:"Now-- will you come? |
30863 | There was silence now for a short time, after which Brooke said:"Talbot, lad, you do n''t object, do you, to my holding your hand?" |
30863 | There, is that strong enough? |
30863 | To give up Katie? |
30863 | To sacrifice this man? |
30863 | Upon such agonizing thoughts as these came Katie''s question,"Why are you so sad?" |
30863 | Was I wrong?" |
30863 | Was Katie the bride? |
30863 | Was he a man of honor? |
30863 | Was he a prisoner? |
30863 | Was he escaping? |
30863 | Was he free, or was he still a prisoner? |
30863 | Was it Dolores, whom he had tracked on the previous evening? |
30863 | Was it Katie, whose answer to his proposal had not yet been given? |
30863 | Was it a woman, then-- that figure-- with its noiseless motion, its strange fragility, its flowing, floating, cloud- like draperies? |
30863 | Was it at the mention of Ashby''s name? |
30863 | Was it from regrets for the lost crown of Spain? |
30863 | Was it on her own account, or for some other reason? |
30863 | Was it possible that she could so soon forget? |
30863 | Was it possible to get them before leaving? |
30863 | Was it this woman that did the deed-- this fiend from the robbers''hold-- to make room for herself? |
30863 | Was n''t that a blow? |
30863 | Was not honor due to Ashby? |
30863 | Was she about to marry Lopez? |
30863 | Was she asleep? |
30863 | Was she friend or foe? |
30863 | Was she here now, or had they let her go? |
30863 | Was she not a mother to me in my sorest need? |
30863 | Was she, then, after all, a mere shallow flirt? |
30863 | Was that a crime? |
30863 | Was there any other in all the world who would pronounce his name in that way? |
30863 | Was there not in this a stronger reason than ever why he should be true to her? |
30863 | Was this his ghost? |
30863 | Was this she? |
30863 | Was this the revenge which Lopez had planned? |
30863 | Was your look then, Talbot, as calm and as firm as it is now?" |
30863 | We are brothers in arms, Brooke, are n''t we?" |
30863 | We''ve dreamed love''s young dream, you and I, have n''t we? |
30863 | Well, suppose we adopt that word-- what then?" |
30863 | Well, yes--""Of course: then why did she have to choose you again?" |
30863 | Were the women here? |
30863 | Were they by themselves? |
30863 | Were they ladies?" |
30863 | Were you not on that train which was stopped by the Carlists?" |
30863 | What are you doing here? |
30863 | What are you? |
30863 | What betrayal of confidence is there in this?" |
30863 | What business is it of yours?" |
30863 | What can you do? |
30863 | What cause will he have to kill me?" |
30863 | What could he say? |
30863 | What could save Talbot from their murderous hands? |
30863 | What could she do now? |
30863 | What d''ye say, me lord? |
30863 | What dark and lonely ways, dear Dolores? |
30863 | What did Katie care for him? |
30863 | What did she expect, or why had she spoken so gently and roused him so quietly? |
30863 | What did that mean? |
30863 | What did this mean? |
30863 | What do ye say to that? |
30863 | What do ye say, me lord? |
30863 | What do you mean? |
30863 | What do you mean? |
30863 | What do you say to our amusing ourselves by starting a fire? |
30863 | What do you think of that? |
30863 | What do you think?" |
30863 | What does it mean? |
30863 | What else can you suppose that I intend to do? |
30863 | What else?" |
30863 | What had been the cause of this? |
30863 | What haf I done? |
30863 | What has the State to do with the acts of a priest of the Church?" |
30863 | What indeed? |
30863 | What is life worth to me at such a cost? |
30863 | What is that?" |
30863 | What is there to divulge? |
30863 | What is your decision? |
30863 | What is your name?" |
30863 | What is your name?" |
30863 | What made you turn up in this queer way at Burgos? |
30863 | What more could she want? |
30863 | What now was there for her to do? |
30863 | What now? |
30863 | What of that? |
30863 | What profession?" |
30863 | What say ye, me fair one?" |
30863 | What shall I do? |
30863 | What shall we talk about? |
30863 | What should he do? |
30863 | What should he do? |
30863 | What the devil do you mean by coming here?" |
30863 | What the devil have you got to say for yourself?" |
30863 | What the mischief does he mean by coming with his family to Burgos with no other language than English? |
30863 | What was Katie doing here? |
30863 | What was the meaning of all this? |
30863 | What was the meaning of this? |
30863 | What were you doing at the castle?" |
30863 | What will be the fate of the rest of us, after this?" |
30863 | What would become of his bonds? |
30863 | What''il ye have? |
30863 | What''s the row?" |
30863 | What, and take you to your friends? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | What? |
30863 | When could he hope to have a better time than the present? |
30863 | When she should discover it, what would she do? |
30863 | Where did you go?" |
30863 | Where did you leave them? |
30863 | Where have ye hid thim, ye rogue? |
30863 | Where is my own one?" |
30863 | Where is she? |
30863 | Where is the hope of Spain?" |
30863 | Where was it? |
30863 | Which way would honor impel him? |
30863 | Whither had it gone? |
30863 | Who are you? |
30863 | Who are you? |
30863 | Who could it have been? |
30863 | Who could this be? |
30863 | Who else in the world would do this for him? |
30863 | Who gave you authority to occupy this post?" |
30863 | Who is Lord Russell? |
30863 | Who is he?" |
30863 | Who is she, did you say?" |
30863 | Who is the charmer? |
30863 | Who kill them? |
30863 | Who was the bride? |
30863 | Who was the object of his search? |
30863 | Who was this stranger? |
30863 | Who were in that room? |
30863 | Who would capture her? |
30863 | Who, he thought, is the King? |
30863 | Who, she asked herself, was this visitor to Katie? |
30863 | Who? |
30863 | Who? |
30863 | Who? |
30863 | Why can not you do in Spain what you might safely do in Scotland?" |
30863 | Why did Dolores leave him so abruptly? |
30863 | Why did you not speak before?" |
30863 | Why may I not be at least as free as she is?" |
30863 | Why may not you do in Spain what you may safely do in Turkey? |
30863 | Why may we not fly now, or to- night? |
30863 | Why not do so now?" |
30863 | Why should I? |
30863 | Why should he interpret at all? |
30863 | Why should my mind have such strange alternations, feelings so contradictory, so unreasonable? |
30863 | Why should she? |
30863 | Why wait? |
30863 | Why was he so familiar? |
30863 | Why will you torment me?" |
30863 | Why, he thought, had Dolores deserted him? |
30863 | Why, man, what in Heaven''s name are you doing with coupon bonds in this country?" |
30863 | Why, then, do n''t you see, auntie, you will have had all your worry for nothing?" |
30863 | Why, what else have I been thinking of ever since I met you? |
30863 | Why?" |
30863 | Why?" |
30863 | Will she consent?" |
30863 | Will that do? |
30863 | Will this place satisfy you?" |
30863 | Will ye give yer consint to our proposal, an''allow yer ward to become the Quane av Spain?" |
30863 | Will you allow this lady to go in company with the other, so as to procure the amount needed for my deliverance?" |
30863 | Will you do as much for me?" |
30863 | Will you fly?" |
30863 | Will you go with us and show us where the Carlists took the English ladies?" |
30863 | Will you now name a sum again-- some sum that I can pay? |
30863 | Will you remain here?" |
30863 | Will you remember that, Talbot?" |
30863 | Will you take the pistol?" |
30863 | Will you tell me?" |
30863 | Will you? |
30863 | With these fierce, implacable spirits how can he be safe? |
30863 | With what eyes could she look at him? |
30863 | With what words could she speak to him? |
30863 | With whom? |
30863 | Would England? |
30863 | Would Katie be so glad at seeing him again as Dolores had been at meeting him? |
30863 | Would Katie take so much trouble for the sake of speaking to him? |
30863 | Would Katie? |
30863 | Would Spain forgive her? |
30863 | Would he leave her for this lady? |
30863 | Would it be possible for him to go down so as to try to communicate with any of them? |
30863 | Would it be possible for him to procure a guide for part of the way, at least to Vittoria, or some nearer railway station?" |
30863 | Would it be safe to tell Rita, and direct her to get them for him? |
30863 | Would it not be better that the Queen of Spain should emulate the domestic graces of a Victoria than the corrupt follies of an Isabella? |
30863 | Would it not be better that the throne of Spain should be filled by a virtuous Englishwoman than by some frivolous Continental princess? |
30863 | Would n''t I a seen him, an''me wid a loight?" |
30863 | Would not liberty be useless without her? |
30863 | Would she ever see it? |
30863 | Would she not rather die than give up Brooke? |
30863 | Would she now give him up? |
30863 | Would you like me to do anything? |
30863 | Would you mind sitting on that tree over there?" |
30863 | Would you not like to--""Like what?" |
30863 | Would you wish me to save my life, and always afterward have the thought that I had stained my honor?" |
30863 | Ye do n''t know it? |
30863 | Ye''ll moind, will ye? |
30863 | Yet how could she avoid him? |
30863 | Yet what is she to him? |
30863 | Yet where was she? |
30863 | Yet why not leave me? |
30863 | Yet, after all, how could he really escape? |
30863 | Yet, on the other hand, how could he bring himself to give her up? |
30863 | You are not a politician, not a political agent, not a spy?" |
30863 | You are now out of danger; why put yourself into it? |
30863 | You call her Miss-- Talbot? |
30863 | You can not have been long in Spain?" |
30863 | You have n''t been out yet, I suppose?" |
30863 | You not want to''scape?" |
30863 | You were seized by the Carlists, it is true, but what of that? |
30863 | You will not leave me in this way? |
30863 | You will not sacrifice me to a punctilio, will you? |
30863 | You wo n''t refuse to share with me and take half?" |
30863 | Your way-- and what way can that be in times like these, and here in this country, and, above all, in this part of the country? |
30863 | a man ought to know his own tailor, ought n''t he? |
30863 | after such love and loyalty? |
30863 | am I not ready to lay down my life for him?" |
30863 | an''so the young lady is a ward av yours? |
30863 | and can you help me?" |
30863 | and did not honor bind him to Talbot? |
30863 | and did you really get lost so?" |
30863 | and had he not been a traitor to his friend? |
30863 | and have you been in them ever?" |
30863 | and here-- when you''ve gone away?" |
30863 | and if any one should, how could that package be seen? |
30863 | and marry them?" |
30863 | and shall I set him free? |
30863 | and the use he wishes to make of me in my false character as priest?" |
30863 | and where in the world did you come from?" |
30863 | and where is she now?" |
30863 | and why was she telling to this stranger the whole story of her life? |
30863 | and would Dolores look upon him in his loneliness with such a smile of indifference and light- hearted mirth? |
30863 | are you too a priest? |
30863 | could you not join their party? |
30863 | cried Ashby;"but how did you get acquainted with him?" |
30863 | cried Brooke;"how can you have the heart to make such a proposal to me? |
30863 | cried Lopez;"have they any others?" |
30863 | cried the other,"are you mad? |
30863 | did you say_ unfortunately_?" |
30863 | do n''t I know it? |
30863 | do you know, old fellow,"said Harry Rivers,"I call this no end of a piece of good luck? |
30863 | do you think I sall let you turn false to me? |
30863 | go and leave you?" |
30863 | have you been there?" |
30863 | he cried, in a reproachful voice,"why did n''t you go? |
30863 | he cried;"what do you mean by such insults as these? |
30863 | here in this castle?" |
30863 | here in this room?" |
30863 | how can I live, and think of it? |
30863 | how can I?" |
30863 | how could he get here?" |
30863 | how will you like that?" |
30863 | how you like that, meestaire? |
30863 | how?" |
30863 | how?" |
30863 | in dishonor?" |
30863 | is it possible that you can have the heart to leave these English ladies to a fate of horror among brigands?" |
30863 | is n''t it, Brooke?" |
30863 | is n''t it, old boy?" |
30863 | my John? |
30863 | or was he indeed alive? |
30863 | or was it from the thought of that one whose fortunes she had followed for many eventful hours with a view to such a conclusion as this? |
30863 | or was it merely from the tender sentiment which is usually called forth on such an occasion? |
30863 | or was it not rather his own friends-- and-- Katie? |
30863 | perhaps a connection by marriage?" |
30863 | said Ashby, in a tone of tender apology,"how could I imagine that it was you? |
30863 | said Brooke;"fly? |
30863 | said Dolores;"and wo n''t you say that about the English maid? |
30863 | said Harry, wonderingly;"what fun?" |
30863 | said Harry--"stay? |
30863 | said Katie, in a joyous voice,"in this train?" |
30863 | said Katie;"where?" |
30863 | said Lopez, growing more excited still at this news, which was so much in accordance with his wishes--"English? |
30863 | said Lopez, interrupting her;"where is it?" |
30863 | said Lopez,"how do you know that?" |
30863 | said Lopez;"what does that matter? |
30863 | said Mrs. Russell, clinging more closely to"His Majesty,""do you hear that?" |
30863 | said Talbot;"but do n''t you see how different this thing is? |
30863 | said he;"so that''s it?" |
30863 | said she, in innocent surprise--"you here?" |
30863 | said the man, impudently,"what of that? |
30863 | she cried,"are you really-- really an Englishman? |
30863 | she cried,"what is it that you mean? |
30863 | she cried--"''His Majesty?'' |
30863 | she said--"and will you be my man, señor?" |
30863 | so I have changed? |
30863 | so you''ve been in Cuba, have you, my dear? |
30863 | that he was at once heroic and compassionate, and one on whose honor she might rely to the uttermost? |
30863 | was there no one to speak for you? |
30863 | what is n''t fair?" |
30863 | what shall I do? |
30863 | what?" |
30863 | what?" |
30863 | what?" |
30863 | when he had fought a mortal quarrel with Ashby for her? |
30863 | when she had given up all for him? |
30863 | when you have risked your life, and are in such danger of death, for me? |
30863 | where? |
30863 | who? |
30863 | why ca n''t you help us now?" |
30863 | why have we never met before? |
30863 | why not? |
30863 | why, Talbot, lad, I never began to know what life could be till I saw you; and do you ask me now to put an end to our friendship?" |
30863 | why?" |
30863 | with what eyes could he look upon that pure and noble face? |
30863 | with what words could he address her? |
30863 | wo n''t you understand? |
30863 | would not one suffice? |
30863 | you do n''t, do n''t you?" |
30863 | you haven''t-- you haven''t-- done-- done it?" |
30863 | you will not let your poor Talbot go away all alone?" |
39907 | ''Deed so, friend? 39907 ''Deed you''re not, but what are you? |
39907 | ''Why should Daedalus have----''"''Should''? 39907 ''Why was it Daedalus plied uninjured wings?'' |
39907 | ... sleigh gone a''ready to Hadley with others from Deerfield-- be there more on the way? |
39907 | A September, was it not, when they attacked the Beldings? 39907 A commonplace?" |
39907 | A file, Kate? |
39907 | A goaty eye for Jenks''fair daughter belike? |
39907 | A one- eyed man? |
39907 | A sloop bearing Jan Dyckman''s name, a sloop that seems now to be moving, Mr. Shawn, in a flat calm where we find no breath of wind at all? 39907 A''n''t you waiting for your friend?" |
39907 | A-- a gross exaggeration of some natural activity of the mind? 39907 About the Cicero-- haven''t I leaned on thee too much, Ru? |
39907 | Acquire learning? |
39907 | Ah, I see.... And was there a queen of the Spice Islands? |
39907 | Ah, they do, but at your age why should you need it? |
39907 | Ah-- sweet cod-- my little goat-- whatever''s the matter, love? |
39907 | Ah? 39907 Ah? |
39907 | Alas, poor Ben!--no Latin? 39907 Alive? |
39907 | All away? |
39907 | All lank and lean? |
39907 | Am I to take the helm again? |
39907 | And I wonder would you be out there too-- Mister Cory? 39907 And did n''t I know last night that I must meet them in a calm? |
39907 | And do n''t I remember that time of life, the ache of it? 39907 And he died then?" |
39907 | And him breaking his heart for a year because he''s short- handed? |
39907 | And if it''s you that oversaw the designing, as( forgive my rudeness) I thought I overheard you say, then may I be shaking your hand? |
39907 | And see it strike fire in you? |
39907 | And so I''m to go overboard? |
39907 | And so got your jacket torn and muddy on the inside? 39907 And so what is madness?" |
39907 | And the books? |
39907 | And then New York, from Sherburne? |
39907 | And tie''em in any string, or do you take me for a mooncalf? |
39907 | And what''s up with Hibbs? 39907 And where is that?" |
39907 | And who a devil''s name are you? 39907 And why should I have that, and thou not have it?" |
39907 | And you think this may hurt him, too much? |
39907 | Another name was mentioned-- a new bosun, Tom Ball-- will that mean bosun of your ketch_ Artemis_, Mr. Kenny? 39907 Answers nothing, and will any man hold such a silence with nothing to hide?" |
39907 | Anything new here, Nanny? |
39907 | Are the others all dead? |
39907 | Are they still about? 39907 Are you now? |
39907 | Are you sure of him? |
39907 | Art thou in need of me? |
39907 | As I never saw it in any other.... Have I not been kind? |
39907 | As for example the seeming humility of proper Christians? |
39907 | Ay, but sha''n''t I walk a bit way with you? 39907 Ay, but-- thou, scrubbing_ my_ shoes? |
39907 | Ay-- stinks, do n''t it? |
39907 | Be you paying or him? |
39907 | Be you pleased with me? |
39907 | Be you--Charity jerked her head; upstairs Ben could hear a muted ripple of women''s voices--"in love with_ her_?" |
39907 | Ben''s? |
39907 | Ben, I must----"God damn it, do n''t be looking for the pot, use the floor, if they burn us who''s to care? |
39907 | Ben, how ever did we get over the palisade? |
39907 | Ben, what ails thee?--can''t sleep? |
39907 | Ben-- all''s well?... 39907 Ben-- how did you know?" |
39907 | Ben-- thou didst not know it? |
39907 | Ben--''d I ever recount to thee the story of the woodcutter''s stupid son who tamed a lion? |
39907 | Benjamin, what am I to do with you? 39907 Brave dreams, but-- why to me?" |
39907 | Brier roses? 39907 But Father, you know so much----""I? |
39907 | But at least, Uncle John, there would not be the expense of my keep here, and I would be----"What? 39907 But in what manner is mind not a part of common life?" |
39907 | But not on the face is well enough? |
39907 | But sewing is poo? |
39907 | But suppose, sir-- Ru is ready, as Mr. Leverett said, and certainly he ought to begin in September-- but suppose I were to wait another year? 39907 But that is....""Terrifying? |
39907 | But what is knowledge? |
39907 | But why did n''t I know it when it happened? |
39907 | But_ why_ do so many die after trifling minor surgery? 39907 Ca n''t you be sensible, Muttonhead?" |
39907 | Ca n''t you see the poles? 39907 Ca n''t you understand?" |
39907 | Can you walk on water? 39907 Charity, I meant to ask before now: Faith-- is she-- content?" |
39907 | Come to my room, love? |
39907 | Compassed about.... Ben-- why, why? 39907 Constable?" |
39907 | Cory, Mother of God, ca n''t_ you_ speak up like a seaman? |
39907 | D''you tell me the same, John? |
39907 | Damn the thing, blind and stubborn as you are, I like you, Ben Cory.... Do you play chess? |
39907 | Dead in hell or alive in hell with one eye, what''s the difference? 39907 Dead?" |
39907 | Did I not give you the vision? |
39907 | Did Uncle John say when_ Artemis_ was to sail? |
39907 | Did he say if any of them was young? |
39907 | Did he to you? |
39907 | Did n''t I_ say_ it had an_ a_ into it? 39907 Did you also see this man?" |
39907 | Did you play Inj''an when you was young? |
39907 | Did you sleep enough yourself? |
39907 | Did you think, sir, I was all vain because I like to make comical noises with big words? |
39907 | Did your father ever make me pay lighterage if he could help it? |
39907 | Did your voice tell you of the coming of that sloop? |
39907 | Do I?... 39907 Do n''t you know nothing, little goat?" |
39907 | Do n''t you know there''s talk in these times that slavery itself is wrong? 39907 Do n''t you remember Sultan, Mr. Hibbs? |
39907 | Do you attempt to assert that the difference between night and dawn can be detected by the dull besotted perception of the peasantry? |
39907 | Do you have those dreams much, Ben? |
39907 | Do you speak Dutch? |
39907 | Does it matter? 39907 Done without aid, ha?" |
39907 | Dost thou not_ wish_ to be saved, Benjamin?... |
39907 | Dyckman? |
39907 | Eh? 39907 Eh? |
39907 | Eh? 39907 Eh?" |
39907 | Eh? |
39907 | Feeds them, does it not? |
39907 | First time, dearie? |
39907 | Forbearing too? 39907 Gawd, sir, that part there-- I mean----""What part, Joey Mills?" |
39907 | God damn it, Jesse, you think we''d abandon you? 39907 Going away?" |
39907 | Going so soon? 39907 Goodm''n Cory?" |
39907 | Ha? 39907 Ha? |
39907 | Ha? 39907 Ha?" |
39907 | Ha? |
39907 | Ha?... 39907 Harvard, sir?" |
39907 | Harvey? |
39907 | Hast thou forgotten? 39907 Hatfield?" |
39907 | Have I not alway known that, in thee? |
39907 | Have you a family, sir? |
39907 | Have you chanced to look aft, the last half- hour, boy? |
39907 | He did not know James? |
39907 | He did? |
39907 | He is-- no longer with you? |
39907 | He knows so much... to study... if I might....A call? |
39907 | He-- uh-- died? |
39907 | Help me drink it, wo n''t you? 39907 Hm? |
39907 | Ho, and if he''s not, how comes he to lay about him so? |
39907 | How could I know why you say any of the things you do? |
39907 | How could that be, now? 39907 How do you know?" |
39907 | How many? |
39907 | How''s that? |
39907 | I be naked, ca n''t you see? 39907 I can read, by the way.... Was your mother very beautiful?" |
39907 | I fear I intrude-- is it I''m addressing the owner of the ketch? |
39907 | I give you my word, sir, do I not? |
39907 | I guessed right, then? |
39907 | I had her once-- wasn''t it like sinking into a warm dumpling fresh from the oven? 39907 I have n''t truly prayed since my father and mother were murdered.... Is not conscience enough?" |
39907 | I may not then? |
39907 | I must say more then?... 39907 I see.... Will you undertake not to speak of it to anyone?" |
39907 | I shall undertake not to be prostrated, and a''n''t thy bonnet- strings a little tight? |
39907 | I suppose he might even bear a message from me to Captain Jenks? |
39907 | I suppose we ought n''t use such words here? |
39907 | I suppose you can stand up when spoken to? |
39907 | I think I''d best not, Ru, unless-- art thou tired? |
39907 | I''ll read from_ Religio Medici_--shall I, sir? |
39907 | I''m to instruct a man of seventy, when he wo n''t even hear to my signing on to learn a bit of seamanship and so be of use to him? |
39907 | I-- was? |
39907 | I?... 39907 If Ovid had wished an adverb he would have written----?" |
39907 | If a man hath an eye for my_ Artemis_, shall I let him go without drinking her health? 39907 If he was that hot for it why''d you bother to drug him?" |
39907 | If you like...."Nothing left then, Beneen, of the friendship I hoped there was between thee and me? |
39907 | If you''ll call Manuel aft, whose eyes are good as mine----"Manuel is it? 39907 In what manner higher, Mr. Hibbs? |
39907 | Indeed.... Do you enjoy the Boston air? |
39907 | Indeed? 39907 Indeed?" |
39907 | Is it strange? |
39907 | Is it wrong, Adna, a man should be proud? 39907 Is n''t it the strange thing how from all the ruck, all the thousands, millions of humankind, explorers are so few? |
39907 | Is something wrong with me? |
39907 | Is that strange? |
39907 | Is that why you came? 39907 Is there a blacker thing than murder in the Decalogue? |
39907 | Is there not such a voice? |
39907 | It seems to be gone and that''s the truth, and yet I could have sworn-- what? 39907 It was a sail?" |
39907 | It''s all so still under the sun, and warm-- what? 39907 It''s the hard thing such a man as Mr. Dyckman should die, and for what? |
39907 | It''s true I was thinking a little of the seaways, but how a devil''s name did you know it? |
39907 | It-- seems not wrong to you, that I wish to sail? |
39907 | Jan Dyckman? 39907 Jesse Plum.... Why did Father never speak of those things?" |
39907 | Keeping the Old Man alive? |
39907 | Knowing quite well that by a lift of my finger I could have you put to death? 39907 Last- minute business?" |
39907 | Later? |
39907 | Law, why that, on a spring morning? |
39907 | Leaving only Joey and Manuel on deck, and Joey scared of a tiller he do n''t know yet, and the God- damn night blacker''n a witch''s box? |
39907 | Looking for something? |
39907 | Love, a region? |
39907 | Ma''am, if my brother might rest in a room where it''s quiet? |
39907 | Manuel? |
39907 | May I ask, Mr. Shawn, is this course for Martinique? |
39907 | May I ask, have you spoken to Mr. Jenks, about that matter you mentioned to my great- uncle? |
39907 | May I come in then? |
39907 | May I hold her for you, sir? |
39907 | May we not have the precise height of this hobgoblin, in inches and fractions? |
39907 | Mice, with that cat? |
39907 | Might I ask further, why you do n''t find it strange that I should spend my declining years endeavoring to watch frogs peep? |
39907 | Mind thy God- damned manners, pup-- a''n''t we all brothers in Christ? 39907 Mistress Faith Jenks-- is she at home?" |
39907 | Mm- yas, I begin to see.... Reuben, why do you speak as if he were somehow your charge? 39907 Mm? |
39907 | Monday? 39907 Moon''ll be up in an hour.... What if we do n''t go back to the ketch?" |
39907 | Mr. Kenny, sir, if you have a moment? |
39907 | Mr. Kenny, surely you, sir, will not display a froward heart before the will of the Lord? 39907 Mr. Kenny, why is the bowsprit slanted so low to the water? |
39907 | Muscles, surely? |
39907 | Must I say again, he is not captain now?... 39907 Must you, Ben?" |
39907 | My hand still aches.... Sir, do you think that if I-- I mean when I go to Harvard, I shall know what I wish to do, that is for a life''s work? |
39907 | My opinion? |
39907 | Nay, I-- maybe I am.... Dorchester, you said? 39907 No dallying with Venus? |
39907 | No, how should I? |
39907 | Noddle''s is it? 39907 Not now?" |
39907 | Not poo,said Charity, sinking him...."Do you go often to church, Mistress Charity?" |
39907 | Not that, but-- oh, never mind.... What do you like to read? |
39907 | Now tell me, Benjamin, tell me truly the reason that brought you here? |
39907 | Now what do you mean? |
39907 | Now why would we be tacking, Beneen? |
39907 | Now why? 39907 O the anatomical enigmas of the mermaid!--hey? |
39907 | Of course, Ben...."Did my father have-- have aught to say of poor Ledyard? |
39907 | Oh, why, why? 39907 Oh, why?" |
39907 | Oh.... That was only one reason, Reuben? |
39907 | Oh? 39907 Oh? |
39907 | Oh? |
39907 | Oh?... |
39907 | On such a thing as that, Mr. Cory, you''d be obliged to play it timid, understand me? 39907 Only a thousand? |
39907 | Or I could send Charity to you, sir? 39907 Parents not living?" |
39907 | Perhaps an apprenticeship? 39907 Preparing for the ministry, I presume?" |
39907 | Rags? |
39907 | Reservations, sir? |
39907 | Reuben, hath Benjamin spoke any word to you lately to suggest a disturbance or over- concern with-- hm-- with----"With the mounting of smocks? 39907 Reuben-- could Benjamin by chance have overindulged in liquor?" |
39907 | Ru, what ails thee? 39907 Said nothing to you, Reuben, about remaining late?" |
39907 | Shall I so? |
39907 | Shall we hope to soften this Puritan virtue to some degree? |
39907 | Shawn, do you think I could walk into Heaven across the flesh of Jan Dyckman? 39907 Sin? |
39907 | Sir--startled, Reuben saw his brother rising, not quite knocking over his little desk--"sir, may I ask a favor?" |
39907 | Sir, if I-- supposing I might ship aboard----"You? |
39907 | Sir, sir,said Mr. Kenny,"was there no reviving Jemima?" |
39907 | So few as that? |
39907 | So throw it over, d''you hear, or will I do it? 39907 So? |
39907 | So? 39907 So?" |
39907 | Some article you wished to question, Joey Mills? |
39907 | Some of the ham I stole-- don''t you remember? |
39907 | Something else? |
39907 | Still, what do we know, man? |
39907 | Sultan? |
39907 | Suppose I ought to be bled? |
39907 | Suppose that''s what made me sick? |
39907 | Surely it''s plain? 39907 Thank you-- this is very kind.... You are from one of the French islands, are you not?" |
39907 | That bullet----"What bullet? |
39907 | That is learning? 39907 The blood was not flowing but spurting?" |
39907 | The left eye, Mr. Cory? 39907 The mate? |
39907 | The snow''s stopped? |
39907 | The stocks, was it? |
39907 | The wig, sir? 39907 The--_Artemis_--is sailing?" |
39907 | The_ Iris_? 39907 Then I''ll require of you no act of violence, only the labor of a foremast hand-- can I say more? |
39907 | Then a''n''t you too? |
39907 | Then bide here aft, seeing I care nothing what you think or do, and your one eye blinder than the one that''s gone.... Any lights, Manuel? |
39907 | Then will you tell me, sir, what on earth you were looking for over there by the pond? |
39907 | There are storms then in the Spice Islands? |
39907 | They let me eat heavy at supper, and I did so, knowing we might have a chance-- Ben, are you having trouble walking? |
39907 | They say that, do they now? |
39907 | This little air? 39907 To know?" |
39907 | To turn this knife against myself? |
39907 | Touchy, man? 39907 Trees? |
39907 | Uh? 39907 Um... Mr. Cory, is it true that swallows spend the winter at the bottom of frozen ponds and streams all naked of any feathers?" |
39907 | Understand? 39907 Understanding, Ru?" |
39907 | Upstairs? |
39907 | Voice? |
39907 | Was I not doing so when we met? |
39907 | Was Shawn there? 39907 Was it a sail, Captain?" |
39907 | Was it-- any good, Ben? |
39907 | Was n''t he your son? 39907 We ca n''t keep you?" |
39907 | Well, Shawn? |
39907 | Well, a''n''t it the nature of the children of Adam to hunt for the North Star on a cloudy night? |
39907 | Well, sir, might it not be that sailing with_ Artemis_ would help me decide, or at least understand better, what I wish to do? |
39907 | Well, tuck it under your britches, ca n''t you?--so to look less like a bloody cutthroat and more like my little brother? |
39907 | Well, well-- you thought what? |
39907 | Well, what if it is? |
39907 | Well, young man,said Mr. Derry,"I know the place, the which----"Jenks interrupted as if Derry were a plaguy noise in the street:"Shawn? |
39907 | Well-- well, Cory, why would we be tacking, and a good little westerly breeze on the sta''board quarter that do be sending us where we wish to go? |
39907 | Well? 39907 Well? |
39907 | Well? |
39907 | Well? |
39907 | Welland? 39907 Were we not to go there together, Ben?" |
39907 | What about going to sea? |
39907 | What about this afternoon, that is what''s left of it? |
39907 | What are you laughing at now? |
39907 | What art thou saying now? |
39907 | What did he write? |
39907 | What do I call you, dearie? |
39907 | What do you mean? |
39907 | What else? 39907 What has this to do with Captain Jenks?" |
39907 | What if he did? 39907 What is it in Shawn that should make the thought trouble you?... |
39907 | What is it, Mr. Hibbs-- what_ is_ it that doth compel one to-- eh, as they say, to give away the whole heart to another? 39907 What is that complement, sir, may I ask?" |
39907 | What now? 39907 What of Jesse?" |
39907 | What of Mr. Dyckman, my dear? |
39907 | What of that girl who-- I mean-- her name was Clarissa, was it not? |
39907 | What planneth he for the morrow''s morn, the evil old-- uh-- papoose? |
39907 | What was he after? |
39907 | What would you have him do? |
39907 | What''ll we do-- I mean in Springfield, or Roxbury? |
39907 | What''s that you say? |
39907 | What''s the matter, Reuben? 39907 What''s the matter, love? |
39907 | What''s this, Reuben? |
39907 | What''s to be scared of, you fool? |
39907 | What, all ten thousand of''em? |
39907 | What-- coach wheels? |
39907 | What? 39907 What? |
39907 | What? 39907 What? |
39907 | What? 39907 What? |
39907 | What? 39907 What?" |
39907 | What? |
39907 | What? |
39907 | What? |
39907 | What? |
39907 | What? |
39907 | What? |
39907 | What_ is_ knowledge? |
39907 | Where away? |
39907 | Where is the way where light dwelleth? |
39907 | Where''s Mother? |
39907 | Where, Ru? 39907 Where-- do you know where_ Artemis_ is bound for?" |
39907 | Which way is Roxbury? |
39907 | Whims, Mr. Shawn? 39907 Who are you, sir?" |
39907 | Who calls you that? |
39907 | Who can ever say? 39907 Who now hath plumbed the depths of a contumelious paronomasia?" |
39907 | Who would be with us? |
39907 | Who''s to know all the whims of a green boy? |
39907 | Whose then? |
39907 | Why ca n''t I remember it? |
39907 | Why, Hanson, I think-- don''t you know him? 39907 Why, Mother? |
39907 | Why, damme, suppose my brother wishes to know the very things told of in these lost pages? |
39907 | Why, do n''t they alway know that? |
39907 | Why, man, Quelch swung there till he rotted and the rope too, and what would I want of his furniture? |
39907 | Why, sure, we''ll make it.... What happened to your jacket? |
39907 | Why? 39907 Why?" |
39907 | Why? |
39907 | Why? |
39907 | Will a man be inventing such a thing? 39907 Will the French be coming down this way, you think?" |
39907 | Will you come in, Mr. Cory, the while I inquire? |
39907 | Will you sheet her in, you bloody farmer? 39907 Will you shoot through the door?" |
39907 | Wish to rest a while? |
39907 | With such a breath why walk? 39907 Would you dine with me, Ben?--that is,"he asked again,"may I call you so and no offense?" |
39907 | Would you like to come look at the daffodils? 39907 Would you wish something to drink, Mistress Gundy, that we might have sent up from next door?" |
39907 | Yah? |
39907 | Yes, Ben? |
39907 | Yes, maybe.... Ben, is it true''tis a hundred miles to Boston and Roxbury? |
39907 | Yes, my boy? |
39907 | Yes, they''re black.... By the madder ones, you mean the raving kind? 39907 Yes, you could, Mr. Shawn, because I''m asking you again: Why do you hold him at all? |
39907 | Yes.... Can you make up for a hurt when there''s no way to turn back the clock? |
39907 | Yet he used this strange word_ tutas_, which is----? |
39907 | You are Madam Cory''s grandsons? |
39907 | You can, ha? 39907 You can-- oh, damn my head!--you can be certain?" |
39907 | You contradict me?... 39907 You do n''t mean you''re going to be thirteen forever?" |
39907 | You have? |
39907 | You hear that? |
39907 | You heard my question? |
39907 | You heard that, Eccles?--how it appeals to my humanity and in the same breath threatens my life? 39907 You heard what happened to the_ Iris_?" |
39907 | You leave me tell you this: you mark one of my poor girls on the face just once, just once, Mr. Shawn----"And you''ll have law on me belike? |
39907 | You mean nothing happened? |
39907 | You mean the marshes, boy? |
39907 | You put it to him a few days ago, did you not? |
39907 | You question the voice that guides me? |
39907 | You sure to God hate that man, do n''t you? |
39907 | You think I do n''t feel it? 39907 You think a man and woman ought to marry if they have serious''ligious differences?" |
39907 | You thought I''d help you take_ Artemis_? |
39907 | You too maybe?... 39907 You too?" |
39907 | You walked from Deerfield with that and all? 39907 You what or that which, sir?" |
39907 | You wished to sail with_ Artemis_, did you not? |
39907 | You wished to speak with me? |
39907 | You would n''t care to say''Well, sir?'' 39907 You would n''t play no jape on me, would you?" |
39907 | You-- did? |
39907 | Your brother is n''t in Boston today to see the_ Artemis_? |
39907 | Your mother''s well, my dear? |
39907 | Your pardon, sir? |
39907 | Your pardon, sir? |
39907 | _ Artemis!_--what other name would be possible? |
39907 | _ Hide_, Mr. Shawn? 39907 _ If I said, however, that living is a journey_"--oh, Mr. Welland, what else could it be, and every morning a misty crossroads? |
39907 | _ You?_ I''ll take care of you presently. |
39907 | quid fuit, ut tutas agitaret Daedalus alas, Icarus immensas...."What''s the matter? 39907 ''Should''? 39907 ''Why was it Daedalus plied uninjured wings, but Icarus marks with his name the enormous waves?'' |
39907 | ( What was the use?) |
39907 | (_ The most important, why? |
39907 | *****"Ah, what happened to the day?" |
39907 | *****"Ben, what are we to do?" |
39907 | *****"Thursday night we came away-- remember? |
39907 | A battle with arithmetic, in a way: how does one youth steal a vessel from seven grown men-- not counting Manuel, who was rather less than a man? |
39907 | A black- haired Irishman with a green coat?" |
39907 | A blunt- faced sergeant of militia shouted to Ben:"They still there, boy?" |
39907 | A devil''s name, what do you want of a pisstail boy on such an errand?" |
39907 | A knife- throw? |
39907 | A lethal rush? |
39907 | A public shame in the middle of the street, but who''ll notice old Ben Cory in the dark? |
39907 | A''n''t I crushed to the dust nor ca n''t sink no further down, a piss- poor toad under the heel of the Almighty? |
39907 | A''n''t I heard''em talk together, devil and angel? |
39907 | A''n''t I? |
39907 | A''n''t Shawn tried to break him for a year now? |
39907 | A''n''t she a caution, love?" |
39907 | A''n''t thou my own brother, Athenian?" |
39907 | A''n''t you hungry, Ru?" |
39907 | Abruptly Shawn was asking:"Have you ever had a woman?" |
39907 | Ah, Beneen, do n''t you see, all this is but prologue? |
39907 | Ah, how long, Amadeus?" |
39907 | All of a sudden Ru wished to study medicine? |
39907 | Am I a terrible bad heathen, that I should have felt-- well, angry at it? |
39907 | Am I any more likely to sink or stray, now that I know it? |
39907 | Am I right, sir? |
39907 | Am I speaking nonsense, I wonder? |
39907 | Am I to meet them in a bloody calm?... |
39907 | Am I weeping? |
39907 | Am I, my dear?" |
39907 | And I said to him:''Will you sail with me then?'' |
39907 | And all the South Pacific lies there unseen, untraveled-- nothing but a waste of water? |
39907 | And could you or the Captain tell me anything of him?" |
39907 | And go in front-- I''m not so green you''ll ever find yourself behind me with a rag over me eyes.... Hath he been quiet, Dummy? |
39907 | And ha''done with talk of the sea too-- ask Mr. John, what''s it ever done but make widows, and empty graves in the God''s acre?" |
39907 | And how many more, before we ever saw the new lands?" |
39907 | And how often was I tempted to shove the paw aside and blow in his ear-- give him a real storm-- you know? |
39907 | And how should Charity have made him actually hear the slow yielding of a brook to the coming of spring? |
39907 | And if I do not give you that other key?" |
39907 | And if it be satisfactory, Mr. Hibbs, may I go to Boston this afternoon?" |
39907 | And now, what was it about yesterday evening at the tavern that you did n''t tell the Constable?" |
39907 | And once on a time was n''t I a boy of your age who believed that God was over me?" |
39907 | And so you will not serve me?" |
39907 | And tell me something-- have you ever spoken in this fashion to any man before?" |
39907 | And the end game?" |
39907 | And then the Spice Islands?" |
39907 | And then-- well....""What is it, Ru?" |
39907 | And this woman''s breast I have drawn-- beautiful, you would say?" |
39907 | And thou?" |
39907 | And was that all? |
39907 | And we''d live on what? |
39907 | And what evil is commoner than vanity? |
39907 | And where does the self end and the universe begin? |
39907 | And yet how like them too, for these artists, with the coolness of great skill, were certainly trying to convey----(_"What is truth?" |
39907 | And yet one would think that if contagion could somehow be prevented-- but where doth it breed? |
39907 | And you?" |
39907 | And you?" |
39907 | And-- honestly now, doth this appear to you like an item of female apparel?" |
39907 | Another was to inquire: Where does the self end and the universe begin?... |
39907 | Anything in that bottle?... |
39907 | Are these actual sounds of pain, or only noises of some mechanism which creates an illusion of animation?" |
39907 | Are you afeared of an old woman?" |
39907 | Are you certain, Ben?" |
39907 | Are you comfortable?" |
39907 | Are you considering, Mr. Cory, whether the caesura be intended by the poet to indicate a pause for daydreaming?" |
39907 | Are you soft on the pup?" |
39907 | Are you telling me indirectly, Uncle John, that Captain Jenks----?" |
39907 | At length she asked with much coolness:"What does that mean?" |
39907 | Ball? |
39907 | Be you afeared of me?" |
39907 | Be you going below-- sir?" |
39907 | Because Ben will go where I can not? |
39907 | Because an old man must regret the flowers he never touched, mornings when he never saw the sun? |
39907 | Because----""Now why in the world should it trouble me? |
39907 | Behind Ben a crystalline voice abruptly asked:"Will she anchor, Mr. Kenny, or come in to moor direct?" |
39907 | Behind him a cackling voice inquired:"Mr. Shawn, sir, Mr. Shawn-- be that there thing a sailor?" |
39907 | Ben fumbled for an evasion:"Student of medicine for sure?" |
39907 | Ben in the undemanding hours of the days that followed could yet inquire: Where is the way where light dwelleth? |
39907 | Ben thought: This is-- relief? |
39907 | Ben turned to Shawn, rapt and flushed, and Reuben knew he was asking for the sake of hearing Shawn speak again:"The Kraken?" |
39907 | Ben was gazing into the purple country of a wineglass, and Reuben saw that he had not drunk much, which was proper-- or was that his second glass? |
39907 | Ben wondered-- was that all the old man would say? |
39907 | Ben, art thou fevered? |
39907 | Ben, did you know I spent more than a year in that sorry city of Boston?" |
39907 | Ben, you had something more to tell?" |
39907 | Benjamin, what of the night?" |
39907 | Benjamin? |
39907 | Betrayal?..." |
39907 | Better to hear it quick and plain?" |
39907 | Boston? |
39907 | Bound to happen-- I knowed it, I knowed it, I know all the signs of what makes the world go''round, and who should know''em better? |
39907 | But I know, for a''n''t I_ alway_ said it was love''t makes the world go''round? |
39907 | But I may be your gray- headed counselor, and-- friend?" |
39907 | But Reuben thought: Who under the North Star hath ever known himself to the depth? |
39907 | But childhood ended-- when? |
39907 | But hark''ee to this, Matthew: could somebody steal the key to that leg- chain and turn the Old Man loose----""God Almighty, who''ll bell the cat? |
39907 | But how can a captain demand less than that even if he would? |
39907 | But may we return to the matter of definition?" |
39907 | But nobody could know them all.... Do the books tell anything of the cause?" |
39907 | But now that you know I know this, will there be any particular thing you wish to tell me, Ben Cory?" |
39907 | But was n''t that someone lounging by the faint lantern which ought to mark the opening of Union Street? |
39907 | But what else had his father said? |
39907 | But what is morning to a slave? |
39907 | But when Ben dared to ask him:"Where are we bound?" |
39907 | But why flee from the present even for an instant? |
39907 | But why, Ben wanted to know, why was she at sea now, and why was his head one great blind snarl of pain? |
39907 | But would they? |
39907 | But you do n''t think I''m a terrible bad heathen?" |
39907 | But-- but a''n''t it terrible short?" |
39907 | But.... How much have we?" |
39907 | By the way, where''d the bloody pot get to this time?" |
39907 | Ca n''t I help you sleep?" |
39907 | Ca n''t tempt you with Johnny?" |
39907 | Ca n''t you sleep? |
39907 | Can I say more?" |
39907 | Can we go anywhere and not be hanged? |
39907 | Can you doubt me now? |
39907 | Can you hear the water, Manuel? |
39907 | Can you own it or give it or take it? |
39907 | Can you stay the night, my dear?" |
39907 | Can you take orders from me?" |
39907 | Captain Jenks panted:"Mr. Eames-- I asked you-- be there any word how Sam Foster died?" |
39907 | Captain Jenks, hide?" |
39907 | Carey?" |
39907 | Certain of them began to think: Why not the venture without the man? |
39907 | Chips-- what''s the name of this ketch?" |
39907 | Closing soon, but do n''t be hurried, look about.... Student of medicine?" |
39907 | Comes fast, do you see? |
39907 | Commerce should be building, not gambling, a''n''t that so? |
39907 | Compassed about.... And still, did n''t I ask far less than was asked by Cabot, Drake, Magellan? |
39907 | Concerning the word_ tutas_: is this an adverb?" |
39907 | Cory?" |
39907 | Cory?" |
39907 | Cory?" |
39907 | Cory?" |
39907 | Cory?" |
39907 | Cory?" |
39907 | Cory?" |
39907 | Could a man dissemble, hiding essential doubts from a woman if he loved her? |
39907 | Could anything have been done?" |
39907 | Could he not speak at all, to damn the man who''d done the thing?" |
39907 | Could he speak then?" |
39907 | Could n''t you?... |
39907 | Could three men, four men, ever hold the Old Man, if somebody was to steal the key?" |
39907 | Could-- could it be so?" |
39907 | D''you hear, Ben? |
39907 | D''you imagine I do n''t love you, my grandson?" |
39907 | D''you think me cold, unnatural? |
39907 | Daringly Ben murmured:"What about Newport?" |
39907 | Derry?) |
39907 | Derry?--the watch? |
39907 | Did Heaven and Hell fill everything beyond the earth? |
39907 | Did I hear you translate it as''moved''?" |
39907 | Did I not say they were all phantoms, all but you and me?" |
39907 | Did I show it, Ben?" |
39907 | Did I snarl, or squeak?..._"Of course. |
39907 | Did I? |
39907 | Did he discover, percontate and make manifest this crapulent, this obscene and overweening impudicity? |
39907 | Did n''t I say she''d be the lucky thing, when I took thee and Reuben up the Mystic to watch her a- building on the ways?" |
39907 | Did n''t I take ship as a common seaman when I was twenty? |
39907 | Did not John Eliot do so?) |
39907 | Did not Reuben at fifteen discover a purpose? |
39907 | Did not your friend himself commend his soul to God? |
39907 | Did they do wrong?" |
39907 | Did true silence ever come to the open sea?--say, in that time when the ship_ Providence_ in her passage to Recife lay becalmed? |
39907 | Did we not go to Cambridge not long ago and discuss your situation with Mr. Leverett himself? |
39907 | Did you not know it?" |
39907 | Did you not?" |
39907 | Did_ he_ ever go within four foot of the end of that chain? |
39907 | Dimly frightened and not intending his own words, Ben asked:"Someone important?" |
39907 | Do I still say it badly, Amadeus? |
39907 | Do n''t I stay alive because Hell wo n''t have me? |
39907 | Do n''t the key hang on a cord at the devil''s neck, and is it ever off him?... |
39907 | Do n''t they tell he''s not even master of his own bowels? |
39907 | Do n''t we all suffer small cuts and bruises repeatedly and take no harm by it?" |
39907 | Do you believe in God?" |
39907 | Do you enjoy it?" |
39907 | Do you hear me?" |
39907 | Do you know that in all history no epidemic hath ever been overcome, nor even much lightened? |
39907 | Do you know you was stepping direct for that quicksand?" |
39907 | Do you pray?" |
39907 | Do you see it?" |
39907 | Do you wish to live?" |
39907 | Does he know I am aboard?" |
39907 | Double Indians-- why? |
39907 | Dummy? |
39907 | Dyckman and others-- how many? |
39907 | Dyckman?" |
39907 | Eames?" |
39907 | Even if true, why should it mean anything? |
39907 | Eyes drawing sand?" |
39907 | Father asked:"There''s been cattle killed?" |
39907 | Fell and could n''t rise with the liquor in him-- oh, when the singing stopped I did think some friend----""Singing? |
39907 | Filled in twenty minutes, no fault of Jenks, and did n''t he bring off every man alive in one boat and one damned little dory? |
39907 | For that matter, what did England herself really understand of the New World? |
39907 | Forgiving a thousand things I''d never take from any other man?" |
39907 | French Jack? |
39907 | Fruit and clams?" |
39907 | Full of good things? |
39907 | Gloucester? |
39907 | God then is synonymous with first cause?" |
39907 | Good work, women, children, warmth of an earned fireside? |
39907 | Grimes yielded it without a murmur, and Reuben ran, unthinking, sure- footed, avoiding the hummocks and the marshy hollows, shouting:"Where are you? |
39907 | Had he stumbled into sin without knowing it? |
39907 | Had she a fair passage?" |
39907 | Have I not alway gone alone? |
39907 | Have I not seen Pacific moonrise where no land is, and the gray and silver piled higher than the North Star Polaris?" |
39907 | Have n''t I made you laugh?" |
39907 | Have we not spoke together a thousand times like friends? |
39907 | Have you ever heard of such a thing as stealing a man''s dreams?" |
39907 | Have you ever heard tell of one named Jack Marsh, or some say it should be Judah Marsh, or Judas?" |
39907 | Have you no pity? |
39907 | Have you? |
39907 | He and Dummy will make ready to haul me the tack-- will you move, man?" |
39907 | He asked with care:"Here?" |
39907 | He described no others?" |
39907 | He had been gazing off to the southwest, but now, since the blue- eyed stare had swung around to Ben, Ben asked:"Mr. Shawn, are we tacking?" |
39907 | He said:''Will they not ask him concerning ends and means? |
39907 | He say strong,''You coq?'' |
39907 | He shall be brought before the body, and does any man doubt the wounds will bleed?" |
39907 | He thought:_ What do they know?_ He stood as tall as he could, waving the green spear, and shouted at them:"I know you! |
39907 | He was hungry, yes, but was n''t some difficulty connected with the idea of eating? |
39907 | He''d favor it so-- wouldn''t he?" |
39907 | He''s very close to your heart, is he not?" |
39907 | Her Majesty''s law do n''t reach there, ha? |
39907 | Hi!--that wind''s pure easterly, and will that be meaning rain by morning in this part of the world?" |
39907 | Hibbs?" |
39907 | His breath was difficult; he looked into damp palms and thought: What the devil am I contemplating? |
39907 | Honestly, Reuben, a''n''t it a_ hell_ of a wig?" |
39907 | How can you cancel a hurt when there''s no way to turn back the clock? |
39907 | How could even a child suppose the disaster was on his account? |
39907 | How did he die, Mr. Eames? |
39907 | How did you survive till I came to you?" |
39907 | How long? |
39907 | How many times did you strike?" |
39907 | How old art thou?" |
39907 | How they hangin'', m''lud?" |
39907 | How to choose? |
39907 | How''s that?" |
39907 | How-- how much?" |
39907 | How? |
39907 | Hoy, and Charity-- how''s my lady Charity?" |
39907 | I allow_ he_ ca n''t bear no laughing at-- now do n''t betray me, do n''t never let it out I said no such of a thing-- you would n''t, boy?" |
39907 | I am one of the fortunate, did n''t you know?" |
39907 | I did confess to you about that-- long ago, remember? |
39907 | I did right? |
39907 | I do n''t think Ru''s been sleeping well-- red- eyed in the morning, and d''you know I ca n''t ask? |
39907 | I have heard Judge Sewall himself declare that disorder increaseth continually, but doth the power of my office increase also? |
39907 | I might translate:''Why was it that Daedalus fluttered safe wings?''" |
39907 | I only meant to ask-- does it trouble thee, that I like to put my arm over thy shoulder, sometimes kiss thy cheek? |
39907 | I only thought-- that there part about forswearing allegiance-- well, sir----""You wished it more strongly expressed, belike?" |
39907 | I only....""Only what?" |
39907 | I pray you, Mr. Hibbs, would you sit the other side of the lamp? |
39907 | I say God is far away, no whit concerned with man...._""Sir, will you not look up?" |
39907 | I sought audience with your Governor Dudley himself-- Mother of God, would he even admit me to the bloody presence? |
39907 | I suppose he could use it?" |
39907 | I take it, Mr. Derry, you''ve told us everything Mr. Dyckman was able to say before he died?" |
39907 | I thought only his body was there, and he the other side of the moon-- but of course a funeral is a poor time to meet anyone.... Rosemary? |
39907 | I thought-- I certainly thought----""What, Ben?" |
39907 | I trust you met no inconvenience?" |
39907 | I trust your grandfather is well?" |
39907 | I understand you dined yesterday evening with Mr. Cory here, at the Lion Tavern on Ship Street?" |
39907 | I understand your synecdoche, or do I mean hypallage?" |
39907 | I was fond of Joe Day-- made me think of Jesse Plum, the tales he could tell.... What''s Kate contriving that smells so good all over the house?" |
39907 | I was fretting at that question the other night-- only I came to it from the other side, wondering, what is disease? |
39907 | I wonder could there be word of her in Physiologus?... |
39907 | I would-- I would....""What, Reuben?" |
39907 | I''ll come later, ha? |
39907 | I''ll fetch you a drop of brandy, is n''t it? |
39907 | I''ll never settle anywhere till I die, and wo n''t that be under the salt water where nothing marks the place a man''s vanity ended?... |
39907 | I''m drinking first from the same bottle, am I not? |
39907 | If I am evil, who set the standard whereby men and women are to be judged? |
39907 | If I said, however, that living is a journey, would that be a simile?" |
39907 | If our own trail ends here, what can they think? |
39907 | If so, what are they, and how was one who had lived three years with the calm skepticism of John Kenny to believe in them? |
39907 | If the present alone is real, then do we ourselves create it from moment to moment? |
39907 | If we got to go back to the ketch, suppose we might-- do something?... |
39907 | If you will not serve me-- as yet-- perhaps you will serve the ketch? |
39907 | If you-- if we can take care of Shawn and the others, you would release the Captain?" |
39907 | In fact he is....""Poo?" |
39907 | In fantasy Ben saw a gleam of rugged friendliness( respect?) |
39907 | In the spring, perhaps, before such time as you''ll be too busied with the plowing and all?" |
39907 | Is it a call?" |
39907 | Is it for us to question the judgment? |
39907 | Is it from Aesop?" |
39907 | Is it one of his bad nights, Reuben?" |
39907 | Is it possible that was only three weeks ago now? |
39907 | Is n''t he for Harvard in the autumn, with thee?" |
39907 | Is n''t it the destroying of the one thing we know we possess? |
39907 | Is n''t the land fair, Ben? |
39907 | Is no one aloft?" |
39907 | Is not the land fair?" |
39907 | Is she fair, Ben? |
39907 | Is she kind?" |
39907 | Is that what you meant?" |
39907 | Is the house as you remember it?" |
39907 | Is there a difference?" |
39907 | Islands-- continents.... Why should Spain and France sit a- straddle of half the known earth? |
39907 | It would not do for Reuben to guess how puzzled he was; craftily he asked:"How far you think we came from Hatfield?" |
39907 | It''s the clear plain thing what you say, but d''you know I never had the thought myself? |
39907 | Jenks turned slowly to examine him, as one who wished to ask: Who a devil''s name are you? |
39907 | John Kenny asked:"And what is truth?" |
39907 | John Kenny asked:"Did this Dutchman speak of others?" |
39907 | Judah Marsh? |
39907 | Kenny?" |
39907 | Killed by the savages?" |
39907 | Know what he did? |
39907 | Known him long?" |
39907 | Ledyard? |
39907 | Like a judge?" |
39907 | Make him over into something the Devil himself would n''t own? |
39907 | Manuel? |
39907 | Manuel? |
39907 | Martinique? |
39907 | May I ask what years you have itself?" |
39907 | Maybe a word from him would be of use?" |
39907 | Meanwhile, the memory of her double wink helped him to repair the fabric of sentiment.... Where to? |
39907 | Might I not go with you? |
39907 | Mind if I''m touching your hump for luck, Dummy? |
39907 | More difficult? |
39907 | More full of earthly significance?--if so, to whom?" |
39907 | More important? |
39907 | Mph!--so peradventure art is good for something?" |
39907 | Mr. Cory, I take it they have peeped in your presence?" |
39907 | Mr. Dyckman was murdered?" |
39907 | Mr. Eames, did any go alive on the sloop?" |
39907 | Mr. Kenny sighed and obliged:"You heard, from your friend at Gloucester--?" |
39907 | Must I now be angered with you?" |
39907 | Must you stay for my senile chattering?" |
39907 | Must_ I_ wait on the needs of this moaning monster?" |
39907 | Nay, Lord, ha''n''t I been in irons myself, my life long, with this purple face? |
39907 | Nay, think of it, Ru Cory, why not? |
39907 | No cursing and swearing, boy!--I ca n''t abide it.... Did something happen maybe? |
39907 | No unkindness to himself and others to live with the conversation of a hog, to spend all the years God gave him in utter blasphemy?" |
39907 | No unkindness?" |
39907 | Nobody understands the power of the mind over the flesh-- or ought I to say, over the rest of the flesh? |
39907 | Not much there, ha, to make a man think of the green land?... |
39907 | Nothing''s truly warm since Mother died, therefore I was deluded...."Ru, what''s the time?" |
39907 | Nothing?" |
39907 | Now I see you''re-- not, quite, and I...."His own courage amazing him, Ben said:"And thou, Faith? |
39907 | Now, how many men would it require, to get_ Artemis_ home to Boston?" |
39907 | Now, if everyone went there would n''t be meeting- houses to hold''em.... Do you like going?" |
39907 | O Lord Jesus, is it coming day already? |
39907 | Ochone!--how could a man be looking on the ugly thing, the mother she was, and not have pity?" |
39907 | Of course, Mr. Derry, I remember Avery, as who would not?" |
39907 | Of-- of poetic spirit, would n''t you say? |
39907 | Oh, I wish----""You''re drunk, and no money-- remember? |
39907 | Oh, my brother....""Your brother?" |
39907 | Oh, the doctor?" |
39907 | On the Sabbath, engaged in preventing others from ungodliness, how could he find proper time to look to his own soul? |
39907 | One of the lights near the hill road winked out, a friend gone away.... Cry out? |
39907 | Ooh!--he done all that commotion last night?" |
39907 | Or back here on the deck belike, so to sail with Captain Shawn when the rest of us is maybe dried up and burnt too black to stink? |
39907 | Or did I truly? |
39907 | Or had they been there forever? |
39907 | Or will you now be trundling aft to tell the Captain what old Ledyard said to you?" |
39907 | Out of this blank two remote voices spoke with needle sharpness:"_ Goodm''n Cory?_""_ They''ve shot him, Jesse._"Maybe after that he had fainted. |
39907 | Pacific nights-- deep as any night of the soul, and will you be telling me of a deeper dark than that? |
39907 | Peter?" |
39907 | Pleased, my dear?" |
39907 | Poor lump, have I not given him vision and purpose? |
39907 | Pulling an oar? |
39907 | Quite gently Shawn asked;"All quiet, Ben?" |
39907 | Rattle the door, bang on the walls? |
39907 | Remember the bosun Joe Day? |
39907 | Remember you told me how some time soon, whenever it happened, I''d be spending the seed?" |
39907 | Remembering a narrow gray face advancing in the snow:--If I had died then, who would walk in this fog in this year''s May? |
39907 | Reuben muttered:"Dare we sit elsewhere?" |
39907 | Reuben said aloud:"Why?..." |
39907 | Reuben thought: What''s it to Shawn? |
39907 | Reuben, thou art still growing-- many more changes-- let them come to pass-- heavens, what else can anyone do? |
39907 | Ru, what was that?--you started to say that if I sail, then you also--?" |
39907 | Running away? |
39907 | Satisfactory, Reuben?" |
39907 | Shall God rule by chance? |
39907 | Shawn asked of no one in particular:"Had Mr. Dyckman wife and children?" |
39907 | Shawn did not rave or babble or foam at the mouth; he never acted as one possessed of a devil ought to act, and besides, are there any devils? |
39907 | Shawn spoke with ugly patience:"I said go, and will I be explaining? |
39907 | Shawn?" |
39907 | Shawn?" |
39907 | Shawn?" |
39907 | Shawn?" |
39907 | Shawn?" |
39907 | Shawn?" |
39907 | Shawn?... |
39907 | Shining with relief, Ben said:"''Plied''?" |
39907 | Sir, I asked myself, could that be anyone but Matthew Ledyard that was carpenter of the_ Artemis_? |
39907 | Sir, do you doubt the separateness of soul and body?" |
39907 | Sleep got thee, Ru? |
39907 | So consider-- would you say there are_ any_ activities of the mind that would not deserve the name of madness if sorely exaggerated?" |
39907 | So he did....""Why should I be angry?" |
39907 | So he loseth nothing else, no harm done, ha, Mr. Shawn? |
39907 | So shall we go?" |
39907 | So?... |
39907 | Some kind of shack over there-- see it? |
39907 | Some tea, ha?" |
39907 | Some- way, it do n''t seem....""You think he may be angry with me?" |
39907 | Somehow I ca n''t ever do anything without first wondering, how would he do it, what would he think of it? |
39907 | Something for the-- for what I believe fair young maids do call a bride chest?" |
39907 | Something happen, Master Benjamin?--maybe Monday?" |
39907 | Something hot to drink? |
39907 | Something?" |
39907 | Sou''-sou''east, d''you hear? |
39907 | Step further away from the hatch, will you?" |
39907 | Still at the hearth, watching the fire because his vision needed a refuge, Reuben asked:"Sir, may I detain you for one question more?" |
39907 | Suppose, somehow----? |
39907 | Supposing I could?" |
39907 | Swim among the fishes?" |
39907 | Tell me something, Ben, and do n''t be angry-- remember how Mother used to call me Puppy?" |
39907 | Tell me where he''s been and what did he see?" |
39907 | That minikin shivering old man, that homunculus, that thing, master of Europe and the West? |
39907 | That was me-- old Cory, old Ben Cory, know him? |
39907 | That was the last he spoke.... Are you dreaming, Charity?" |
39907 | That''s real Latin, Master Reuben? |
39907 | That-- is your intention?" |
39907 | The axe-- came-- down.... Then what? |
39907 | The gossip that''s gone on about us, all these years, it''s become a-- a-- what''s the word I want?" |
39907 | The great ventures draw his heart-- and why not, seeing that in the past he''s won them? |
39907 | The key jammed; Anna Lloyd shuffled up behind him wheezing:"Now what''s all this, boy?" |
39907 | The look in her brown face-- widening of brown eyes, slight parting of friendly lips-- not pity, surely? |
39907 | The men of the_ Schouven_--how many, Shawn? |
39907 | The poor scrap of money he may have had with him-- what''s money beside a man''s life, Mother of God?" |
39907 | The sergeant offered a leather flask and Jesse grabbed his arm, muttering uneasily:"Water?" |
39907 | The sloop was worthless except for her provisions and so must be burned, but would they not go with him? |
39907 | The thought might be dutiful and correct, yet was he actually praising the Lord for having made Ben beautiful? |
39907 | The young apple tree by the kitchen garden-- might that be in bloom this morning, and Reuben there to see it? |
39907 | The youth was swooping on when Joseph Cory asked:"Boy-- who did? |
39907 | The-- docks?" |
39907 | There goes my thread again and I was n''t even pulling at it, they need n''t to make it so miserable weak, do they? |
39907 | These men with us-- what are they but phantoms, all of''em? |
39907 | They''re the worst, did n''t you know? |
39907 | Think this''ll cover our tracks?" |
39907 | Thirteen, was it?" |
39907 | This had happened before-- how many times? |
39907 | Those with wild delusions?" |
39907 | Thou may''st have wondered too, why I live so like a monk? |
39907 | Thou wast six that year, Benjamin, and all warrior with no mind to be hustled out of the way-- remember?" |
39907 | Throw me a clean pair of drawers, will you, like a fair angel, Ben? |
39907 | To Ben he appeared a stupid and trivial man with babyish pop eyes-- couldn''t the fellow understand that Goodman Cory was dead? |
39907 | To-- to say something beautiful I could n''t forget, even though....""Even though----?" |
39907 | Turn our heads, and faith, do n''t she go down again to the bottom of the well, the way we''ve had our labor for nothing? |
39907 | Two men must be rolling about all over the forward deck-- which two? |
39907 | Uh-- don''t you think so?" |
39907 | Uncle John was asking:"Did you come afoot, sir, all the way to Roxbury, and at night?" |
39907 | Uncle John, Reuben thought, is another who forgives much, and why did I never think of_ that_ before? |
39907 | Under cover of her wailing laughter he muttered in Ben''s ear:"Ca n''t you see she loves you? |
39907 | Understand that? |
39907 | Up and off like a little bull? |
39907 | Up the hill and east....""That might be the last house, you think?" |
39907 | WHY NOT?_"Not him. |
39907 | Walk easy- don''t give in to it, boy.... You''re to be married?" |
39907 | Was Jenks''daughter there?" |
39907 | Was he a coward, that he should die a little whenever some obscure night noise resembled distant shouts or gunfire? |
39907 | Was he not close in the here- and- now? |
39907 | Was n''t it Ball mostly that set me against the Old Man? |
39907 | Was she beautiful?" |
39907 | Was she only a wolf? |
39907 | Was this forest under the sea? |
39907 | We all die, do n''t we? |
39907 | We need all our wits to find the way here.... Can you make out the sled- marks? |
39907 | We spoke of it, coming home from seeing_ Artemis_ return-- did we not?" |
39907 | Well, how could they? |
39907 | Well, what should that be to you?" |
39907 | Well-- might not Uncle John suppose he had been invited to dine at the Jenks house, and so not be troubled? |
39907 | Welland?" |
39907 | What about Dummy?" |
39907 | What about Harvard, Ru?" |
39907 | What ails thee, boy?" |
39907 | What am I?_ What is fear? |
39907 | What am I?_ What is fear? |
39907 | What art thou saying, Charity? |
39907 | What did I say to disturb thee?" |
39907 | What did you do with the hide?" |
39907 | What did you say, Lottie?" |
39907 | What did you say?" |
39907 | What do I call the pretty young gentleman that''s lost his pretty tongue, Mr. Shawn? |
39907 | What do you yourself think would be right for me to do with you, a liar, a wilderness child who hath something like the conversation of a savage?" |
39907 | What does it say, Manuel?" |
39907 | What does that mean?... |
39907 | What for?" |
39907 | What hath Kate wrought, do you know? |
39907 | What if nothing is real at all except the present moment? |
39907 | What if she discovered with shock that he had not seen the inside of a meeting- house since coming to Roxbury?... |
39907 | What is it, Faith?" |
39907 | What is it?" |
39907 | What is madness?... |
39907 | What is memory? |
39907 | What next?" |
39907 | What of all those in Deerfield who did pray? |
39907 | What was bravery anyway, and why could you never be certain you possessed it? |
39907 | What was his name?" |
39907 | What was it you seen in the cabin, Joey?" |
39907 | What was it? |
39907 | What''s it mean?" |
39907 | What''s that you were asking? |
39907 | What''s that?" |
39907 | What''s the matter, Mistress Charity?" |
39907 | What''s this disorder, and thou naked and shameless?" |
39907 | What''s this part I''m eating now and enjoying so?" |
39907 | What''s up?" |
39907 | What''s your name?" |
39907 | What''ve I got left any man could take from me? |
39907 | What? |
39907 | What_ is_ contagion? |
39907 | When did that happen?" |
39907 | When, pray, and how, may a man arise to inquire?" |
39907 | Where are you?" |
39907 | Where are you?..._ Constable Derry had lent the searchers a sturdy man from the Select Watch. |
39907 | Where do children go, Amadeus?" |
39907 | Where does the self end and the universe begin? |
39907 | Which ones? |
39907 | Who a devil''s name is Shawn?" |
39907 | Who ever can see himself?" |
39907 | Why God?... |
39907 | Why I have never married?" |
39907 | Why could I never draw his face when he was gone?... |
39907 | Why did I say that, Ben? |
39907 | Why did I say, the_ color_ of the western sea?" |
39907 | Why do you press me so? |
39907 | Why have I never desired women?" |
39907 | Why may n''t they enter us sometimes, causing the ills we ca n''t explain? |
39907 | Why must it be so?... |
39907 | Why not float, friend?" |
39907 | Why not medicine? |
39907 | Why rosemary? |
39907 | Why should God listen to such a squeak? |
39907 | Why should God listen?... |
39907 | Why should it stick in my mind?" |
39907 | Why should the slave pity him? |
39907 | Why should_ he_ step forward so, where Uncle John must be aware of him, and put on a plain show of anger at the bringer of bad news? |
39907 | Why the knife, little Benjamin?" |
39907 | Why think now of poor old Reuben Cory? |
39907 | Why would n''t I? |
39907 | Why''s that?" |
39907 | Why, bugger''em all, s''s I, and you too-- a''n''t I meek and lowly? |
39907 | Why? |
39907 | Why? |
39907 | Why?" |
39907 | Why?... |
39907 | Why?... |
39907 | Will Rob let''em ripen this year, I wonder?" |
39907 | Will they not ask him how far he would go to secure a vessel so to be another Francis Drake?'' |
39907 | Will you be forcing me to destroy you? |
39907 | Will you be in haste to return home?" |
39907 | Will you continue?" |
39907 | Will you go to the kitchen and fetch a pot of coffee for it?" |
39907 | Will you heave to, sir? |
39907 | Will you look over there-- sir?" |
39907 | Will you look to the northeast?" |
39907 | Will you not come in and rest a moment?" |
39907 | Will you not mend, sir?" |
39907 | Will you not say it? |
39907 | Will you not share it?" |
39907 | Will you not?" |
39907 | Will you speak your news?" |
39907 | Will you stay the night? |
39907 | Will you tell me how he died?" |
39907 | Wish us to stay beca''med forever? |
39907 | With another picture maybe, so to keep you company?" |
39907 | With the better part of a generous monthly allowance in his breeches, Ben thought: Why return at once? |
39907 | With your charmed young life, so even the tropic sun wo n''t strike you down? |
39907 | Wo n''t he? |
39907 | Wo n''t you tell the rest, Ben? |
39907 | Word arrived about us?" |
39907 | Would it sit fair with your conscience to help me run for it? |
39907 | Would n''t you think he was bearing down smack onto the bow of that three- master? |
39907 | Would that man know( could I ask him?) |
39907 | Would there then be any part of this earth where Amadeus and I might go, and not be hated, driven, feared, utterly condemned?... |
39907 | Would you do that much, if I can help you in this thing?" |
39907 | Would you have everyone perfect, devil any lapse from virtue, and yourself a saint in ivory?" |
39907 | Would you wish to behold the picture I made of swallows under the water all naked of any feathers and one on the brink?" |
39907 | You are certain?" |
39907 | You are not a believer, I think? |
39907 | You ask me, what of Gideon Hibbs; you ask, oh, where is he? |
39907 | You can imagine, I suppose, what these are-- these flowing, overlapping bands?" |
39907 | You can not expect to share in any prizes----""Do you fancy I ever would?" |
39907 | You did as he ordered?" |
39907 | You did n''t know?" |
39907 | You do n''t mind, I hope, if I talk a certain amount of shit?" |
39907 | You do n''t suppose----?" |
39907 | You do n''t take it unkind? |
39907 | You killed your wolf....""Ben, what of Ledyard? |
39907 | You know-- spill salt at supper? |
39907 | You like gold?..." |
39907 | You like women, boy, so pretty? |
39907 | You live here in Boston?" |
39907 | You mean it, do n''t you?" |
39907 | You mean-- what do you mean, Ben?" |
39907 | You must see it, Beneen, the way I have no choice?" |
39907 | You see now, do n''t you? |
39907 | You see what a naughty heartless old woman I am already? |
39907 | You see? |
39907 | You think God forgives such a thing? |
39907 | You think I could cry when I saw my people killed? |
39907 | You think there''s any place in the world for us now? |
39907 | You think----?" |
39907 | You was of Deerfield, I think?" |
39907 | You wish him to speak, do you not?" |
39907 | You wish the creature buried among the Saints?" |
39907 | You''d suppose that the sentiment of an aging man, would n''t you? |
39907 | You?" |
39907 | Your heart, is it? |
39907 | Your shoes-- no, bugger it, these''re mine, where''d you put yours?" |
39907 | _ And if there be no Spice Islands, where shall I go?__ Chapter Six_ On Saturday began a long lisping April rain. |
39907 | _ And will again._ She thought: How else could it be, after all? |
39907 | _ Chapter Four_"In such a gale, and my father shot down, and no one at the helm?" |
39907 | _ Could I kill a wolf again if there was need? |
39907 | _ From what?_ Good God, not from Uncle John Kenny, the soul of generosity! |
39907 | _ Relief?_"Yes, sir. |
39907 | _ There must be something I can do...._"Mr. Hibbs, was Reuben uncertain what time he would come home?" |
39907 | _ Was that good enough? |
39907 | _ What are you? |
39907 | _ What if I undertake what I could never do before? |
39907 | _ Where are you? |
39907 | _ Where are you?_ The question could be directed nowhere except into the rolling fog and the dark. |
39907 | _ Will_ you go on, Rob?" |
39907 | _ Will_ you tell me where your shoes are?" |
39907 | had amazed and somewhat frightened her by coming true? |
39907 | or''Well, Captain?''" |
39907 | she said--"do you see? |
6434 | By whose authority? |
6434 | Has he proved a coward or a traitor? |
6434 | What can you do? |
6434 | Who is so foolish as to believe that there are people on the other side of the world, walking with their heels upward, and their heads hanging down? 6434 Who run?" |
6434 | ''Do I understand you to say that you have struck?'' |
6434 | 103 What efforts were made to resist the law? |
6434 | 111. Who was"Poor Richard"? |
6434 | 112. Who were the"Green Mountain Boys"? |
6434 | 122. Who succeeded General Schuyler? |
6434 | 134. Who is said to have used the words,"A little more grape, Captain Bragg"? |
6434 | 150. Who was the"old man eloquent"? |
6434 | 154. Who was elected second President? |
6434 | 156. Who was the inventor of the cotton- gin? |
6434 | 166. Who were the"Silver Greys"? |
6434 | 177. Who are the"Mormons"? |
6434 | 183. Who were the"Filibusters"? |
6434 | 184. Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | 195. Who was President in 1812--1832--1846--1850--1861? |
6434 | 196. Who was elected fifteenth President? |
6434 | 20. Who said,"I would rather be right than be President"? |
6434 | 23 Did Columbus waver? |
6434 | 270. Who was elected President? |
6434 | 281. Who became President on the death of Lincoln? |
6434 | 31. Who was President from 1787( the adoption of the Constitution) to 1789? |
6434 | 31. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 33. Who said,"I am not worth purchasing, but such as I am the king of England is not rich enough to buy me"? |
6434 | 39. Who entered New York harbor next after Verrazani? |
6434 | 42. Who, in a frail canoe, on a stormy night, visited an Indian wigwam to save the lives of his enemies? |
6434 | 51. Who fired the first gun in the French and Indian war? |
6434 | 54. Who was called the"Great Pacificator"? |
6434 | 58. Who was"Rough and Ready"? |
6434 | 59. Who was the"Sage of Monticello"? |
6434 | 75. Who drafted the Declaration of Independence? |
6434 | 75. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 76. Who secured its adoption in the Convention? |
6434 | 79. Who was the"bachelor President"? |
6434 | 89. Who used the expression,"We have met the enemy, and they are ours"? |
6434 | 93 Commerce? |
6434 | A bill of attainder? |
6434 | A navy? |
6434 | A rain? |
6434 | A stone wall? |
6434 | ARTICLE V. What provisions are made with regard to a trial for capital offences? |
6434 | After this fort had been taken, a British officer entering asked,"Who commands here?" |
6434 | After whom ought this continent to have been named? |
6434 | Alexander Hamilton? |
6434 | Algiers? |
6434 | Amusing story of the longevity of the Indians? |
6434 | An ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | And even if a ship could perchance get around there safely, how could it ever get back? |
6434 | And then, how can a ship get there? |
6434 | Andrew Jackson? |
6434 | Appellate jurisdiction? |
6434 | Appointment of ambassadors? |
6434 | Are earth- works permanent? |
6434 | Are there any remains of this people now existing? |
6434 | Are these stories credible? |
6434 | At the South? |
6434 | At the north? |
6434 | At what date does the history of this country begin? |
6434 | Authors and inventors? |
6434 | Bankruptcies? |
6434 | Before whom did he lay his plan? |
6434 | Bill of attainder? |
6434 | Borrowing money? |
6434 | Boston? |
6434 | By annexation? |
6434 | By conquest? |
6434 | By what battle was each invasion checked? |
6434 | By what coincidence is Georgia linked with Washington? |
6434 | By what event can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what incident or peculiarity can you recollect each one? |
6434 | By what name is it commonly known? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity was it distinguished? |
6434 | By what providential circumstance did the Americans escape? |
6434 | By what route were the goods from the East obtained? |
6434 | By what two battles was the contest at the south closed? |
6434 | By whom and on what occasion were the words used,"Millions for defence, but not one cent for tribute"? |
6434 | By whom and under what circumstances was the expression used,"Give me liberty or give me death"? |
6434 | By whom was the Albemarle colony settled? |
6434 | By whom was the Carteret colony settled? |
6434 | By whose advice? |
6434 | California? |
6434 | Calling forth the militia? |
6434 | Can a Congressman hold another office at the same time?] |
6434 | Can a criminal be forced to witness against himself? |
6434 | Can a criminal or an apprentice escape by fleeing into another state? |
6434 | Can a person be tried twice for the same crime? |
6434 | Can a religious test be exacted?] |
6434 | Can a ship sail up hill?" |
6434 | Can he receive any other emolument from the national or any state government? |
6434 | Can the citizens of one state bring a suit against another state?] |
6434 | Can the salary of a President be changed during his term of office? |
6434 | Can their salary be changed during their term of office?] |
6434 | Captain Pring? |
6434 | Cause of Brook''s assault on Sumner? |
6434 | Cause of Pontiac''s war? |
6434 | Cause of Shays''s rebellion? |
6434 | Cause of it? |
6434 | Cause of the battles of Iuka and Corinth? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Central America? |
6434 | Champions of each party? |
6434 | Character of the settlers? |
6434 | Coinage of money? |
6434 | Coining money? |
6434 | Col. George, of the Second Minnesota, being asked,"How long can you hold this pass?" |
6434 | Columbus''s idea? |
6434 | Condition of affairs in the border States? |
6434 | Condition of agriculture? |
6434 | Condition of the State? |
6434 | Condition of the army at the south? |
6434 | Condition of the colonies? |
6434 | Condition of the country? |
6434 | Counterfeiting? |
6434 | Daniel Webster? |
6434 | Declaring war? |
6434 | Defines the duties of the President, Name these duties with regard( 1) to Congress,( 2) to ambassadors, and( 3) to United States officers? |
6434 | Did England improve them? |
6434 | Did he discover the main- land? |
6434 | Did he have any idea of God? |
6434 | Did he know that he had found a new continent? |
6434 | Did he make any valuable discoveries? |
6434 | Did he remain true to his party? |
6434 | Did his discoveries antedate those of Columbus? |
6434 | Did the English government support educational interests? |
6434 | Did the Puritans obey it? |
6434 | Did the Puritans tolerate other Churches? |
6434 | Did the king treat him fairly? |
6434 | Did they have any more privileges than the Jamestown colonists? |
6434 | Difficulty with France? |
6434 | Direct tax? |
6434 | Does the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitution have any effect upon those not enumerated?] |
6434 | Dongan? |
6434 | Duration of King William''s war? |
6434 | Duties( taxes on imported or exported articles)? |
6434 | Effect of these fights? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of this campaign? |
6434 | Effect of this event? |
6434 | Effect upon New England? |
6434 | Effect upon the federalist party? |
6434 | Effect? |
6434 | Effects of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Eight clauses now follow, enumerating the_ powers denied to Congress._ What prohibition was made concerning the slave trade? |
6434 | Ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | Excises( taxes on articles produced in the country)? |
6434 | Exports from any state? |
6434 | Extent of the public lands granted? |
6434 | Fate of Jumonville? |
6434 | Fate of Pontiac? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Feeling at the North? |
6434 | Filling vacancies?] |
6434 | Florida? |
6434 | For how many years have the United States been involved in war? |
6434 | For how many years was the Revolutionary War carried on mainly at the North? |
6434 | For what crimes and in what way may any United States officer be removed from office?] |
6434 | For what did he search? |
6434 | For what did the nation wait? |
6434 | For what incident is it noted? |
6434 | For what is Ethan Allen noted? |
6434 | For what is Faneuil Hall noted? |
6434 | For what is John Brown noted? |
6434 | Freedom of speech and the press? |
6434 | From what States have Presidents been elected? |
6434 | From what continent did the first inhabitants of America probably come? |
6434 | George Washington? |
6434 | Georgia? |
6434 | Give an account of the life of Polk, What war now broke out? |
6434 | Give an account of the principal parties which have arisen since the Constitutional Convention of 1787? |
6434 | Government of the land and naval forces? |
6434 | Had these nations any idea of the extent of the country? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | How are representatives and direct taxes to be apportioned among the states? |
6434 | How are representatives apportioned among the several states? |
6434 | How are vacancies filled? |
6434 | How are vacancies in the House to be filled? |
6434 | How came Carolina to be divided? |
6434 | How came Delaware to be separated from Pennsylvania? |
6434 | How could he, I thought, with so large a family, and in such narrow circumstances, think of incurring so great an expense for me? |
6434 | How could the soldiers endure such misery? |
6434 | How did Clay pacify? |
6434 | How did England treat the colonies? |
6434 | How did General Fraser die? |
6434 | How did General Jackson avenge the massacre of Fort Minims? |
6434 | How did General Joseph E. Johnston thwart General McClellan''s plan? |
6434 | How did Gosnold shorten the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | How did Governor Bradford reply to Canonicus''s threat? |
6434 | How did Harrison gain his popularity? |
6434 | How did Jackson act? |
6434 | How did Jackson receive the name of"Stonewall"? |
6434 | How did New Jersey come to be united to New York? |
6434 | How did Penn come to obtain a grant of this region? |
6434 | How did Penn settle the territory? |
6434 | How did Pennsylvania secure the title to its soil? |
6434 | How did Sherman capture Atlanta? |
6434 | How did Sherman drive him from these positions? |
6434 | How did a half- witted boy once save a fort from capture? |
6434 | How did he escape? |
6434 | How did he find things at Hochelaga? |
6434 | How did he overcome them? |
6434 | How did he pacify the army? |
6434 | How did he settle the boundary lines? |
6434 | How did it compare with English enterprise? |
6434 | How did it end? |
6434 | How did it happen that raw militia defeated English veterans? |
6434 | How did it turn out? |
6434 | How did relief come? |
6434 | How did religious toleration vary in the colonies? |
6434 | How did speculation become rife? |
6434 | How did that happen? |
6434 | How did the British officers treat the colonial officers? |
6434 | How did the French difficulty look during this administration? |
6434 | How did the Indians compare with them? |
6434 | How did the Navigation Act affect Massachusetts? |
6434 | How did the battle of Brandywine occur? |
6434 | How did the battle of Bull Run take place? |
6434 | How did the battle of Camden occur? |
6434 | How did the battle turn on the second day? |
6434 | How did the campaign in Pennsylvania close? |
6434 | How did the campaign open? |
6434 | How did the colonists protect themselves? |
6434 | How did the contest arise in Kansas? |
6434 | How did the naval and the land warfare compare? |
6434 | How did the people travel? |
6434 | How did the plan of working in common succeed? |
6434 | How did the style of living at the south differ from that at the north? |
6434 | How did the war in Virginia open? |
6434 | How did they get here? |
6434 | How did they regard labor? |
6434 | How divided? |
6434 | How had they treated the Boston people? |
6434 | How long did the war last? |
6434 | How long do the judges hold office? |
6434 | How long is the President''s term of office? |
6434 | How long is the term of a representative? |
6434 | How long was he President? |
6434 | How many Presidents have served two terms? |
6434 | How many States were named from their principal rivers? |
6434 | How many States were necessary? |
6434 | How many amendments have been made to the Constitution? |
6434 | How many are there from each state? |
6434 | How many attacks have been made on Quebec? |
6434 | How many colleges? |
6434 | How many colonies voted for it? |
6434 | How many expeditions have been made into Canada? |
6434 | How many inter- colonial wars were there? |
6434 | How many invasions of Kentucky did Bragg make? |
6434 | How many invasions of the North did Lee make? |
6434 | How many kinds of government? |
6434 | How many members were there in the first House of Representatives? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents have been military men? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were Virginians? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were poor boys? |
6434 | How many prizes were captured by privateers? |
6434 | How many rebellions have occurred in our history? |
6434 | How many subsequent voyages did Columbus make? |
6434 | How many times did the rain save him? |
6434 | How many times has Fort Ticonderoga been captured? |
6434 | How may this disability be removed?] |
6434 | How much land was granted? |
6434 | How much territory did he claim? |
6434 | How must a fact tried by a jury be re- examined?] |
6434 | How often must the Census be taken? |
6434 | How often, and when, must Congress meet? |
6434 | How soon was the Constitution ratified? |
6434 | How was Bragg''s second expedition stopped? |
6434 | How was Corinth captured? |
6434 | How was Fortress Monroe protected from capture? |
6434 | How was a charter secured? |
6434 | How was each stopped? |
6434 | How was he regarded? |
6434 | How was he relieved of this difficulty? |
6434 | How was it met? |
6434 | How was it received by the colonists? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it unfitted for a new country? |
6434 | How was the Union advance on Richmond checked? |
6434 | How was the continent named? |
6434 | How was the news of Cornwallis''s surrender received? |
6434 | How was the northwestern boundary question settled? |
6434 | How was the protective tariff received? |
6434 | How was the representative population of the different states to be determined? |
6434 | How was the siege of Fort Schuyler( Stanwix) raised? |
6434 | How was the treaty received in this country? |
6434 | How was the war finally ended? |
6434 | How was this regarded at the North and at the South? |
6434 | How were the British forced to leave Boston? |
6434 | How were the Narraganset Indians kept from joining the Pequods against the whites? |
6434 | How were the difficulties ended? |
6434 | How were the ministers''salaries met? |
6434 | How were they combined into one colony? |
6434 | How were they received? |
6434 | How? |
6434 | I, Sec 2, Clause 3?] |
6434 | If a President should not be chosen by March 4, who would act as President?] |
6434 | If you include the Spanish war? |
6434 | Imports( taxes on imported articles)? |
6434 | Imposts? |
6434 | In Pennsylvania? |
6434 | In case of a vacancy, who would become President? |
6434 | In case there is no choice by the electors, how is the President elected? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington bitterly rebuke the commanding- general, and himself rally the troops to battle? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington show the most brilliant generalship? |
6434 | In what battle did both generals mass their strength on the left wing, expecting to crush the enemy''s right? |
6434 | In what battle did the Continentals gain the victory by falling back and then suddenly facing about upon the enemy? |
6434 | In what battle did the defeated general leave his wooden leg? |
6434 | In what battle was Molly Stark the watchword? |
6434 | In what battle was the left wing, when separated from the main body by a river, attacked by an overwhelming force of the enemy? |
6434 | In what battles had the opposing generals formed the same plan? |
6434 | In what cases does the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction? |
6434 | In what colony was New Jersey formerly embraced? |
6434 | In what does treason consist? |
6434 | In what estimation was he held? |
6434 | In what is the judicial power of the United States vested? |
6434 | In what spirit did Penn treat the colony? |
6434 | In what war was Lincoln a captain and Davis a lieutenant? |
6434 | In what way was the retreat conducted? |
6434 | In what were they skilled? |
6434 | In what year did these successes occur? |
6434 | In what year was it adopted?] |
6434 | In which administrations were none? |
6434 | In which was he successful? |
6434 | In whom is the executive power vested? |
6434 | In whose administration was the largest number of States admitted to the Union? |
6434 | Inferior courts? |
6434 | Is a foreign- born person eligible to the office of representative? |
6434 | Is a person so convicted liable to a trial- at- law for the same offence?] |
6434 | Is every state entitled to representation? |
6434 | Is the"union"one of states or of people? |
6434 | Issuing bills of credit( bills to circulate as money)? |
6434 | Its characteristic idea? |
6434 | Its date? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its principles? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | J. Q. Adams? |
6434 | Jackson''s? |
6434 | John C. Calhoun? |
6434 | Judges of the Supreme Court, etc.? |
6434 | Keeping troops? |
6434 | Laws with regard to drinking? |
6434 | Length of King George''s war? |
6434 | Length of Queen Anne''s war? |
6434 | Length of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Letters of marque and reprisal? |
6434 | Limits of this epoch? |
6434 | Louisiana? |
6434 | Making any other legal tender than gold or silver? |
6434 | Making peace or war? |
6434 | Manufactures? |
6434 | Maryland? |
6434 | Massachusetts? |
6434 | Meaning of the name? |
6434 | Meaning of the word California in the sixteenth century? |
6434 | Mexico? |
6434 | Michigan? |
6434 | Monroe''s? |
6434 | Naturalization? |
6434 | New Jersey? |
6434 | New Mexico? |
6434 | New York? |
6434 | North Virginia? |
6434 | Number of vessels in the Union navy? |
6434 | Object of the war in the East? |
6434 | Occasions of quarrel? |
6434 | Of Clay''s patriotism? |
6434 | Of General Grant? |
6434 | Of how many members does the Senate of the United States consist? |
6434 | Of the luxurious living? |
6434 | Of their charge on Fort Wagner? |
6434 | Of what President was it said that"if his soul were turned inside out, not a spot could be found upon it"? |
6434 | Of what does Congress consist? |
6434 | Of what general was this said to be always true? |
6434 | Of what statesman was it said that"he was in the public service fifty years, and never attempted to deceive his countrymen"? |
6434 | Of what value were these charters? |
6434 | Of what value were they? |
6434 | Of what value? |
6434 | Of whom was it said that"he touched the dead corpse of public credit, and it sprang upon its feet"? |
6434 | On what conditions were the seceded States finally readmitted to their former position in the Union? |
6434 | On what expedition was Jackson sent? |
6434 | On what issue was Polk elected President? |
6434 | On what mountains have battles been fought? |
6434 | On what plundering tours did Arnold go? |
6434 | Oregon? |
6434 | Organizing the militia? |
6434 | Over what places has Congress exclusive legislation? |
6434 | Payments from the Treasury? |
6434 | Peaceable assembly and petition? |
6434 | Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Peru? |
6434 | Piracies? |
6434 | Post- offices and post- roads? |
6434 | Principal event? |
6434 | Principles of the democratic party? |
6434 | Provision made for public worship? |
6434 | Raising and supporting armies? |
6434 | Rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | Regulating commerce? |
6434 | Reprieves and pardons? |
6434 | Restrictions of the trustees? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of this clashing between Congress and the President? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Results of these explorations? |
6434 | Results of this war? |
6434 | Since these lands became the property of the general government, a most perplexing question has been, Shall they be free? |
6434 | South Carolina? |
6434 | State militia? |
6434 | State of education in New England? |
6434 | State of party feeling? |
6434 | Stephen A. Douglas? |
6434 | Stories told of Taylor? |
6434 | Story told of Governor Nelson? |
6434 | Story told of Jackson? |
6434 | Story told of Raleigh''s smoking? |
6434 | Story told of Washington by Mr. Potts? |
6434 | Successful candidates? |
6434 | Taylor? |
6434 | Tell the story of the old"liberty bell,"How did the campaign near New York occur? |
6434 | The Boston boys? |
6434 | The Indians, feeling this, sent to the agent of the Ohio Company the pertinent query,"Where is the Indian''s land? |
6434 | The Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | The Rocky Mountains? |
6434 | The South? |
6434 | The Stamp Act? |
6434 | The Vice President''s? |
6434 | The Virginia troops under Washington? |
6434 | The chief officers of the different executive departments? |
6434 | The conditions of peace? |
6434 | The consequence of his trip? |
6434 | The democrats? |
6434 | The effect? |
6434 | The first magnetic telegraph? |
6434 | The first steamboat? |
6434 | The impairing of contracts? |
6434 | The making of treaties? |
6434 | The officer asked him"what he was waiting for?" |
6434 | The right wing? |
6434 | The second expedition? |
6434 | The"Anti- Renters"? |
6434 | The"Barnburners"? |
6434 | The"Compromise of 1850"? |
6434 | The"Free Soilers"? |
6434 | The"Hunkers"? |
6434 | The"Know- Nothings"? |
6434 | The"Unionists"? |
6434 | The"Woolly- Heads"? |
6434 | Their views? |
6434 | This, they were sure, was carrying them to destruction, for how could they ever return against it? |
6434 | Thomas Jefferson? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | To be made a separate royal province? |
6434 | To what offices are members of Congress ineligible? |
6434 | To what party did Henry Clay belong? |
6434 | To whom did Columbus apply next? |
6434 | Trade between the United States? |
6434 | Union plan of attack? |
6434 | United States office- holder receiving presents from a foreign power? |
6434 | Using tobacco? |
6434 | Views of the federalists? |
6434 | Was Bacon a patriot or a rebel? |
6434 | Was Hudson a Dutchman? |
6434 | Was Monroe a popular man? |
6434 | Was Tyler''s administration successful? |
6434 | Was Washington ever wounded in battle? |
6434 | Was all peril to our liberties over? |
6434 | Was any attempt made by the United States authorities to relieve it? |
6434 | Was civil liberty secured under Andros? |
6434 | Was it based on the principle of self- government? |
6434 | Was it popular? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was money plenty? |
6434 | Was religious toleration granted? |
6434 | Was the English occupation permanent? |
6434 | Was the French aid of great value? |
6434 | Was the country recovering from the effects of the war? |
6434 | Was the discovery of gold profitable? |
6434 | Was the impressment of seamen general? |
6434 | Was this delusion common at that time? |
6434 | Was this permanent? |
6434 | Was this separation total? |
6434 | Was war a necessity? |
6434 | Webster? |
6434 | Were her jewels sold? |
6434 | Were the English or Americans victorious? |
6434 | Were the people pleased with the English rule? |
6434 | Were their discoveries of any value? |
6434 | Were there any blacksmiths, carpenters, etc., among them? |
6434 | Were there many books or papers? |
6434 | Were they a progressive people? |
6434 | Were they successful? |
6434 | Were they united during this epoch? |
6434 | What French navigator was the next to ascend the St. Lawrence? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs befriended Massachusetts and Virginia in their early history? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs formed leagues against the whites? |
6434 | What Indian conflict at the West? |
6434 | What Indian difficulties occurred? |
6434 | What Indian war now arose? |
6434 | What Indians visited them in the spring? |
6434 | What President elect came to Washington in disguise? |
6434 | What President followed Washington-- Taylor-- Jefferson-- Lincoln-- J. Q. Adams-- Pierce? |
6434 | What President had not voted for forty years? |
6434 | What President introduced"rotation in office"? |
6434 | What President vetoed the measures of the party which elected him to office? |
6434 | What President was impeached? |
6434 | What President was once a tailor''s apprentice? |
6434 | What Presidents died in office? |
6434 | What Presidents were not elected to that office by the people? |
6434 | What State was added during this epoch? |
6434 | What State was admitted soon after the close of the Civil War? |
6434 | What State was admitted to the Union first after the original thirteen? |
6434 | What States were named from mountain ranges? |
6434 | What Union general was now sent to this region? |
6434 | What Union general who afterward became celebrated? |
6434 | What Vice- Presidents were afterward elected Presidents? |
6434 | What action did Jackson take concerning the United States bank? |
6434 | What action did it take? |
6434 | What action did the North take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action was taken? |
6434 | What administrations have been most popular? |
6434 | What advantage did the Maryland charter confer? |
6434 | What are privateers? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications for the office of President? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications of an elector( or voter) for a representative? |
6434 | What are"State rights"? |
6434 | What army retreated at the moment of victory because the fog was so dense that it did not see how successful it was? |
6434 | What attack by the colonists at the south? |
6434 | What attacks were made by the colonists in return? |
6434 | What attempt was made on Louisburg? |
6434 | What authority has the President over the United States army and navy? |
6434 | What authority is given the Senate with regard to such bills? |
6434 | What authority was granted to the Council of New England? |
6434 | What base offer was made to Washington? |
6434 | What battle did General Gates win? |
6434 | What battle did he lose? |
6434 | What battle ensued? |
6434 | What battle occurred when both armies were marching to make a night attack upon each other? |
6434 | What battle took place in New York State? |
6434 | What battle was fought after peace was declared? |
6434 | What battle was fought and gained without a commanding officer? |
6434 | What battle was fought in Missouri? |
6434 | What battle was preceded by prayer? |
6434 | What battles did Washington win? |
6434 | What battles did he lose? |
6434 | What battles ensued? |
6434 | What battles had Taylor fought? |
6434 | What battles have been decided by an attack in the rear? |
6434 | What battles have been fought in Virginia? |
6434 | What battles have resulted in the destruction or surrender of an entire army? |
6434 | What battles occurred while Washington was falling back? |
6434 | What battles were fought? |
6434 | What became of Burr? |
6434 | What became of General Lee? |
6434 | What became of his companions? |
6434 | What became of the Plymouth Company? |
6434 | What became of the colony sent out the same year by the Plymouth company? |
6434 | What became of them? |
6434 | What beneficial influence did they have on the colony? |
6434 | What bills must originate in the House of Representatives? |
6434 | What body has the sole power of impeachment?] |
6434 | What body has the"power of legislation"? |
6434 | What branches of government are established under the first three articles of the Constitution? |
6434 | What business can a minority transact? |
6434 | What campaign was now planned by the aid of the French? |
6434 | What campaign was undertaken? |
6434 | What candidates for the presidency were nominated in 1873? |
6434 | What caused the battle of Monmouth to happen? |
6434 | What celebrated Indian was killed? |
6434 | What celebrated debate took place? |
6434 | What celebrated philosopher, when a boy, went without meat to buy books? |
6434 | What celebrated statesman was killed in a duel? |
6434 | What change in the government of the colony was made by the second charter? |
6434 | What change now took place in the government? |
6434 | What change was made by the third charter? |
6434 | What characterized the campaign at the north? |
6434 | What checked McClellan''s advance? |
6434 | What cities have undergone a siege? |
6434 | What city did he found? |
6434 | What city now occupies its site? |
6434 | What city now surrendered? |
6434 | What city was now captured? |
6434 | What claim did the Dutch found on this discovery? |
6434 | What class of people generally settled this country? |
6434 | What coincidence between this event and the Revolution? |
6434 | What coincidence? |
6434 | What colonel, when asked if he could take a battery, replied,"I''ll try, sir"? |
6434 | What colonies are named after a king or a queen? |
6434 | What colony was conquered by the British during this year? |
6434 | What colony was established the same year that Hooker went to Hartford? |
6434 | What colony was founded as a home for the poor? |
6434 | What course did Clay take? |
6434 | What course did Washington take? |
6434 | What course did he take with regard to the United States Bank? |
6434 | What course did the Duke of York take when he became King of England? |
6434 | What course did the proprietors take? |
6434 | What cruel act disgraced their victory? |
6434 | What curious fact illustrates the ruling sentiment of Massachusetts and of Virginia at that time? |
6434 | What customs familiar to us are of Dutch origin? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What declaration is made concerning the powers neither delegated to Congress nor forbidden the states?] |
6434 | What departments were established? |
6434 | What did Columbus''s friends do for him? |
6434 | What did Webster say of Hamilton? |
6434 | What did it propose? |
6434 | What did the British do? |
6434 | What did the English now do? |
6434 | What did the French do in the spring? |
6434 | What did the United States gain by the war? |
6434 | What did the armies of the centre and north do? |
6434 | What did the colonists introduce into England on their return? |
6434 | What did their peaceful discharge prove? |
6434 | What difficulties beset the government? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty now arose with England and France? |
6434 | What difficulty occurred with Cuba? |
6434 | What disastrous attempt was made by the British at the north? |
6434 | What discoveries did Gosnold make? |
6434 | What discoveries did Sebastian Cabot make? |
6434 | What discoveries did he make? |
6434 | What discoveries? |
6434 | What discovery did Balboa make? |
6434 | What discovery did Sir Francis Drake make? |
6434 | What distinguished generals have been unsuccessful candidates for the Presidency? |
6434 | What division arose among the people? |
6434 | What do the French names in the Mississippi valley indicate? |
6434 | What do the names New York, New England, New Hampshire, Georgia, Carolina, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do the names San Salvador, Santa Cruz, Vera Cruz, La Trinidad, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do you mean by"reconstruction"? |
6434 | What do you say of the naval successes? |
6434 | What do you say of the negro troops? |
6434 | What do you say of the number of the Indians? |
6434 | What do you say of the rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | What effect did they have on the English government? |
6434 | What effect was produced? |
6434 | What event closed the Mississippi campaign? |
6434 | What events attended General Burgoyne''s march south? |
6434 | What events deranged Burgoyne''s plans? |
6434 | What ex- Vice- President was tried for treason? |
6434 | What exiles settled Rhode Island? |
6434 | What expedition was undertaken against Canada? |
6434 | What fact illustrates Williams''s generosity? |
6434 | What facts strengthened his view? |
6434 | What famous despatch did Grant send? |
6434 | What famous doctrine advanced by Monroe? |
6434 | What father and son were Presidents? |
6434 | What financial measures were adopted? |
6434 | What five ex- Presidents died in the decade between 1860 and 1870? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What form of government was finally imposed upon them? |
6434 | What fort was carried by a midnight assault? |
6434 | What four nations explored the territory of the future United States? |
6434 | What four restrictions upon the Congressional powers are made in this section? |
6434 | What gallant exploit was performed by Perry? |
6434 | What general arose from a sick- bed to lead his troops into a battle in which he was killed? |
6434 | What general died at the moment of victory? |
6434 | What general escaped by riding down a steep precipice? |
6434 | What general led the advance? |
6434 | What general rushed into battle without orders and won it? |
6434 | What general was captured by the enemy? |
6434 | What general was captured through his carelessness, and exchanged for another taken in a similar way? |
6434 | What great fires happened in''71 and''72? |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to excessive bail or fine and unusual punishment?] |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to the right of bearing arms? |
6434 | What guarantees are provided concerning religious freedom? |
6434 | What held the colonies together? |
6434 | What historical memories cluster around Santo Domingo? |
6434 | What important contemporaneous events can you name? |
6434 | What important rights are secured to the accused in case of a criminal prosecution?] |
6434 | What is a charter? |
6434 | What is a senator''s term of office? |
6434 | What is a"protective tariff"? |
6434 | What is a"witch"? |
6434 | What is meant by"Reconstruction"? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to quartering soldiers upon citizens? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to unreasonable searches and warrants? |
6434 | What is said of Calhoun? |
6434 | What is said of Mount Vernon flour? |
6434 | What is said of Osceola? |
6434 | What is said of the claims made upon the land by the heirs of these proprietors? |
6434 | What is squatter sovereignty? |
6434 | What is the American doctrine? |
6434 | What is the Fifteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Fourteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Thirteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the climate in the far north along the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific coast? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to keeping and publishing a journal of the proceedings? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to state records, judicial proceedings, etc.?] |
6434 | What is the law with regard to trial by jury? |
6434 | What is the object of this provision? |
6434 | What is"Plymouth Rock"? |
6434 | What is"squatter sovereignty"? |
6434 | What issues depended on this fight? |
6434 | What journey did Champlain make? |
6434 | What kept the interest in America alive? |
6434 | What kind of war did he wage in Virginia? |
6434 | What land did he discover? |
6434 | What leaders on each side? |
6434 | What limit is assigned?] |
6434 | What limit is there to the number of representatives? |
6434 | What line was now held by the Union army? |
6434 | What location did they select? |
6434 | What massacre occurred in Kansas? |
6434 | What measures were taken to check his advance? |
6434 | What movement did Grant make against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What movement was made by General Brown? |
6434 | What movements did they make to break through the Union lines? |
6434 | What mutiny occurred? |
6434 | What name did he give it? |
6434 | What name did they give to the region? |
6434 | What nations settled the different States? |
6434 | What naval commander captured his antagonist as his own vessel was sinking? |
6434 | What naval expeditions were made? |
6434 | What navigator shortened the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | What need was felt? |
6434 | What new change was made in the government? |
6434 | What new railroad is building? |
6434 | What new trouble assailed Columbus? |
6434 | What news came in the spring? |
6434 | What noted events occurred on April 19th? |
6434 | What noted expressions of General Taylor became favorite mottoes? |
6434 | What number is needed to convict? |
6434 | What number of the members is necessary for a quorum( needed to do business)? |
6434 | What object did Penn, Lord Baltimore, and Oglethorpe each have in founding a colony in the new world? |
6434 | What offer did Queen Isabella make? |
6434 | What officer lost his life because he neglected to open a note? |
6434 | What other islands did he discover? |
6434 | What parties arose? |
6434 | What parties now arose? |
6434 | What parties were formed? |
6434 | What party adopted the views of the old federalists on the United States Bank, etc.? |
6434 | What party was arising? |
6434 | What peculiarities in the government of each? |
6434 | What penalties can be inflicted in case of conviction? |
6434 | What persecuted people settled the different colonies? |
6434 | What persons are prohibited from holding any office under the United States? |
6434 | What places captured? |
6434 | What places in Florida were captured? |
6434 | What plan did Lee now adopt? |
6434 | What plan did McClellan form? |
6434 | What plan did Washington now adopt? |
6434 | What poem has been written upon this event? |
6434 | What policy should be pursued toward the Indian? |
6434 | What political changes now took place? |
6434 | What political parties now arose? |
6434 | What portion of the continent did each explore? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the electors? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the state regulations? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the territory and propeity of the United States?] |
6434 | What power has Congress with regard to taxes? |
6434 | What power is finally given to Congress to enable it to enforce its authority? |
6434 | What power is given each House of Congress of making and enforcing rules? |
6434 | What precipitated this issue? |
6434 | What prevented Sherman''s advance into Georgia? |
6434 | What previous battle did it resemble? |
6434 | What principle did he introduce? |
6434 | What privileges has the citizen of one state in all the others? |
6434 | What prohibition was made with regard to treaties? |
6434 | What proof is required? |
6434 | What proof is there of their antiquity? |
6434 | What providential circumstance favored the attack? |
6434 | What provision for the benefit of the smaller states is attached to this article?] |
6434 | What put an end to these fears? |
6434 | What questions agitated the country at that time? |
6434 | What questions agitated the people? |
6434 | What ravages were committed by Admiral Cockburn? |
6434 | What region did Columbus think he had reached? |
6434 | What region did De Soto traverse? |
6434 | What relics of them remain? |
6434 | What religious toleration was granted in the different colonies? |
6434 | What remains of these people are found? |
6434 | What rendered Valley Forge memorable? |
6434 | What reply did Pinckney make to the base offer of the French Directory? |
6434 | What reply was made him? |
6434 | What restriction in this article has now lost all force? |
6434 | What restriction is there upon the time and place of adjournment?] |
6434 | What restrictions are laid upon the states with regard to abridging the rights of citizens?] |
6434 | What reverse happened to a part of General Harrison''s command? |
6434 | What river did he discover? |
6434 | What river was his burial place? |
6434 | What settlement did he found? |
6434 | What settlement did he make? |
6434 | What special privileges are granted to members of Congress? |
6434 | What step did Davis take? |
6434 | What story is told of Andros''s visit? |
6434 | What story is told of Colonel Miller? |
6434 | What story is told of General Reed? |
6434 | What story is told to illustrate their piety? |
6434 | What stratagems did the Indians use? |
6434 | What success did he have? |
6434 | What success did he meet? |
6434 | What success did the English meet in Acadia? |
6434 | What tea party is celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What territory has the United States acquired by purchase? |
6434 | What territory was added to the United States? |
6434 | What territory was gained by treaty? |
6434 | What territory was granted to Lord Clarendon? |
6434 | What three colonies were formed in Connecticut? |
6434 | What three ex- Presidents died on the 4th of July? |
6434 | What town and army were surrendered without firing a shot? |
6434 | What traditions about their having discovered and settled America? |
6434 | What treaties are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What treaty was made with Spain? |
6434 | What trees are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What two battles were fought in the"Wilderness"? |
6434 | What two colonies were intimately united to Massachusetts? |
6434 | What two contemporaneous events? |
6434 | What two distinguished generals of the same name served in the Confederate army? |
6434 | What union of the colonies was now formed? |
6434 | What valuable stores were seized? |
6434 | What vessels composed his fleet? |
6434 | What victories induced him to attempt each of these invasions? |
6434 | What was Coligny''s plan? |
6434 | What was Delaware styled? |
6434 | What was Grant''s plan for an expedition against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What was Laconia? |
6434 | What was Schuyler''s conduct? |
6434 | What was South Virginia? |
6434 | What was his favorite idea? |
6434 | What was his theory of founding a colony? |
6434 | What was its character? |
6434 | What was its effect on the colony? |
6434 | What was its effect? |
6434 | What was its object? |
6434 | What was its result? |
6434 | What was meant by saying that"Clay was in the succession"? |
6434 | What was necessary for the adoption of this Constitution? |
6434 | What was now the expectation of the Union army? |
6434 | What was the Ashburton treaty? |
6434 | What was the Compromise of 1850? |
6434 | What was the Confederate line of defence at the West? |
6434 | What was the Credit Mobilier? |
6434 | What was the Gadsden purchase? |
6434 | What was the High Commission? |
6434 | What was the Joint Electoral Commission? |
6434 | What was the Missouri Compromise? |
6434 | What was the Mutiny Act? |
6434 | What was the Navigation Act? |
6434 | What was the Secretary of State formerly called? |
6434 | What was the Wilmot proviso? |
6434 | What was the cause of his sudden death? |
6434 | What was the cause of the"Panic of''73"? |
6434 | What was the character of the Virginia colonists? |
6434 | What was the character of the history of New York under its four Dutch governors? |
6434 | What was the characteristic of his administration? |
6434 | What was the condition of the army? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the public finances? |
6434 | What was the conduct of Berkeley? |
6434 | What was the conduct of the assembly? |
6434 | What was the difference between the Puritans and the Pilgrims? |
6434 | What was the direct cause of war? |
6434 | What was the extent of the Spanish possessions in the new world? |
6434 | What was the feeling in Spain? |
6434 | What was the great wish of maritime nations? |
6434 | What was the importance of Roanoke Island? |
6434 | What was the important event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the issue of the next political campaign? |
6434 | What was the most prominent event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the next movement? |
6434 | What was the northeast boundary question? |
6434 | What was the nullification ordinance? |
6434 | What was the object of the"American party"? |
6434 | What was the object? |
6434 | What was the opening event of the war of 1812? |
6434 | What was the peculiarity of the attack on the Port Royal forts? |
6434 | What was the plan of John Cabot? |
6434 | What was the plan of the campaign? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward France? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward Washington? |
6434 | What was the population of the United States in 1870? |
6434 | What was the principal cause of the easy capture of the fort? |
6434 | What was the problem of that day? |
6434 | What was the question of the elections? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Congress? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Johnson? |
6434 | What was the result of the battle? |
6434 | What was the result of the war? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the situation at Richmond? |
6434 | What was the situation at the beginning of the year 1863? |
6434 | What was the size of the two armies at the close of the war? |
6434 | What was the state of education in the southern colonies? |
6434 | What was the state of geographical knowledge in Europe in the fifteenth century? |
6434 | What was the tendency of this course of conduct? |
6434 | What was the view of Sir Humphrey Gilbert? |
6434 | What was the"Dred Scott decision"? |
6434 | What was the"Fugitive Slave Law"? |
6434 | What was the"Gadsden purchase"? |
6434 | What was the"Grand Model"? |
6434 | What was the"Great Code"? |
6434 | What was the"Hartford Convention"? |
6434 | What was the"Kansas- Nebraska Bill"? |
6434 | What was the"Missouri Compromise"? |
6434 | What was the"Nullification Act"? |
6434 | What was the"O grab me Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Toleration Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Trent affair"? |
6434 | What was the"Wilmot Proviso"? |
6434 | What was the"swamp angel"? |
6434 | What was their character? |
6434 | What was their success? |
6434 | What were Lawrence''s dying words? |
6434 | What were Personal Liberty bills? |
6434 | What were Writs of Assistance? |
6434 | What were common people called? |
6434 | What were the alien and sedition laws? |
6434 | What were the effects of the Shiloh battle? |
6434 | What were the principles of the whigs? |
6434 | What were the prison ships? |
6434 | What were the relations between the proprietors and settlers? |
6434 | What were the results of French enterprise? |
6434 | What were the"alien and sedition laws"? |
6434 | What were their principles? |
6434 | What"is the Monroe Doctrine"? |
6434 | What"orders, resolutions and votes"must be submitted to the President? |
6434 | What"sole power"does the Senate possess? |
6434 | When and by whom founded? |
6434 | When and how was slavery introduced? |
6434 | When and where was he inaugurated? |
6434 | When and where was the Confederate government formed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood shed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood spilled? |
6434 | When and where was the"First Continental Congress"held? |
6434 | When and where was this? |
6434 | When can private property be taken for the public use?] |
6434 | When can the Senate choose a president_ pro tempore_( for the time being)? |
6434 | When did a fog save our army? |
6434 | When did a stone house largely decide a battle? |
6434 | When did the English awake to the importance of American discovery? |
6434 | When did the new government go into operation? |
6434 | When has an unnecessary delay cost a general a victory? |
6434 | When has the question of the public lands threatened the Union? |
6434 | When is the right of jury trial guaranteed? |
6434 | When must Congress protect the states?] |
6434 | When must the yeas and nays be entered on the journal? |
6434 | When only can he vote? |
6434 | When was a general blown up by a magazine, in the moment of victory? |
6434 | When was peace concluded? |
6434 | When was peace signed? |
6434 | When was the Constitution adopted? |
6434 | When was the Declaration of Independence adopted? |
6434 | When was the Erie Canal opened? |
6434 | When was the Mississippi River the western boundary of the United States? |
6434 | When was the first constitution given? |
6434 | When was the first gun of the Civil War fired? |
6434 | When was the first railroad constructed? |
6434 | When was the first settlement made? |
6434 | When was war declared? |
6434 | When were both forts captured? |
6434 | When were slaves introduced into this country? |
6434 | When, to whom, and by whom was the land granted? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in America? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in Canada? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first town in the United States founded? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first English settlement made? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first settlement in Delaware made? |
6434 | Where and when is it probable the American continent was discovered? |
6434 | Where did Cornwallis go after the failure of his southern campaign? |
6434 | Where did Hood go? |
6434 | Where did Raleigh plant his first colony? |
6434 | Where did he go? |
6434 | Where do they occur? |
6434 | Where does our land lie?"] |
6434 | Where is Columbus''s tomb? |
6434 | Where is Labrador? |
6434 | Where is the"Cradle of Liberty"? |
6434 | Where may a crime be committed"not within a state"? |
6434 | Where most numerous? |
6434 | Where must such a trial be held? |
6434 | Where was the capital? |
6434 | Where was the first attack? |
6434 | Where was the first legislative body held? |
6434 | Where was the war mainly fought? |
6434 | Where were the Confederates located? |
6434 | Where, when, and by whom was the first English settlement made in the United States? |
6434 | Which centuries were characterized by explorations, and which century by settlements? |
6434 | Which colonies early enjoyed the greatest liberty? |
6434 | Which colony took the Bible as its guide? |
6434 | Which is the longer, the Atlantic Cable or the Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | Which is the second oldest town in the United States? |
6434 | Which nation ultimately secured the whole region? |
6434 | Which party absorbed most of the old federalists? |
6434 | Who adopted his plan? |
6434 | Who are ineligible to the office? |
6434 | Who are required to take an oath or affirmation to support the Constitution of the United States? |
6434 | Who are the presidential electors? |
6434 | Who assumed command of the army of the Potomac? |
6434 | Who choose the representatives? |
6434 | Who chooses the other officers of the Senate? |
6434 | Who claimed this region? |
6434 | Who decides upon the"elections, returns and qualifications"of the representatives and of the senators? |
6434 | Who discovered the River St. Lawrence? |
6434 | Who earned the glory of this victory and who got it? |
6434 | Who elect the officers of the House? |
6434 | Who elect the senators? |
6434 | Who explored the Mississippi valley? |
6434 | Who finally captured it? |
6434 | Who finally captured the fort? |
6434 | Who fired the first gun of this war? |
6434 | Who first settled it? |
6434 | Who fixes and pays the salaries of members of Congress? |
6434 | Who fixes the punishment? |
6434 | Who forced it to surrender? |
6434 | Who founded Salem? |
6434 | Who gained great credit? |
6434 | Who is the president of the Senate? |
6434 | Who led the first expedition? |
6434 | Who made the first attempt to carry out Cabot''s plan? |
6434 | Who made the first voyage along the Pacific coast? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Confederate army? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Union troops? |
6434 | Who now took command? |
6434 | Who obtained a grant of the territory now embraced in Connecticut? |
6434 | Who presides when the President of the United States is impeached? |
6434 | Who settled about Massachusetts Bay? |
6434 | Who settled the different parts? |
6434 | Who succeeded Johnston in command? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded them? |
6434 | Who took command of the Union army before Washington? |
6434 | Who used them in battle? |
6434 | Who was chosen? |
6434 | Who was elected eighteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eighth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eleventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected fifth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourth President? |
6434 | Who was elected ninth President? |
6434 | Who was elected seventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixth President? |
6434 | Who was elected third President? |
6434 | Who was elected twelfth President? |
6434 | Who was entitled to the prefix Mr.? |
6434 | Who was his opponent? |
6434 | Who was its author? |
6434 | Who was the ablest of them? |
6434 | Who was the commanding general? |
6434 | Who was the first French navigator to reach the continent? |
6434 | Who was the first President of the United States? |
6434 | Who was the founder of Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Who was the hero of the fight? |
6434 | Who was the hero of this exploit? |
6434 | Who were elected President and Vice- President? |
6434 | Who were killed? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the Presidency? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the presidency in''77? |
6434 | Who were the Hessians? |
6434 | Who were the Northmen? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Puritans? |
6434 | Who were the leaders of each? |
6434 | Who were the mound- builders? |
6434 | Who were the"patroons"? |
6434 | Who"ordained and established"this Constitution? |
6434 | Whose dying words were,"Do n''t give up the ship"? |
6434 | Why are these States so named? |
6434 | Why could not sailors have crossed the ocean before as well as then? |
6434 | Why did Cortez explore that region? |
6434 | Why did Lee now march North? |
6434 | Why did Lee send Early into the Shenandoah Valley? |
6434 | Why did Mrs. Hutchinson become obnoxious? |
6434 | Why did Ponce de Leon come to the new world? |
6434 | Why did Smith leave? |
6434 | Why did he retire to Yorktown? |
6434 | Why did he seek assistance? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did not Webster and Clay become Presidents? |
6434 | Why did not the Indians disturb them? |
6434 | Why did the Americans fail? |
6434 | Why did the French in Canada extend their explorations westward to the Mississippi rather than southward into New York? |
6434 | Why did the Indians now become hostile? |
6434 | Why did the Pilgrims come to this country? |
6434 | Why did this fail? |
6434 | Why not? |
6434 | Why so called? |
6434 | Why so eagerly read? |
6434 | Why was Genet recalled? |
6434 | Why was Johnson impeached? |
6434 | Why was Maryland so named? |
6434 | Why was Montreal so named? |
6434 | Why was New England spared? |
6434 | Why was Virginia so named? |
6434 | Why was it made? |
6434 | Why was it oppressive? |
6434 | Why was it passed? |
6434 | Why was it so named? |
6434 | Why was not Adams re- elected? |
6434 | Why was not the colony allowed to join the New England Union? |
6434 | Why was the Fugitive Slave law obnoxious? |
6434 | Why was the battle of New Orleans unnecessary? |
6434 | Why was the charter so highly prized? |
6434 | Why was the colony named New York? |
6434 | Why was the island so called? |
6434 | Why was the tea thrown overboard? |
6434 | Why was the war now transferred to the south? |
6434 | Why was this colony popular? |
6434 | Why was this measure warmly opposed? |
6434 | Why was"Stonewall"Jackson so called? |
6434 | Why were Davis''s Strait, Baffin''s Bay, Hudson River, Frobisher''s Strait, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were books of travel more abundant then? |
6434 | Why were the New Hampshire Grants so called? |
6434 | Why were the River St. Lawrence, Florida, St. Augustine, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were these claims conflicting? |
6434 | Why were these now awakened? |
6434 | Why were they passed? |
6434 | Why were they so obstinately attacked and defended? |
6434 | Why, in the Missouri Compromise, was 36 degrees 30 minutes taken as the boundary between the slave and the free States? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | With what battle did it close? |
6434 | With what intent did Lord Baltimore secure a grant of land in America? |
6434 | With what intention was this colony planned? |
6434 | Writ of habeas corpus? |
6434 | Yet, how was he to aid it? |
6434 | [ Footnote: Section 4. Who prescribes the"time, place and manner"of electing representatives and senators? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What debts did the United States assume when the Constitution was adopted?] |
6434 | [ Footnote: What is the supreme law of the land? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What must Congress guarantee to every state? |
6434 | _ Section_ 1. Who are citizens of the United States? |
6434 | _ Section_ 2. Who compose the House of Representatives? |
6434 | and Dec. 21, N.S.? |
6434 | in Tennessee? |
6434 | said Gage,"have your fathers sent you here to exhibit the rebellion they have been teaching you?" |
1365 | And sawest thou on the turrets The King and his royal bride? 1365 And wilt thou, little bird, go with us? |
1365 | Are you so much offended, you will not speak to me? |
1365 | Do we not learn from runes and rhymes Made by the gods in elder times, And do not still the great Scalds teach That silence better is than speech? |
1365 | Do you ne''er think what wondrous beings these? 1365 Does not all the blood within me Leap to meet thee, leap to meet thee, As the springs to meet the sunshine, In the Moon when nights are brightest? |
1365 | Has the audacious Frank, forsooth, Subdued these seas and lands? 1365 High over the sails, high over the mast, Who shall gainsay these joys? |
1365 | How should I be fair and fine? 1365 How should I be white and red, So long, so long have I been dead?" |
1365 | I will give thee my coat of mail, Of softest leather made, With choicest steel inlaid; Will not all this prevail? |
1365 | Is it my fault,he said,"that the maiden has chosen between us? |
1365 | Led they not forth, in rapture, A beauteous maiden there? 1365 Must I relinquish it all,"he cried with a wild lamentation,"Must I relinquish it all, the joy, the hope, the illusion? |
1365 | Must it be Calvin, and not Christ? 1365 Shall I have naught that is fair?" |
1365 | Shall the bold lions that have bathed Their paws in Libyan gore, Crouch basely to a feebler foe, And dare the strife no more? 1365 The winds and the waves of ocean, Had they a merry chime? |
1365 | Then why dost thou turn so pale, O churl, And then again black as the earth? |
1365 | Was it for this the Roman power Of old was made to yield Unto Numantia''s valiant hosts On many a bloody field? 1365 What is that,"King Olaf said,"Gleams so bright above thy head? |
1365 | What is this that ye do, my children? 1365 What right hast thou, O Khan, To me, who am mine own, Who am slave to God alone, And not to any man? |
1365 | What then, shall sorrows and shall fears Come to disturb so pure a brow? 1365 What was that?" |
1365 | Where are we? 1365 Who is thy mother, my fair boy?" |
1365 | Who knows? 1365 Why dost thou persecute me, Saul of Tarsus?" |
1365 | Why standest thou here, dear daughter mine? 1365 Why touch upon such themes?" |
1365 | Why, then, should I care to have thee? |
1365 | Wouldst thou,--so the helmsman answered,"Learn the secret of the sea? |
1365 | Yes; seest thou not our journey''s end? 1365 ''O,''said he in answer,''the bear understood me very well; did you not observe how ashamed he looked while I was upbraiding him?'' |
1365 | ''T is Ovid, is it not? |
1365 | ( Enter DON CARLOS) Don C. Are not the horses ready yet? |
1365 | *************** THE SONG OF HIAWATHA< Notes from HIAWATHA follow> INTRODUCTION Should you ask me, whence these stories? |
1365 | < Greek here> Then saith the Christ, as silent stands The crowd,"What wilt thou at my hands?" |
1365 | A SHADOW I said unto myself, if I were dead, What would befall these children? |
1365 | A charmer of serpents? |
1365 | A great Prophet? |
1365 | A spy in the convent? |
1365 | A voice seemed crying from that grave so dreary,"What wouldst thou do, my daughter?" |
1365 | After long years, Do they remember me in the same way, And is the memory pleasant as to me? |
1365 | Ah, have they grown Forgetful of their own? |
1365 | Ah, how can I ever hope to requite This honor from one so erudite? |
1365 | Ah, when, on bright autumnal eves, Pursuing still thy course, shall I Lisp the soft shudder of the leaves, And hear the lapwing''s plaintive cry? |
1365 | Ah, who hath been here before us, When we rose early, wishing to be first? |
1365 | Ah, who then can be saved? |
1365 | Ah, who would love, if loving she might be Like Semele consumed and burnt to ashes? |
1365 | Ah, why could we not do it? |
1365 | Ah, why has that wild boy gone from me?" |
1365 | Ah, why shouldst thou be dead, when common men Are busy with their trivial affairs, Having and holding? |
1365 | Ah, yes, they said, Missing, but whither had he fled? |
1365 | Ah? |
1365 | Alas why art thou here, And the army of Amurath slain, And left on the battle plain?" |
1365 | Am I a king, that I should call my own This splendid ebon throne? |
1365 | Am I a spirit, or so like a spirit, That I could slip through bolted door or window? |
1365 | Am I awake? |
1365 | Am I comprehended? |
1365 | Am I not Herod? |
1365 | Am I not always fair? |
1365 | Am I not? |
1365 | Am I now free to go? |
1365 | Am I so changed you do not know my voice? |
1365 | Am I still dreaming, or awake? |
1365 | Am I to blame Because I can not love, and ne''er have known The love of woman or the love of children? |
1365 | Among the Squires? |
1365 | And Ahab then, the King of Israel, Said, Hast thou found me, O mine enemy? |
1365 | And I answer,--"Though it be, Why should that discomfort me? |
1365 | And Jezebel, the wife of Ahab, came And said to him, Why is thy spirit sad? |
1365 | And Jezebel, the wife of Ahab, said, Dost thou not rule the realm of Israel? |
1365 | And Sigrid the Queen, in her haughty way, Said,"Why do you smile, my goldsmiths, say?" |
1365 | And are there none to die for Israel? |
1365 | And are these Jews that throng and stare and listen? |
1365 | And are we Jews or Christians? |
1365 | And are we the aunts and uncles?" |
1365 | And can it be enough for these The Christian Church the year embalms With evergreens and boughs of palms, And fills the air with litanies? |
1365 | And did not some one say, or have I dreamed it, That Humphrey Atherton is dead? |
1365 | And did they say What clothes I came in? |
1365 | And did you not then say That they were overlooked? |
1365 | And does that prove That Preciosa is above suspicion? |
1365 | And doth punishment now give me its place for a home? |
1365 | And doubting and believing, has not said,"Lord, I believe; help thou my unbelief"? |
1365 | And evermore beside him on his way The unseen Christ shall move, That he may lean upon his arm and say,"Dost thou, dear Lord, approve?" |
1365 | And for what? |
1365 | And for whom is meant This portrait that you speak of? |
1365 | And has Gordonius the Divine, In his famous Lily of Medicine,-- I see the book lies open before you,-- No remedy potent enough to restore you? |
1365 | And have I not King Charles''s Twelve Good Rules, all framed and glazed, Hanging in my best parlor? |
1365 | And have they with them a pale, beautiful girl, Called Preciosa? |
1365 | And if I will He tarry till I come, what is it to thee? |
1365 | And in the public market- place? |
1365 | And is Fra Bastian dead? |
1365 | And is it so with them? |
1365 | And is this not enough? |
1365 | And must he die? |
1365 | And no more from the marble hew those forms That fill us all with wonder? |
1365 | And none have been sent back To England to malign us with the King? |
1365 | And now be quiet, will you? |
1365 | And now what see you? |
1365 | And now, my Judas, say to me What the great Voices Four may be, That quite across the world do flee, And are not heard by men? |
1365 | And poor Baptiste, what sayest thou? |
1365 | And served him right; But, Master Merry, is it not eight bells? |
1365 | And shall I go or stay? |
1365 | And shall the sad discourse Whispered within thy heart, by tenderness paternal, Only augment its force? |
1365 | And shall this count for nothing? |
1365 | And tell me, she with eyes of olive tint, And skin as fair as wheat, and pale brown hair, The woman at his side? |
1365 | And the Duke of Lermos? |
1365 | And the golden crown of pride? |
1365 | And the statue? |
1365 | And the stranger replied, with staid and quiet behavior,"Dost thou remember me still, Elizabeth? |
1365 | And the wave of their crimson mantles? |
1365 | And then the Duchess,--how shall I describe her, Or tell the merits of that happy nature, Which pleases most when least it thinks of pleasing? |
1365 | And thou bringest nothing back with thee? |
1365 | And thou, Prometheus; say, hast thou again Been stealing fire from Helios''chariot- wheels To light thy furnaces? |
1365 | And thou, and he, and I, all fell to crying? |
1365 | And thou? |
1365 | And was this the meed Of his sweet singing? |
1365 | And we who are so few And poorly armed, and ready to faint with fasting, How shall we fight against this multitude? |
1365 | And what answer Shall I take back to Grand Duke Cosimo? |
1365 | And what are the studies you pursue? |
1365 | And what care I? |
1365 | And what dishonor? |
1365 | And what earthquake''s arm of might Breaks his dungeon- gates at night? |
1365 | And what have you to show me? |
1365 | And what is that? |
1365 | And what is this placard? |
1365 | And what is this, that follows close upon it? |
1365 | And what more can be done? |
1365 | And what poets Were there to sing you madrigals, and praise Olympia''s eyes and Cherubina''s tresses? |
1365 | And what says Goodwife Proctor? |
1365 | And what so great occasion of seeing Rome hath possessed thee? |
1365 | And what then? |
1365 | And what''s it for? |
1365 | And where is the Prince? |
1365 | And where''s your warrant? |
1365 | And wherefore gone? |
1365 | And which way lies Segovia? |
1365 | And whither goest thou, gentle sigh, Breathed so softly in my ear? |
1365 | And whither goest thou, gentle sigh, Breathed so softly in my ear? |
1365 | And who absolved Pope Clement? |
1365 | And who are you, sir? |
1365 | And who hath said it? |
1365 | And who is Parson Palmer? |
1365 | And whose tomb is that, Which bears the brass escutcheon? |
1365 | And why do the roaring ocean, And the night- wind, wild and bleak, As they beat at the heart of the mother, Drive the color from her cheek? |
1365 | And will the righteous Heaven forgive? |
1365 | And will you paint no more? |
1365 | And wilt thou die? |
1365 | And with the bitterness of tears These eyes of azure troubled grow? |
1365 | And with what soldiery Think you he now defends the Eternal City? |
1365 | And with whom, I pray? |
1365 | And wouldst thou venture? |
1365 | And yet who is there that has never doubted? |
1365 | And yet who knows? |
1365 | And you others? |
1365 | And you? |
1365 | And your Abbot What''s- his- name? |
1365 | Antiochus? |
1365 | Anything you are afraid of?" |
1365 | Are all set free? |
1365 | Are all things well with them? |
1365 | Are but dead leaves that rustle in the wind? |
1365 | Are not these The tempest- haunted Hebrides, Where sea gulls scream, and breakers roar, And wreck and sea- weed line the shore? |
1365 | Are there no brighter dreams, No higher aspirations, than the wish To please and to be pleased? |
1365 | Are there no other artists here in Rome To do this work, that they must needs seek me? |
1365 | Are there not other youths as fair as Gabriel? |
1365 | Are there robbers in these mountains? |
1365 | Are these celestial manners? |
1365 | Are these things peace? |
1365 | Are they all bewitched? |
1365 | Are they all dead? |
1365 | Are they asleep, or dead, That open to the sky Their ruined Missions lie, No longer tenanted? |
1365 | Are they going Up to Jerusalem to the Passover? |
1365 | Are thou not ashamed? |
1365 | Are we demoniacs, are we halt or blind, Or palsy- stricken, or lepers, or the like, That we should join the Synagogue of Satan, And follow jugglers? |
1365 | Are we not in danger, Perhaps, of punishing some who are not guilty? |
1365 | Are ye come hither as against a thief, With swords and staves to take me? |
1365 | Are ye deceived? |
1365 | Are ye ready, ye children, to eat of the bread of Atonement?" |
1365 | Are you Christian monks, or heathen devils, To pollute this convent with your revels? |
1365 | Are you Ernestus, Abbot of the convent? |
1365 | Are you a Prophetess? |
1365 | Are you convinced? |
1365 | Are you from Madrid? |
1365 | Are you incapable? |
1365 | Are you not afraid of the evil eye? |
1365 | Are you not penitent? |
1365 | Are you prepared? |
1365 | Are you such asses As to keep up the fashion of midnight masses? |
1365 | Are you the master here? |
1365 | Art thou Elias? |
1365 | Art thou a master Of Israel, and knowest not these things? |
1365 | Art thou afraid? |
1365 | Art thou afraid?" |
1365 | Art thou convinced? |
1365 | Art thou not One of this man''s also disciples? |
1365 | Art thou not better now? |
1365 | Art thou safe? |
1365 | Art thou so near unto me, and yet I can not behold thee? |
1365 | Art thou so near unto me, and yet thy voice does not reach me? |
1365 | Art thou the Christ? |
1365 | As we draw near, What sound is it I hear Ascending through the dark? |
1365 | Awake from thy sleep, O dreamer? |
1365 | BY FRANCOISE MALHERBE Will then, Duperrier, thy sorrow be eternal? |
1365 | Banished on pain of death, why come you here? |
1365 | Be born again? |
1365 | Be willing for my Prince to die? |
1365 | Bears not each human figure the godlike stamp on his forehead Readest thou not in his face thou origin? |
1365 | Beautiful in form and feature, Lovely as the day, Can there be so fair a creature Formed of common clay? |
1365 | Because I said I saw thee Under the fig- tree, before Philip called thee, Believest thou? |
1365 | Because Isaiah Went stripped and barefoot, must ye wail and howl? |
1365 | Because a quaking fell On Daniel, at beholding of the Vision, Must ye needs shake and quake? |
1365 | Behold them where they lie How dost thou like this picture? |
1365 | Benvenuto? |
1365 | Betray thee? |
1365 | Bewitched? |
1365 | Brook, to what fountain dost thou go? |
1365 | Brook, to what garden dost thou go? |
1365 | Brook, to what river dost thou go? |
1365 | But art thou safe? |
1365 | But by what instinct, or what secret sign, Meeting me here, do you straightway divine That northward of the Alps my country lies? |
1365 | But do I comprehend aright The meaning of the words he sung So sweetly in his native tongue? |
1365 | But how is this? |
1365 | But in what way suppressed? |
1365 | But in what way? |
1365 | But pray tell me, lover, How speeds thy wooing? |
1365 | But shall I not ask Don Victorian in, to take a draught of the Pedro Ximenes? |
1365 | But she smiled with contempt as she answered:"O King, Will you swear it, as Odin once swore, on the ring?" |
1365 | But tell me, has a band of Gypsies passed this way of late? |
1365 | But the statues without breath, That stand on the bridge overarching The silent river of death? |
1365 | But this deed, is it good or evil? |
1365 | But what are these grave thoughts to thee? |
1365 | But what brings thee, thus armed and dight In the equipments of a knight? |
1365 | But what of Michael Angelo? |
1365 | But when he came at length to the words Priscilla had spoken, Words so tender and cruel:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
1365 | But where are the old Egyptian Demi- gods and kings? |
1365 | But where is thy sword, O stranger? |
1365 | But where wast thou for the most part? |
1365 | But wherefore do I prate of this? |
1365 | But wherefore should I jest? |
1365 | But who Shall roll away the stone for us to enter? |
1365 | But who is This floating lily? |
1365 | But who say ye I am? |
1365 | But who shall dare To measure loss and gain in this wise? |
1365 | But who''s this? |
1365 | But why should I fatigue myself? |
1365 | But why should the reapers eat of it And not the Prophet of Zion In the den of the lion? |
1365 | But why this haste? |
1365 | But why, dear Master, Why do you live so high up in your house, When you could live below and have a garden, As I do? |
1365 | But why, you ask me, should this tale be told To men grown old, or who are growing old? |
1365 | But, speaking of green eyes, Are thine green? |
1365 | By none? |
1365 | By what name shall I call thee? |
1365 | C. Why not? |
1365 | Can I go? |
1365 | Can a man do such deeds, and yet not die By the recoil of his own wickedness? |
1365 | Can any good come out of Nazareth? |
1365 | Can he be afraid of the bees? |
1365 | Can it be so? |
1365 | Can the Master Doubt if we love Him? |
1365 | Can the innocent be guilty? |
1365 | Can this be Martha Hilton? |
1365 | Can this be Sir Allan McLean? |
1365 | Can this be The King of Israel, whom the Wise Men worshipped? |
1365 | Can this be the Messiah? |
1365 | Can this be the dwelling Of a disciple of that lowly Man Who had not where to lay his head? |
1365 | Can you bring The dead to life? |
1365 | Can you direct us to Friar Angelo? |
1365 | Can you not drink your wine in quiet? |
1365 | Can you not turn your thoughts a little while To public matters? |
1365 | Can you sit down in them, On summer afternoons, and play the lute Or sing, or sleep the time away? |
1365 | Cardinal Salviati And Cardinal Marcello, do you listen? |
1365 | Children, have ye any meat? |
1365 | Come, Aleph, Beth; dost thou forget? |
1365 | Come, tell me quickly,--do not lie; What secret message bring''st thou here? |
1365 | Compare me with the great men of the earth; What am I? |
1365 | Corey in prison? |
1365 | Could I refuse the only boon he asked At such a time, my portrait? |
1365 | Could you not be gone a minute But some mischief must be doing, Turning bad to worse? |
1365 | Could you not paint it for me? |
1365 | Cried the fierce Kabibonokka,"Who is this that dares to brave me? |
1365 | Cueva? |
1365 | Cueva? |
1365 | D''ye hear? |
1365 | Dear Mary, are you better? |
1365 | Deep distress and hesitation Mingled with his adoration; Should he go, or should he stay? |
1365 | Descended from the Marquis Santillana? |
1365 | Did I dream it, Or has some person told me, that John Norton Is dead? |
1365 | Did I forsake my father and my mother And come here to New England to see this? |
1365 | Did I not caution thee? |
1365 | Did I not tell thee I was but half persuaded of her virtue? |
1365 | Did I not tell you they were overlooked? |
1365 | Did I say she was? |
1365 | Did he drink hard? |
1365 | Did he give us the beautiful stork above On the chimney- top, with its large, round nest? |
1365 | Did no one see thee? |
1365 | Did not an Evil Spirit come on Saul? |
1365 | Did not the Witch of Endor bring the ghost Of Samuel from his grave? |
1365 | Did the warlocks mingle in it, Thorberg Skafting, any curse? |
1365 | Did you meet Benvenuto As you came up the stair? |
1365 | Did you not On one occasion hide your husband''s saddle To hinder him from coming to the sessions? |
1365 | Did you not carry once the Devil''s Book To this young woman? |
1365 | Did you not hear it whisper? |
1365 | Did you not say the Devil hindered you? |
1365 | Did you not say the Magistrates were blind? |
1365 | Did you not say your husband told you so? |
1365 | Did you not scourge her with an iron rod? |
1365 | Didst thou hear, from those lofty chambers, The harp and the minstrel''s rhyme?" |
1365 | Didst thou rob no one? |
1365 | Do I look like your aunt? |
1365 | Do I not know The life of woman is full of woe? |
1365 | Do I not see you Attack the marble blocks with the same fury As twenty years ago? |
1365 | Do I stand too near thee? |
1365 | Do n''t you think so? |
1365 | Do ye consider not It is expedient that one man should die, Not the whole nation perish? |
1365 | Do ye see a man Standing upon the beach and beckoning? |
1365 | Do you abuse our town? |
1365 | Do you believe in dreams? |
1365 | Do you come here to poison these good people? |
1365 | Do you count as nothing A privilege like that? |
1365 | Do you ever need me? |
1365 | Do you ne''er think of Florence? |
1365 | Do you ne''er think who made them and who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought? |
1365 | Do you not hear the drum? |
1365 | Do you not know a heavier doom awaits you, If you refuse to plead, than if found guilty? |
1365 | Do you not know me? |
1365 | Do you not see her there? |
1365 | Do you not see them? |
1365 | Do you refuse to plead?--''T were better for you To make confession, or to plead Not Guilty.-- Do you not hear me?--Answer, are you guilty? |
1365 | Do you remember Cueva? |
1365 | Do you remember, Julia, when we walked, One afternoon, upon the castle terrace At Ischia, on the day before you left me? |
1365 | Do you remember, in Quevedo''s Dreams, The miser, who, upon the Day of Judgment, Asks if his money- bags would rise? |
1365 | Do you see anything? |
1365 | Do you see that Livornese felucca, That vessel to the windward yonder, Running with her gunwale under? |
1365 | Do you see that? |
1365 | Do you think She is bewitched? |
1365 | Do you think we are going to sing mass in the cathedral of Cordova? |
1365 | Does he not warn us all to seek The happier, better land on high, Where flowers immortal never wither; And could he forbid me to go thither? |
1365 | Does he ride through Rome Upon his little mule, as he was wo nt, With his slouched hat, and boots of Cordovan, As when I saw him last? |
1365 | Does he say that? |
1365 | Does he still keep Above his door the arrogant inscription That once was painted there,--"The color of Titian, With the design of Michael Angelo"? |
1365 | Does she Without compulsion, of her own free will, Consent to this? |
1365 | Does the same madness fill thy brain? |
1365 | Don C. And is it faring ill To be in love? |
1365 | Don C. And pray, how fares the brave Victorian? |
1365 | Don C. And where? |
1365 | Don C. But tell me, Come you to- day from Alcala? |
1365 | Don C. I do; But what of that? |
1365 | Don C. Jesting aside, who is it? |
1365 | Don C. Of course, the Preciosa danced to- night? |
1365 | Don C. Pray, how much need you? |
1365 | Don C. What was the play? |
1365 | Don C. Why do you ask? |
1365 | Don C. You mean to tell me yours have risen empty? |
1365 | Don L. Why not music? |
1365 | Dost thou accept the gift? |
1365 | Dost thou answer nothing? |
1365 | Dost thou gainsay me? |
1365 | Dost thou hear? |
1365 | Dost thou not answer me? |
1365 | Dost thou not know That I have power enough to crucify thee? |
1365 | Dost thou not know that what is best In this too restless world is rest From over- work and worry? |
1365 | Dost thou not see it? |
1365 | Dost thou not see upon my breast The cross of the Crusaders shine? |
1365 | Dost thou remember The Gypsy girl we saw at Cordova Dance the Romalis in the market- place? |
1365 | Dost thou remember Thy earlier days? |
1365 | Dost thou remember When first we met? |
1365 | Dost thou remember, Philip, the old fable Told us when we were boys, in which the bear Going for honey overturns the hive, And is stung blind by bees? |
1365 | Dost thou see on the rampart''s height That wreath of mist, in the light Of the midnight moon? |
1365 | Dost thou still doubt? |
1365 | Dost thou think So meanly of this Michael Angelo As to imagine he would let thee serve, When he is free from service? |
1365 | Doth he fall away In the last hour from God? |
1365 | Doth he make himself To be a Prophet? |
1365 | Doth he you pray to say that he is God? |
1365 | Doth his heart fail him? |
1365 | Doth not the Scripture say,"Thou shalt not suffer A Witch to live"? |
1365 | Dust thou believe these warnings? |
1365 | EPIMETHEUS OR THE POET''S AFTERTHOUGHT Have I dreamed? |
1365 | Earnestly prayed for his foes, for his murderers? |
1365 | Elias must first come? |
1365 | False friend or true? |
1365 | First love or last love,--which of these two passions Is more omnipotent? |
1365 | First say, who are you? |
1365 | First tell me what keeps thee here? |
1365 | First, what right have you To question thus a nobleman of Spain? |
1365 | For him? |
1365 | For swearing, was it? |
1365 | For what are all our contrivings, And the wisdom of our books, When compared with your caresses, And the gladness of your looks? |
1365 | For what purpose? |
1365 | For when the abbot plays cards, what can you expect of the friars? |
1365 | For wherein shall a man be profited If he shall gain the whole world, and shall lose Himself or be a castaway? |
1365 | For why should I With out- door hospitality My prince''s friend thus entertain? |
1365 | For ye have died A better death, a death so full of life That I ought rather to rejoice than mourn.-- Wherefore art thou not dead, O Sirion? |
1365 | For, do you see? |
1365 | Friend, wherefore art thou come? |
1365 | From the coming anguish and ire? |
1365 | From the distinguished poet? |
1365 | From what? |
1365 | Giles Corey''s wife? |
1365 | Giles, what is the matter? |
1365 | Good Alcuin, I remember how one day When my Pepino asked you,''What are men?'' |
1365 | Good Master Merry, may I say confound? |
1365 | Good Master, tell us, for what reason was it We could not cast him out? |
1365 | Goodman Corey, Say, did you tell her? |
1365 | HELEN OF TYRE What phantom is this that appears Through the purple mist of the years, Itself but a mist like these? |
1365 | Hail!--Who art thou That comest here in this mysterious guise Into our camp unheralded? |
1365 | Hardly a glimmer Of light comes in at the window- pane; Or is it my eyes are growing dimmer? |
1365 | Has he forgotten The many mansions in our father''s house? |
1365 | Has it the Governor''s seal? |
1365 | Has perchance the old Nokomis, Has my wife, my Minnehaha, Wronged or grieved you by unkindness, Failed in hospitable duties?" |
1365 | Hast thou again been stealing The heifers of Admetus in the sweet Meadows of asphodel? |
1365 | Hast thou been robbed? |
1365 | Hast thou done this, O King? |
1365 | Hast thou e''er reflected How much lies hidden in that one word, NOW? |
1365 | Hast thou forgotten thy promise? |
1365 | Hast thou given gold away, and not to me? |
1365 | Hast thou never Lifted the lid? |
1365 | Hath any man been here, And brought Him aught to eat, while we were gone? |
1365 | Have I divined your secret? |
1365 | Have I not sacked the Temple, and on the altar Set up the statue of Olympian Zeus To Hellenize it? |
1365 | Have I offended so there is no hope Here nor hereafter? |
1365 | Have I offended you? |
1365 | Have I thine absolution free To do it, and without restriction? |
1365 | Have any of the Rulers Believed on him? |
1365 | Have the Gods to four increased us Who were only three? |
1365 | Have ye forgotten certain fugitives That fled once to these hills, and hid themselves In caves? |
1365 | Have ye not read What David did when he anhungered was, And all they that were with him? |
1365 | Have ye not read, how on the Sabbath- days The priests profane the Sabbath in the Temple, And yet are blameless? |
1365 | Have you a stag''s horn with you? |
1365 | Have you done this, by the appliance And aid of doctors? |
1365 | Have you forgotten That in the market- place this very day You trampled on the laws? |
1365 | Have you forgotten The doom of Heretics, and the fate of those Who aid and comfort them? |
1365 | Have you forgotten that he calls you Michael, less man than angel, and divine? |
1365 | Have you forgotten? |
1365 | Have you found them? |
1365 | Have you heard what things have happened? |
1365 | Have you lifted me Into the air, only to hurl me back Wounded upon the ground? |
1365 | Have you not dealt with a Familiar Spirit? |
1365 | Have you not seen him do Strange feats of strength? |
1365 | Have you seen John Proctor lately? |
1365 | Have you seen my saddle? |
1365 | Have you signed it, Or touched it? |
1365 | Have you so soon forgotten all lessons of love and forgiveness? |
1365 | Have you thought well of it? |
1365 | He who foretold to Herod He should one day be King? |
1365 | He who is sitting there, With a rollicking, Devil may care, Free and easy look and air, As if he were used to such feasting and frolicking? |
1365 | Hear''st thou that cry? |
1365 | Hearest not the osprey from the belfry cry? |
1365 | Hearest thou not The flute players, and the voices of the women Singing their lamentation? |
1365 | Hearest thou voices on the shore, That our ears perceive no more, Deafened by the cataract''s roar? |
1365 | Heart''s dearest, Why dost thou sorrow so? |
1365 | Heart''s dearest, Why dost thou sorrow so? |
1365 | Heaven protect us? |
1365 | Hereafter?--And do you think to look On the terrible pages of that Book To find her failings, faults, and errors? |
1365 | Him that was once the Cardinal Caraffa? |
1365 | Him who redeemed it, the Son, and the Spirit where both are united? |
1365 | His form is the form of a giant, But his face wears an aspect of pain; Can this be the Laird of Inchkenneth? |
1365 | How came they here? |
1365 | How came this spindle here? |
1365 | How came you in? |
1365 | How can I tell the many thousand ways By which it keeps the secret it betrays? |
1365 | How can I tell the signals and the signs By which one heart another heart divines? |
1365 | How can a man be born when he is old? |
1365 | How can a man that is a sinner do Such miracles? |
1365 | How can it be that thou, Being a Jew, askest to drink of me Which am a woman of Samaria? |
1365 | How can these things be? |
1365 | How can you say that it is a delusion, When all our learned and good men believe it,-- Our Ministers and worshipful Magistrates? |
1365 | How canst thou help it, Philip? |
1365 | How canst thou rejoice? |
1365 | How could an old man work, when he was starving? |
1365 | How could the daughter of a king of France We d such a duke? |
1365 | How could you do it? |
1365 | How could you know beforehand why we came? |
1365 | How couldst thou see me? |
1365 | How dare you tell a lie in this assembly? |
1365 | How did it end? |
1365 | How did she look? |
1365 | How did you know the children had been told To note the clothes you wore? |
1365 | How do I know but under my own roof I too may harbor Witches, and some Devil Be plotting and contriving against me? |
1365 | How do you like that Cornish hug, my lad? |
1365 | How does that work go on? |
1365 | How far is it? |
1365 | How fare the Jews? |
1365 | How fares Don Carlos? |
1365 | How fares it with brothers and sisters thine?" |
1365 | How fares it with the holy monks of Hirschau? |
1365 | How have thine eyes been opened? |
1365 | How he entered Into the house of God, and ate the shew- bread, Which was not lawful, saving for the priests? |
1365 | How in the turmoil of life can love stand, Where there is not one heart, and one mouth, and one hand? |
1365 | How is she clad? |
1365 | How is she? |
1365 | How is that young and green- eyed Gaditana That you both wot of? |
1365 | How is the Prince? |
1365 | How is the Prince? |
1365 | How know you that? |
1365 | How know you that? |
1365 | How late is it, Dolores? |
1365 | How long is it ago Since this came unto him? |
1365 | How long shall I be with you, and suffer you? |
1365 | How long shall I still reign? |
1365 | How long, how long, Ere thou avenge the blood of Thine Elect? |
1365 | How may I call your Grace? |
1365 | How mean you? |
1365 | How more than we do? |
1365 | How my Quakers? |
1365 | How now, sir? |
1365 | How now? |
1365 | How opened he thine eyes? |
1365 | How shall I be seated? |
1365 | How shall I do it? |
1365 | How shall I e''er thank you For such kind language? |
1365 | How shall I more deserve it? |
1365 | How should we know? |
1365 | How shouldst thou know me, woman? |
1365 | How their pursuers camped against them Upon the Seventh Day, and challenged them? |
1365 | How was this done? |
1365 | How will men speak of me when I am gone, When all this colorless, sad life is ended, And I am dust? |
1365 | How with the rest? |
1365 | How''s this, Don Carlos? |
1365 | How''s this? |
1365 | How? |
1365 | I What is this I read in history, Full of marvel, full of mystery, Difficult to understand? |
1365 | I am ashamed Not to remember Reynard''s fate; I have not read the book of late; Was he not hanged?" |
1365 | I ask myself, Is this a dream? |
1365 | I betray thee? |
1365 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
1365 | I burn his house? |
1365 | I can not rest until my sight Is satisfied with seeing thee, What, then, if thou wert dead? |
1365 | I do adjure thee by the living God, Tell us, art thou indeed the Christ? |
1365 | I do not know thee,--nor what deeds are thine: Love, love, what wilt thou with this heart of mine? |
1365 | I fear to ask; yet wherefore are my fears? |
1365 | I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?" |
1365 | I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?" |
1365 | I hear your mothers and your sires Cry from their purgatorial fires, And will ye not their ransom pay? |
1365 | I know He is arisen; But where are now the kingdom and the glory He promised unto us? |
1365 | I not dare? |
1365 | I pray you, do you speak officially? |
1365 | I recognize thy features, but what mean These torn and faded garments? |
1365 | I said to Ralph, says I,"What''s to be done?" |
1365 | I saw the wedding guests go by; Tell me, my sister, why were we not asked? |
1365 | I see a gleaming light O say, what may it be?" |
1365 | I think the Essenians Are wiser, or more wary, are they not? |
1365 | I wonder now If the old man will die, and will not speak? |
1365 | I wonder who those strangers were I met Going into the city? |
1365 | I yield to the will divine, The city and lands are thine; Who shall contend with fate?" |
1365 | I''ll ride down to the village Bareback; and when the people stare and say,"Giles Corey, where''s your saddle?" |
1365 | III LORD, IS IT I? |
1365 | INTERLUDE"What was the end? |
1365 | If I have spoken evil, Bear witness of the evil; but if well, Why smitest thou me? |
1365 | If I tell you earthly things, And ye believe not, how shall ye believe, If I should tell you of things heavenly? |
1365 | If still further you should ask me, Saying,"Who was Nawadaha? |
1365 | If you already know it, why not tell me? |
1365 | In his case very ill. Don C. Why so? |
1365 | In raiment of camel''s hair, Begirt with leathern thong, That here in the wilderness, With a cry as of one in distress, Preachest unto this throng? |
1365 | In the workshop of Hephaestus What is this I see? |
1365 | In this life of labor endless Who shall comfort my distresses? |
1365 | In what gardens of delight Rest thy weary feet to- night? |
1365 | Indeed, since that sad hour I have not slept, For thinking of the wrong I did to thee Dost thou forgive me? |
1365 | Is Aretino dead? |
1365 | Is Faith of no avail? |
1365 | Is Florence then a place for honest men To flourish in? |
1365 | Is Hope blown out like a light By a gust of wind in the night? |
1365 | Is Master Corey here? |
1365 | Is he guilty? |
1365 | Is he in Antioch Among his women still, and from his windows Throwing down gold by handfuls, for the rabble To scramble for? |
1365 | Is he not sailing Lost like thyself on an ocean unknown, and is he not guided By the same stars that guide thee? |
1365 | Is it Castilian honor, Is it Castilian pride, to steal in here Upon a friendless girl, to do her wrong? |
1365 | Is it I? |
1365 | Is it Saint Joseph would say to us all, That love, o''er- hasty, precedeth a fall? |
1365 | Is it a foolish dream, an idle and vague superstition? |
1365 | Is it a ghost from the grave, that has come to forbid the betrothal? |
1365 | Is it a phantom of air,--a bodiless, spectral illusion? |
1365 | Is it changed, or am I changed? |
1365 | Is it fiction, is it truth? |
1365 | Is it finished? |
1365 | Is it for the poor? |
1365 | Is it honor For one who has been all these noble dames, To tramp about the dirty villages And cities of Samaria with a juggler? |
1365 | Is it my fault that he failed,--my fault that I am the victor?" |
1365 | Is it not he who used to sit and beg By the Gate Beautiful? |
1365 | Is it not so? |
1365 | Is it not so? |
1365 | Is it not so? |
1365 | Is it not true, that fourteen head of cattle, To you belonging, broke from their enclosure And leaped into the river, and were drowned? |
1365 | Is it not true, that on a certain night You were impeded strangely in your prayers? |
1365 | Is it not true? |
1365 | Is it not written,"Upon my handmaidens will I pour out My spirit, and they shall prophesy"? |
1365 | Is it perhaps some foolish freak Of thine, to put the words I speak Into a plaintive ditty? |
1365 | Is it so long ago That cry of human woe From the walled city came, Calling on his dear name, That it has died away In the distance of to- day? |
1365 | Is it the tender star of love? |
1365 | Is it then in vain That I have warned thee? |
1365 | Is it thou? |
1365 | Is it to bow in silence to our victors? |
1365 | Is it to shoot red squirrels you have your howitzer planted There on the roof of the church, or is it to shoot red devils? |
1365 | Is it you, Hubert? |
1365 | Is not Mount Tabor As beautiful as Carmel by the Sea? |
1365 | Is not his mother Called Mary? |
1365 | Is not this The carpenter Joseph''s son? |
1365 | Is she always thus? |
1365 | Is that my sin? |
1365 | Is that quite prudent? |
1365 | Is that your meaning? |
1365 | Is the house of Ovid in Scythian lands now? |
1365 | Is the maiden coy? |
1365 | Is there a land of such supreme And perfect beauty anywhere? |
1365 | Is there anything can harm you? |
1365 | Is there no other architect on earth? |
1365 | Is there no way Left open to accord this difference, But you must make one with your swords? |
1365 | Is this Guadarrama? |
1365 | Is this Jerusalem? |
1365 | Is this a dream? |
1365 | Is this a tavern and drinking- house? |
1365 | Is this apparition Visibly there, and yet we can not see it? |
1365 | Is this the fruit of my toils, of my vigils and prayers and privations? |
1365 | Is this the passage? |
1365 | Is this the road to Segovia? |
1365 | Is this the tenant Gottlieb''s farm? |
1365 | Is this the way A Cardinal should live? |
1365 | Is this the way I was going? |
1365 | Is this your son? |
1365 | Is thy name Preciosa? |
1365 | Is thy work done, Hephaestus? |
1365 | Is your name Kempthorn? |
1365 | Is''t silver? |
1365 | It is I. Dost thou not know me? |
1365 | It is not cock- crow yet, and art thou stirring? |
1365 | Jason, didst thou take note How these Samaritans of Sichem said They were not Jews? |
1365 | Jesus Barabbas, called the Son of Shame, Or Jesus, Son of Joseph, called the Christ? |
1365 | John Gloyd, Whose turn is it to- day? |
1365 | Justice? |
1365 | King Olaf laid an arrow on string,"Have I a coward on board?" |
1365 | Knowest thou Him, who forgave, with the crown of thorns on his temples? |
1365 | Knowest thou John the Baptist? |
1365 | Let me die; What else remains for me? |
1365 | Life- giving, death- giving, which will it be; O breath of the merciful, merciless Sea? |
1365 | Lightning''s brother, where is he? |
1365 | Logic makes an important part Of the mystery of the healing art; For without it how could you hope to show That nobody knows so much as you know? |
1365 | Lord, dost thou care not that my sister Mary Hath left me thus to wait on thee alone? |
1365 | Lord, he thought, in heaven that reignest, Who am I, that thus thou deignest To reveal thyself to me? |
1365 | Lord, is it I? |
1365 | Lord, is it I? |
1365 | Lord, is it I? |
1365 | MAD RIVER IN THE WHITE MOUNTAINS TRAVELLER Why dost thou wildly rush and roar, Mad River, O Mad River? |
1365 | Malaria? |
1365 | Marry, is that all? |
1365 | May not a saint fall from her Paradise, And be no more a saint? |
1365 | May not the Devil take the outward shape Of innocent persons? |
1365 | Meanwhile, hast thou searched well thy breast? |
1365 | Moreover, what has the world in store For one like her, but tears and toil? |
1365 | Mother, what does marry mean? |
1365 | Must each noble aspiration Come at last to this conclusion, Jarring discord, wild confusion, Lassitude, renunciation? |
1365 | Must even your delights and pleasures Fade and perish with the capture? |
1365 | Must it be Athanasian creeds, Or holy water, books, and beads? |
1365 | Must struggling souls remain content With councils and decrees of Trend? |
1365 | Must ye go stripped and naked? |
1365 | My Philip, prayest thou for me? |
1365 | My child, who is it? |
1365 | My son, you say? |
1365 | Need we hear further? |
1365 | No; you might as well say,"Don''t- you- want- some?" |
1365 | Not even a cup of water? |
1365 | Not to thy father? |
1365 | Nothing that you are afraid of?" |
1365 | Now in what circle of his poem sacred Would the great Florentine have placed this man? |
1365 | Now tell me which of them Will love him most? |
1365 | Now tell me, Padre Cura,--you know all things, How came these Gypsies into Spain? |
1365 | Now, Simon Kempthorn, what say you to that? |
1365 | Now, little Jesus, the carpenter''s son, Let us see how thy task is done; Canst thou thy letters say? |
1365 | Nymph or Muse, Callirrhoe or Urania? |
1365 | O Claudia, How shall I save him? |
1365 | O Death, why is it I can not portray Thy form and features? |
1365 | O Jason, my High- Priest, For I have made thee so, and thou art mine, Hast thou seen Antioch the Beautiful? |
1365 | O Joseph Caiaphas, thou great High- Priest How wilt thou answer for this deed of blood? |
1365 | O Priest, and Pharisee, Who hath warned you to flee From the wrath that is to be? |
1365 | O Sirion, Sirion, Art thou afraid? |
1365 | O beautiful, awful summer day, What hast thou given, what taken away? |
1365 | O hasten; Why dost thou pause? |
1365 | O how from their fury shall I flee? |
1365 | O most faithful Disciple of Hircanus Maccabaeus, Will nothing but complete annihilation Comfort and satisfy thee? |
1365 | O neighbors, tell me who it is that passes? |
1365 | O soul of man, Groping through mist and shadow, and recoiling Back on thyself, are, too, thy devious ways Subject to law? |
1365 | O thou spirit of grace, Where art thou now? |
1365 | O woman, what have I To do with thee? |
1365 | O ye Immortal Gods, What evil are ye plotting and contriving? |
1365 | O, not that; That is the public cry; I mean the name They give me when they talk among themselves, And think that no one listens; what is that? |
1365 | O, when shall he, for whom I sigh in vain, Beside me watch to see thy waking smile? |
1365 | O, where are now The splendors of my court, my baths and banquets? |
1365 | O, who shall give me, now that ye are gone, Juices of those immortal plants that bloom Upon Olympus, making us immortal? |
1365 | Of Denmark''s Juel who can defy The power?" |
1365 | Of death or life? |
1365 | Of me? |
1365 | Oh tell me, for thou knowest, Wherefore and by what grace, Have I, who am least and lowest, Been chosen to this place, To this exalted part? |
1365 | Oh, what was Miriam dancing with her timbrel, Compared to this one? |
1365 | Oh, who, then, is this man That pardoneth also sins without atonement? |
1365 | Old as I am, I have at last consented To the entreaties and the supplications Of Michael Angelo-- JULIA To marry him? |
1365 | On thy road Have demons crowded thee, and rubbed against thee, And given thee weary knees? |
1365 | One of my ancestors ran his sword through the heart of Wat Tyler; Who shall prevent me from running my own through the heart of a traitor? |
1365 | One of the brothers Telling scandalous tales of the others? |
1365 | Or art thou deaf, or gone upon a journey? |
1365 | Or by what reason, or what right divine, Can I proclaim it mine? |
1365 | Or do ye know, ye children, one blessing that comes not from Heaven? |
1365 | Or does He fear to meet me? |
1365 | Or does my sight Deceive me in the uncertain light? |
1365 | Or dost thou hold my hand, and draw me back, As being thy disciple, not thy master? |
1365 | Or has an angel passed, and revealed the truth to my spirit?" |
1365 | Or have the mountains, the giants, The ice- helmed, the forest- belted, Scattered their arms abroad; Flung in the meadows their shields? |
1365 | Or have thy passion and unrest Vanished forever from thy mind? |
1365 | Or litter to be trampled under foot? |
1365 | Or the earth- shaking trident of Poseidon? |
1365 | Or the heron, the Shuh- shuh- gah? |
1365 | Or the pelican, the Shada? |
1365 | Or the white goose, Waw- be- wawa, With the water dripping, flashing, From its glossy neck and feathers? |
1365 | Or was it Christian charity, And lowliness and humility, The richest and rarest of all dowers? |
1365 | Or wherefore was I born, If thou in thy foreknowledge didst perceive All that I am, and all that I must be? |
1365 | Or who takes note of every flower that dies? |
1365 | Our journey into Italy Perchance together we may make; Wilt thou not do it for my sake? |
1365 | POETIC APHORISMS FROM THE SINNGEDICHTE OF FRIEDRICH VON LOGAU MONEY Whereunto is money good? |
1365 | PRINCE HENRY, Why for the dead, who are at rest? |
1365 | Padre C. And pray, whom have we here? |
1365 | Padre C. Of what professor speak you? |
1365 | Pardon me This window, as I think, looks toward the street, And this into the Prado, does it not? |
1365 | Poisoned? |
1365 | Pontiff and priest, and sceptred throng? |
1365 | Pray tell me, Is there no virtue in the world? |
1365 | Pray tell ne, of what school are you? |
1365 | Pray who was there? |
1365 | Pray, Geronimo, is not Saturday an unpleasant day with thee? |
1365 | Pray, Master Kempthorn, where were you last night? |
1365 | Pray, art thou related to the bagpiper of Bujalance, who asked a maravedi for playing, and ten for leaving off? |
1365 | Pray, did you call? |
1365 | Pray, dost thou know Victorian? |
1365 | Pray, have you any children? |
1365 | Pray, how may I call thy name, friend? |
1365 | Pray, shall I tell your fortune? |
1365 | Pray, then, what brings thee back to Madrid? |
1365 | Pray, what is it? |
1365 | Pray, what''s the news? |
1365 | Pray, what''s your pleasure? |
1365 | Profess perfection? |
1365 | RONDEL BY JEAN FROISSART Love, love, what wilt thou with this heart of mine? |
1365 | Raphael is not dead; He doth but sleep; for how can he be dead Who lives immortal in the hearts of men? |
1365 | Remember Rahab, and how she became The ancestress of the great Psalmist David; And wherefore should not I, Helen of Tyre, Attain like honor? |
1365 | Resplendent as the morning sun, Beaming with golden hair?" |
1365 | Responds,--as if with unseen wings, An angel touched its quivering strings; And whispers, in its song,"''Where hast thou stayed so long?" |
1365 | Rome? |
1365 | SONG And whither goest thou, gentle sigh, Breathed so softly in my ear? |
1365 | Saw the moon rise from the water Rippling, rounding from the water, Saw the flecks and shadows on it, Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
1365 | Saw the rainbow in the heaven, In the eastern sky, the rainbow, Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
1365 | Say to me only, ye children, ye denizens new- come in heaven, Are ye ready this day to eat of the bread of Atonement? |
1365 | Say, are you guilty? |
1365 | Say, art thou greater than our father Jacob, Which gave this well to us, and drank thereof Himself, and all his children and his cattle? |
1365 | Say, can he enter for a second time Into his mother''s womb, and so be born? |
1365 | Say, can you prove this to me? |
1365 | Say, dost thou bear his fate severe To Love''s poor martyr doomed to die? |
1365 | Say, dost thou know him? |
1365 | Say, have the solid rocks Into streams of silver been melted, Flowing over the plains, Spreading to lakes in the fields? |
1365 | Say, have you seen our friend Fra Bastian lately, Since by a turn of fortune he became Friar of the Signet? |
1365 | Say, is not this the Christ? |
1365 | Say, will you smoke? |
1365 | Say, wilt thou forgive me? |
1365 | Say, would thy star like Merope''s grow dim If thou shouldst we d beneath thee? |
1365 | Seest thou shadows sailing by, As the dove, with startled eye, Sees the falcon''s shadow fly? |
1365 | Seest thou this woman? |
1365 | Ser Federigo, would not these suffice Without thy falcon stuffed with cloves and spice? |
1365 | Seriously enamored? |
1365 | Set in the bilboes? |
1365 | Shall I be mute, or vows with prayers combine? |
1365 | Shall I crucify your King? |
1365 | Shall I go with you and point out the way? |
1365 | Shall I refuse the gifts they send to me? |
1365 | Shall an impious soldier possess these lands newly cultured, And these fields of corn a barbarian? |
1365 | Shall he a bloodless victory have? |
1365 | Shall it be war or peace? |
1365 | Shall it, then, be unavailing, All this toil for human culture? |
1365 | Shall this man suffer death? |
1365 | Shall we not go, then? |
1365 | Shall we not then be glad, and rejoice in the joy of our children?" |
1365 | Shall we sit idly down and say The night hath come; it is no longer day? |
1365 | She had heard her father praise him, Praise his courage and his wisdom; Would he come again for arrows To the Falls of Minnehaha? |
1365 | She speaks almost As if it were the Holy Ghost Spake through her lips, and in her stead: What if this were of God? |
1365 | She standeth before the Lord of all:"And may I go to my children small?" |
1365 | Should he leave the poor to wait Hungry at the convent gate, Till the Vision passed away? |
1365 | Should he slight his radiant guest, Slight this visitant celestial, For a crowd of ragged, bestial Beggars at the convent gate? |
1365 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
1365 | Sidonians? |
1365 | Simon, son of Jonas, Lovest thou me, more than these others? |
1365 | Simon, son of Jonas, Lovest thou me? |
1365 | Simon, son of Jonas, Lovest thou me? |
1365 | Since then this mighty orb lies open so wide upon all sides, Has this region been found only my prison to be? |
1365 | Sir, how is it Thou askest drink of me? |
1365 | Sister, dost thou hear them singing? |
1365 | So soon? |
1365 | So speak the Oracles; then wherefore fatal? |
1365 | So; can you tell fortunes? |
1365 | Some one perhaps of yourselves, a lily broken untimely, Bow down his head to the earth; why delay I? |
1365 | Speak; what brings thee here? |
1365 | Speaking against the laws? |
1365 | Still in her heart she heard the funeral dirge of the ocean, But with its sound there was mingled a voice that whispered,"Despair not?" |
1365 | Surely I know thy face, Did I not see thee in the garden with him? |
1365 | THE BELLS OF SAN BLAS What say the Bells of San Blas To the ships that southward pass From the harbor of Mazatlan? |
1365 | THE CASTLE BY THE SEA BY JOHANN LUDWIG UHLAND"Hast thou seen that lordly castle, That Castle by the Sea? |
1365 | THE EMPEROR''S GLOVE"Combien faudrait- il de peaux d''Espagne pour faire un gant de cette grandeur?" |
1365 | THE MEETING After so long an absence At last we meet again: Does the meeting give us pleasure, Or does it give us pain? |
1365 | THE RIVER What wouldst thou in these mountains seek, O stranger from the city? |
1365 | THE WAVE BY CHRISTOPH AUGUST TIEDGE"Whither, thou turbid wave? |
1365 | Tears came into her eyes, and she said, with a tremulous accent,"Gone? |
1365 | Tell me frankly, How meanest thou? |
1365 | Tell me, O Lord, And what shall this man do? |
1365 | Tell me, who is the master That works in such an admirable way, And with such power and feeling? |
1365 | Tell me, why is it ye are discontent, You, Cardinals Salviati and Marcello, With Michael Angelo? |
1365 | Tell the Court Have you not seen the supernatural power Of this old man? |
1365 | Tell us, Padre Cura, Who are these Gypsies in the neighborhood? |
1365 | Tell us, Philip, What tidings dost thou bring? |
1365 | Tell us, art thou the Christ? |
1365 | That I have also power to set thee free? |
1365 | That haunt my troubled brain? |
1365 | That something hindered you? |
1365 | That vanish when day approaches, And at night return again? |
1365 | That you would open their eyes? |
1365 | That''s not your name? |
1365 | That''s nuts to crack, I''ve teeth to spare, but where shall I find almonds? |
1365 | The Count of Lara? |
1365 | The Happiest Land The Wave The Dead The Bird and the Ship Whither? |
1365 | The Justice wrote The words down in a book, and then Continued, as he raised his pen:"She is; and hath a mass been said For the salvation of her soul? |
1365 | The Lord replied,"My Angels, be not wroth; Did e''er the son of Levi break his oath? |
1365 | The Primus of great Alcala Enamored of a Gypsy? |
1365 | The Ruler of the Feast is gazing at me, As if he asked, why is that old man here Among the revellers? |
1365 | The cup my Father hath given me to drink, Shall I not drink it? |
1365 | The daughter Of Wenlock Christison? |
1365 | The day is drawing to its close; And what good deeds, since first it rose, Have I presented, Lord, to thee, As offsprings of my ministry? |
1365 | The death- song they sing Even now in mine ear, What avails it? |
1365 | The deeds of love and high emprise, In battle done? |
1365 | The dreams of love, that were so sweet of yore, What are they now, when two deaths may be mine,-- One sure, and one forecasting its alarms? |
1365 | The greatest of all poets? |
1365 | The impatient Governor cried:"This is the lady; do you hesitate? |
1365 | The king looked, and replied:"I know him well; It is the Angel men call Azrael,''T is the Death Angel; what hast thou to fear?" |
1365 | The listening guests were greatly mystified, None more so than the rector, who replied:"Marry you? |
1365 | The monk? |
1365 | The star of love and dreams? |
1365 | The sunrise or the sunset of the heart? |
1365 | Then answer me: When certain persons came To see you yesterday, how did you know Beforehand why they came? |
1365 | Then asked him in a business way, Kindly but cold:"Is thy wife dead?" |
1365 | Then he said,"O Mudjekeewis, Is there nothing that can harm you? |
1365 | Then he turned and saw the strangers, Cowering, crouching with the shadows; Said within himself,"Who are they? |
1365 | Then how doth he now see? |
1365 | Then saith the Christ, as silent stands The crowd, What wilt thou at my hands? |
1365 | Then tell me, Why do you trouble them? |
1365 | Then tell me, Witch and woman, For you must know the pathways through this wood, Where lieth Salem Village? |
1365 | Then to the cobbler turned:"My friend, Pray tell me, didst thou ever read Reynard the Fox?" |
1365 | Then who can do it? |
1365 | Then why Doth he come here to sadden with his presence Our marriage feast, belonging to a sect Haters of women, and that taste not wine? |
1365 | Then why come you here? |
1365 | Then why pause with indecision, When bright angels in thy vision Beckon thee to fields Elysian? |
1365 | Then, what need Is there for us to beat about the bush? |
1365 | Then, will you drink? |
1365 | There is his grave; there stands the cross we set; Why dost thou clasp me so, dear Margaret? |
1365 | These the wild, bewildering fancies, That with dithyrambic dances As with magic circles bound me? |
1365 | Think ye, shall Christ come out of Galilee? |
1365 | Think you that I approve such cruelties, Because I marvel at the architects Who built these walls, and curved these noble arches? |
1365 | Think''st thou this heart could feel a moment''s joy, Thou being absent? |
1365 | Thirty? |
1365 | This is the house of the Prince of Peace, and would you profane it Thus with violent deeds and hearts overflowing with hatred? |
1365 | This land of sluices, dikes, and dunes? |
1365 | This water- net, that tessellates The landscape? |
1365 | Thou art the Christ? |
1365 | Thou canst supply thy wants; what wouldst thou more? |
1365 | Thou hast no hand? |
1365 | Thou hast seen the land; Is it not fair to look on? |
1365 | Thou here? |
1365 | Thou sayest I should be jealous? |
1365 | Thou seest the multitude that throng and press thee, And sayest thou: Who touched me? |
1365 | Thou, who wast altogether born in sins And in iniquities, dost thou teach us? |
1365 | Through the cloud- rack, dark and trailing, Must they see above them sailing O''er life''s barren crags the vulture? |
1365 | Thus, then,--believe ye in God, in the Father who this world created? |
1365 | Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food? |
1365 | To whom, then? |
1365 | Told my fortune? |
1365 | Tourney and joust, that charmed the eye, And scarf, and gorgeous panoply, And nodding plume, What were they but a pageant scene? |
1365 | V How can the Three be One? |
1365 | WHITHER? |
1365 | WILL EVER THE DEAR DAYS COME BACK AGAIN? |
1365 | Was he born blind? |
1365 | Was he one, or many, merging Name and fame in one, Like a stream, to which, converging Many streamlets run? |
1365 | Was it Shingebis the diver? |
1365 | Was it a wanton song? |
1365 | Was it for this I have followed the flying feet and the shadow Over the wintry sea, to the desolate shores of New England? |
1365 | Was it for this I have loved, and waited, and worshipped in silence? |
1365 | Was it not so, Francisco? |
1365 | Was it not? |
1365 | Was it the owl, the Koko- koho, Hooting from the dismal forest? |
1365 | Was it the wind above the smoke- flue, Muttering down into the wigwam? |
1365 | Was it then for heads of arrows, Arrow- heads of chalcedony, Arrow- heads of flint and jasper, That my Hiawatha halted In the land of the Dacotahs? |
1365 | Was it wrong That in an hour like that I did not weigh Too nicely this or that, but granted him A boon that pleased him, and that flattered me? |
1365 | Was she a lady of high degree, So much in love with the vanity And foolish pomp of this world of ours? |
1365 | Was there another like it? |
1365 | Well, Francisco, What speed with Preciosa? |
1365 | Well, Francisco, What tidings from Don Juan? |
1365 | Well, What of them? |
1365 | Well, what then? |
1365 | Well, where''s my flip? |
1365 | Well? |
1365 | Were it not better, then, To let the treasures rest Hid from the eyes of men, Locked in their iron chest? |
1365 | Were not the paintings on the Sistine ceiling Enough for them? |
1365 | Were you ever in love, Baltasar? |
1365 | Were you not frightened? |
1365 | What ails Baptiste? |
1365 | What ails the cattle? |
1365 | What ails the child, who seems to fear That we shall do him harm? |
1365 | What answer do you make to this, Giles Corey? |
1365 | What answer make you? |
1365 | What answer make you? |
1365 | What answer shall we make? |
1365 | What are the books now most in vogue? |
1365 | What are these idle tales? |
1365 | What are these paintings on the walls around us? |
1365 | What are those torches, That glimmer on Brook Kedron there below us? |
1365 | What are ye doing here? |
1365 | What are you doing here? |
1365 | What bee hath stung you? |
1365 | What bells are those, that ring so slow, So mellow, musical, and low? |
1365 | What brings the rest of you? |
1365 | What brings thee here? |
1365 | What brings thee hither to this hostile camp Thus unattended? |
1365 | What brings thee hither? |
1365 | What brings you forth so early? |
1365 | What but the garlands, gay and green, That deck the tomb? |
1365 | What can I do or say? |
1365 | What can I say Better than silence is? |
1365 | What can I say? |
1365 | What can he Who lives in boundless luxury at Rome Care for the imperilled liberties of Florence, Her people, her Republic? |
1365 | What can it mean, This rising from the dead? |
1365 | What can so many Jews be doing here Together in Samaria? |
1365 | What can this mean? |
1365 | What can this mean? |
1365 | What choice And precious things dost thou keep hidden in it? |
1365 | What convent of barefooted Carmelites Taught thee so much theology? |
1365 | What could I do? |
1365 | What craft of alchemy can bid defiance To time and change, and for a single hour Renew this phantom- flower? |
1365 | What deadly sin Have you committed? |
1365 | What did he do? |
1365 | What did you dream about? |
1365 | What did you hear? |
1365 | What disaster Could she bring on thy house, who is a woman? |
1365 | What do I care for the Doctor Seraphic, With all his wordy chaffer and traffic? |
1365 | What do I say of a murmur? |
1365 | What do they want? |
1365 | What do we gain by parleying with the Devil? |
1365 | What do we know of spirits good or ill, Or of their power to help us or to harm us? |
1365 | What do we? |
1365 | What do you think I heard there in the village? |
1365 | What do you want of Padre Francisco? |
1365 | What do you want of Padre Hypolito? |
1365 | What does he say? |
1365 | What does it say to you? |
1365 | What dost thou mean? |
1365 | What dost thou say of him That hath restored thy sight? |
1365 | What evil have I done? |
1365 | What fair renown, what honor, what repute Can come to you from starving this poor brute? |
1365 | What for? |
1365 | What frightens you? |
1365 | What further need Have we of witnesses? |
1365 | What further shall we do? |
1365 | What further would you see? |
1365 | What good thing shall I do, that I may have Eternal life? |
1365 | What greetings come there from the voiceless dead? |
1365 | What has a rough old soldier, grown grim and gray in the harness, Used to the camp and its ways, to do with the wooing of maidens? |
1365 | What has been done? |
1365 | What has happened? |
1365 | What has he done, Or left undone, that ye are set against him? |
1365 | What hast thou To bring against all these? |
1365 | What hast thou done to make thee look so fair? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What have I to do With thee, thou Son of God? |
1365 | What have they done to me, that I am naked? |
1365 | What have we gained? |
1365 | What have we here, affixed to the gate? |
1365 | What have we here? |
1365 | What have you done that''s better? |
1365 | What have you here alone, Messer Michele? |
1365 | What holds he in his hand? |
1365 | What hope deludes, what promise cheers, What pleasant voices fill their ears? |
1365 | What hope have we from such an Emperor? |
1365 | What if they were dead? |
1365 | What instrument is that? |
1365 | What is Antiochus, that he should prate Of peace to me, who am a fugitive? |
1365 | What is amiss? |
1365 | What is death? |
1365 | What is he accused of? |
1365 | What is he doing? |
1365 | What is it to die? |
1365 | What is it you would warn me of? |
1365 | What is it, O my Lord? |
1365 | What is it, then? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is peace? |
1365 | What is that gun? |
1365 | What is that yonder in the valley? |
1365 | What is that yonder on the square? |
1365 | What is that? |
1365 | What is that? |
1365 | What is the course you here go through? |
1365 | What is the marble group that glimmers there Behind you? |
1365 | What is the name of yonder friar, With an eye that glows like a coal of fire, And such a black mass of tangled hair? |
1365 | What is their remedy? |
1365 | What is there To cause suspicion or alarm in that, More than in friendships that I entertain With you and others? |
1365 | What is there to prevent My sharing the same fate? |
1365 | What is this castle that rises above us, and lords it over a land so wide? |
1365 | What is this crowd Gathered about a beggar? |
1365 | What is this gathering here? |
1365 | What is this picture? |
1365 | What is this stir and tumult in the street? |
1365 | What is this thing they witness here against thee? |
1365 | What is thy name? |
1365 | What is thy will with me? |
1365 | What is your illness? |
1365 | What is your landlord''s name? |
1365 | What is your name? |
1365 | What is your name? |
1365 | What joy have I without thee? |
1365 | What lack I yet? |
1365 | What land is this that seems to be A mingling of the land and sea? |
1365 | What land is this that spreads itself beneath us? |
1365 | What land is this? |
1365 | What land is this? |
1365 | What lands and skies Paint pictures in their friendly eyes? |
1365 | What lights are these? |
1365 | What mad jest Is this? |
1365 | What man is that? |
1365 | What may I call your name? |
1365 | What may be The questions that perplex, the hopes that cheer him? |
1365 | What may your business be? |
1365 | What may your wish or purpose be? |
1365 | What means this outrage? |
1365 | What means this revel and carouse? |
1365 | What monstrous apparition, Exceeding fierce, that none may pass that way? |
1365 | What more of this strange story? |
1365 | What more was done? |
1365 | What more? |
1365 | What more? |
1365 | What news from Court? |
1365 | What news have you from Florence? |
1365 | What news is this, that makes thy cheek turn pale, And thy hand tremble? |
1365 | What next? |
1365 | What now Why such a fearful din? |
1365 | What now? |
1365 | What other instruments have we? |
1365 | What penitence proportionate Can e''er be felt for sin so great? |
1365 | What place is this? |
1365 | What potent charm Has drawn thee from thy German farm Into the old Alsatian city? |
1365 | What pressure from the hands that lifeless lie? |
1365 | What prince hereditary of their line, Uprising in the strength and flush of youth, Their glory shall inherit and prolong? |
1365 | What prompted such a letter? |
1365 | What salutation, welcome, or reply? |
1365 | What say the laws of England? |
1365 | What say ye, Judges of the Court,--what say ye? |
1365 | What say you to this charge? |
1365 | What say you? |
1365 | What say? |
1365 | What say? |
1365 | What secret trouble stirs thy breast? |
1365 | What see I now? |
1365 | What see you now? |
1365 | What see you? |
1365 | What seek ye? |
1365 | What seekest thou here to- day? |
1365 | What seekest thou? |
1365 | What seest thou? |
1365 | What shall I do? |
1365 | What shall I read? |
1365 | What shall I say to you? |
1365 | What shall we have therefor? |
1365 | What shall we say unto them That sent us here? |
1365 | What shape is this? |
1365 | What should I be afraid of? |
1365 | What should I fear? |
1365 | What should prevent me now, thou man of sin, From hanging at its side the head of one Who born a Jew hath made himself a Greek? |
1365 | What sound is that? |
1365 | What story is it? |
1365 | What strange guests has Minnehaha?" |
1365 | What tale do the roaring ocean, And the night- wind, bleak and wild, As they beat at the crazy casement, Tell to that little child? |
1365 | What testimony? |
1365 | What then was the Book You showed to this young woman, and besought her To write in it? |
1365 | What then will ye That I should do with him that is called Christ? |
1365 | What then-- when one is blind? |
1365 | What then? |
1365 | What think ye, would he care For a Jew slain here or there, Or a plundered caravan? |
1365 | What think ye? |
1365 | What think you of ours here at Salern? |
1365 | What think you of that bridge? |
1365 | What think you? |
1365 | What think you? |
1365 | What tidings bring ye? |
1365 | What torches glare and glisten Upon the swords and armor of these men? |
1365 | What was he doing there? |
1365 | What was it held me back From kissing her fair forehead, and those lips, Those dead, dumb lips? |
1365 | What was the bird that this young woman saw Just now upon your hand? |
1365 | What was the meaning of those words? |
1365 | What wilt thou That I should do to thee? |
1365 | What wilt thou do When I am dead, Urbino? |
1365 | What wilt thou give me? |
1365 | What wilt thou, then? |
1365 | What wise man wrote it? |
1365 | What woman''s this, that, like an apparition, Haunts this deserted homestead in broad day? |
1365 | What would be Their fate, who now are looking up to me For help and furtherance? |
1365 | What would the people think, If they should see the Reverend Cotton Mather Ride into Salem with a Witch behind him? |
1365 | What would you Have done to such a man? |
1365 | What would you further? |
1365 | What would you have me do? |
1365 | What would you see in Rome? |
1365 | What wouldst thou ask of us? |
1365 | What wouldst thou with me, A feeble girl, who have not long to live, Whose heart is broken? |
1365 | What wouldst thou? |
1365 | What wrong repressed, what right maintained, What struggle passed, what victory gained, What good attempted and attained? |
1365 | What''s happened to my wife? |
1365 | What''s the matter with you? |
1365 | What''s the news at Court? |
1365 | What''s yours? |
1365 | What, Captain Simon Kempthorn of the Swallow? |
1365 | What, again, Maestro? |
1365 | What, am I a Jew To put my moneys out at usury? |
1365 | What, but a transient gleam of light, A flame, which, glaring at its height, Grew dim and died? |
1365 | What, in a few short years, will remain of thy race but the footprints? |
1365 | What, think''st thou, is she doing at this moment; Now, while we speak of her? |
1365 | What? |
1365 | What? |
1365 | When came you in? |
1365 | When did he this? |
1365 | When did you come from Fondi? |
1365 | When first I sent you forth without a purse, Or scrip, or shoes, did ye lack anything? |
1365 | When hast thou At any time, to any man or woman, Or even to any little child, shown mercy? |
1365 | When he heard the owls at midnight, Hooting, laughing in the forest,"What is that?" |
1365 | When shall these eyes behold, these arms be folded about thee?" |
1365 | When was that? |
1365 | When will our journey end? |
1365 | When will that be? |
1365 | When will that be? |
1365 | When will that come? |
1365 | When you two Are gone, who is there that remains behind To seize the pencil falling from your fingers? |
1365 | Whence art thou? |
1365 | Whence come you now? |
1365 | Whence come you? |
1365 | Whence come you? |
1365 | Whence come you? |
1365 | Whence comest thou? |
1365 | Whence hast thou living water? |
1365 | Whence knowest thou me? |
1365 | Whence knowest thou these stories? |
1365 | Where Each royal prince and noble heir Of Aragon? |
1365 | Where I have eaten the bread and drunk the wine So many times at our Lord''s Table with you? |
1365 | Where are Bertha and Max? |
1365 | Where are Helios and Hephaestus, Gods of eldest eld? |
1365 | Where are my players and my dancing women? |
1365 | Where are my sweet musicians with their pipes, That made me merry in the olden time? |
1365 | Where are now the freighted barks From the marts of east and west? |
1365 | Where are now the many hundred Thousand books he wrote? |
1365 | Where are our shallow fords? |
1365 | Where are the children? |
1365 | Where are the courtly gallantries? |
1365 | Where are the gentle knights, that came To kneel, and breathe love''s ardent flame, Low at their feet? |
1365 | Where are the high- born dames, and where Their gay attire, and jewelled hair, And odors sweet? |
1365 | Where are the lute and gay tambour They loved of yore? |
1365 | Where are the others? |
1365 | Where are the witnesses? |
1365 | Where are they now? |
1365 | Where are they? |
1365 | Where are we, Philip? |
1365 | Where are you living? |
1365 | Where art thou, Chilion? |
1365 | Where can Victorian be? |
1365 | Where did you see it? |
1365 | Where had he hidden himself away? |
1365 | Where hast thou been so long? |
1365 | Where hast thou been to- day? |
1365 | Where hast thou been? |
1365 | Where have you been? |
1365 | Where is Baptiste? |
1365 | Where is Giles Corey? |
1365 | Where is Hermes Trismegistus, Who their secrets held? |
1365 | Where is John Gloyd? |
1365 | Where is Victorian? |
1365 | Where is he? |
1365 | Where is he? |
1365 | Where is she? |
1365 | Where is the King, Don Juan? |
1365 | Where is the Landlord? |
1365 | Where is the gentlemen? |
1365 | Where is the man? |
1365 | Where is the mazy dance of old, The flowing robes, inwrought with gold, The dancers wore? |
1365 | Where is the ring I gave thee? |
1365 | Where is the song of Troubadour? |
1365 | Where is this King? |
1365 | Where is thy brother?" |
1365 | Where is your master? |
1365 | Where should I have a book? |
1365 | Where stays the coward? |
1365 | Where the knights in iron sarks Journeying to the Holy Land, Glove of steel upon the hand, Cross of crimson on the breast? |
1365 | Where the merchants with their wares, And their gallant brigantines Sailing safely into port Chased by corsair Algerines? |
1365 | Where the pilgrims with their prayers? |
1365 | Where the pomp of camp and court? |
1365 | Where''s my horse? |
1365 | Where''s my horse? |
1365 | Where? |
1365 | Wherefore art thou not with him? |
1365 | Wherefore art thou the only living thing Among thy brothers dead? |
1365 | Wherefore can I not follow thee? |
1365 | Wherefore dost thou turn Thy face from me? |
1365 | Wherefore standest thou so white In pale moonlight?" |
1365 | Wherefore then Askest thou me of this? |
1365 | Wherefore? |
1365 | Whereunto shall I liken, then, the men Of this generation? |
1365 | Which is more fair, The star of morning or the evening star? |
1365 | Which may be Atreides, Menelaus, Odysseus, Ajax the great, or bold Idomeneus?" |
1365 | Which of them? |
1365 | Whither, oh, whither? |
1365 | Whither, or whence, With thy fluttering golden band?" |
1365 | Whither, with so much haste, As if a thief wert thou?" |
1365 | Who am I, that from the centre Of thy glory thou shouldst enter This poor cell, my guest to be? |
1365 | Who and what are ye, that with furtive steps Steal in among our tents? |
1365 | Who and what are you? |
1365 | Who and whence are they? |
1365 | Who are the deputies that make complaint? |
1365 | Who are these gentlemen? |
1365 | Who are they That bring complaints against me? |
1365 | Who are they? |
1365 | Who are they? |
1365 | Who are you? |
1365 | Who art thou, and what is the word That here thou proclaimest? |
1365 | Who art thou, and whence comest thou? |
1365 | Who art thou? |
1365 | Who art thou? |
1365 | Who art thou? |
1365 | Who braves of Denmark''s Christian The stroke?" |
1365 | Who built it? |
1365 | Who calls me? |
1365 | Who cares for death? |
1365 | Who comes next? |
1365 | Who dares To say that he alone has found the truth? |
1365 | Who did these things? |
1365 | Who do the people say I am? |
1365 | Who has searched or sought All the unexplored and spacious Universe of thought? |
1365 | Who hath set in motion That sorry jest? |
1365 | Who hears the falling of the forest leaf? |
1365 | Who here would languish Longer in bewailing and in anguish? |
1365 | Who hurt her then? |
1365 | Who is He; ye exclaim? |
1365 | Who is he? |
1365 | Who is it calls? |
1365 | Who is it coming under the trees? |
1365 | Who is it makes Such outcry here? |
1365 | Who is it smote thee? |
1365 | Who is it speaketh in this place, With such a gentle voice? |
1365 | Who is it speaks? |
1365 | Who is it that doth stand so near His whispered words I almost hear? |
1365 | Who is it that speaketh? |
1365 | Who is it? |
1365 | Who is it? |
1365 | Who is it? |
1365 | Who is poisoned? |
1365 | Who is safe? |
1365 | Who is that woman yonder, gliding in So silently behind him? |
1365 | Who is that youth with the dark azure eyes, And hair, in color like unto the wine, Parted upon his forehead, and behind Falling in flowing locks? |
1365 | Who is the champion? |
1365 | Who is there to tell me? |
1365 | Who is this Exhorting in the outer courts so loudly? |
1365 | Who is this beggar blinking in the sun? |
1365 | Who is this youth? |
1365 | Who is this, that lights the wigwam? |
1365 | Who is this? |
1365 | Who is thy father? |
1365 | Who is your God and Father? |
1365 | Who knoweth not Prometheus the humane? |
1365 | Who knows what may happen? |
1365 | Who knows? |
1365 | Who leads us with a gentle hand Thither, O thither, Into the Silent Land? |
1365 | Who made these marks Upon her hands? |
1365 | Who says that I am ill? |
1365 | Who shall answer or divine? |
1365 | Who shall call his dreams fallacious? |
1365 | Who shall dare My crown to take, my sceptre bear, As king among the Jews? |
1365 | Who shall say That from the world of spirits comes no greeting, No message of remembrance? |
1365 | Who shall say what dreams of beauty Filled the heart of Hiawatha? |
1365 | Who shall say what thoughts and visions Fill the fiery brains of young men? |
1365 | Who shall tell us? |
1365 | Who thus parts you, who should never from each other parted be?" |
1365 | Who told you of the clothes? |
1365 | Who waits for you at Fondi? |
1365 | Who was it fled from here? |
1365 | Who was it said Amen? |
1365 | Who was it touched my garments? |
1365 | Who was it? |
1365 | Who will be tried to- day? |
1365 | Who will care for the Puk- Wudjies? |
1365 | Who would have thought That Bridget Bishop e''er would come to this? |
1365 | Who would not love, if loving she might be Changed like Callisto to a star in heaven? |
1365 | Who would think her but fifteen? |
1365 | Who''s conceited? |
1365 | Who''s next? |
1365 | Who''s next? |
1365 | Who''s the tall man in front? |
1365 | Who''s there? |
1365 | Who''s there? |
1365 | Who, in his own skill confiding, Shall with rule and line Mark the border- land dividing Human and divine? |
1365 | Who? |
1365 | Whom seek ye? |
1365 | Whom seekest thou? |
1365 | Whom wait ye for? |
1365 | Whom will ye, then, that I release to you? |
1365 | Whom would you pray to? |
1365 | Whose hand shall dare to open and explore These volumes, closed and clasped forevermore? |
1365 | Whose was the right and the wrong? |
1365 | Why all this fret and flurry? |
1365 | Why am I here alone among the tombs? |
1365 | Why art thou here? |
1365 | Why art thou up so early, pretty man? |
1365 | Why art thou up so late, my pretty damsel? |
1365 | Why ca n''t they let him rest? |
1365 | Why callest thou me good? |
1365 | Why came you there? |
1365 | Why comest thou Into this dark guest- chamber in the night? |
1365 | Why comest thou hither So early in the dawn? |
1365 | Why did I leave it? |
1365 | Why did I leave my ploughing and my reaping To plough and reap this Sodom and Gomorrah? |
1365 | Why did I leave thee? |
1365 | Why did mighty Jove create thee Coy as Thetis, fair as Flora, Beautiful as young Aurora, If to win thee is to hate thee? |
1365 | Why did the Pope and his ten Cardinals Come here to lay this heavy task upon me? |
1365 | Why did you let this horrible deed be done? |
1365 | Why did you not lay hold on her, and keep her From self destruction? |
1365 | Why didst thou leave me? |
1365 | Why didst thou not commission thy swift lightning To strike me dead? |
1365 | Why didst thou return? |
1365 | Why do they linger? |
1365 | Why do ye crowd us? |
1365 | Why do ye seek the living among the dead? |
1365 | Why do you hurt this person? |
1365 | Why does he go so often to Madrid? |
1365 | Why does he seek to fix a quarrel on me? |
1365 | Why does she torture me? |
1365 | Why does the bride turn pale, and hide her face on his shoulder? |
1365 | Why does the bridegroom start and stare at the strange apparition? |
1365 | Why does your spectre haunt and hurt this person? |
1365 | Why dost thou bear me aloft, O Angel of God, on thy pinions O''er realms and dominions? |
1365 | Why dost thou hurl me here among these rocks, And cut me with these stones? |
1365 | Why dost thou lift those tender eyes With so much sorrow and surprise? |
1365 | Why dost thou persecute me, Saul of Tarsus? |
1365 | Why doth The Master lead us up into this mountain? |
1365 | Why drag again into the light of day The errors of an age long passed away?" |
1365 | Why entreat me, why upbraid me, When the steadfast tongues of truth And the flattering hopes of youth Have all deceived me and betrayed me? |
1365 | Why fill the convent with such scandals, As if we were so many drunken Vandals? |
1365 | Why frightened? |
1365 | Why hast thou sent for me? |
1365 | Why have I done this? |
1365 | Why howl the dogs at night? |
1365 | Why hurry through the world at such a pace? |
1365 | Why is it hateful to you? |
1365 | Why keep me pacing to and fro Amid these aisles of sacred gloom, Counting my footsteps as I go, And marking with each step a tomb? |
1365 | Why make ye this ado, and weep? |
1365 | Why must they drag him Out of his grave to give me a bad name? |
1365 | Why must you? |
1365 | Why not my displeasure? |
1365 | Why not? |
1365 | Why not? |
1365 | Why seek to know? |
1365 | Why should I live? |
1365 | Why should I not? |
1365 | Why should I paint? |
1365 | Why should I seek this Frenchman, Rabelais? |
1365 | Why should I tell you how all the rivers are frozen and solid, And from out of the lake frangible water is dug? |
1365 | Why should I toil and sweat, Who now am rich enough to live at ease, And take my pleasure? |
1365 | Why should Proctor say Such things bout me? |
1365 | Why should the world for thee make room, And wait thy leisure and thy beck? |
1365 | Why should their praise in verse be sung? |
1365 | Why should you not have Quakers at your tavern If you have fiddlers? |
1365 | Why shouldst thou be dead? |
1365 | Why shouldst thou hate then thy brother? |
1365 | Why so? |
1365 | Why so? |
1365 | Why stayest thou here? |
1365 | Why stayest thou, Prince of Hoheneck? |
1365 | Why then will you hunt each other? |
1365 | Why this rapture and unrest? |
1365 | Why troublest thou the Master? |
1365 | Why wait you? |
1365 | Why will you go so soon? |
1365 | Why will you harbor such delusions, Giles? |
1365 | Why will you not Give all your heart to God? |
1365 | Why would you have this ring? |
1365 | Why, Simon, is it you? |
1365 | Why, what evil hath he done? |
1365 | Why, what has he been doing? |
1365 | Why, who do you think? |
1365 | Why? |
1365 | Why? |
1365 | Will he instruct the Elders? |
1365 | Will it all vanish into air? |
1365 | Will it not interrupt you? |
1365 | Will no one answer? |
1365 | Will no one give me water? |
1365 | Will one draught Suffice? |
1365 | Will she become immortal like ourselves? |
1365 | Will some one give me water? |
1365 | Will ye be his disciples? |
1365 | Will ye not enter in to- day? |
1365 | Will ye promise me this before God and man?" |
1365 | Will you be seated? |
1365 | Will you condemn me in this house of God, Where I so long have worshipped with you all? |
1365 | Will you condemn me on such evidence,-- You who have known me for so many years? |
1365 | Will you let me stay A little while, and with your falcon play? |
1365 | Will you not drink the King? |
1365 | Will you not promise? |
1365 | Will you not taste it? |
1365 | Will you serenade her? |
1365 | Will you sit down? |
1365 | Will you swear? |
1365 | Will you take My life away from me, because this girl, Who is distraught, and not in her right mind, Accuses me of things I blush to name? |
1365 | Will you take the oath? |
1365 | Will you then leave me, Julia, and so soon, To pace alone this terrace like a ghost? |
1365 | Will you, sir, sign the book? |
1365 | Wilt thou as fond and faithful be? |
1365 | Wilt thou eat then? |
1365 | Wilt thou fight on the Sabbath, Maccabaeus? |
1365 | Wilt thou not come? |
1365 | Wilt thou not pause and cease to pour Thy hurrying, headlong waters o''er This rocky shelf forever? |
1365 | Wilt thou so love me after death? |
1365 | Wilt thou sup with us? |
1365 | Wist ye not That I must be about my Father''s business? |
1365 | With Proctor''s wife? |
1365 | With hand outstretched She said:"Giles Corey, will you sign the Book?" |
1365 | With his great eyes lights the wigwam? |
1365 | With permission, Monsignori, What is it ye complain of? |
1365 | With trembling voice he said,"What wilt thou here?" |
1365 | Woman, who are you? |
1365 | Woman, why weepest thou? |
1365 | Wore not his cheek the apple''s ruddy glow, Would you not say he slept on Death''s cold arm? |
1365 | Would the Vision come again? |
1365 | Would the Vision there remain? |
1365 | Would you hear more? |
1365 | Wouldst thou have done so, Elsie? |
1365 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, Bat with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
1365 | XII THE SON OF THE EVENING STAR Can it be the sun descending O''er the level plain of water? |
1365 | Ye Scribes, why come ye hither? |
1365 | Ye children, does Death e''er alarm you? |
1365 | Ye did not hear: why would ye hear again? |
1365 | Ye recording angels, Open your books and read? |
1365 | Ye who are blessed in loving, tell it me: Love, love, what wilt thou with this heart of mine? |
1365 | Yea, I know him; Who knows him not? |
1365 | Yea, it remaineth forevermore, However Satan may rage and roar, Though often be whispers in my ears: What if thy doctrines false should be? |
1365 | Yes, that were a pleasant task, Your Excellency; but to whom? |
1365 | Yet am I not of those who imagine some evil intention Brings them here, for we are at peace; and why then molest us?" |
1365 | Yet why should I fear death? |
1365 | Yet without illusions What would our lives become, what we ourselves? |
1365 | Yet,--for what reason not children? |
1365 | Yet,--why are ye afraid, ye children? |
1365 | You are Tituba? |
1365 | You are not angry with me,--are you, Gloyd? |
1365 | You dare not? |
1365 | You have read-- For you read all things, not a book escapes you-- The famous Demonology of King James? |
1365 | You know this mark? |
1365 | You like it? |
1365 | You own yourself a Quaker,--do you not? |
1365 | You remember, surely, The adventure with the corsair Barbarossa, And all that followed? |
1365 | You saw her? |
1365 | You were not at the play tonight, Don Carlos; How happened it? |
1365 | You were there? |
1365 | You''re not hurt,--are you, Gloyd? |
1365 | Your life is mine; and what shall now withhold me From sending your vile soul to its account? |
1365 | an adept? |
1365 | and his brethren and his sisters Are they not with us? |
1365 | and offered me The waters of eternal life, to bid me Drink the polluted puddles of the world? |
1365 | and safe from danger; Can you not, with all your cunning, All your wisdom and contrivance, Change me, too, into a beaver?" |
1365 | and that you left This woman here, your wife, kneeling alone Upon the hearth? |
1365 | and what are they like? |
1365 | and where The power of Kazan with its fourfold gates? |
1365 | and where are they That brought the gifts of frankincense and myrrh? |
1365 | and why com''st thou here?" |
1365 | answerest thou The High- Priest so? |
1365 | are these the guests whose glances Seemed like sunshine gleaming round me? |
1365 | are you going to slay me? |
1365 | are you on fire, too, old hay- stack? |
1365 | can you tell me where alight Thuringia''s horsemen for the night? |
1365 | canst thou endure so long? |
1365 | canst thou not be Blithe as the air is, and as free? |
1365 | could ye not watch with me for one hour? |
1365 | dead? |
1365 | do you mean to make war with milk and the water of roses? |
1365 | do you not hear? |
1365 | do you see at the window there That face, with a look of grief and despair, That ghastly face, as of one in pain? |
1365 | do you think our statutes are but paper? |
1365 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
1365 | doth Charity fail? |
1365 | hast thou killed And also taken possession? |
1365 | have you, then, forgotten The story of Sophocles in his old age? |
1365 | he cried in terror,"What is that,"he said,"Nokomis?" |
1365 | he cried, desponding,"Must our lives depend on these things?" |
1365 | he cried, desponding,"Must our lives depend on these things?" |
1365 | he cried, desponding,"Must our lives depend on these things?" |
1365 | how canst thou mourn? |
1365 | how shall I be grateful For so much kindness? |
1365 | if thou art love, Why didst thou leave me naked to the tempter? |
1365 | in what deep Recesses of your realms of mystery Lies hidden now that star? |
1365 | in what realms afar, In what planet, in what star, In what vast, aerial space, Shines the light upon thy face? |
1365 | is Gabriel gone?" |
1365 | is it not enough? |
1365 | march again? |
1365 | must ye make A wailing like the dragons, and a mourning As of the owls? |
1365 | now say, if thou art wise, When the Angel of Death, who is full of eyes, Comes where a sick man dying lies, What doth he to the wight? |
1365 | or Hera''s girdle? |
1365 | or do they know indeed This man to be the very Christ? |
1365 | or was it real, What I saw as in a vision, When to marches hymeneal In the land of the Ideal Moved my thought o''er Fields Elysian? |
1365 | others Who have hearts as tender and true, and spirits as loyal? |
1365 | perhaps some friend May ask, incredulous;"and to what good end? |
1365 | said the young men, As they sported in the meadow:"Why stand idly looking at us, Leaning on the rock behind you? |
1365 | said you so? |
1365 | saith he;"Have naught but the bearded grain? |
1365 | shall I reign ten years? |
1365 | shouted the hasty and somewhat irascible blacksmith;"Must we in all things look for the how, and the why, and the wherefore? |
1365 | that it has not received? |
1365 | that once did visit me, Making night glorious with your smile, where are ye? |
1365 | that they were Medes and Persians, They were Sidonians, anything but Jews? |
1365 | there are yet four months And cometh, harvest? |
1365 | these The ways that win, the arts that please? |
1365 | to cherish God more than all things earthly, and every man as a brother? |
1365 | to hope, to forgive, and to suffer, Be what it may your condition, and walk before God in uprightness? |
1365 | was ever a grief like this? |
1365 | what ails thee, my poor child? |
1365 | what ails thee, sweet?" |
1365 | what are the tidings to- day? |
1365 | what can I do? |
1365 | what delight? |
1365 | what grief doth him oppress? |
1365 | what have I said? |
1365 | what holy angel Brings the Slave this glad evangel? |
1365 | what is the news, I pray? |
1365 | what madness has seized you? |
1365 | what murmurs arise from the heart of those mountainous deserts? |
1365 | what wonder- working, occult science Can from the ashes in our hearts once more The rose of youth restore? |
1365 | what would the world be to us If the children were no more? |
1365 | when shall they all meet again?" |
1365 | when the gate Of heaven is open, will ye wait? |
1365 | where? |
1365 | wherefore? |
1365 | who is this That looketh forth as the morning? |
1365 | who is this doll? |
1365 | who knowst? |
1365 | who may the bridegroom be?" |
1365 | who shall lead us thither? |
1365 | who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost clew regain? |
1365 | who the strong? |
1365 | who will e''er believe the words I say? |
1365 | who would not, then, depart with gladness, To inherit heaven for earthly sadness? |
1365 | why did your clouds retain For peasants''fields their floods of hoarded rain? |
1365 | why do ye play, And break the holy Sabbath day? |
1365 | why dream and wait for him longer? |
1365 | why is it That your hearts are so afflicted, That you sob so in the midnight? |
1365 | why open no abyss To bury in its chasm a crime like this? |
1365 | why will you harbor these dark thoughts? |
1365 | wilt thou return no more? |
1365 | wouldst thou so? |
1365 | you ask me; I answer by asking, Hail and snow and rain, are they not three, and yet one? |
3252 | ''How mosh does he bay you by der veeks?'' 3252 ''Might not some other cause,''said I,''produce this concurrence? |
3252 | ''On which side?'' 3252 A bit of the wing, Roxy, or of the-- under limb?" |
3252 | A good many books, has n''t he? |
3252 | A long ride to- day? |
3252 | A young person,he said to himself,--"why a young person? |
3252 | About what? |
3252 | Afraid of them? |
3252 | Afraid? 3252 Ah, Mr. Gridley,"he said,"you are not studying the civil law, are you?" |
3252 | An''to be sure ai n''t I tellin''you, Mr. Gridley, jist as fast as my breath will let me? 3252 And Silas Peckham?" |
3252 | And do you take real pleasure in the din of all those screeching and banging and growling instruments? |
3252 | And how does Mr. Dudley Veneer take all this? |
3252 | And how have you all been at the mansion house? |
3252 | And now,he said,"what do you think of her companion?" |
3252 | And so you advise me to make love to the English girl, do you? |
3252 | And this is what you have been working at so long,--is it, Clement? |
3252 | And what are your pursuits, Jack? 3252 And what becomes of all those that he drops into the basket?" |
3252 | And what do you say to these others? |
3252 | And what have you found, my dear? |
3252 | And what was that? |
3252 | And who and what is that,he said,--"sitting a little apart there,--that strange, wild- looking girl?" |
3252 | And who was that, pray? |
3252 | And why not your English maiden? |
3252 | And why the New Portfolio, I would ask? |
3252 | And worth a great deal of money? |
3252 | And you did not speak to her? |
3252 | Anything ketchin''about it? |
3252 | Anything new in the city? |
3252 | Are a dozen additional spasms worth living for? |
3252 | Are there not some special inconveniences connected with what is called celebrity? 3252 Are we dead?" |
3252 | Are we like to be alone and undisturbed? |
3252 | Are you crazy? |
3252 | Are you going to open a correspondence with Mr. Maurice Kirkwood, Lurida? 3252 Are you not a little overstating his peculiarity? |
3252 | Are you sure you can depend on Kitty? |
3252 | Are you the literary critic of that well- known journal, or do you manage the political column? |
3252 | Believe it, Euthymia? 3252 Board and lodging for ten days, Mr. Peckham,--whose board and lodging, pray?" |
3252 | Busy, grandpapa? |
3252 | But is there nothing in thy track To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day? |
3252 | But surely, Sophy, you a''n''t afraid to have Dick marry her, if she would have him for any reason, are you? 3252 But what if it were a case of''How happy could I be with either''? |
3252 | But when we come to inquire Whence is matter? 3252 But, as I said above, what could I do? |
3252 | But,said be,"suppose that I had been offered such a place; do you think I ought to accept it and leave Arrowhead Village? |
3252 | By the way, Doctor, have you seen anything of a little plaid- pattern match- box? |
3252 | Ca n''t find out anything about him, you said, did n-''t you? 3252 Can he answer these questions? |
3252 | Can you repeat it to us? |
3252 | Canst thou by searching find out God? 3252 Children of the natural method[ his own method of classification of skin diseases,] are you all here?" |
3252 | Cynthia Badlam Fund Hopkins,said the good woman triumphantly,--"is that what you mean?" |
3252 | DO YOU WANT TO BE REMEMBERED AFTER THE CONTINENTS HAVE GONE UNDER, AND COME UP AGAIN, AND DRIED, AND BRED NEW RACES? 3252 Dead, is he? |
3252 | Dear mother,cried the boy,"why wo n''t you listen to reason? |
3252 | Did Number Five go to meet you in your laboratory, as she talked of doing? |
3252 | Did any of you notice any remarkable sounds last night,he said,--"or this morning? |
3252 | Did ever passion heat words to incandescence as it did those of Sappho? |
3252 | Did he talk with you on the way? |
3252 | Did n''t he say to Cain,''Where is Abel, thy brother?'' |
3252 | Did n''t you tell me once, Clement, that you were attempting a bust of Innocence? 3252 Did she look at you?" |
3252 | Did the party give you possession of these documents without making any effort to retain them? |
3252 | Did y''bring home somethin''from the party? 3252 Did you ever see a genuine Yankee?" |
3252 | Did you happen to notice anything about it, Kitty? |
3252 | Did you remark Elsie''s ways this forenoon? |
3252 | Did you see the paper that he showed her before he fastened it up with the others, Kitty? |
3252 | Did you talk about books at all with the old man? |
3252 | Did you write the letter from Rome, published a few weeks ago? |
3252 | Did, you ever see a case of epilepsy cured by nitrate of silver? |
3252 | Do n''t you know who he was nor what he was? |
3252 | Do n''t you speak about my client? 3252 Do n''t you think he worries himself about the souls of young women rather more than for those of old ones, Myrtle?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think she''s vuiry good- lookin''? |
3252 | Do not dull people bore you? |
3252 | Do you go to those musical hullabaloos? |
3252 | Do you know anything of Captain H. of the Massachusetts Twentieth? |
3252 | Do you know much about the Veneer family? |
3252 | Do you know what I think? |
3252 | Do you mean to say that every man is not absolutely free to choose his beliefs? |
3252 | Do you notice how many people you meet with their mouths stretched wide open? |
3252 | Do you really think Dick means mischief to anybody, that he has such dangerous- looking things? |
3252 | Do you really think of studying medicine? |
3252 | Do you recollect giving some of them to Mr. Bradshaw to look over? |
3252 | Do you see that? |
3252 | Do you seriously think of becoming a practitioner of medicine? |
3252 | Do you suppose I am going to answer such questions as you are putting me because you repeat them over, Mr. Gridley? 3252 Do you think her father has treated her judiciously?" |
3252 | Do you understand it? 3252 Do you want money?" |
3252 | Do? |
3252 | Doctor,the physician began, as from a sudden suggestion,"you wo n''t quarrel with me, if I tell you some of my real thoughts, will you?" |
3252 | Does Mr. Clement Lindsay live here? |
3252 | Does Mr. William Murray Bradshaw know anything about any papers, such as I am referring to, that may have been sent to the office? |
3252 | Dolus an virtus quis in hoste requirat? |
3252 | Elsie there? 3252 FISH AND DANDIES ONLY KEEP ON ICE.--Who will take? |
3252 | Far off his coming--shall I say"shone,"and finish the Miltonic phrase, or leave the verb to the happy conjectures of my audience? |
3252 | For whom this gift? |
3252 | Four hands all round? |
3252 | Greatly interested in the souls of his people, is n''t he? |
3252 | Had n''t you better let me write it for you, dear? |
3252 | Has n''t he some curiosities,--old figures, old jewelry, old coins, or things of that sort? |
3252 | Has she left no letter,--no explanation of her leaving in this way? |
3252 | Has that young gentleman ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping? |
3252 | Has there not been some understanding between you that he should become the approved suitor of Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Have some of these shell- oysters? |
3252 | Have they a billiard- room in the upper story? |
3252 | Have you ever talked with her about studying medicine? |
3252 | Have you found it well furnished with the books you most want? |
3252 | Have you heard anything against him? |
3252 | Have you heerd anything yet, Kitty Fagan? |
3252 | Have you kept your eye on her steadily? |
3252 | Have you received any papers from any of the family since the settlement of the estate? |
3252 | Have you seen his room? 3252 Have you stay, my friend?" |
3252 | Have you watched him pretty close for the last few days? |
3252 | He does look warm, does n''t he? |
3252 | He? 3252 How are you, Boy?" |
3252 | How are you, Dad? |
3252 | How are you, my fortunate friend? |
3252 | How can he be reached? |
3252 | How can the man who has learned but one art procure all the conveniences of life honestly? 3252 How can we manage to get an impartial judgment?" |
3252 | How can you ask that, Mr. Gridley? 3252 How do I know, Jeff?" |
3252 | How do you like the books I see you reading? |
3252 | How do you like the look of these oranges? |
3252 | How is Mr. Kirkwood, to- day? |
3252 | How is this? |
3252 | How long ago did her mother die? |
3252 | How long since your return to this country, may I ask? |
3252 | How long were you gone? |
3252 | How many horses does your papa keep? |
3252 | How many times,I kept saying to myself,"is that wicked old moon coming up to stare at me?" |
3252 | How many words do you think I shall want? |
3252 | How many? |
3252 | How much do you pay for your winter- strained? |
3252 | How much is it now? |
3252 | How much should you call about right for the picter an''figgerin''? |
3252 | How much, should you say? |
3252 | How much? |
3252 | How old is Elsie? |
3252 | I could n''t help comin'',said Nurse Byloe,"we do so love our babies,--how can we help it, Miss Badlam?" |
3252 | I hope I should be equal to that emergency,answered the young Doctor;"but I trust you are not suffering from any such accident?" |
3252 | I wonder if he would examine some old coins of mine? |
3252 | I wonder if the old man reads other novelists.--Do tell me, Deacon, if you have read Thackeray''s last story? |
3252 | If any of those papers were of importance, should you think your junior partner ought to keep them from your knowledge? |
3252 | If this is not genuine pathos, where will you find it, I should like to know? 3252 In what literary occupation have you been engaged, if you will pardon my inquiry? |
3252 | Is Helen come? |
3252 | Is Miss Badlam in? |
3252 | Is all this from real life? |
3252 | Is it as I thought? |
3252 | Is it probable that time and circumstances will alter a habit of nervous interactions so long established? 3252 Is n''t it a leetle rash to give him the use of his hands? |
3252 | Is n''t it so? 3252 Is not poetry the natural language of lovers?" |
3252 | Is she a good scholar? |
3252 | Is she violent in her delirium? |
3252 | Is the boy still awake? |
3252 | Is the last word to be spelt with one or two s''s? |
3252 | Is the person you are seeking a niece or other relative of yours? |
3252 | Is there a young person here, a stranger? |
3252 | Is there nobody that I can trust, or is everybody hunting me like a bird? |
3252 | Is there nobody that will venture his life to save a brother like that? |
3252 | Is this only your own suggestion? |
3252 | Is this the mighty ocean?--is this all? |
3252 | Is this very rare and valuable? 3252 Is your appetite as good as usual?" |
3252 | It''s apoplexy,--I told you so,--don''t you see how red he is in the face? |
3252 | Jawin''abaout? 3252 Judge, will you take Mrs. Sprowle in to supper?" |
3252 | Just out of the village,--that''s all.--There''s a kink in her mane,--pull it out, will you? |
3252 | Keep what, Kitty? 3252 Know of what, Cyprian?" |
3252 | Knows how to shut a fellow up pretty well for a young one, does n''t he? |
3252 | Lecture to students of your sex? 3252 Let Ol''Sophy set at''th''foot o''th''bed, if th''young missis sets by th''piller,--won''y'', darlin''? |
3252 | Lived in Rome once? |
3252 | Madam, do you remember you have your party tonight? |
3252 | Marry a man because she hates him, Sophy? 3252 May I ask how long you lived in Rome?" |
3252 | May I ask when, where, and of whom you obtained these papers, Miss Badlam? |
3252 | May I ask where you picked up the coin you are showing me? |
3252 | May I ask who the person or persons may be on whose account you wish to look at papers belonging to my late relative, Malachi Withers? |
3252 | May I not be Clement, dearest? 3252 Miss Hazard, will you allow me to present to you my friend, Mr. Clement Lindsay?" |
3252 | Mr. Gridley? 3252 My return? |
3252 | Myrtle is very lovely,Bathsheba answered,"but is n''t she a little too-- flighty-- for one like your brother? |
3252 | Naow get up, will ye? |
3252 | Nervous? 3252 Never observed it? |
3252 | Nothing very serious, I hope? |
3252 | Nuss Byloe, is that you? 3252 O Mr. Gridley, you are too bad,--what do I care for governors and presidents? |
3252 | Odd, is n''t it, father, the old man''s asking me to come and see him? 3252 Oh!--And the pink one, three seats from her? |
3252 | Oh, Doctor dear, what I''m thinkin''of a''n''t true, is it? |
3252 | Oh, how''s your haalth, Miss Darley? |
3252 | Oh, is n''t''Pickwick''nice? |
3252 | Oh, what is Heaven but the fellowship Of minds that each can stand against the world By its own meek and incorruptible will? |
3252 | One more gallop, Juan? |
3252 | Physician art thou, one all eyes; Philosopher, a fingering slave, One that would peep and botanize Upon his mother''s grave? |
3252 | Places you have been to, and people you have known? |
3252 | Quite warm, is n''t it, this evening? |
3252 | Rip Van Myrtle, you call that handsome girl, do you, Miss Clara? 3252 Scorn trifles"comes from Aunt Mary Moody Emerson, and reappears in her nephew, Ralph Waldo.--"What right have you, Sir, to your virtue? |
3252 | Sell you them things to make a colation out of? |
3252 | Shall I read you some of the rhymed pieces first, or some of the blank- verse poems, sir? |
3252 | Shall I seek a deeper slumber at the bottom of the lake I love than I have ever found when drifting idly over its surface? 3252 Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar? |
3252 | Shall I try the other publishers? |
3252 | Shall we judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? 3252 Sick, my child?" |
3252 | Signor? 3252 So Mr. Clement Lindsay has been saving a life, has he, and got some hard knocks doing it, hey, Susan Posey? |
3252 | So you admire conceited people, do you? |
3252 | Sounds like Coleridge, hey? 3252 Surely you are not afraid?" |
3252 | Susan Posey, child, what is your trouble? |
3252 | THE SUPREME SELF- INDULGENCE IS TO SURRENDER THE WILL TO A SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR.--Protestantism gave up a great luxury.--Did it though? 3252 Tell me, Sophy,"she said,"was Elsie always as shy as she seems to be now, in talking with those to whom she is friendly?" |
3252 | Tell me, darlin'',--don''you love somebody?--don''you love? 3252 Tell me, my dear, would you be willing to give up meeting this man alone, and gratify my friend, and avoid all occasion of reproach?" |
3252 | Tell me,said Gifted,"what are these papers, and who is he that looks upon them and drops them into the basket?" |
3252 | Thackeray''s story? 3252 The first thing? |
3252 | The regular correspondent from where? |
3252 | Them? |
3252 | Think about it? |
3252 | Think well of him? 3252 To be sure you are,"answered the Tutor,"and what of it? |
3252 | To be, or not to be: that is the question Whether''t is nobl----"William, shall we have pudding to- day, or flapjacks?" |
3252 | W''at''s in a name? |
3252 | WHY DO YOU COMPLAIN OF YOUR ORGANIZATION? 3252 Was that all that happened?" |
3252 | Was there ever anything like it? |
3252 | Was there ever such a senseless, stupid creature as I am? 3252 Was"--? |
3252 | Well, Doctor,the Counsellor began,"how are stocks in the measles market about these times? |
3252 | Well, Kitty, how are things going on up at The Poplars? 3252 Well, Stebbins,"said Mr. Dudley Veneer,"have you brought any special message from the Doctor?" |
3252 | Well, how has Elsie seemed of late? |
3252 | Well, if you say so; but why that P., Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 Well, then, Mrs. Hopkins, what shall be the boy''s name?" |
3252 | Well, there is some truth in that; but did you think the old- fashioned family doctor was extinct, a fossil like the megatherium? |
3252 | Well, what does she say to it? |
3252 | Well, what has been the trouble, Nurse? |
3252 | Well? |
3252 | Well? |
3252 | Whar he''s gone? 3252 What I''seen''bout Dick Veneer?" |
3252 | What I''ve got? 3252 What State do you come from?" |
3252 | What are their amusements? |
3252 | What are your favorites among his writings, Deacon? 3252 What building is that?" |
3252 | What can I do better,he said to himself,"than have a dance with Rosa Milburn?" |
3252 | What can I do with such a creature as this? |
3252 | What can have brought Dudley out to- night? |
3252 | What color was your mantle? |
3252 | What did you do before you became a soldier? |
3252 | What did you tell me, Miss Vincent, was this fellow''s particular antipathy? |
3252 | What disposition had you thought of making of them? |
3252 | What do you mean by asking me these questions, Mr. Gridley? 3252 What do you mean to do when you get back?" |
3252 | What do you say to my taking your question as the subject of a paper to be read before the Society? 3252 What do you say to the love poetry of women?" |
3252 | What do you say, uncle? |
3252 | What do you think of the young man over there at the Veneers''? |
3252 | What do you want of me, Elsie Venner? |
3252 | What do you want to know? |
3252 | What does all this mean? 3252 What has the public to do with my private affairs?" |
3252 | What if we change Isosceles to Theodore, Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 What is it, Doctor? |
3252 | What is it, Helen? 3252 What is it?" |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is like to be the further history of the case? 3252 What is that you have seen about Mr. Richard Veneer that gives you such a spite against him, Sophy?" |
3252 | What is the first book you would put in a student''s hands, doctor? |
3252 | What is the first thing you would do? |
3252 | What is the matter, Cousin Elsie? 3252 What is the matter, my darling?" |
3252 | What is the meaning of all this? 3252 What is the meaning of all this?" |
3252 | What is the remedy? 3252 What is this great stone pillar here for?" |
3252 | What made you ask me about him? 3252 What makes you think I care more for her than for her American friend?" |
3252 | What may her figure be? |
3252 | What now, Susan Posey, my dear? |
3252 | What o''clock is it? |
3252 | What paper has had anything about it, Lurida? 3252 What part of Georgia?" |
3252 | What shall we sing this evening? |
3252 | What the d--- is the reason I ca n''t see Myrtle, Cynthia? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What thinkest thou, Luke, of the maid we have been visiting? |
3252 | What time is''t? |
3252 | What were you whispering? |
3252 | What would Amanda think of a suitor who courted her with a rhyming dictionary in his pocket to help him make love? |
3252 | What would I do about it? 3252 What''r''you jawin''abaout?" |
3252 | What''s fetched y''daown here so all- fired airly? |
3252 | What''s the matter with Elsie Venner? |
3252 | What''s the matter with your shoulder, Venner? |
3252 | What''s the matter, do you suppose? 3252 What''s the meaning of all this, Cynthia? |
3252 | What''s the meaning of that, Kitty? 3252 What, Mr. Gridley? |
3252 | What,he answered,"the man that paddles a birch canoe, and rides all the wild horses of the neighborhood? |
3252 | What? |
3252 | When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
3252 | When a fellah goes out huntin''and shoots a squirrel, do you think he''s go''n''to let another fellah pick him up and kerry him off? 3252 Where am I? |
3252 | Where are our broomsticks? |
3252 | Where did our friends pick up all these fine ecstatic airs? |
3252 | Where did you get that flower, Elsie? |
3252 | Where did you go to church when you were at home? |
3252 | Where did you go? |
3252 | Where did you meet her? |
3252 | Where is the boat I was in? |
3252 | Where is the first volume of this Medical Cyclopaedia? |
3252 | Where is the light to come from that is to do as much for our poor human lives? |
3252 | Where is your uneasiness, Myrtle? |
3252 | Where shall I send your trunk after you from your uncle''s? |
3252 | Where''s all the oranges gone to? |
3252 | Which is the image of your protector, Myrtle? 3252 Which of the men do you wish would take himself off?" |
3252 | Which one shall it be? |
3252 | Who are those? |
3252 | Who are you, giants, whence and why? |
3252 | Who are you? |
3252 | Who can doubt that in this passage of his story he is picturing his own visions, one of the fairest of which was destined to become reality? 3252 Who do you think is coming, Mr. Gridley? |
3252 | Who fought? |
3252 | Who gave this cup? |
3252 | Who has a part with**** at this next exhibition? |
3252 | Who is she, I should like to know? |
3252 | Who is that girl in ringlets,--the fourth in the third row on the right? |
3252 | Who is that in the canoe over there? |
3252 | Who is that pretty girl my young doctor has got there? |
3252 | Who is that? |
3252 | Who is this Clement Lindsay, Bathsheba? |
3252 | Who might that favored person be? |
3252 | Who tol''you Elsie was a woman, Doctor? |
3252 | Who was at the wedding? |
3252 | Who was the general on the American side? |
3252 | Who was the person you sentenced? |
3252 | Who''s hurt? 3252 Who''s took care o''them things that was on the hoss?" |
3252 | Who''shurt? 3252 Why call him_ the Post_?" |
3252 | Why did n''t we all have a chance to help erect that statue? |
3252 | Why did not Miss Darley go to the party last evening? |
3252 | Why did you ask me for myself, when you could have claimed me? |
3252 | Why do n''t they take her away from the school, if she is in such a strange, excitable state? |
3252 | Why do n''t you tell the man he is wasting that water? 3252 Why does he keep out of sight as he does?" |
3252 | Why is it,she said,"that there is so common and so intense a desire for poetical reputation? |
3252 | Why should n''t you go to see a brother as well as a sister, I should like to know? 3252 Why strikest not? |
3252 | Why then goest thou as some Boswell or literary worshipper to this saint or to that? 3252 Why, Cynthy Badlam, what do y''mean?" |
3252 | Why, Kitty,he said,"what mischief do you think is going on, and who is to be harmed?" |
3252 | Why, Mr. Peckham,she said,"do you mean this? |
3252 | Why, bless me, is that my young friend Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Why, have n''t I met you walking with her, and did n''t you both seem greatly interested in the subject you were discussing? 3252 Why, how do you know without tasting them?" |
3252 | Why, my dear friend, how can you think of such a thing? 3252 Why, my dear little soul,"said Mr. Bernard,"what are you worried about? |
3252 | Why, sister, do n''t you know that Myrtle Hazard is missing,--gone!--gone nobody knows where, and that we are looking in all directions to find her? |
3252 | Why, then, Master, didst thou give her of thy medicine, seeing that her ail is unto death? |
3252 | Why, what is there to be interviewed in him? 3252 Why, what''s the matter, my dear?" |
3252 | Why,said the Doctor, sharply,--"have you ever seen him with any such weapon about him?" |
3252 | Why? |
3252 | Wicked to live, my dear? 3252 Will you allow me to take that envelope containing papers, Miss Badlam?" |
3252 | Will you go with me to the doctor''s, and let him read it in our presence? 3252 Will you state, if you please-- I beg your pardon-- may I ask who is your own favorite author?" |
3252 | Will you tell me,she said,"where you have found any account of the bands and lines in the spectrum of dream- nitrogen? |
3252 | Will you walk towards my home with me today? |
3252 | Winter- strained? |
3252 | Would you kindly write your autograph in my note- book, with that pen? 3252 Y''do n''t think anything dreadful has come o''that child''s wild nater, do ye?" |
3252 | Y''ha''n''t heerd nothin''abaout it, Squire, d''ye mean t''say? |
3252 | Yes; but you surely would not consider it inspiration of the same kind as that of the writers of the Old Testament? |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | You do n''t know the notion that people commonly have about that tree, Sophy? |
3252 | You do n''t know? 3252 You do n''t mean that she has any mark about her, except-- you know-- under the necklace?" |
3252 | You find great changes in London, of course, I suppose? |
3252 | You have heard the news, Mr. Gridley, I suppose? |
3252 | You know Sir Walter Raleigh''s''History of the World,''of course? |
3252 | You know all about it, Olive? |
3252 | You know nothing about her, then? |
3252 | You know something about that nephew of yours, during these last years, I suppose? |
3252 | You made the pulse about ninety,--a little hard,--did n''t you; as I did? 3252 You never noticed the colors and patterns of her dresses? |
3252 | You read this lecture, do n''t you, Professor? |
3252 | You receive a good many volumes of verse, do you not? |
3252 | You remember my son, Cortland Saunders, whom I brought to see you once in Boston? |
3252 | You say she has had some of her old nervous whims,--has the doctor been to see her? |
3252 | You spoke of Newspapers,she said, without any change of tone or manner:"do you not frequently write for them yourself?" |
3252 | You want to get out of the new church into the old one, do n''t you? |
3252 | You would n''t act so, if you were dancing with Mr. Langdon,--would you, Elsie? |
3252 | You would n''t trust a woman even if she was dead, hey, Nurse? |
3252 | Your partner must have known about it yesterday? |
3252 | Your whole quarter''s allowance, I bullieve,--ain''t it? |
3252 | _ It is easy enough to get up if you are dragged up, but how will it be to come down such a declivity? 3252 ''How long?'' 3252 ''Some things can be done as well as others,''can they? 3252 ''Then why not invent them?'' 3252 ''What is this truth you seek? 3252 ''What personalities?'' 3252 ''What will you do, then?'' 3252 ''Why, that is a kind of title of nobility, is n''t it? 3252 ''sseventy exclusive cases as he from the three cases in the ward of the Dublin Hospital? |
3252 | ( 3) Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,--And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
3252 | ( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--"Gambrel?--Gambrel?" |
3252 | ( Why did not she ask if the girl was his daughter? |
3252 | ( commonly pronounced haalth)--instead of, How do you do? |
3252 | ***** What was the errand on which he visited our earth,--the message with which he came commissioned from the Infinite source of all life? |
3252 | *****"Let us then ponder his words:--''Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach and sunsets show? |
3252 | --"About those conditions?" |
3252 | --"And is there nothing yet unsaid Before the change appears? |
3252 | --"Guess he''s been through the mill,--don''t look so green, anyhow, hey? |
3252 | --And how did the Lady receive these valuable and useful gifts? |
3252 | --And the Evening Transcript? |
3252 | --And the calipers said I.--What are the calipers? |
3252 | --And this is all the friend you have to love? |
3252 | --And thou? |
3252 | --And whence thy sadness in a world of bliss Where never parting comes, nor mourner''s tear? |
3252 | --And where is my cat? |
3252 | --Anything you like,--he answered,--what difference does it make how you christen a foundling? |
3252 | --Bonfire?--shrieked the little man.--The bonfire when Robert Calef''s book was burned? |
3252 | --Can a man love his own soul too well? |
3252 | --Did I not say to you a little while ago that the universe swam in an ocean of similitudes and analogies? |
3252 | --Do I remember Byron''s line about"striking the electric chain"? |
3252 | --Do men fly yet? |
3252 | --Do you mean to say the pun- question is not clearly settled in your minds? |
3252 | --Do you mean you can always see the sources from which a man fills his mind,--his feeders, as you call them? |
3252 | --Do you receive many visitors,--I mean vertebrates, not articulates? |
3252 | --Do you think they mean business? |
3252 | --Do you want an image of the human will, or the self- determining principle, as compared with its prearranged and impassable restrictions? |
3252 | --Funny, wasn''it? |
3252 | --Has the planet met with any accident of importance? |
3252 | --Has the universal language come into use? |
3252 | --Have I ever acted in private theatricals? |
3252 | --He said, as I returned it to him, You have heard military men say that such a person had an eye for country, have n''t you? |
3252 | --How can a man help writing poetry in such a place? |
3252 | --How do I know that? |
3252 | --How does she go to work to help you? |
3252 | --How general is the republican form of government? |
3252 | --I am afraid I did,--I said,--but was n''t I colored myself so as to look ridiculous? |
3252 | --I wonder if anybody ever finds fault with anything I say at this table when it is repeated? |
3252 | --I wonder if you know the TERRIBLE SMILE? |
3252 | --If Iris does not love this Little Gentleman, what does love look like when one sees it? |
3252 | --If a fellow attacked my opinions in print would I reply? |
3252 | --Is that the same piece of money as the other one? |
3252 | --Is the Daily Advertiser still published? |
3252 | --Is the euthanasia a recognized branch of medical science? |
3252 | --Is the oldest inhabitant still living? |
3252 | --Is there a new fuel since the English coal- mines have given out? |
3252 | --May I venture to ask,--I said, a little awed by his statement and manner,--what is your special province of study? |
3252 | --Next month!--said I.---Why, what election do you mean? |
3252 | --No doubt, no doubt, if you meet him once; but what are you going to do with him if you meet him every day? |
3252 | --Of these three questions, What is matter? |
3252 | --Oh, indeed,--said I,--and may I venture to ask on what particular point you are engaged just at present? |
3252 | --Oh, you could n''t mistake those dried leaves for an insect, hey? |
3252 | --Should you like to hear what moderate wishes life brings one to at last? |
3252 | --The Doctor put his hand to his forehead and drew a long breath.--"What is there you notice out of the way about Elsie Venner?" |
3252 | --The divinity- student wished to know what I thought of affinities, as well as of antipathies; did I believe in love at first sight? |
3252 | --Then to the Doctor,--"Anybody get sick at Sprowles''s? |
3252 | --Well, then, how did the little beast which is peculiar to that special complaint intrude himself into the Order of Things? |
3252 | --What are the great faults of conversation? |
3252 | --What do you think I question everything for, the Master replied,--if I never get any answers? |
3252 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
3252 | --What do you think, Sir,--said the divinity- student,--opens the souls of poets most fully? |
3252 | --What if, instead of talking this morning, I should read you a copy of verses, with critical remarks by the author? |
3252 | --What in the world can have become of That Boy and his popgun while all this somewhat extended sermonizing was going on? |
3252 | --What is the prevalent religious creed of civilization? |
3252 | --What is the saddle of a thought? |
3252 | --What should decide one, in choosing a summer residence? |
3252 | --When the Lord sends out a batch of human beings, say a hundred-- Did you ever read my book, the new edition of it, I mean? |
3252 | --Where have I been for the last three or four days? |
3252 | --Where is the election held? |
3252 | --Who knows it not,--this dead recoil Of weary fibres stretched with toil, The pulse that flutters faint and low When Summer''s seething breezes blow? |
3252 | --Who was that person that was so abused some time since for saying that in the conflict of two races our sympathies naturally go with the higher? |
3252 | --Will you read them very good- naturedly? |
3252 | --Would I be so good as to specify any particular example?--Oh,--an example? |
3252 | --Yes,--said I,--but why should n''t we always set a man talking about the thing he knows best? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what I mean by the GREEN STATE? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what I mean, indignant and not unintelligent country- practitioner? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what plague has fallen on the practitioners of theology? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what your thoughts are going to be beforehand? |
3252 | --You do n''t mean to say you have studied insects as well as solar systems and the order of things generally? |
3252 | --You do n''t suppose that my remarks made at this table are like so many postage- stamps, do you,--each to be only once uttered? |
3252 | --You have a laugh together sometimes, do you? |
3252 | --You have n''t heard about my friend the Professor''s first experiment in the use of anaesthetics, have you? |
3252 | --You remember the old story of the tender- hearted man, who placed a frozen viper in his bosom, and was stung by it when it became thawed? |
3252 | --said I.--Have you seen the Declaration of Independence photographed in a surface that a fly''s foot would cover? |
3252 | -And how is your father and your mother? |
3252 | -Oh, the Governor and the Head Centre? |
3252 | -Terrible fact? |
3252 | -Wouldn''t do?--said I,--why not? |
3252 | -Yes, yes; did you ever see how they will poke those wonderful little fingers of theirs into every fold and crack and crevice they can get at? |
3252 | .............. What have I rescued from the shelf? |
3252 | ..._ But will they come when you do call for them?_"The most formidable thing about a London party is getting away from it. |
3252 | 1.--Whether a lady was ever known to write a letter covering only a single page? |
3252 | 16 correctly the first time?) |
3252 | 2.--What constitutes a man a gentleman? |
3252 | 3.--Whether face or figure is most attractive in the female sex? |
3252 | A PERSON at table asked me whether I"went in for rum as a steady drink?" |
3252 | A Prologue? |
3252 | A West Minkville?] |
3252 | A fellow is n''t all battery, is he? |
3252 | A hundred and forty?" |
3252 | A little while afterwards he asked of his fellow- traveller, Professor Thayer,"How much did I weigh? |
3252 | A man that had been saying all his fine things to Miss Susan Posey, too, had he, before he had bestowed his attentions on her? |
3252 | A return of the natural instincts of girlhood with returning health? |
3252 | A temple such as Athens might have been proud to rear upon her Acropolis? |
3252 | A visitor, indigenous to the region, looking pensively at the figure, asked the lady of the house"if that was a statoo of her deceased infant?" |
3252 | A voice whispers, What next? |
3252 | A work of art, is it, Miss Myrtle Hazard?" |
3252 | A young girl''s caprice? |
3252 | A''n''t it fun to hear him blow off his steam? |
3252 | A''n''t much of a loser, I guess, by acceptin''his propositions?" |
3252 | Advertise for a bronzed living horse-- Lyceum invitations and engagements-- bronze versus brass.---What''s the use in being frightened? |
3252 | After all, what was your Chevy Chace to stir blood with like a trumpet? |
3252 | After reading what Emerson says about"the masses,"one is tempted to ask whether a philosopher can ever have"a constituency"and be elected to Congress? |
3252 | Again, what was the influence this girl had seemingly exerted, under which the venomous creature had collapsed in such a sudden way? |
3252 | Ah, Lord of life, though spectres pale Fill with their threats the shadowy vale, With Thee my faltering steps to aid, How can I dare to be afraid? |
3252 | Ah, said I to myself; does that young girl understand French? |
3252 | Ah, wilt thou yet return, Bearing thy rose- hued torch, and bid thine altar burn? |
3252 | Ahead? |
3252 | Ai n''t they nice children? |
3252 | Ai n''t you telling me stories? |
3252 | All at once he jumped up and said,-- Do n''t you want to hear what I just read to the boys? |
3252 | All here, then, perhaps; all where, now? |
3252 | All these have left their work and not their names, Why should I murmur at a fate like theirs? |
3252 | All up for a year or more,--hey?" |
3252 | All your wisdom is to him like the lady''s virtue in Raleigh''s song:"If she seem not chaste to me, What care I how chaste she be?" |
3252 | Alumin.(?) |
3252 | Am I not gentle? |
3252 | Am I not harmless? |
3252 | Am I not kind? |
3252 | Am I not mirrored in those eyes of yours? |
3252 | Amid our slender group we see; With him we still remained"The Class,"without his presence what are we? |
3252 | An effect of an influx from another sphere of being? |
3252 | An impression produced by her dream? |
3252 | An obelisk such as Thebes might have pointed out with pride to the strangers who found admission through her hundred gates? |
3252 | An old campaigner came up.--"Can these fellows get well?" |
3252 | An''she ha''n''got the same kind o''feelin''s as other women.--Do you know that young gen''l''m''n up at the school, Doctor?" |
3252 | And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong,"What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done? |
3252 | And Number Five and her young friend the Tutor,--have they kept on in their dangerous intimacy? |
3252 | And are you, and is your husband, and Paolo,--good Paolo,--are you all as well and happy as you have been and as you ought to be? |
3252 | And can we smile when thou art dead? |
3252 | And can you tell me why you like candy? |
3252 | And did n''t I grin when I saw the pieces fly? |
3252 | And having a chance every day, too, how could you expect her to stand it?" |
3252 | And how could prose go on all- fours more unmetrically than this? |
3252 | And how did you like his looks?" |
3252 | And how does our young lady seem to be of late?" |
3252 | And how does the law apply to this? |
3252 | And if boys may have this additional ornament to their vertebral columns, why not men? |
3252 | And if men, why not giants? |
3252 | And if once the blacks had leave to run, how many whites would have to stay at home to guard their dissolving property? |
3252 | And in the first place, will you allow me to ask what led you to this particular place? |
3252 | And in the same person, do n''t you know the same two shades in different parts of the character that you find in the wing and thigh of a partridge? |
3252 | And is it not appalling to think of the''large constitution of this man,''when you reflect on the acres of canvas which he has covered? |
3252 | And is not the sky that covers us one roof, which makes us all one family? |
3252 | And is this the pen you write with? |
3252 | And of deception too-- do you see how nearly those dried leaves resemble an insect? |
3252 | And so it was all as plain sailing for Number Five and the young Tutor as it had been for Delilah and the young Doctor, was it? |
3252 | And so of the people you know; ca n''t you pick out the full- flavored, coarse- fibred characters from the delicate, fine- fibred ones? |
3252 | And so you think you would like to become an octogenarian? |
3252 | And wants you to come and talk religion with him in his study, Susan Posey, does he? |
3252 | And was he noted in his day? |
3252 | And what brings my young friend out in such good season this morning? |
3252 | And what is your whole human family but a parenthesis in a single page of my history? |
3252 | And what more natural than that one should be inquiring about what another has accepted and ceased to have any doubts concerning? |
3252 | And what shall we do with Pope''s"Essay on Man,"which has furnished more familiar lines than"Paradise Lost"and"Paradise Regained"both together? |
3252 | And what would literature or art be without such associations? |
3252 | And who is the new- comer? |
3252 | And who might he be, forsooth? |
3252 | And whom do you know so well as your friends? |
3252 | And will you agree to abide by his opinion, if it coincides with mine?" |
3252 | And will you believe it? |
3252 | And will you stop in England, and bring home the author of"Counterparts"with you? |
3252 | And your family, are they as discreet as yourself?" |
3252 | And-- and-- my son, do you remember Major Gideon Withers?" |
3252 | Any corner in bronchitis? |
3252 | Any strange cases among the scholars?" |
3252 | Any syndicate in the vaccination business?" |
3252 | Any young men teach in the school?" |
3252 | Anybody tell you he sick?" |
3252 | Are angels more true? |
3252 | Are horses subject to the Morbus Addisonii? |
3252 | Are ministers composed of finer clay than the rest of mankind, that entitles them to this preeminence? |
3252 | Are my friends bent on killing me with kindness? |
3252 | Are not Erard and Broadwood and Chickering the true humanizers of our time? |
3252 | Are not almost all brains a little wanting in bilateral symmetry? |
3252 | Are not most of us a little crazy, doctor,--just a little? |
3252 | Are the English taller, stouter, lustier, ruddier, healthier, than our New England people? |
3252 | Are the laity an inferior order of beings, fit only to be slaves and to be governed? |
3252 | Are there never any worms in the leaves after they get old and yellow, Miss Cynthia?" |
3252 | Are there not fruits, which, while unripe, are not to be tasted or endured, which mature into the richest taste and fragrance? |
3252 | Are there not moods in which it seems to you that they are disposed to see all things out of plumb and in false relations with each other? |
3252 | Are there not rough buds that open into sweet flowers? |
3252 | Are there not some subjects in looking at which it seems to you impossible that they should ever see straight? |
3252 | Are we any wiser than those great men? |
3252 | Are we less earthly than the chosen race? |
3252 | Are we not fresh and blooming? |
3252 | Are we not glad that the responsibility of the decision did not rest on us? |
3252 | Are we not the centre of something? |
3252 | Are we not there ourselves? |
3252 | Are we not whole years short of that interesting period of life when Mr. Balzac says that a man, etc., etc., etc.? |
3252 | Are we not young? |
3252 | Are we to spend twelve hundred millions, and raise six hundred thousand soldiers, in order to protect slavery? |
3252 | Are you in the tune for pork? |
3252 | Are you not ready to recognize in me a friend, an equal, a sister, who can speak to you as if she had been reared under the same roof? |
3252 | Are you quite sure that you wish to live to be threescore and twenty years old? |
3252 | Are you true to me, dearest Clement,--true as when we promised each other that we would love while life lasted? |
3252 | Are you willing to give it to me? |
3252 | Art thou, too, dreaming of a mortal''s kiss Amid the seraphs of the heavenly sphere? |
3252 | As for his wound, how could it do otherwise than well under such hands? |
3252 | At five or ten or fifteen years old they put their hands up to their foreheads and ask, What are they strapping down my brains in this way for? |
3252 | At last I got out the question,--Will you take the long path with me? |
3252 | At last the Scarabee creaked out very slowly,"Did I understand you to ask the following question, to wit?" |
3252 | At last: Do you know the story of Andromeda? |
3252 | At twoscore, threescore, is he then full grown? |
3252 | Author writing, jacks?" |
3252 | Ay, said a doubting bystander, but how many made vows of gifts and were shipwrecked notwithstanding? |
3252 | Because Cleopatra swallowed a pearl?" |
3252 | Because bread is good and wholesome and necessary and nourishing, shall you thrust a crumb into my windpipe while I am talking? |
3252 | Because if they are not, what could hinder a witch from crossing the line that separates Wilmington from Andover, I should like to know? |
3252 | Because time softens its outlines and rounds the sharp angles of its cornices, shall a fellow take a pickaxe to help time? |
3252 | Besides, what business has a mere boarder to be talking about such things at a breakfast- table? |
3252 | Born in Injy,--that''s it, ai n''t it? |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal? |
3252 | Bridshaw?" |
3252 | Burn up? |
3252 | But after all, what could I do? |
3252 | But am I not glad, for my own sake, that I went? |
3252 | But are there any trustworthy friends to the Union among the slaveholders? |
3252 | But can it be astronomy alone that does it? |
3252 | But come, now, why should not a giant have a tail as well as a dragon? |
3252 | But confound the make- believe women we have turned loose in our streets!--where do they come from? |
3252 | But did n''t it make you nervous, reading about so many people possessed with such strange notions?" |
3252 | But do you think that I can forget them? |
3252 | But how could any conceivable antipathy be so comprehensive as to keep a young man aloof from all the world, and make a hermit of him? |
3252 | But how do you think practice would be? |
3252 | But how in respect of those who were not asked? |
3252 | But how long would it take to turn that circle into a polygon, unless some mighty counteracting force should prevent it? |
3252 | But how to let one''s self down from the high level of such a character to one''s own poor standard? |
3252 | But how was it in Salem, according to Mr. Upham''s own statement? |
3252 | But if not, was the baptismal name Francis or Franklin? |
3252 | But in the first place, what do we mean by an antipathy? |
3252 | But is n''t there some truth in it, Doctor? |
3252 | But is there not something of rest, of calm, in the thought of gently and gradually fading away out of human remembrance? |
3252 | But there must be others,--I am afraid many others,--who will exclaim:"He has had his day, and why ca n''t he be content? |
3252 | But what are you going to do when you find John Keats an apprentice to a surgeon or apothecary? |
3252 | But what could she do? |
3252 | But what if I should lay down the rule, Be cheerful; take all the troubles and trials of life with perfect equanimity and a smiling countenance? |
3252 | But what if one does say the same things,--of course in a little different form each time,--over her? |
3252 | But what if the joy of the summer is past, And winter''s wild herald is blowing his blast? |
3252 | But what if this so- called antipathy were only a fear, a terror, which borrowed the less unmanly name? |
3252 | But what if your oldest boy had been stolen from his cradle and bred in a North- Street cellar? |
3252 | But what is half a century to a place like Stonehenge? |
3252 | But what is the gift of a mourning ring to the bequest of a perpetual annuity? |
3252 | But what is this? |
3252 | But what right have I to say it can not be so? |
3252 | But what shall I do now? |
3252 | But what shall we say to the"Ars Poetica"of Horace? |
3252 | But what should I do with Number Five? |
3252 | But what was the use of a young man''s pretending to know anything in the presence of an old owl? |
3252 | But what was this new light which seemed to have kindled in her eyes? |
3252 | But what would youth be without its extravagances,--its preterpluperfect in the shape of adjectives, its unmeasured and unstinted admiration? |
3252 | But what''s the use of good looks if they scare away folks? |
3252 | But what, even then, could she have done? |
3252 | But where are those contemporaries? |
3252 | But where did them black eyes come from? |
3252 | But where to look for what I wanted? |
3252 | But who else was there? |
3252 | But who is that other one that has been lengthening his stride from the first, and now shows close up to the front? |
3252 | But who shall tune the pitch- pipe? |
3252 | But why does n''t he come to our meetings? |
3252 | But why should I illustrate further what it seems almost a breach of confidence to speak of? |
3252 | By and by, perhaps, we can work you into our series of poets; but the best pears ripen slowly, and so with genius.--Where shall I send the volumes?" |
3252 | By digging in calomel freely about their roots? |
3252 | By watering them with Fowler''s solution? |
3252 | Ca n''t you get your friends to unite with you in committing those odious instruments of debauchery to the flames in which you have consumed your own? |
3252 | Ca n''t you lend it to me for a while? |
3252 | Came from where? |
3252 | Can I bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
3252 | Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women? |
3252 | Can I help you, my brother''? |
3252 | Can I see this young person?" |
3252 | Can Number Five be masquerading in verse? |
3252 | Can any ear reconcile itself to the last of these three lines of Emerson''s? |
3252 | Can any of you tell what those two words are? |
3252 | Can he dispose of them? |
3252 | Can he have furnished the model I saw at the sculptor''s? |
3252 | Can it be possible that her prediction is not far from its realization? |
3252 | Can it be that the curse is passing away, and my daughter is to be restored to me,--such as her mother would have had her,--such as her mother was?" |
3252 | Can it be that this imparts a religious character to the article? |
3252 | Can she tell me anything? |
3252 | Can such peculiarities-- be transmitted by inheritance? |
3252 | Can that ever be? |
3252 | Can thy servant taste what I eat or what I drink? |
3252 | Can we find any trace of this idea elsewhere? |
3252 | Can we make a safe and honorable peace as the quarrel now stands? |
3252 | Can you describe in intelligible language the smell of a rose as compared with that of a violet? |
3252 | Can you find no lesson in this? |
3252 | Can you help any soul_? |
3252 | Can you help me to get sight of any of these papers not to be found at the Registry of Deeds or the Probate Office?" |
3252 | Can you not imagine the tones in which those words,''Peace, be still,''were spoken? |
3252 | Can you obtain what you wish? |
3252 | Can you see tendency in your life? |
3252 | Can you suggest what should be done to dispel the existing prejudice?" |
3252 | Can you tell how much money there is in a safe, which also has thick double walls, by kneading its knobs with your fingers? |
3252 | Can you tell me just how high they are? |
3252 | Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" |
3252 | Casts and drawings of A. are multiplied, and the bump does not lose in the act of copying.--I did not say it gained.--What do you look so for? |
3252 | Cognati, queis te salvo est opus? |
3252 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grand- children-- where were they? |
3252 | Come here, Youngster, will you? |
3252 | Come to go to bed, little dears? |
3252 | Come, now,--he said,--what''s the use of these comparisons? |
3252 | Consulting daily with Cynthia Badlam, was he? |
3252 | Could I make an appointment with you for either of those days? |
3252 | Could a brother of this young lady have written it? |
3252 | Could he not confer that immortality so dear to the human heart? |
3252 | Could it be so? |
3252 | Could it be that--? |
3252 | Could it be the roar of the thousand wheels and the ten thousand footsteps jarring and trampling along the stones of the neighboring city? |
3252 | Could n''t be anything in such a violent supposition as that, and yet such a crafty fellow as that Bradshaw,--what trick was he not up to? |
3252 | Could she be an heiress in disguise? |
3252 | Could she call him at will by looking at him? |
3252 | Could she have stayed to meet the schoolmaster? |
3252 | Could that be a copy of"Thoughts on the Universe"? |
3252 | Could that have anything to do with his pursuit of Myrtle Hazard today?" |
3252 | Could the cures have been real ones, produced by the principle of ANIMAL MAGNETISM? |
3252 | Could they help recalling Romeo and Juliet? |
3252 | Cuprum,(?) |
3252 | Curious entities, or non- entities, space and tithe? |
3252 | Cyprian Eveleth was the one she thought most of; but Cyprian was as true as his sister Olive, and who else was there? |
3252 | D''d y''ever see Ed''in Forrest play Metamora? |
3252 | D''you remember how handsome she looked in the tableau, when the fair was held for the Dorcas Society? |
3252 | DO YOU MEAN TO SAY JEAN CHAUVIN, THAT''HEAVEN LIES ABOUT US IN OUR INFANCY''? |
3252 | Darwinii( we can keep A. D. you see) 1872? |
3252 | Did I not see his eyes turn toward her as the silvery notes rippled from her throat? |
3252 | Did Sir Isaac think what he was saying when he made HIS speech about the ocean,--the child and the pebbles, you know? |
3252 | Did he ever see the Siamese twins, or any pair like them? |
3252 | Did he mean to speak slightingly of a pebble? |
3252 | Did he possess a hitherto unexercised personal power, which put the key of this young girl''s nervous system into his hands? |
3252 | Did he tell her he loved her? |
3252 | Did he think she hated every kind of goodness and loved every kind of evil? |
3252 | Did he think she was hateful to the Being who made her? |
3252 | Did it not seem as if Death had spared them for Love, and that Love should lead them together through life''s long journey to the gates of Death? |
3252 | Did it occur to you that he could not see you clearly enough to know you from any other son or daughter of Adam? |
3252 | Did n''t I hear this gentleman saying, the other day, that every American owns all America? |
3252 | Did n''t one of my teachers split a Gunter''s scale into three pieces over the palm of my hand? |
3252 | Did n''t somebody say he was very handsome? |
3252 | Did n''t you ever think she would have to give in to Murray Bradshaw at last? |
3252 | Did n''t you have to finish it, Deacon, after you had once begun?" |
3252 | Did not C. buy nuts and gingerbread, when a boy, with the money he stole? |
3252 | Did not my own consciousness migrate, or seem, at least, to transfer itself into this brilliant life history, as I traced its glowing record? |
3252 | Did not worthy Mr. Higginson say that a breath of New England''s air is better than a sup of Old England''s ale? |
3252 | Did she go only to get out of his, her cousin''s, reach? |
3252 | Did she not remember the difference of their position? |
3252 | Did the tenants of the fatal ledge recognize some mysterious affinity which made them tributary to the cold glitter of her diamond eyes? |
3252 | Did they ever die? |
3252 | Did they not follow her in her movements, as she turned her tread this or that way? |
3252 | Did we talk of graveyards and epitaphs? |
3252 | Did y''ever look at those eyes of his, M''randy? |
3252 | Did y''ever mind that cut over his left eyebrow?" |
3252 | Did y''ever watch her at meetin''playing with posies and looking round all the time of the long prayer? |
3252 | Did you ever happen to see that most soft- spoken and velvet- handed steam- engine at the Mint? |
3252 | Did you ever hear Olive play''Songs without Words''? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of a man''s growing lean by the reading of"Romeo and Juliet,"or blowing his brains out because Desdemona was maligned? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of a poet who did not talk about them? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of the Capsulae, Suprarenales? |
3252 | Did you ever read old Daddy Gilpin? |
3252 | Did you ever read the oldest of medical documents,--the Oath of Hippocrates?" |
3252 | Did you ever see a bear- trap? |
3252 | Did you ever see a case of catalepsy? |
3252 | Did you ever see an oyster opened? |
3252 | Did you ever see her before?" |
3252 | Did you ever see one of those Japanese figures with the points for acupuncture marked upon it? |
3252 | Did you ever think of that? |
3252 | Did you ever watch a baby''s fingers? |
3252 | Did you get them together by accident or according to some preconceived plan? |
3252 | Did you happen to remember that though he does not allow that he is deaf, he will not deny that he does not hear quite so well as he used to? |
3252 | Did you pull me out of the water?" |
3252 | Did you think I did n''t know anything about the human body?" |
3252 | Didst thou not mark that he stayed his roaring when I did press hard over the lesser bowels? |
3252 | Do I see her afar in the distance? |
3252 | Do I understand that you are an author?" |
3252 | Do all the women have bad noses and bad mouths? |
3252 | Do n''t keep that boy waiting,--how do we know what messages he has got to carry? |
3252 | Do n''t spiders have their mates as well as other folks? |
3252 | Do n''t they say that Theophrastus lived to his hundred and seventh year, and did n''t he complain of the shortness of life? |
3252 | Do n''t you ever feel a longing to send your thoughts forth in verse, Cyprian?" |
3252 | Do n''t you hate me, dying as I am?" |
3252 | Do n''t you know how hard it is for some people to get out of a room after their visit is really over? |
3252 | Do n''t you know that he''ll have you and all of us in his paper? |
3252 | Do n''t you know that nothing is safe where one of those fellows gets in with his note- book and pencil? |
3252 | Do n''t you perceive the sonorousness of these old dead Latin phrases? |
3252 | Do n''t you remember the quiet brown colt ASTEROID, with the star in his forehead? |
3252 | Do n''t you see how small Conscientiousness is? |
3252 | Do n''t you see that a student in his library is a caddice- worm in his case? |
3252 | Do n''t you see that all this is just as true of a poem? |
3252 | Do n''t you see why? |
3252 | Do n''t you see why? |
3252 | Do n''t you think I shall ever learn to know what is nice from what is n''t? |
3252 | Do n''t you think he would find another to make him happy? |
3252 | Do n''t you think it will be safer-- for the women- folks-- jest to wait till mornin'', afore you put that j''int into the socket?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think the''inspiration of the Almighty''gave Newton and Cuvier''understanding''?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think they would like to hear it?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think you and I should be apt to do just so, if we were in the critical line? |
3252 | Do n''t you think you can say which is the dark- meat and which is the white- meat poet? |
3252 | Do n''t you think, on the whole, you have pretty good reason to trust me? |
3252 | Do n''t you want some more items of village news? |
3252 | Do n''t you want to wait here, jest a little while, till I come back? |
3252 | Do n''t your clients call you their lawyer? |
3252 | Do not these muscles of mine represent a hundred loaves of bread? |
3252 | Do not you all wonder and admire to see and behold and hear? |
3252 | Do these young folks suppose that all vanity dies out of the natures of old men and old women? |
3252 | Do they not name their children after you very frequently? |
3252 | Do they really think those little thin legs can do anything in such a slashing sweepstakes as is coming off in these next forty years? |
3252 | Do they see what this amounts to? |
3252 | Do we not use more emphatic words than these in our self- depreciation? |
3252 | Do we understand the intricate machinery of the Universe? |
3252 | Do you care to know about the Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, that shall be King hereafter of Mexico( if L. N. has his way)? |
3252 | Do you come with any authority to make inquiries?" |
3252 | Do you cry at those great musical smashes? |
3252 | Do you eat a cheese before you buy it?" |
3252 | Do you feel the rocks tremble as my huge billows crash against them? |
3252 | Do you find it an easy and pleasant exercise to make rhymes?" |
3252 | Do you find yourself disposed to take a special interest in Elsie,--to fall in love with her, in a word? |
3252 | Do you forget Helen, and the fair women who made mischief and set nations by the ears before Helen was born? |
3252 | Do you forget the angels who lost heaven for the daughters of men? |
3252 | Do you go armed?" |
3252 | Do you know a good article of brown sagas when you see it?" |
3252 | Do you know anything about him, Bathsheba? |
3252 | Do you know anything particular about him?" |
3252 | Do you know how Art brings all ages together? |
3252 | Do you know how important good jockeying is to authors? |
3252 | Do you know how people hate to have their names misspelled? |
3252 | Do you know that I met him this morning, and had a good look at him, full in the face?" |
3252 | Do you know that every man has a religious belief peculiar to himself? |
3252 | Do you know that you feel a little superior to every man who makes you laugh, whether by making faces or verses? |
3252 | Do you know the charm of melancholy? |
3252 | Do you know two native trees called pitch pine and white pine respectively? |
3252 | Do you know what his name is? |
3252 | Do you know what it all means?" |
3252 | Do you know what to do about it? |
3252 | Do you know what would have happened if that liquid had been clouded, and we had found life in the sealed flask? |
3252 | Do you know, I believe I could solve the riddle of the''Arrowhead Village Sphinx,''as the paper called him, if he would only stay here long enough?" |
3252 | Do you know, I can make her laugh and cry, reading my poor stories? |
3252 | Do you know, my dear, I think there is a blank at the Sheriff''s office, with a place for his name in it?" |
3252 | Do you know, too, that the majority of men look upon all who challenge their attention,--for a while, at least,--as beggars, and nuisances? |
3252 | Do you mean to say that the upper Me, the Me of the true thinking- marrow, the convolutions of the brain, does not know better? |
3252 | Do you not find in persons whom you love, whom you esteem, and even admire, some marks of obliquity in mental vision? |
3252 | Do you not remember soliloquies something like this? |
3252 | Do you not think there may be a crime which is not a sin? |
3252 | Do you notice how, while everything else has gone to smash, that wheel remains sound and fit for service? |
3252 | Do you really want to know"whether oatmeal is preferable to pie as an American national food"? |
3252 | Do you recognize the fact that we are living in a new time? |
3252 | Do you remember about that woman in Scriptur''out of whom the Lord cast seven devils? |
3252 | Do you remember how the angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph and told him to flee into Egypt? |
3252 | Do you remember that chap the sheriff come and took away when we kep''tahvern? |
3252 | Do you remember what I used to say in my lectures?--or were you asleep just then, or cutting your initials on the rail? |
3252 | Do you say that old age is unfeeling? |
3252 | Do you see any cloudiness in it? |
3252 | Do you see equally well with both eyes, and hear equally well with both ears? |
3252 | Do you see my foaming lips? |
3252 | Do you see that Hedericus? |
3252 | Do you suppose he does n''t enjoy the quiet of that resting- place? |
3252 | Do you suppose if there is anything in the evil eye it would go through glass? |
3252 | Do you suppose our dear didascalos over there ever read Poli Synopsis, or consulted Castelli Lexicon, while he was growing up to their stature? |
3252 | Do you suppose she left that poison to rankle in the tender soul of her darling? |
3252 | Do you suppose that I shall cease to follow the love( or the loves; which do you think is the true word, the singular or the plural?) |
3252 | Do you take any idea from it? |
3252 | Do you think I do n''t understand what my friend, the Professor, long ago called THE HYDROSTATIC PARADOX OF CONTROVERSY? |
3252 | Do you think I was necessarily a greater fool and coward than another? |
3252 | Do you think blue eye- glasses would be better than common ones? |
3252 | Do you think he would be willing to let this friend of mine share in the privileges of spiritual intercourse which you enjoy?" |
3252 | Do you think it really the larva of meloe? |
3252 | Do you think it would be wrong in me to do it? |
3252 | Do you think men of true genius are apt to indulge in the use of inebriating fluids? |
3252 | Do you think she did not see the ridiculous element in a silly speech, or the absurdity of an outrageously extravagant assertion? |
3252 | Do you think she has any special fancy for anybody else in the school besides Miss Darley?" |
3252 | Do you think so? |
3252 | Do you think there is anything so very odd about this idea? |
3252 | Do you think you can make your heroes and heroines,--nay, even your scrappy supernumeraries,--out of refuse material, as you made your scarecrow? |
3252 | Do you want me to describe more branches of the sciatic and crural nerves? |
3252 | Do you want to know what I think he is? |
3252 | Do you want to know why that name is given to the men who do most for the world''s progress? |
3252 | Do you want to make him kill me? |
3252 | Do you wonder that my thoughts took the poetical form, in the contemplation of these changes and their melancholy consequences? |
3252 | Do? |
3252 | Does God hate me so?" |
3252 | Does Hahnemann himself represent Homoeopathy as it now exists? |
3252 | Does He behold with smile serene The shows of that unending scene, Where sleepless, hopeless anguish lies, And, ever dying, never dies? |
3252 | Does a license to preach transform a man into a higher order of beings and endow him with a natural quality to govern? |
3252 | Does all this seem strange and incredible to the reader of my manuscript? |
3252 | Does he become unconscious, too? |
3252 | Does he hope to secure a hearing from those who have come into the reading world since his coevals? |
3252 | Does he really believe that everybody remembers all of his, writer''s, words he may happen to have read? |
3252 | Does he suppose we want to be known and talked about in public as"Teacups"? |
3252 | Does he write and publish for those of his own time of life? |
3252 | Does it please their thin ghosts thus to be dragged to the light of day? |
3252 | Does n''t Cyprian want some more every- day kind of girl to keep him straight? |
3252 | Does n''t Elsie look savage? |
3252 | Does n''t Sydney Smith say that a public man in England never gets over a false quantity uttered in early life? |
3252 | Does n''t he look handsome, though?" |
3252 | Does n''t it seem as if there was a kind of Injin look to''em? |
3252 | Does n''t it seem as if there was a vein of satire as well as of fun that ran through the solemn manifestations of creative wisdom? |
3252 | Does n''t she carry a lump of opium in her pocket? |
3252 | Does n''t your baker, does n''t your butcher, speak of the families he supplies as his families?" |
3252 | Does not Mr. Bryant say, that Truth gets well if she is run over by a locomotive, while Error dies of lockjaw if she scratches her finger? |
3252 | Does not Myrtle look more in her place by the side of Murray Bradshaw than she would with Gifted hitched on her arm?" |
3252 | Does not a single star seem very lonely to you up there? |
3252 | Does not her face recall to you one that you remember, as never before?" |
3252 | Does not your heart throb, in the presence of budding or blooming womanhood, sometimes as if it"were ready to crack"with its own excess of strain? |
3252 | Does she ever listen about to hear what people are saying?" |
3252 | Does she remind you of him?" |
3252 | Does she tell you all her plans and projects?" |
3252 | Does the Bunker- Hill Monument bend in the blast like a blade of grass? |
3252 | Does the bird know why its feathers grow more brilliant and its voice becomes musical in the pairing season? |
3252 | Does the ocean share your grief? |
3252 | Does the river listen to your sighs? |
3252 | Does the simpleton really think that everybody has read all he has written? |
3252 | Does this girl like to have her own way pretty well, like the rest of the family?" |
3252 | Does this sound wild and extravagant? |
3252 | Doubt it, do you? |
3252 | Down at the Island, deer- shooting.--How many did I bag? |
3252 | Down flat,--five,--six,--how many? |
3252 | Dr. Kittredge, is there any ketchin''complaint goin''about in the village?" |
3252 | Dropped? |
3252 | Earn his money, hey, Master Gridley?" |
3252 | Endless doubt and unrest here below; wondering, admiring, adoring certainty above.--Am I not right? |
3252 | Errors excepted.--Did I hear some gentleman say,"Doubted?" |
3252 | Est- elle bien gentille, cette petite? |
3252 | Euthymia said,"or has some one been putting the idea into your head?" |
3252 | Everything else being equal, which is best for an American to marry, an American or an English girl? |
3252 | Everything right? |
3252 | Festive,--hey? |
3252 | Fish''s way of reproducing the expression without the insinuation which called it forth is a practical misstatement which does Mr. Motley great wrong? |
3252 | Folks had read letters laid ag''in''the pits o''their stomachs,''n''why should n''t they see out o''the backs o''their heads? |
3252 | For art thou not the Palladium of our Troy? |
3252 | For talking at its best being an inspiration, it wants a corresponding divine quality of receptiveness; and where will you find this but in woman? |
3252 | For what do we understand by that word? |
3252 | From what cliff was it broken? |
3252 | Genius has given you the freedom of the universe, why then come within any walls? |
3252 | Gifted Hopkins? |
3252 | Got his witch grandmother mummied in it? |
3252 | Great on Paul''s Epistles,--don''t you think so?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Habet?] |
3252 | Had I ever perused McFingal? |
3252 | Had a message for him,--could she see him in his study? |
3252 | Had any young fellow been on the train within a day or two, who had attracted his notice? |
3252 | Had he not discovered a, new tabanus? |
3252 | Had he sense and spirit enough to deal with such people? |
3252 | Had not he as good right to ask questions as Abraham? |
3252 | Had she never worn that painted robe before? |
3252 | Had she some such love- token on her neck as the old Don''s revolver had left on his? |
3252 | Had she, after all, some human tenderness in her heart? |
3252 | Haow''s your haalth?" |
3252 | Has Mr. Bradshaw been following after her lately? |
3252 | Has Mr. William Murray Bradshaw ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping?" |
3252 | Has anybody a brandy flask about him?" |
3252 | Has anybody counted the spoons? |
3252 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of men? |
3252 | Has n''t he got any sisters or nieces or anybody to see to his things, if he should be took away? |
3252 | Has nobody got thirteen cents? |
3252 | Has not a man a right to ask this question in the here or in the hereafter,--in this world or in any world in which he may find himself? |
3252 | Has she not exhausted this lean soil of the elements her growing nature requires? |
3252 | Has the young Doctor''s crown yet received the seal which is Nature''s warrant of wisdom and proof of professional competency? |
3252 | Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? |
3252 | Has your aunt Silence promised to bear your expenses while you are in the city? |
3252 | Has"Stultus"forgiven the indignity of being thus characterized? |
3252 | Have n''t I found the true story of this strange visitor? |
3252 | Have n''t I guessed right, now, tell me, my dear?" |
3252 | Have n''t I solved the riddle of the Sphinx? |
3252 | Have n''t any of you seen the wonderful fat man exhibitin''down in Hanover Street? |
3252 | Have they any of those uneasy people called reformers?" |
3252 | Have they fired cannon? |
3252 | Have they looked in the woods everywhere? |
3252 | Have you a grief that gnaws at your heart- strings? |
3252 | Have you any commands for the city?" |
3252 | Have you any personal experience as to the power of fascination said to be exercised by certain animals? |
3252 | Have you ever heard the Lady-- the one that I sit next to at the table-- say anything about me? |
3252 | Have you ever met with any cases which admitted of a solution like that which I have mentioned? |
3252 | Have you ever read Spenser''s Faery Queen?" |
3252 | Have you ever read the little book called"The Stars and the Earth?" |
3252 | Have you eyes to find the five Which five hundred did survive?" |
3252 | Have you got any handsome pictures in your house?" |
3252 | Have you read Sampson Reed''s"Growth of the Mind"? |
3252 | Have you seen how large it is? |
3252 | Have you seen them galloping about together? |
3252 | Have you the means to pay for your journey and your stay at a city hotel?" |
3252 | Hawthorne says in a letter to Longfellow,"Why do n''t you come over, being now a man of leisure and with nothing to keep you in America? |
3252 | Hazard? |
3252 | Hazard? |
3252 | He began, after an awkward pause,"You would not have me stay in a communion which I feel to be alien to the true church, would you?" |
3252 | He cut you dead, you say? |
3252 | He had been a widower long enough,"--nigh twenty year, wa''n''t it? |
3252 | He knows forty times as much about heaven as that Stoker man does, or ever''s like to,--why do n''t they run after him, I should like to know? |
3252 | He looked at it for a moment, and put his hands to his eyes as if moved.--I was thinking,--he said indistinctly----How? |
3252 | He made a figure, it is true, in Dryden''s great Ode, but what kind of a figure? |
3252 | He may perhaps be a widower before a great while.--Does he know that you are working those slippers for him?" |
3252 | He must live for this child''s sake, at any rate; and yet,--oh, yet, who could tell with what thoughts he looked upon her? |
3252 | He never looked so happy,--could anything fill his cup fuller? |
3252 | He said he was very glad to hear it, did he, when you told him that your beloved grandmother had just deceased? |
3252 | He saw she was in suffering, and said presently,"You have pain somewhere; where is it?" |
3252 | He took as his text,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
3252 | He was a serviceable kind of body on occasion, after all, was he not, hey, Mr. Byles Gridley? |
3252 | He was silent,--and sat looking at his handsome left hand with the red stone ring upon it.--Is he going to fall in love with Iris? |
3252 | He was under the effect of opiates,--why not( if his case was desperate, as it seemed to be considered) stop his sufferings with chloroform? |
3252 | Helen''s eyes glistened as she interrupted him,--"What do you mean? |
3252 | Her father, I believe, is sensible enough;--what sort of a woman was her mother, Doctor?--I suppose, of course, you remember all about her?" |
3252 | Here are the mills that grind food for its hunger, and"is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?" |
3252 | Here is another chance for you,--I said.--What do you want nicer than such a young lady as Iris? |
3252 | His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it;-- This little speck the British Isles? |
3252 | His tired old eyes glistened as he asked about them,--could it be that their little romance recalled some early vision of his own? |
3252 | Hope the Squire treated you hahnsomely,--liberal pecooniary compensation,--hey? |
3252 | Hope you do.-- Born there? |
3252 | Hoped his uncle was well, and his charming cousin,--was she as original as ever? |
3252 | Hopkins? |
3252 | Hopkins?" |
3252 | Hopkins?" |
3252 | How about the miserable Indians? |
3252 | How can I do what all these letters ask me to? |
3252 | How can he tell the exhaustion produced by his evacuants from the collapse belonging to the disease they were meant to remove? |
3252 | How can it be made grand and dignified enough to be equal to the office assigned it? |
3252 | How can one explain its significance to those whose musical faculties are in a rudimentary state of development, or who have never had them trained? |
3252 | How can one tell the story of the finish in cold- blooded preterites? |
3252 | How can we give it the distinction we demand for it? |
3252 | How can you cry when you do n''t know what it is all about? |
3252 | How can you expect anything interesting from such a human cocoon? |
3252 | How can you fail to see the resemblance? |
3252 | How can you tell that anything is poetry, I should like to know, if there is neither a regular line with just so many syllables, nor a rhyme? |
3252 | How could I ever judge Margaret fairly after such a crushing discovery of her superiority? |
3252 | How could I look at the Bodleian Library, or wander beneath its roof, without recalling the lines from"The Vanity of Human Wishes"? |
3252 | How could he ever come to fancy such a quadroon- looking thing as that, she should like to know? |
3252 | How could he help admiring Byron and falling into more or less unconscious imitation of his moods if not of his special affectations? |
3252 | How could he resist the dictate of humanity which called him to make his visits more frequent, that her intervals of rest might be more numerous? |
3252 | How could he resist the temptation? |
3252 | How could it be otherwise? |
3252 | How could it be otherwise?--Did you speak, Madam? |
3252 | How could one be otherwise?" |
3252 | How could the man in whose thought such a meteoric expression suddenly announced itself fail to recognize it as divine? |
3252 | How could they expire if they did n''t breathe? |
3252 | How could they have got on together? |
3252 | How d''ye do? |
3252 | How d''ye do? |
3252 | How d''ye know she has n''t fell into the river? |
3252 | How did Dr. Jackson gain the position which all conceded to him? |
3252 | How did they get their model of the pyramid? |
3252 | How did you get me into dry clothes so quick?" |
3252 | How do I know that I shall feel like opening it? |
3252 | How do I know that I shall have a chance to open it again? |
3252 | How do I know that anybody will want it to be opened a second time? |
3252 | How do we know that a rapid pulse is not a normal adjustment of nature to the condition it accompanies? |
3252 | How do you feel now you are awake?" |
3252 | How do you know that he will not send it to one of the gossiping journals like the''Household Inquisitor''? |
3252 | How do you know that posterity may not resuscitate these seemingly dead poems, and give their author the immortality for which he longed and labored? |
3252 | How do you know that this stranger will not show your letter to anybody or everybody? |
3252 | How do you know there''s anything to find? |
3252 | How do you suppose this change was brought about? |
3252 | How does Dr. Meigs know that the patients he bled in puerperal fever would not have all got well if he had not bled them? |
3252 | How does a footpath across a field establish itself? |
3252 | How does your knowledge stand to- day? |
3252 | How far did that atmosphere extend, and through what channel did it act? |
3252 | How have I managed to keep so long out of the idiot asylum? |
3252 | How have you been since our correspondence on Fascination and other curious scientific questions?" |
3252 | How is a physician to distinguish the irritation produced by his blister from that caused by the inflammation it was meant to cure? |
3252 | How is it possible that I can keep up my freedom of intercourse with you all if you insist on bellowing my"asides"through a speaking- trumpet? |
3252 | How long is Mr. William Murray Bradshaw like to be away?" |
3252 | How long will school- keeping take to kill you? |
3252 | How long would it have taken small doses of calomel and rhubarb to save as many children? |
3252 | How many more generations will pass before Milton''s alarming prophecy will find itself realized in the belief of civilized mankind?" |
3252 | How many of us ever read or ever will read Drayton''s"Poly- Olbion?" |
3252 | How many of you who are before me are familiarly acquainted with the name of Broussais, or even with that of Andral? |
3252 | How many would find it out if one should say over in the same words that which he said in the last decade? |
3252 | How much do you weigh?" |
3252 | How much dress and how much light can a woman bear? |
3252 | How much nearer have we come to the secret of force than Lully and Geber and the whole crew of juggling alchemists? |
3252 | How much snow could you melt in an hour, if you were planted in a hogshead of it? |
3252 | How often is he mentioned except as a warning? |
3252 | How old was Floyer when he died, Fordyce? |
3252 | How old was I, The Dictator, once known by another equally audacious title,--I, the recipient of all these favors and honors? |
3252 | How pleasant do you think it is to have an arm offered to you when you are walking on a level surface, where there is no chance to trip? |
3252 | How safe would anybody feel to live with her? |
3252 | How shall I describe the conflicts of those dreamy, bewildering, dreadful years? |
3252 | How shall we characterize the doctrine of endless torture as the destiny of most of those who have lived, and are living, on this planet? |
3252 | How should he ever live through the long months of November and December? |
3252 | How should she forget it? |
3252 | How was it likely she would look on such an extraordinary proposition? |
3252 | How would you like being called up to ride ten miles in a midnight snow- storm, just when one of your raging headaches was racking you?" |
3252 | How''s the Deacon, Miss Withers?" |
3252 | How''s your folks?" |
3252 | How''s your haalth, Colonel Sprowle?" |
3252 | How, then, did nitrate of silver come to be given for epilepsy? |
3252 | How, then, is he to blame mankind for inheriting"sinfulness"from their first parents? |
3252 | Hullo, You- sir, joo know th''wuz gon- to be a race to- morrah? |
3252 | Hush,--said I,--what will the divinity- student say? |
3252 | I am fair to the poets,--don''t you agree that I am? |
3252 | I am in the power of a dreadful man--""You mean Mr. William Murray Bradshaw?" |
3252 | I appropriated it to my own use; what can one do better than this, when one has a friend that tells him anything worth remembering? |
3252 | I asked the first of those two old New- Yorkers the following question:"Who, on the whole, seemed to you the most considerable person you ever met?" |
3252 | I began abruptly:--Do you know that you are a rich young person? |
3252 | I brought home one buck shot.--The Island is where? |
3252 | I did not say that you and I do n''t know, but how many people do know anything about it? |
3252 | I do n''t believe you have exercised enough;--don''t you think it''s confinement in the school has made you nervous?" |
3252 | I do n''t know what there is about Elsie''s,--but do you know, my dear, I find myself curiously influenced by them? |
3252 | I do n''t think anything of such objects, you know; but what should he have it in his chamber for? |
3252 | I do n''t want to speak too slightingly of these verbal critics;--how can I, who am so fond of talking about errors and vulgarisms of speech? |
3252 | I from my clinging babe was rudely torn; His tender lips a loveless bosom pressed Can I forget him in my life new born? |
3252 | I hear that a newspaper correspondent has visited him so as to make a report to his paper,--do you know what he found out?" |
3252 | I heard him distinctly whispering to the young fellow who brought him to dinner, SHALL I TELL IT? |
3252 | I hope he will carry that faculty of an honest laugh with him wherever he goes,--why should n''t he? |
3252 | I hope you are invited to Miss Eveleth''s to- morrow evening?" |
3252 | I know my danger,--does not Lord Byron say,"I have even been accused of writing puffs for Warren''s blacking"? |
3252 | I never saw or heard of anything like it, in prose at least;--do you remember much of Coleridge''s Poems, Doctor?" |
3252 | I no like his looks these las''days.--Is that a very pooty gen''l''m''n up at the schoolhouse, Doctor?" |
3252 | I reasoned with myself: Why should I not have outgrown that idle apprehension which had been the nightmare of my earlier years? |
3252 | I recollect his regretting the splendid guardsmen of the old Empire,--for what? |
3252 | I said nothing, but looked the question, What are you laughing at? |
3252 | I said to myself, Why should not I overcome this dread of woman as Peter the Great fought down his dread of wheels rolling over a bridge? |
3252 | I said,''Did you begin, Dear Queen?'' |
3252 | I say,"Boys, who was this man Shakespeare, people talk so much about?" |
3252 | I should like to know if all story- tellers do not do this? |
3252 | I suppose all of you have had the pocket- book fever when you were little?--What do I mean? |
3252 | I suppose you do a little of what we teachers used to call"cramming"now and then? |
3252 | I suppose you do n''t care about going, Elsie?" |
3252 | I suppose you will have some fine horses, and who would n''t be glad to? |
3252 | I was there, of course? |
3252 | I wonder if anybody will be curious enough to look further along to find out what it was before she reads the next paragraph? |
3252 | I wonder if she remembers how very lovely and agreeable she was? |
3252 | I wonder if you ever thought of the single mark of supremacy which distinguishes this tree from all our other forest- trees? |
3252 | IV What is a country village without its mysterious personage? |
3252 | If I like Broadway better than Washington Street, what then? |
3252 | If I were Florence Smythe, I''d try it, and begin now,--eh, Clara?" |
3252 | If a man picks your pocket, do you not consider him thereby disqualified to pronounce any authoritative opinion on matters of ethics? |
3252 | If a person who is born with it looks at you, you die, or something happens-- awful-- is n''t it? |
3252 | If all she did was hateful to God, what was the meaning of the approving or else the disapproving conscience, when she had done"right"or"wrong"? |
3252 | If any of you really believe in a working Utopia, why not join the Shakers, and convert the world to this mode of life? |
3252 | If any, born of kindlier blood, Should ask, What maiden lies below? |
3252 | If he has not seen so much of women, where could he study all that is best in womanhood as he can in his own wife? |
3252 | If he is not authority on the subject of his own doctrines, who is? |
3252 | If he writes the same word twice in succession, by accident, he always erases the one that stands second; has not the first- comer the prior right? |
3252 | If my little sister comes to Boston next June, will you let me bring her to see you? |
3252 | If neither of those days should suit you, could you kindly suggest another day? |
3252 | If so, when does he come to his consciousness? |
3252 | If that ai n''t what y''mean, what do y''mean? |
3252 | If the girl had only inherited that property-- whew? |
3252 | If the magnolia can bloom in northern New England, why should not a poet or a painter come to his full growth here just as well? |
3252 | If the men were so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
3252 | If the son of that boy''s father could not be trusted, what boy in Christendom could? |
3252 | If this is to be a child, what is it to be a woman? |
3252 | If we ca n''t understand them, because we have n''t taken a medical degree, what the Father of Lies do they ask us to sign them for? |
3252 | If we could make a peace without dishonor, could we make one that would be safe and lasting? |
3252 | If we understand them, why ca n''t we discuss them? |
3252 | If what my Rabbi tells me is the truth, Why did the choir of angels sing for joy? |
3252 | If you have really got more brains in Boston than other folks, as you seem to think, who hates you for it, except a pack of scribbling fools? |
3252 | If your ship springs a leak, what would you do? |
3252 | In love, Philip? |
3252 | In one of these, after looking round as usual, I asked aloud,"Any Massachusetts men here?" |
3252 | In that case, where would he, Dick, be? |
3252 | Inspector general?" |
3252 | Interpellandi locus hic erat; Est tibi mater? |
3252 | Is a young man in the habit of writing verses? |
3252 | Is anybody trying it softly? |
3252 | Is he in the house now?" |
3252 | Is he known to have changed his opinion as to the approaching disastrous event? |
3252 | Is he not a POET that painted us? |
3252 | Is it frut- cake? |
3252 | Is it good policy for mankind to subject themselves to such degrading vassalage and abject submission? |
3252 | Is it impossible for an archangel to smile? |
3252 | Is it likely that some other attraction may come into disturb the existing relation? |
3252 | Is it not a relief that I am abstaining from description of what everybody has heard described? |
3252 | Is it not evident that Lord Clarendon suggested the idea which Mr. Motley repelled as implying an insidious mode of action? |
3252 | Is it not true that the young man of average ability will find it as much as he can do to fit himself for these simple duties? |
3252 | Is it nuts and oranges and apples? |
3252 | Is it possible that the books which have been for me what Morhof was for Dr. Johnson can look like that to the student of the year 1990? |
3252 | Is it possible the poor thing works with her needle, too? |
3252 | Is it so? |
3252 | Is it taking too great a liberty to ask how early you began to write in verse? |
3252 | Is it the God that walked in Eden''s grove In the cool hour to seek our guilty sire? |
3252 | Is it too late now? |
3252 | Is n''t he a fust- rate- lookin''watch- dog, an''a rig''ler rat- hound?" |
3252 | Is n''t her cologne- bottle replenished oftener than its legitimate use would require? |
3252 | Is n''t it a giant putting his tongue out? |
3252 | Is n''t it a pretty thought? |
3252 | Is n''t that a picture of the poet''s hungry and hurried feast at the banquet of life? |
3252 | Is n''t that high enough? |
3252 | Is n''t there an odd sort of fascination about her? |
3252 | Is n''t there any old whisper which will tarnish that wearisome aureole of saintly perfection? |
3252 | Is n''t this book enough to scare any of you? |
3252 | Is not a Creator bound to guard his children against the ruin which inherited ignorance might entail on them? |
3252 | Is not freethinker a term of reproach in England? |
3252 | Is not the inaudible, inward laughter of Emerson more refreshing than the explosions of our noisiest humorists? |
3252 | Is not this a manifest case of insanity, in the form known as melancholia? |
3252 | Is not this a pleasing programme? |
3252 | Is not this to make vain the gift of God? |
3252 | Is not this to turn back the hand on the dial?" |
3252 | Is such a phenomenon as a laugh never heard except in our little sinful corner of the universe? |
3252 | Is that a stem or a straw? |
3252 | Is that done?" |
3252 | Is that fellow making love to Myrtle?" |
3252 | Is the door fast? |
3252 | Is the sick man moved? |
3252 | Is there a world of blank despair, And dwells the Omnipresent there? |
3252 | Is there an inner apartment that I have not seen? |
3252 | Is there any book you would like to have out of my library? |
3252 | Is there any ketchin''fevers-- bilious, or nervous, or typus, or whatever you call''em-- now goin''round this village? |
3252 | Is there any story of crime, or anything else to spice a column or so, or even a few paragraphs, with? |
3252 | Is there any trick that love and their own fancies do not play them? |
3252 | Is there anything to countenance the stories, long and widely current, about the"evil eye"? |
3252 | Is there method in your consciousness? |
3252 | Is there no progress, then, but do we return to the same beliefs and practices which our forefathers wore out and threw away? |
3252 | Is there no such thing, then, as hydrophobia? |
3252 | Is there not danger in introducing discussions or allusions relating to matters of religion into common discourse? |
3252 | Is there not in this as great an exception to all the hitherto received laws of nature as in the miracle of the loaves and fishes? |
3252 | Is this prejudice not due largely to the religious instruction that is given by the church acid Sunday- school? |
3252 | Is this the condition of affairs between Number Five and the Tutor? |
3252 | Is this the desk at which you write? |
3252 | Is this the way that genius is welcomed to the world of letters?" |
3252 | Is this typical of the creative force on the two sides of the ocean, or not? |
3252 | Is venesection done with forever? |
3252 | Is virtue piecemeal? |
3252 | Is''t not like That devil- spider that devours her mate Scarce freed from her embraces?" |
3252 | It is an honorable term,--I replied.--But why Little Boston, in a place where most are Bostonians? |
3252 | It is so much less known to the public at large than many other resorts that we naturally ask, What brings this or that new visitor among us? |
3252 | It is true that my waters exhale and are renewed from one season to another; but are your features the same, absolutely the same, from year to year? |
3252 | It is,--said I.--But would you have the kindness to tell me if you know anything about this deformed person? |
3252 | It shows a little more distinctly than in the first photograph, does n''t it?'' |
3252 | It was n''t nice a bit, was it? |
3252 | It was, Do you, Miss So and So, take this GENTLEMAN? |
3252 | It wo n''t be my fault if one visit is not enough.--You do n''t suppose Myrtle is in love with this fellow?" |
3252 | It would be a very interesting question, what was the intellectual character of those persons most conspicuous in behalf of the Perkinistic delusion? |
3252 | It''s the young Missis, Doctor,--it''s our Elsie,--it''s the baby, as we use''t''call her,--don''you remember, Doctor? |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker and his young proselyte, Miss Myrtle Hazard?" |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker has called upon you, Susan Posey, has he? |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker?" |
3252 | Just clear up these two children for me, will you, my dear? |
3252 | K.?" |
3252 | Ketched ye''ith a slippernoose, hey? |
3252 | Kindness? |
3252 | Kirkwood?" |
3252 | Kitty departed, communing with herself in this wise:--"Ockipied, is it? |
3252 | Know old Cambridge? |
3252 | Langdon?" |
3252 | Leduc? |
3252 | Leduc? |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Listen to him; he is reading aloud in impassioned tones: And have I coined my soul in words for naught? |
3252 | Listen to poor old Barzillai, and hear him piping:"I am this day fourscore years old; and can I discern between good and evil? |
3252 | Liver- complaint one of''em? |
3252 | Liver- tissue brings sugar out of the blood, or out of its own substance;--why? |
3252 | Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you, Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations? |
3252 | Look here,--you young philosopher over there,--do you like candy? |
3252 | Look!--said he,--is it clear or cloudy? |
3252 | Looks bright; anything in her?" |
3252 | Lord, what are we, and what are our children, but a Generation of Vipers?" |
3252 | MADNESS? |
3252 | MR. BRADSHAW CALLS ON MISS BADLAM"Is Miss Hazard in, Kitty?" |
3252 | Mahser Maurice asleep an''all this racket going on? |
3252 | May I ask why you do not try the experiment yourself? |
3252 | May I take the liberty to ask your-- profession?" |
3252 | May I venture to contrast youth and experience in medical practice, something in the way the man painted the lion, that is, the lion under? |
3252 | May not the serpent have bitten Eve before the birth of Cain, her first- born? |
3252 | May we not hope for your presence at the meeting, which is to take place next Wednesday evening? |
3252 | Mr. Bernard heard the answer, but presently stared about and asked again,"Who''s hurt? |
3252 | Mr. Bradshaw asked, in a rather excited way,"Is it possible, Miss Withers, that your niece has quitted you to go to a city school?" |
3252 | Mr. Gridley, is that you? |
3252 | Mr. Langdon, has anything happened to you?" |
3252 | Mr. Peckham, would you be so polite as to pass me a glass of srub?" |
3252 | Mr. Stoker''s sermon had touched her hard heart? |
3252 | Mr. Stoker; and when the women run after a minister or a doctor, what do the men signify? |
3252 | Mulier, Latin for woman; why apply that name to one of the gentle but occasionally obstinate sex? |
3252 | My beauty have anything ugly? |
3252 | My reader might be a little puzzled when he read that Number Five did or said such or such a thing, and ask,"Whom do you mean by that title? |
3252 | Myrtle ought, according to the common rules of conversation, to have asked, What other? |
3252 | Myrtle turned to Master Byles Gridley, and said,"You have been my friend and protector so far, will you continue to be so hereafter?" |
3252 | Nay, what was that which obscured its outline, in shape like a human figure? |
3252 | Never heard of her? |
3252 | Never? |
3252 | Never? |
3252 | Ninety- odd, was n''t it? |
3252 | No leading hotel kept by any Hazard, was there? |
3252 | No newspaper of note edited by anybody called Hazard, was there? |
3252 | No second self to say her evening prayer for? |
3252 | No sleep since twelve o''clock last night, you say?" |
3252 | Nobody sick up at the school, I hope?" |
3252 | Noisy little good- for- nothing tike,--ain''t you, Fret?" |
3252 | None of the boats missing? |
3252 | Nothing going wrong up at our ancient mansion, The Poplars, I trust?" |
3252 | Nothing? |
3252 | Now what have we come to in our own day? |
3252 | Now, said the Professor, you do n''t mean to tell me that I have got to that yet? |
3252 | Now, what did I expect when I began these papers, and what is it that has begun to frighten me? |
3252 | Of course the Algonquin kept gaining, but could it possibly gain enough? |
3252 | Of course the Professor acquires his information solely through his cranial inspections and manipulations.--What are you laughing at? |
3252 | Of what use is he going to be in my record of what I have seen and heard at the breakfast- table? |
3252 | Of what use was it to offer books like the"Saint''s Rest"to a child whose idea of happiness was in perpetual activity? |
3252 | Of what use were they to me without general indexes? |
3252 | Oh, you never read his Naufragium, or"Shipwreck,"did you? |
3252 | Old Sophy would say,--"don''you hear th''crackin''''n''th''snappin''up in Th''Mountain,''n''th''rollin''o''th''big stones? |
3252 | Old fellow?--said I,--whom do you mean? |
3252 | On what beach rolled by the waves of what ocean? |
3252 | One was tempted to ask:"What forlorn hope have you led? |
3252 | Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the status bred in Crosses flint- solution? |
3252 | Or did these girls lay their heads together, and send the poem we had at our last sitting to puzzle the company? |
3252 | Or did----write the novels and send them to London, as I fancied when I read them? |
3252 | Or have you forgotten one who will never cease to remember that she was once your own Susan?" |
3252 | Or is he a mythus,--ancient word for"humbug,"--Such as Livy told about the wolf that wet- nursed Romulus and Remus? |
3252 | Or is it a passion? |
3252 | Or is it that the explosion would derange her costume? |
3252 | Or is one of the two Annexes the make believe lover? |
3252 | Or to that of which Addison and Steele formed the centre, and which gave us the Spectator? |
3252 | Or to that where Johnson, and Goldsmith, and Burke, and Reynolds, and Beauclerk, and Boswell, most admiring among all admirers, met together? |
3252 | Or was he one of those men who are always making blunders for other people to correct? |
3252 | Or, to mention one out of many questionable remedies, shall you give Veratrum Viride in fevers and inflammations? |
3252 | Others might have wealth and beauty, he thought to himself, but what were these to the gift of genius? |
3252 | Ought I not to regret having undertaken to report the doings and sayings of the members of the circle which you have known as The Teacups? |
3252 | Ought I not to tell him so? |
3252 | Peckham?" |
3252 | Penhallow?" |
3252 | Penhallow?" |
3252 | Perhaps I shall deliver the lecture in your city: you will come and hear it, and bring him, wo n''t you, dearest? |
3252 | Perhaps he does not receive six hundred letters every day, but if he gets anything like half that number daily, what can he do with them? |
3252 | Perhaps you have been there yourself?" |
3252 | Perhaps you would be good enough to tell me what it is you like about them? |
3252 | Philip, do you know the pathos there is in the eyes of unsought women, oppressed with the burden of an inner life unshared? |
3252 | Please tell me, who taught her to play with it? |
3252 | Possibilities, Sir?--said the divinity- student; ca n''t a man who says Haow? |
3252 | Pray, do you happen to remember Wordsworth''s"Boy of Windermere"? |
3252 | Pray, what part of Maryland did you come from, and how shall I call you? |
3252 | Pray, what set you to asking me this? |
3252 | Predestined, I venture my guess, to one or the other, but to which? |
3252 | Presently the young man asked his pupil:--Do you know what the constellation directly over our heads is? |
3252 | Presently,"Why, Bernard, my dear friend, my brother, it can not be that you are in danger? |
3252 | Presently,-- Do you,--Beloved, I am afraid you are not old enough,--but do you remember the days of the tin tinder- box, the flint, and steel? |
3252 | Professor Byles Gridley,--author of''Thoughts on the Universe''?" |
3252 | Professor come home this very blessed morning with a story of one of her old black women? |
3252 | Professor,--said he, one day,--don''t you think your brain will run dry before a year''s out, if you do n''t get the pump to help the cow? |
3252 | Professor.--Do you mean to say that you have known me so long as that? |
3252 | Professor.--What message do people generally send back when you first call on them? |
3252 | Professor.--Where? |
3252 | Published by the American Tract Society?" |
3252 | Put it well, did n''t she? |
3252 | Qu''est ce qu''il a fait? |
3252 | Query, a bump? |
3252 | Questioning all things: Why her Lord had sent her? |
3252 | Read, flattered, honored? |
3252 | Rest, and low diet for a day or two, and all will be right, wo n''t it?" |
3252 | Robinson?" |
3252 | Roe replied by asking, When charity was like a top? |
3252 | Say, does He hear the sufferer''s groan, And is that child of wrath his own? |
3252 | Says"Yes?" |
3252 | Self- determining he may be, if you will, but who determines the self which is the proximate source of the determination? |
3252 | Seventeen year ago,''n''her poor mother cryin''for her,--''Where is she? |
3252 | Sha''n''t I write him a letter this very day and tell him all? |
3252 | Shall I call on you this evening and tell you about them?" |
3252 | Shall I die forgiven? |
3252 | Shall I ever meet any one of them again, in these pages or in any other? |
3252 | Shall I go instead of you?" |
3252 | Shall I read you the poems referred to in the one you have just heard, sir?" |
3252 | Shall I say anything of Austria,--what can I say that would interest you? |
3252 | Shall I tell you some things the Professor said the other day? |
3252 | Shall I tell you what that experience was?" |
3252 | Shall a man who in his younger days has written poetry, or what passed for it, continue to attempt it in his later years? |
3252 | Shall mouldering page or fading scroll Outface the charter of the soul? |
3252 | Shall priesthood''s palsied arm protect The wrong our human hearts reject, And smite the lips whose shuddering cry Proclaims a cruel creed a lie? |
3252 | Shall the minister be given to understand that you will see him hereafter in her company?" |
3252 | Shall there be no more dew on those leaves thereafter? |
3252 | Shall they ever live again in the memory of those who loved them here below? |
3252 | Shall they give expression to this secondary mental state, or not? |
3252 | Shall we always be youthful and laughing and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
3252 | Shall we not bid him come, and be Poet and Teacher of a most scattered flock wanting a shepherd? |
3252 | Shall we rank Emerson among the great poets or not? |
3252 | Shall we walk down the street together? |
3252 | She blushed as she thought of the comments that might be made; but what were such considerations in a matter of life and death? |
3252 | She certainly looks innocent enough; but what does a blush prove, and what does its absence prove, on one of these innocent faces? |
3252 | She does not seem to be a safe neighbor to very inflammable bodies?" |
3252 | She grew still paler, as she asked,"Is he dead?" |
3252 | She had been so lonely since he was away? |
3252 | She has a woman''s heart; and what talent of mine is to be named by the love a true woman can offer in exchange for these divided and cold affections? |
3252 | She is getting a strange influence over my fellow- teacher, a young lady,--you know Miss Helen Darley, perhaps? |
3252 | She is the best of friends, they say, but can she love anybody, as so many other women do, or seem to? |
3252 | She knows that as well as we do; and her first question after you have been talking your soul into her consciousness is, Did I please? |
3252 | She longed, and knew not wherefore Had the world nothing she might live to care for? |
3252 | She saw Mr. Gridley yesterday, I know; why wo n''t she see me to- day?" |
3252 | She told the whole story;-shall I repeat it? |
3252 | She was genteel enough for him, and-- let''s see, haow old was she? |
3252 | Shoot him? |
3252 | Should I send this poem to the publishers, or not? |
3252 | Should he challenge her lover? |
3252 | Should he fly? |
3252 | Should we lose many Kentuckians and Virginians who are now with us, if we boldly confiscated the slaves of all rebels? |
3252 | Should you expect him to turn out a Mozart or a Beethoven? |
3252 | Should you feel afraid to have him look at you? |
3252 | Should you like to hear them? |
3252 | Some explanation must take place between them, and how was it possible that it should be without emotion? |
3252 | Somebody must have''em,--why should n''t you? |
3252 | Somebody.--Who is it? |
3252 | Something like this, was n''t it? |
3252 | Something was hanging from it,--an old garment, was it? |
3252 | Sometimes a sunlit sphere comes rolling by, And then we softly whisper,--can it be? |
3252 | Speak I not truly, Master, that she will be well speedily?" |
3252 | Sprowle?" |
3252 | Such a simple thing? |
3252 | Sulphur, Mang.(?) |
3252 | Suppose I should try what I can do by visiting Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Suppose a minister were to undertake to express opinions on medical subjects, for instance, would you not think he was going beyond his province? |
3252 | Suppose he had never been trephined, when would his consciousness have returned? |
3252 | Suppose the blow is hard enough to spoil the brain and stop the play of the organs, what happens them? |
3252 | Suppose the youth were Maurice; what then? |
3252 | Suppose, for instance, I wanted to use the double star to illustrate anything, say the relation of two human souls to each other, what would I-- do? |
3252 | Supposing it came to the worst, what could be done then? |
3252 | Symbol? |
3252 | THERE ARE PATIENT SPIRITS THAT HAVE WAITED FROM ETERNITY, AND NEVER FOUND PARENTS FIT TO BE BORN OF.--How do you know anything about all that? |
3252 | Talk about your megatherium and your megalosaurus,--what are these to the bacterium and the vibrio? |
3252 | Tell him the whole truth, and send him a ticket of admission to the Institution for Idiots and Feeble- minded Youth? |
3252 | Tell me now, you are not in earnest, are you, but only trying a little sentiment on me?" |
3252 | Tell me, Mr. Bradshaw, who is there that I shall meet if I go? |
3252 | Tell me, Sophy, what do you think would happen, if he should chance to fall in love with Elsie, and she with him, and he should marry her?" |
3252 | Tell me, oh, tell me, what is it? |
3252 | That buried passions wake and pass In beaded drops of fiery dew? |
3252 | That fellow''s the Speaker,( 3)--the one on the right; Mr. Mayor,( 4) my young one, how are you to- night? |
3252 | That is all, is n''t it? |
3252 | That is the reason people become so attached to these servants with Southern sunlight in their natures? |
3252 | That sounds like the nineteenth century, but what shall we say to this? |
3252 | That was it.--But what had he been doing to get his head into such a state?--had he really committed an excess? |
3252 | That was it; what else could it be? |
3252 | That will do for the Houyhnhnm Gazette.--Do you ever wonder why poets talk so much about flowers? |
3252 | That would be picturesque and pleasant, now, would n''t it? |
3252 | That would be pleasant, would n''t it? |
3252 | The God who dealt with Abraham as the sons Of that old patriarch deal with other men? |
3252 | The Man of Letters(?). |
3252 | The Tutor and Number Five were both quiet, thoughtful: he, evidently captivated; she, what was the meaning of her manner to him? |
3252 | The Widow knew everybody, of course: who was there in Rockland she did not know? |
3252 | The Young Astronomer shook his head, smiling a little at the question.--Was there any meet''n''-houses? |
3252 | The ancient Romans had theirs, the English and the French have theirs as well,--why should not we Americans have ours? |
3252 | The beauties of my recollections-- where are they? |
3252 | The brazen head of Roger Bacon is mute; but is not"Planchette"uttering her responses in a hundred houses of this city? |
3252 | The breeze says to us in its own language, How d''ye do? |
3252 | The cheering smile, the voice of mirth And laughter''s gay surprise That please the children born of earth, Why deem that Heaven denies? |
3252 | The clouds are rich and dark, the air serene,_ So like the soul of me, what if''t were me_?" |
3252 | The compliment was not ungrateful, and the Colonel acknowledged it by smiling and saying,"I should think the''was a trifle? |
3252 | The cries, if possible, were still louder and more persistent; they must have a speech and they would have a speech, and what could I do about it? |
3252 | The earth shook at your nativity, did it? |
3252 | The editor, who sells it to the public-- By the way, the papers have been very civil have n''t they?--to the-- the what d''ye call it? |
3252 | The eye does not bring landscapes into the world on its retina,--why should the brain bring thoughts? |
3252 | The following is an exact transcript of the lines he showed me, and which I took down on the spot:"Are you in the vein for cider? |
3252 | The jealous God of Moses, one who feels An image as an insult, and is wroth With him who made it and his child unborn? |
3252 | The magic of her new talisman? |
3252 | The man a''n''t hurt,--don''t you see him stirring? |
3252 | The minute draws near,--but her watch may go wrong; My heart will be asking, What keeps her so long? |
3252 | The modern version would be,"How came you at Mrs. Billion''s ball not having a dress on your back which came from Paris?" |
3252 | The native female turns her nose up at the idea of"living out;"does she think herself so much superior to the women of other nationalities? |
3252 | The old gentleman opposite all at once asked me if I ever read anything better than Pope''s"Essay on Man"? |
3252 | The only"chaffing"I heard was the question from one of the galleries,"Did he come in the One- Hoss Shay?" |
3252 | The paper you burned was not the original,--it was a copy substituted for it--""And did the old man outwit me after all?" |
3252 | The poems he drops into the basket are those rejected as of no account""But does he not read the poems before he rejects them?" |
3252 | The question is distinctly proposed to us, Shall Slavery die, or the great Republic? |
3252 | The question is: Who manages her, and how can you get at that person or those persons? |
3252 | The sky grows dark,--Was that the roll of thunder? |
3252 | The translations excited me much, and who can estimate the value of a good thought? |
3252 | The trees look down from the hill- sides and ask each other, as they stand on tiptoe,--"What are these people about?" |
3252 | The village people have the strangest stories about her; you know what they call her?" |
3252 | The working of Master Byles Gridley''s emphatic warning? |
3252 | The"Rhodora,"another brief poem, finds itself foreshadowed in the inquiry,"What is Beauty?" |
3252 | Then he asked,"Were you dressed as you are now?" |
3252 | Then she whispered, almost inaudibly,--for her voice appeared to fail her,"What did her mother die of, Sophy?" |
3252 | Then she would let me see the inside of it? |
3252 | Theodore Parker, is it?" |
3252 | There are a good many other strange things about her: did you ever notice how she dresses?" |
3252 | There is another question which must force itself on the thoughts of many among you:"How am I to obtain patients and to keep their confidence?" |
3252 | There may be some among those whom I address who are disposed to ask the question, What course are we to follow in relation to this matter? |
3252 | There seemed to be remarks and questionings going on, which he supposed to be something like the following:-- Which is it? |
3252 | There was a book of hymns; it had her name in it, and looked as if it might have been often read;--what the diablo had Elsie to do with hymns? |
3252 | There''s no harm in that, is there? |
3252 | These two questions are like those famous household puzzles,--Where do the flies come from? |
3252 | They all urged upon Dudley Veneer to go with them: if there was danger, why should he remain to risk it, when he sent away the others? |
3252 | They did n''t mean to shoot Myrtle Hazard, did they? |
3252 | They go only by the bumps.--What do you keep laughing so for? |
3252 | They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--But stay Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day? |
3252 | They said the doctors would want my skeleton when I was dead.--You are my friend, if you are a doctor,--a''n''t you? |
3252 | They seemed to me to betray the richest invention, so rich as almost to say, why draw any line since you can draw all? |
3252 | They tell me there is something in my eyes that draws people to me and makes them faint: Look into them, will you?" |
3252 | They were perfectly fair game; what better use could I put them to? |
3252 | Think the lines you mention are by far the best I ever wrote, hey? |
3252 | This immaculate woman,--why could n''t she have a fault or two? |
3252 | This or That, take this LADY?! |
3252 | This, that is rhyming, must have been found out very early,"''Where are you, Adam?'' |
3252 | Thomas Scott, author of the Commentary?" |
3252 | Though I never owned a horse, have I not been the proprietor of six equine females, of which one was the prettiest little"Morgin"that ever stepped? |
3252 | Thought not mortal, or not thought mortal,--which was it? |
3252 | Thus, at a marriage ceremony, once, of two very excellent persons who had been at service, instead of, Do you take this man, etc.? |
3252 | Thus,"How''s your health?" |
3252 | Thy name is at least once more spoken by living men;--is it a pleasure to thee? |
3252 | To be sure, their scales differ, but have they not the same freezing and the same boiling point? |
3252 | To look through plate- glass windows, and pity the brown soldiers,--or sneer at the black ones? |
3252 | To put gilt bands on coachmen''s hats? |
3252 | To sweep the foul sidewalks with the heaviest silks which the toiling artisans of France can send us? |
3252 | To whom should she go in her vague misery? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Transcendentalism has its occasional vagaries( what school has not? |
3252 | Trust my poems, some of which are unpublished, to the post- office? |
3252 | Turned off by the girl they say he means to marry by and by? |
3252 | V What am I but the creature Thou hast made? |
3252 | Vain? |
3252 | Venerable figure- heads, what would our platforms be without you? |
3252 | Very good, Sir,--he answered.--When have there been most people killed and wounded in the course of this century? |
3252 | Very well; but are they separated by running water? |
3252 | Wan''to hear another? |
3252 | Want my autograph, do you? |
3252 | Was Number Five forgetful, too? |
3252 | Was Parson Young''s own heart such a hideous spectacle to himself? |
3252 | Was he a sound observer, who had made other observations and predictions which had proved accurate? |
3252 | Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty? |
3252 | Was he going to kneel to her? |
3252 | Was he thinking of his relations with Carlyle? |
3252 | Was it a dread of blue sky and open air, of the smell of flowers, or some electrical impression to which he was unnaturally sensitive? |
3252 | Was it a fortnight, as we now reckon duration, or only a week? |
3252 | Was it a graduate who had felt the"icy dagger,"or only a candidate for graduation who was afraid of it? |
3252 | Was it grief at parting from the place where her strange friendship had grown up with the Little Gentleman? |
3252 | Was it not an intoxicating vision of gold and glory? |
3252 | Was it not, on the contrary, invariably, under all conditions, in all companies, by the whole household, spoken of as the baby? |
3252 | Was it possible that he was going to take a fancy to her? |
3252 | Was it possible that my Captain could be lying on the straw in one of these places? |
3252 | Was it possible, in any way, to exasperate her irritable nature against him, and in this way to render her more accessible to his own advances? |
3252 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
3252 | Was it strange that I felt a momentary pang? |
3252 | Was it the feeling of sympathy, or was it the pride of superior sagacity, that changed the look of the old man''s wrinkled features? |
3252 | Was it the first time that these strings of wampum had ever rattled upon her neck and arms? |
3252 | Was it the light reflected from the glossy leaves of the poison sumach which overhung the path that made his cheek look so pale? |
3252 | Was it wicked in me to live?" |
3252 | Was n''t that a pretty neck to slip a hangman''s noose over? |
3252 | Was she indeed writing to this unknown gentleman? |
3252 | Was she not rather becoming more and more involved in the toils of this plotting Yankee? |
3252 | Was that a hundred years ago?--But you''ve got some new pictures and things, have n''t you? |
3252 | Was the Scarabee crushed, as so many of his namesakes are crushed, under the heel of this trampling omniscient? |
3252 | Was the illness dangerous? |
3252 | Was there any great harm in the fact that the Irvings and Paulding wrote in company? |
3252 | Was there any live creatures to be seen on the moon? |
3252 | Was there any strange, mysterious affinity between the master and the dark girl who sat by herself? |
3252 | Was there enough capital of humanity in his somewhat limited nature to furnish sympathy and unshrinking service for his friends in an emergency? |
3252 | Was there ever any such water as that which we used to draw from the deep, cold well, in"the old oaken bucket"? |
3252 | Was there ever anything in Italy, I should like to know, like a Boston sunset? |
3252 | Was there ever anything more miraculous, so far as our common observation goes, than the coming and the going of these creatures? |
3252 | Was there ever anything more stinging, more concentrated, more vigorous, more just? |
3252 | Was there ever anything wholesome that was not poison to somebody? |
3252 | Was there ever such innocence in a creature so full of life? |
3252 | Was there nothing but this forbidding house- front to make the place alive with some breathing memory? |
3252 | We are naturally led to the question, What is the nature of force? |
3252 | We do n''t visit Papa Job quite so early as this without some special cause,--do we, Miss Keren- Happuch?" |
3252 | We do not want his fragments to be made wholes,--if we did, what hand could be found equal to the task? |
3252 | We had fast horses,--did not"Old Blue"trot a mile in three minutes? |
3252 | We have grown rich for what? |
3252 | We have learned a great deal about the how, what have we learned about the why? |
3252 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But ALL must be of buhl? |
3252 | Well, did these two ladies dance as if it was hard work to them? |
3252 | Well, how can you mistake that insect for dried leaves? |
3252 | Well, how do you suppose your lower limbs are held to your body? |
3252 | Well, should n''t you like to see me put my foot into one? |
3252 | Well, what then? |
3252 | Well, you have noticed how quietly and rapidly the cars kept on, just as if the locomotive were drawing them? |
3252 | Were not these good and sufficient reasons for her decision? |
3252 | Were schoolboys ever half so wild? |
3252 | Were they anything but planetary foundlings? |
3252 | Were they really christened by that name, any of these numerous Franks? |
3252 | Were we melancholy? |
3252 | Were we not too young to know each other''s hearts when we promised each other that we would love as long as we lived? |
3252 | Whar''s the man gone th''t brought the critter?" |
3252 | What a picture? |
3252 | What about Elsie?" |
3252 | What am I? |
3252 | What are Olympiads and Consulates to these neighboring systems of being? |
3252 | What are all the strongest epithets of our dictionary to us now? |
3252 | What are men to do when they get to heaven, after having exhausted their vocabulary of admiration on earth? |
3252 | What are the names of ministers''sons which most readily occur to our memory as illustrating these advantages? |
3252 | What are the questions we should ask him? |
3252 | What are we to do with them,--we who teach that the soul of a child is an unstained white tablet?" |
3252 | What better provision can be made for a mortal man than such as our own Boston can afford its wealthy children? |
3252 | What business had I to be trying experiments on this forlorn old soul? |
3252 | What business had Sarmatia to be fighting for liberty with a fifteen- foot pole between her and the breasts of her enemies? |
3252 | What business had he to be laying his hand on your shoulder? |
3252 | What business has he to die, I should like to know? |
3252 | What business was it of his? |
3252 | What can I do with him? |
3252 | What can I say to that? |
3252 | What can I say to you of cis- Atlantic things? |
3252 | What can justify one in addressing himself to the general public as if it were his private correspondent? |
3252 | What can promise more than an Essay by Emerson on"Immortality"? |
3252 | What can you do with chrome or loam or gnome or tome? |
3252 | What can you expect of children that come from heathens and savages? |
3252 | What cares a witch for a hangman''s noose? |
3252 | What color are your carriage- horses?" |
3252 | What could I do? |
3252 | What could account so entirely for his ways and actions as that strange poisoning which produces the state they call Tarantism? |
3252 | What could be broad enough to cover the facts of the case? |
3252 | What could be more natural than that love should find its way among the young people who helped to make up the circle gathered around the table? |
3252 | What could have been in her head when she worked out such a fantasy? |
3252 | What could he do about it? |
3252 | What could life be to her but a perpetual anguish, and to those about her but an ever- present terror? |
3252 | What could she do? |
3252 | What could the Hebrew expect when a Christian preacher could use such language about a petition breathing the very soul of humanity? |
3252 | What did he hide that paper for, a year ago and more? |
3252 | What did he mean by saying that his dream had become a vision? |
3252 | What did he mean? |
3252 | What did it mean? |
3252 | What did our two Annexes say to this unexpected turn of events? |
3252 | What did she always wear a necklace for? |
3252 | What did she do? |
3252 | What did that mean? |
3252 | What did you hand me that schoolbook for? |
3252 | What dignifies a province like a university? |
3252 | What do I care, if Dick Venner die? |
3252 | What do I mean by graduates? |
3252 | What do I say to smoking? |
3252 | What do YOU think of these verses my friends?--Is that piece an impromptu? |
3252 | What do the dear old things look like?" |
3252 | What do they know or care about this last revelation of the omnipresent spirit of the material universe? |
3252 | What do those mean? |
3252 | What do we do with ailing vegetables? |
3252 | What do we know of the mysteries of Nature? |
3252 | What do you care for O''m? |
3252 | What do you do when you build a house on a damp soil, and there are damp soils pretty much everywhere? |
3252 | What do you mean by calling certain families yours?" |
3252 | What do you mean in particular? |
3252 | What do you read such things for, my dear? |
3252 | What do you say to my voice now? |
3252 | What do you say to that? |
3252 | What do you say to that? |
3252 | What do you say to this copy of Joannes de Ketam, Venice, 1522? |
3252 | What do you say to this line of Homer as a piece of poetical full- band music? |
3252 | What do you say to this? |
3252 | What do you stop for?" |
3252 | What do you suppose are the sentiments entertained by the Thompsons with a p towards those who address them in writing as Thomson? |
3252 | What do you suppose is an interviewer''s business? |
3252 | What do you think an admiring friend said the other day to one that was talking good things,--good enough to print? |
3252 | What do you think he employs himself about? |
3252 | What do you think it was? |
3252 | What do you think of the Tarantula business? |
3252 | What do you think was kept under that lock? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you? |
3252 | What doctrines and practice were these colonists likely to bring, with them? |
3252 | What does Byles Gridley want of you, did you say?" |
3252 | What does Rome know of rat and lizard? |
3252 | What does all this sudden concentration upon the girl mean? |
3252 | What does he believe? |
3252 | What does it know about miracles? |
3252 | What does man do in a similar case of need? |
3252 | What does she come to this school for? |
3252 | What does the reader suppose was the source of the most ominous thought which forced itself upon my mind, as I walked the decks of the mighty vessel? |
3252 | What else can it be? |
3252 | What envoy will ever dare to speak with vigor if he is not sustained by the government at home? |
3252 | What feeling have I for you? |
3252 | What glorifies a town like a cathedral? |
3252 | What great discovery have you made? |
3252 | What had happened? |
3252 | What had he to do with your lioness? |
3252 | What harm doth it?" |
3252 | What has Emerson to tell us of"Inspiration?" |
3252 | What has been going on here lately, Deacon?" |
3252 | What has he done? |
3252 | What has his antipathy to do with his staying away? |
3252 | What have I got to say about temperance, the use of animal food, and so forth? |
3252 | What have I save the blessings Thou hast lent? |
3252 | What have they full- dressed you, or rather half- dressed you for, do you think? |
3252 | What have you done? |
3252 | What have you gained as a permanent possession? |
3252 | What have you got there, Jake?" |
3252 | What heathenism has ever approached the horrors of this conception of human destiny? |
3252 | What heroic task of any kind have you performed?" |
3252 | What hope I but Thy mercy and Thy love? |
3252 | What if I should content myself with a single report of what was said and done over our teacups? |
3252 | What if I should sometimes write to please myself? |
3252 | What if I should tell my last, my very recent experience with the other sex? |
3252 | What if Number Five should take off the"rose"that sprinkles her affections on so many, and pour them all on one? |
3252 | What if he is?" |
3252 | What if instead of throbbing it should falter, flutter, and stop as if never to beat again? |
3252 | What if nature has lent him a master key? |
3252 | What if one shall go round and dry up with soft napkins all the dew that falls of a June evening on the leaves of his garden? |
3252 | What if this were the trouble with Maurice Kirkwood? |
3252 | What if you or I had inherited all the tendencies that were born with his cousin Elsie?" |
3252 | What illuminates a country like its scholarship, and what is the nest that hatches scholars but a library? |
3252 | What immortal book have you written? |
3252 | What is Beauty? |
3252 | What is a Prologue? |
3252 | What is a farm but a mute gospel?" |
3252 | What is it that makes common salt crystallize in the form of cubes, and saltpetre in the shape of six- sided prisms? |
3252 | What is it that makes the reputation of Sydenham, as the chief of English physicians? |
3252 | What is it that sets you laughing so? |
3252 | What is it to him that you can localize and name by some uncouth term the disease which you could not prevent and which you can not cure? |
3252 | What is it, Elixir Vitae or Aurum potabile? |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is love, Sophy?" |
3252 | What is that book he is holding? |
3252 | What is that look of paternity and of maternity which observing and experienced mothers and old nurses know so well in men and in women?) |
3252 | What is that old gentleman crying about? |
3252 | What is that saying of mine about I squinting brains?" |
3252 | What is that to the glorious self- renunciation of a martyr in pearls and diamonds? |
3252 | What is the condition of things in the growing intimacy of Number Five and the Tutor? |
3252 | What is the date of it? |
3252 | What is the definite belief of Emerson as expressed in this discourse,--what does it mean? |
3252 | What is the head of it, and where does it lie? |
3252 | What is the meaning of these perpetual changes and conflicts of medical opinion and practice, from an early antiquity to our own time? |
3252 | What is the meaning of this change which has come over her features, and her voice, her temper, her whole being? |
3252 | What is the meaning of this rush into rhyming of such a multitude of people, of all ages, from the infant phenomenon to the oldest inhabitant? |
3252 | What is the use of going about and setting up a flag of negation?''" |
3252 | What is the use of my saying what some of these opinions are? |
3252 | What is the use, I say? |
3252 | What is there that you can tell me to which I can not respond with sympathy? |
3252 | What is there that youth will not endure and triumph over? |
3252 | What is this beauty?'' |
3252 | What is this life without the poor accidents which made it our own, and by which we identify ourselves? |
3252 | What is this"genial atmosphere"but the very spirit of Christianity? |
3252 | What is to be the fate of Lurida? |
3252 | What is''t the chap''s been a- doin''on? |
3252 | What kills anybody quickest, Doctor?" |
3252 | What kind of a constituency is this which is to look to you as its authorized champions in the struggle of life against its numerous enemies? |
3252 | What line have we written that was on a level with our conceptions? |
3252 | What made Myrtle nervous and restless? |
3252 | What madness could impel So rum a flat to face so prime a swell?" |
3252 | What makes you think she''s in love with him? |
3252 | What man could speak more fitly, with more authority of"Character,"than Emerson? |
3252 | What man was he who would lay his hand familiarly upon his shoulder and call him Waldo? |
3252 | What more can be asked to prove their honesty and sincerity? |
3252 | What more could I ask to assure me of the Captain''s safety? |
3252 | What more could this poor, dear Helen say? |
3252 | What more natural than that it should be used again when the subject of appealing to chance came up in conversation? |
3252 | What must she do but buy a small copper breast- pin and put it under"Schoolma''am''s"plate that morning, at breakfast? |
3252 | What must you expect to forget? |
3252 | What noble principle, what deathless interest, was there at stake? |
3252 | What nobler tasks has the poet than to exalt the idea of manhood, and to make the world we live in more beautiful? |
3252 | What of all this shall I remember longest? |
3252 | What others could there be? |
3252 | What page of ours that does not betray some weakness we would fain have left unrecorded? |
3252 | What prospect have I of ever being rid of this long and deep- seated infirmity? |
3252 | What remains for you yet to learn? |
3252 | What reported conversation can stand a captious criticism like this? |
3252 | What saddest note in your spiritual dirges which will not find its chord in mine? |
3252 | What shall I do about it? |
3252 | What shall I do? |
3252 | What shall I do?" |
3252 | What shall I say in this presence of the duties of a Librarian? |
3252 | What shall I say of the personal habits you must form if you wish for success? |
3252 | What shall a man do, when a woman makes such a demand, involving such an avowal? |
3252 | What shall it be? |
3252 | What shall we say to the doctrine of the fall of man as the ground of inflicting endless misery on the human race? |
3252 | What should I be afraid of? |
3252 | What should he do about it, if it turned out so? |
3252 | What should he do? |
3252 | What should she do about it? |
3252 | What should you think of the probable musical genius of a young man who was particularly fond of jingling a set of sleigh- bells? |
3252 | What sort of a man do you find my old friend the Deacon?" |
3252 | What strange early impression was it which led a certain lady always to shriek aloud if she ventured to enter a church, as it is recorded? |
3252 | What the d''d''didos are y''abaout with them great huffs o''yourn?" |
3252 | What the deuse is that odd noise in his chamber? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What though the rose leaves fall? |
3252 | What was I saying,--I, who would not for the world have pained our unfortunate little boarder by an allusion? |
3252 | What was coming next,--a declaration, or an accusation of murder? |
3252 | What was he going to tell us? |
3252 | What was he good for? |
3252 | What was it he wanted her to keep?" |
3252 | What was she crying for? |
3252 | What was that for? |
3252 | What was that medicine which so frequently occurs in the printed letters under the name of"rubila"? |
3252 | What was the end to be attained by accepting the gage of battle? |
3252 | What was the matter with her eyes, that they sucked your life out of you in that strange way? |
3252 | What was the meaning of this slip of paper coming to light at this time, after reposing undisturbed so long? |
3252 | What was the slight peculiarity of her enunciation, when she read? |
3252 | What was the use of trying to enforce social intercourse under such conditions? |
3252 | What was there to distract him or disturb him? |
3252 | What was this unexplained something which came between her soul and that of every other human being with whom she was in relations? |
3252 | What was this wonderful substance which so astonished kings, princes, dukes, knights, and doctors? |
3252 | What were cold conventionalities at such a moment? |
3252 | What were these torturing gifts, and wherefore lent her? |
3252 | What were they thinking of? |
3252 | What will happen, though, if he makes love to her? |
3252 | What will prevent that? |
3252 | What will your hatter say about the two sides of the head? |
3252 | What wizard fills the maddening glass What soil the enchanted clusters grew? |
3252 | What would a steam- engine be without a crank? |
3252 | What would a young girl be who never mingled her voice with the songs and prayers that rose all around her with every returning day of rest? |
3252 | What would be the consequence if all this property came into the possession of Silence Withers? |
3252 | What would be the state of the highways of life, if we did not drive our THOUGHT- SPRINKLERS through them with the valves open, sometimes? |
3252 | What would it avail to tell you anecdotes of a sweet and wonderful boy, such as we solace and sadden ourselves with at home every morning and evening? |
3252 | What would our civilization be without the piano? |
3252 | What would she do it for? |
3252 | What y''been dreamin''abaout? |
3252 | What you think she do,''f anybody else tech it?" |
3252 | What''n thunder''r''y''abaout, y''darned Portagee?" |
3252 | What''n thunder''s that''ere raoun''y''r neck? |
3252 | What''r''y''dreamin''abaout?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s that''ere stickin''aout o''y''r boot?" |
3252 | What''s the name of the alley, and which bell?" |
3252 | What''s the use? |
3252 | When did you ever hear such tones? |
3252 | When gratitude is a bankrupt, love only can pay his debts; and if Maurice gave his heart to Euthymia, would not she receive it as payment in full? |
3252 | When he had got through, the Doctor looked him in the face steadily, as if he were saying, Is that all? |
3252 | When his breath ceased and his heart stopped beating? |
3252 | When we come to the application, in the same Essay, almost on the same page, what can we make of such discourse as this? |
3252 | When we look for them the next morning, do we not find them withered leaves?" |
3252 | When your friends give out, who is left for you? |
3252 | Whence is it? |
3252 | Where are the cemeteries of the dead ones, or do they die at all except when we kill them? |
3252 | Where are the cradles of the young flies? |
3252 | Where can that latch be that rattles so? |
3252 | Where can you find a happier child? |
3252 | Where could it have been? |
3252 | Where did he get those expressions"A 1"and"prime"and so on? |
3252 | Where did she learn French? |
3252 | Where did the anti- republican, anti- democratic passion for swelling names come from, and how long has it been naturalized among us? |
3252 | Where did this"frightful idea"come from? |
3252 | Where does all this ambition for names without realities come from? |
3252 | Where does she get those books she is reading so often? |
3252 | Where is my Beranger? |
3252 | Where is this monument? |
3252 | Where is your hat, doctor? |
3252 | Where now is the fame of Bouillaud, Professor and Deputy, the Sangrado of his time? |
3252 | Where shall it next flame at the head of the long procession? |
3252 | Where should we go next? |
3252 | Where then did Goethe find his lovers? |
3252 | Where to? |
3252 | Where was all his legacy of knowledge when Norfolk was decimated? |
3252 | Where will you find a sympathy like mine in your hours of sadness? |
3252 | Where would Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee,--saved, or looking to be saved, even as it is, as by fire,--have been in the day of trial? |
3252 | Where would she come from? |
3252 | Where''s the Doctor?--let the Doctor get to him, ca n''t ye?" |
3252 | Where''s the skins of''em? |
3252 | Where''s the young master? |
3252 | Wherefore, then, should thy servant be yet a burden unto my lord the king?" |
3252 | Wherever one looked taller and fuller than the rest, I asked myself,--"Is this it?" |
3252 | Whether a hundred or a thousand years old, who knows? |
3252 | Which has most to suffer, and which has most endurance and vitality? |
3252 | Which is it?--Why, that one, there,--that young fellow,--don''t you see?--What young fellow are you two looking at? |
3252 | Which of these did he most favor? |
3252 | Which of these two girls would be the safest choice for a young man? |
3252 | Which style do you like best? |
3252 | While in my simple gospel creed That"God is Love"so plain I read, Shall dreams of heathen birth affright My pathway through the coming night? |
3252 | Who among us has taught better than Nathan Smith, better than Elisha Bartlett? |
3252 | Who are the persons that use this argument? |
3252 | Who are the"quality,"--said the Model, etc., in a community like ours? |
3252 | Who are they that practice Homoeopathy, and say this of a man with the Materia Medica of Hahnemann lying before him? |
3252 | Who are you that build your palaces on my margin? |
3252 | Who blows out the gas instead of shutting it off? |
3252 | Who but myself shall cloud my soul with fear? |
3252 | Who can fail to see one common spirit in the radical ecclesiastic and the reforming court- physician? |
3252 | Who can give better counsels on"Culture"than Emerson? |
3252 | Who can tell what we owe to the Mutual Admiration Society of which Shakspeare, and Ben Jonson, and Beaumont and Fletcher were members? |
3252 | Who can this man be but the boy of that story? |
3252 | Who cares how many stamens or pistils that little brown flower, which comes out before the leaf, may have to classify it by? |
3252 | Who could blame her? |
3252 | Who could know all these things, except the few people of the household? |
3252 | Who could say? |
3252 | Who could say? |
3252 | Who did not do just the same thing, and does not often do it still, now that the first flush of the fever is over? |
3252 | Who did you say was sick and wanted to see me, Fordyce?" |
3252 | Who do you think is coming?" |
3252 | Who does not remember odious images that can never be washed out from the consciousness which they have stained? |
3252 | Who forged in roaring flames the ponderous stone, And shaped the moulded metal to his need? |
3252 | Who forgets the great muster- day, and the collision of the classic with the democratic forces? |
3252 | Who found the seeds of fire and made them shoot, Fed by his breath, in buds and flowers of flame? |
3252 | Who furnished your parlors?" |
3252 | Who gave the dragging car its rolling wheel, And tamed the steed that whirls its circling round? |
3252 | Who is ahead? |
3252 | Who is he, The one ye name and tell us that ye serve, Whom ye would call me from my lonely tower To worship with the many- headed throng? |
3252 | Who is he? |
3252 | Who is it? |
3252 | Who is the city correspondent of this place?" |
3252 | Who is the owner? |
3252 | Who is there here that I can have any true society with, but you? |
3252 | Who is there of English descent among us that does not feel with Cowper,"England, with all thy faults, I love thee still"? |
3252 | Who is this Number Five, so fascinating, so wise, so full of knowledge, and so ready to learn? |
3252 | Who knows And what shall I say if a wretch should propose? |
3252 | Who knows a woman''s wild caprice? |
3252 | Who knows? |
3252 | Who knows? |
3252 | Who or what set you to reading that, I should like to know?" |
3252 | Who puts the key in the desk and fastens it tight with the spring lock? |
3252 | Who said he was a man? |
3252 | Who says we are more? |
3252 | Who shall say? |
3252 | Who that has ever been at the old Anchor Tavern forgets Miranda''s"A little of this fricassee?-it is ver- y nice;"or"Some of these cakes? |
3252 | Who was she? |
3252 | Who will I tell him wants to ask him about old coin?" |
3252 | Who wishes to destroy the Union? |
3252 | Who would dare to marry Elsie? |
3252 | Who would have expected to meet my maternal uncle in the guise of a schoolboy? |
3252 | Who would have looked for it under the Italian word cantare? |
3252 | Who would have thought that the saucy question,"Does your mother know you''re out?" |
3252 | Who would it be? |
3252 | Who would not pray that my last gleam of light and hope may be that of dawn and not of departing day? |
3252 | Who would not rather wear his decorations beneath his uniform than on it? |
3252 | Who would not wish that he were wrong in such a suspicion? |
3252 | Who would not, will not, if he can, Bathe in the breezes of fair Cape Ann, Rest in the bowers her bays enfold, Loved by the sachems and squaws of old? |
3252 | Who wrote that"I Like You and I Love You,"which we found in the sugar- bowl the other day? |
3252 | Who''s gon- to run,''n''wher''s''t gon- to be? |
3252 | Who''s that you call old,--not Byles Gridley, hey? |
3252 | Who, on the whole, constitute the nobler class of human beings? |
3252 | Who?" |
3252 | Whom do we trust and serve? |
3252 | Whose hand protect me from myself but Thine? |
3252 | Whose works was I going to question him about, do you ask me? |
3252 | Why are we not all in love with Number Five? |
3252 | Why ca n''t somebody give us a list of things that everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list of things that everybody says and nobody thinks? |
3252 | Why ca n''t you go over to the shop and make''em trot her out?" |
3252 | Why ca n''t you make her acquaintance and be civil to her? |
3252 | Why ca n''t you pick me out a couple of what you think are the best of''em? |
3252 | Why could not she have done something to prevent it? |
3252 | Why did n''t I tell him he had nothing to do with it, yet awhile? |
3252 | Why did n''t I warn him about love and all that nonsense? |
3252 | Why did n''t Job ask where the flies come from and where they go to? |
3252 | Why did not you think of a railway- station, where the cars stop five minutes for refreshments? |
3252 | Why do n''t I describe her person? |
3252 | Why do n''t they now? |
3252 | Why do n''t they now? |
3252 | Why do n''t they wear a ring in it? |
3252 | Why do n''t those talking ladies take a spider as their emblem? |
3252 | Why do n''t you get that lady off from Battle Monument and plant a terrapin in her place? |
3252 | Why do n''t you interview this mysterious personage? |
3252 | Why do n''t you put a canvas- back- duck on the top of the Washington column? |
3252 | Why do n''t you send your manuscript by mail?" |
3252 | Why does iron rust, while gold remains untarnished, and gold amalgamate, while iron refuses the alliance of mercury? |
3252 | Why does n''t a man always strike out the first of the two words, to gratify his diabolical love of injustice? |
3252 | Why does not somebody come and carry off this noble woman, waiting here all ready to make a man happy? |
3252 | Why doubt for a moment? |
3252 | Why had she quitted the city so abruptly, and fled to her old home, leaving all the gayeties behind her which had so attracted and dazzled her? |
3252 | Why has she never been in love with any one of her suitors? |
3252 | Why has that excellent old phrase gone out of use? |
3252 | Why have you not told me that we thought alike? |
3252 | Why may not some one of the lady Teacups have played the part of a masculine lover? |
3252 | Why mourn that we, the favored few Whom grasping Time so long has spared Life''s sweet illusions to pursue, The common lot of age have shared? |
3252 | Why no, of course not; had not he made all proper inquiries about that when Susan came to town? |
3252 | Why not apply Mr. Galton''s process, and get thirty- eight stories all in one? |
3252 | Why not as well die in the attempt to break up a wretched servitude to a perverted nervous movement as in any other way? |
3252 | Why not say a boy, if it was a boy? |
3252 | Why not, I should like to know? |
3252 | Why not? |
3252 | Why not? |
3252 | Why question? |
3252 | Why should Hannah think herself so much better than Bridget? |
3252 | Why should I any longer be the slave of a foolish fancy that has grown into a half insane habit of mind? |
3252 | Why should I call her"poor little Helen"? |
3252 | Why should I consider it worth while to say that we went there at all? |
3252 | Why should I cumber myself with regrets that the receiver is not capacious? |
3252 | Why should I go mousing about the place? |
3252 | Why should I go over the old house again, having already described it more than ten years ago? |
3252 | Why should I hope or fear when I send out my book? |
3252 | Why should I provoke a catastrophe which appears inevitable if I invite it by exposing myself to its too well ascertained cause? |
3252 | Why should her fleeting day- dreams fade unspoken, Like daffodils that die with sheaths unbroken? |
3252 | Why should it be? |
3252 | Why should n''t he make up to the Jedge''s daughter? |
3252 | Why should n''t they, I should like to know? |
3252 | Why should n''t we get a romance out of all this, hey? |
3252 | Why should n''t you want to revisit your old home sometimes?" |
3252 | Why should not Maurice-- you both tell me to call him so-- take the diplomatic office which has been offered him? |
3252 | Why should not he be writing a novel? |
3252 | Why should not human nature be the same in Arrowhead Village as elsewhere? |
3252 | Why should not the Counsellor fall in love and write verses? |
3252 | Why should not the coming question announce itself by stirring in the pulses and thrilling in the nerves of the descendant of all these grandmothers? |
3252 | Why should not the rising tide of life have drowned out the feeble growths that infested the shallows of childhood? |
3252 | Why should not this happen, when we know that a sudden mental shock may be the cause of insanity? |
3252 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? |
3252 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of theirs?" |
3252 | Why should that be his real name? |
3252 | Why should we be more shy of repeating ourselves than the spring be tired of blossoms or the night of stars? |
3252 | Why should you renounce your right to traverse the starlit deserts of truth, for the premature comforts of an acre, house, and barn? |
3252 | Why the diavolo did n''t he break it off, then? |
3252 | Why tremble? |
3252 | Why two baths?" |
3252 | Why was it that no one of them had the look and bearing of that young man she had seen but a moment the other evening? |
3252 | Why was the A self like his good uncle in bodily aspect and mental and moral qualities, and the B self like the bad uncle in look and character? |
3252 | Why will you ask for other glories when you have soft crabs? |
3252 | Why you ask? |
3252 | Why you floor the cellar with cement, do n''t you? |
3252 | Why, did n''t President Wheelock say to a young man who consulted him, that some persons might be true Christians without suspecting it? |
3252 | Why, what did she do? |
3252 | Why, what did the great Richard Baxter say in his book on Infant Baptism? |
3252 | Why? |
3252 | Why?" |
3252 | Will Elsie be easily taken with such a fellow? |
3252 | Will he be duly grateful for the correction?] |
3252 | Will he die? |
3252 | Will it be enough?" |
3252 | Will no_ Angel_ body himself out of that; no stalwart Yankee_ man_, with color in the cheeks of him and a coat on his back?" |
3252 | Will nobody block those wheels, uncouple that pinion, cut the string that holds those weights, blow up the infernal machine with gunpowder? |
3252 | Will not the rays strike through to his brain at last, and send him to a narrower cell than this egg- shell dome which is his workshop and his prison? |
3252 | Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood? |
3252 | Will she come? |
3252 | Will she pass through it unharmed, or wander from her path, and fall over one of those fearful precipices which lie before her? |
3252 | Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood? |
3252 | Will the Man be of the Indian type, as President Samuel Stanhope Smith and others have supposed the transplanted European will become by and by? |
3252 | Will the needle swing back from the east or the west? |
3252 | Will the ring- dove return to her nest? |
3252 | Will you ask a portrait- painter how many of those who sit to hint have both sides of their faces exactly alike? |
3252 | Will you be so good as to come at once to the facts on which you found your suspicions, and which lead you to put these questions to me?" |
3252 | Will you believe that I saw Number Five, with a sweet, approving smile on her face all the time, brush her cheek with her hand- kerchief? |
3252 | Will you do this at once, or will you compel me to show you the absolute necessity of your doing it, at the expense of pain to both of us? |
3252 | Will you go over to his house with me at noon, when he comes back after his morning visits, and have a talk over the whole matter with him? |
3252 | Will you let me know what keeps you so busy when you ought to be asleep, or taking your ease and comfort in some way or other?" |
3252 | Will you look at the paper I hold?" |
3252 | Will you not indulge me in telling you something of my own story? |
3252 | Will you show me the double star you said I should see? |
3252 | Will you take the offered gift?" |
3252 | Will you take the trouble to ask your tailor how many persons have their two shoulders of the same height? |
3252 | Will you tell me how it is you seem to be acquainted with everybody you are introduced to, though he evidently considers you an entire stranger? |
3252 | Will you trust your life and happiness with one who can offer you so little beside his love? |
3252 | William-- writing once more-- after an exclamation in strong English of the older pattern,--"Whether''t is nobler-- nobler-- nobler--"To do what? |
3252 | Willing? |
3252 | Without thee, what were life? |
3252 | Wonder if angels breathe like mortals? |
3252 | Wordsworth''s"Ode"is a noble and beautiful dream; is it anything more? |
3252 | Would he not call at Hyacinth Cottage, and let her thank him again there? |
3252 | Would he or I be the listener, if we were side by side? |
3252 | Would it be a surprise to you, if he had carried his acuteness in some particular case like the one I am to mention beyond the prescribed limits?" |
3252 | Would it be fair for a parent to put into a child''s hands the title- deeds to all its future possessions, and a bunch of matches? |
3252 | Would it be one of the great Ex- Presidents whose names were known to, all the world? |
3252 | Would it be the silver- tongued orator of Kentucky or the"God- like"champion of the Constitution, our New- England Jupiter Capitolinus? |
3252 | Would it ever be bridged over? |
3252 | Would it wake her from her trance? |
3252 | Would n''t he forgive me for telling him he was free? |
3252 | Would n''t it be fun to look down at the bores and the duns? |
3252 | Would one take no especial precautions if his wife, about to become a mother, had been bitten by a rabid animal, because so many escape? |
3252 | Would you have any objection to showing your case to the Societies of Medical Improvement and Medical Observation? |
3252 | Would you lecture to us; if you were a professor in one of the great medical schools?" |
3252 | Would you venture to take charge of the case?" |
3252 | Would you, then, banish all allusions to matters of this nature from the society of people who come together habitually? |
3252 | Y''ha''n''t heerd noth''n''abaout it?" |
3252 | Yes, where are our cats?" |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | Yet why with coward lips complain That this must lean and that must fall? |
3252 | You ai n''t such a fool as to think that is new,--are you? |
3252 | You are clear, I suppose, that the Omniscient spoke through Solomon, but that Shakespeare wrote without his help?" |
3252 | You are familiar with Vasari, of course?" |
3252 | You are in independent circumstances, perhaps? |
3252 | You are quite welcome to the lines"To the Rhodora;"but I think they need the superscription["Lines on being asked''Whence is the Flower?''"]. |
3252 | You are specialist enough to take care of a sprained ankle, I suppose, are you not?" |
3252 | You believe, do you not? |
3252 | You believe, do you not? |
3252 | You broke down in your great speech, did you? |
3252 | You did n''t think he was my''Literary Celebrity,''did you?" |
3252 | You do n''t believe in presentiments, do you?" |
3252 | You do n''t suppose Adam had the cutaneous unpleasantness politely called psora, do you? |
3252 | You do n''t suppose there was a special act of creation for the express purpose of bestowing that little wretch on humanity, do you? |
3252 | You do n''t think I should expect any woman to listen to such a sentence as that long one, without giving her a chance to put in a word? |
3252 | You do n''t think the idea adds to the sublimity and associations of the cataract? |
3252 | You do not know who she is, then?" |
3252 | You don''think I care for Dick? |
3252 | You found it accurate, I hope, in its descriptions?" |
3252 | You have heard of Alphonse Karr?'' |
3252 | You have not forgotten the double star,--the two that shone for each other and made a little world by themselves? |
3252 | You have sometimes been in a train on the railroad when the engine was detached a long way from the station you were approaching? |
3252 | You know about the caddice- worm? |
3252 | You know that young lady, doctor?" |
3252 | You know the Esquimaux kayak,( if that is the name of it,) do n''t you? |
3252 | You know who the Fire- hang- bird is, do n''t you? |
3252 | You know your Horace and Virgil well, I take it for granted?" |
3252 | You know, I suppose,--he said,--what is meant by complementary colors? |
3252 | You may call the story of Ulysses and the Sirens a fable, but what will you say to Mario and the poor lady who followed him? |
3252 | You may read in the parable,"Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment?" |
3252 | You mean she''s gone an''run off with some good- for- nothin''man or other? |
3252 | You modelled this piece on the style of a famous living English poet, did you not?" |
3252 | You never remarked anything curious about her ornaments? |
3252 | You never wrote in verse, did you, Cyprian?" |
3252 | You read your Bible, Doctor, do n''t you? |
3252 | You reject my offer unconditionally?" |
3252 | You remember Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | You remember Rachel, my first wife,--don''t you, Fordyce?" |
3252 | You remember Thomas Prince''s"Chronological History of New England,"I suppose? |
3252 | You remember how she won us the boat- race?" |
3252 | You remember that dear friend of ours who left us not long since? |
3252 | You remember the boat- race? |
3252 | You remember those beautiful lines out of our newspaper I sent you? |
3252 | You remember, perhaps, in some papers published awhile ago, an odd poem written by an old Latin tutor? |
3252 | You settled the estate of the late Malachi Withers, did you not?" |
3252 | You smile,--I said.--Perhaps life seems to you a little bundle of great things? |
3252 | You will be indulgent to my mistakes and shortcomings,--and who can expect to avoid them? |
3252 | You wish to correct an error in my Broomstick poem, do you? |
3252 | You would not attack a church dogma-- say Total Depravity-- in a lyceum- lecture, for instance? |
3252 | You would not leave us for another school, would you?" |
3252 | You''ll confess to a rhyming dictionary anyhow, wo n''t you? |
3252 | You''ll see to it,--won''t you, Abel?" |
3252 | You''re equal to that, are n''t you?" |
3252 | You''re pious? |
3252 | You''ve heard about her going to school at that place,--the''Institoot,''as those people call it? |
3252 | You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL? |
3252 | You''ve seen a blind man with a stick, feeling his way along? |
3252 | ["Depind on Kitty, is it? |
3252 | [--Now is n''t this the drollest world to live in that one could imagine, short of being in a fit of delirium tremens? |
3252 | _ New England Reformers_.--Would any one venture to guess how Emerson would treat this subject? |
3252 | a thousand times, no!--Yet what is this which has been shaping itself in my soul?--Is it a thought?--is it a dream? |
3252 | against all human and divine authority? |
3252 | and Mrs. Hopkins, and Gifted, and Susan, and everybody? |
3252 | and President Buchanan? |
3252 | and Whereto? |
3252 | and in what do all emotions shared by a young man with such a young girl as this tend to find their last expression? |
3252 | and is not my thought the abstract of ten thousand of these crumbs of truth with which you would choke off my speech? |
3252 | and that the American eagle screams with delight to see three drachms of calomel given at a single mouthful? |
3252 | and the Boston State- House? |
3252 | and the financial question, WHO PAID FOR IT? |
3252 | and the old lady by him, and the three girls, what are they all covering their eyes for? |
3252 | and to what could it be owing, but to an innate organic tendency? |
3252 | and we have already taken our hats off and are answering it with our own How d''ye do? |
3252 | and what are the qualifications? |
3252 | and what''s all this noise about?" |
3252 | and would she see me in the flush of my stolen triumph, and hate and despise me ever after? |
3252 | and, Do you take this woman? |
3252 | and, Where do the pins go to? |
3252 | are the southern curtains drawn? |
3252 | arrive at distinction? |
3252 | as your Dr. Rabelais has it,--answers the iconoclast,--"what is that to me and my colic, to me and my strangury? |
3252 | cast away the flower I took in the bud because it does not show as I hoped it would when it opened? |
3252 | complimentary to our party? |
3252 | did you never read any novels?" |
3252 | do you ask me? |
3252 | do you hear anything now?" |
3252 | do you know what has got hold of you? |
3252 | do you think it''s safe to put that cold stuff into your stomick?" |
3252 | fill a fresh bumper,--for why should we go While the[ nectar][ logwood] still reddens our cups as they flow? |
3252 | ha''n''t I tol''y''a dozen times?" |
3252 | has he come yet? |
3252 | has my stove and pepper- pot a false bottom? |
3252 | he asked, curiously.--Why, the parenthesis, said I.--Parenthesis? |
3252 | he called out,"what have you got there? |
3252 | he said to himself;"what are you about making phrases, when you have got a piece of work like this in hand?" |
3252 | he said, talking to himself in his usual way,"is n''t that good? |
3252 | heard I not that ringing strain, That clear celestial tone? |
3252 | here?" |
3252 | how do you do? |
3252 | how do you think the officiating clergyman put the questions? |
3252 | how many remember anything they read but once, and so long ago as that? |
3252 | how-- do-- you-- do Johnny?! |
3252 | hush!--that whisper,-"Where is Mary''s boy?" |
3252 | it was too horrible, was that the face which had been so close to hers but yesterday? |
3252 | look at me, my child; do n''t you know your old friend Byles Gridley?" |
3252 | of Number Five and the young Tutor who is so constantly found in her company? |
3252 | or any unpardonable cabal in the literary union of Verplanck and Bryant and Sands, and as many more as they chose to associate with them? |
3252 | or do you want to make me kill myself?" |
3252 | or is he going to be late, with the other great folks?" |
3252 | or is it a mere fancy that such a power belongs to any human being? |
3252 | or"Come, naow, a''n''t ye''shamed?" |
3252 | or"Out of what great picture have these pieces been cut?" |
3252 | or, How are you? |
3252 | or, worse than any body, is----? |
3252 | presents!--said I.--What tickets, what presents has he had the impertinence to be offering to that young lady? |
3252 | said Miss Matilda,--"what''s that rumblin''?" |
3252 | said the Doctor, with a pleasant, friendly look,--"have you stay? |
3252 | said the Doctor,--"catching? |
3252 | said the fellow,--but softly, so that Saint Christopher should not hear him,--''do you think I''m in earnest? |
3252 | said the good minister,"is this you?" |
3252 | said the old Doctor, one morning,"after you''ve harnessed Caustic, come into the study a few minutes, will you?" |
3252 | should n''t she be real happy to see him? |
3252 | supper and all?" |
3252 | the old mystery remains, If I am I; thou, thou, or thou art I?" |
3252 | this is the game, is it? |
3252 | to color meerschaums? |
3252 | to dredge our maidens''hair with gold- dust? |
3252 | to flaunt in laces, and sparkle in diamonds? |
3252 | to float through life, the passive shuttlecocks of fashion, from the avenues to the beaches, and back again from the beaches to the avenues? |
3252 | to reduce the speed of trotting horses a second or two below its old minimum? |
3252 | was the very same that Horace addressed to the bore who attacked him in the Via Sacra? |
3252 | what is it? |
3252 | what is life while thou''rt away? |
3252 | what is this my frenzy hears? |
3252 | where is she? |
3252 | who cares? |
3252 | who teaches better than some of our living contemporaries who divide their time between city and country schools? |
3252 | who will be my pupils in a Course,--Poetry taught in twelve lessons? |
3252 | you know,--oh, tell me, darlin'', don''you love to see the gen''l''man that keeps up at the school where you go? |
6046 | A new heart also will I give them; a new heart, what a one is that? |
6046 | A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | And Moses said unto the Lord, Wherefore hast thou afflicted thy servant? |
6046 | And why,saith he,"dost thou ask Abishag for Adonijah? |
6046 | But can you in very deed make these things manifestly evident from the Word of God? 6046 Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? |
6046 | Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? 6046 Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? |
6046 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
6046 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee,saith the Lord? |
6046 | Enter in; enter into what, or whither, but into a state or place, or both? |
6046 | Fear ye not me? 6046 Fear ye not me? |
6046 | For the Lord taketh pleasure in his people,and what follows? |
6046 | For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? 6046 For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? |
6046 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? 6046 Has any man sinned? |
6046 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
6046 | His father,says the text,"had not displeased him at any time in( so much as) saying, Why hast thou done so?" |
6046 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? |
6046 | How shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? |
6046 | I know whom I have believed,I know him, said Paul; and what follows? |
6046 | I will,saith Christ;"I will,"saith Satan; but whose will shall stand? |
6046 | If I be a master, where is my fear? |
6046 | In hope of eternal life,how so? |
6046 | Is any afflicted? 6046 Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire?" |
6046 | Is thine eye evil, because I am good? 6046 It is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth?" |
6046 | Jesus stretched forth his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6046 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? 6046 Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? |
6046 | My God, My God,saith He,"why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
6046 | Now is My soul troubled, and what shall I say? |
6046 | Now,as the Psalmist says,"Who is this King of glory?" |
6046 | O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? |
6046 | O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6046 | Seemeth it to you,saith David,"a light thing to be a king''s son- in- law?" |
6046 | Shall I not visit for these things? 6046 Shall we sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, and will they not stone us?" |
6046 | Shall we- sin that grace may abound? 6046 Sinner, O why so thoughtless grown? |
6046 | Sirs, what must I do to be saved? |
6046 | Stand in awe,saith he,"and sin not"; and again,"my heart standeth in awe of thy word"; and again,"Let all the earth fear the Lord"; what is that? |
6046 | Tush,say they,"they talk of being born again; what good shall a man get by that? |
6046 | What shall I do to be saved? |
6046 | What shall we say then? |
6046 | What, my true servant,quoth he,"my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | What,says he,"shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits? |
6046 | When he hideth his face, who then can behold him? |
6046 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
6046 | Where is boasting then? 6046 Wherefore should I fear,"said David,"in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?" |
6046 | Wherefore should I,said he? |
6046 | Wherefore,saith he,"as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men,"mark that; but why? |
6046 | Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant? 6046 Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?" |
6046 | Who then can condemn? 6046 Whom have I in heaven but thee? |
6046 | Why hast thou hardened our heart from thy fear? |
6046 | Will he plead against me with his great power? 6046 Ye adulterers and adulteresses,"for so the covetous are called,"know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
6046 | ''A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | ''Adam, where art thou?'' |
6046 | ''And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who shall give you that which is your own?'' |
6046 | ''And they all with one consent began to make excuse;''--excuse for what? |
6046 | ''And why art thou disquieted within me? |
6046 | ''Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel; may I not wash in them and be clean?'' |
6046 | ''Art thou also of Galilee? |
6046 | ''But what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''Can the children of the bridechamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them?'' |
6046 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong?'' |
6046 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee? |
6046 | ''Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the days that God shall deal with thee?'' |
6046 | ''Can two walk together,''saith God,''except they be agreed?'' |
6046 | ''Canst thou thunder with a voice like him?'' |
6046 | ''Commune with your own heart upon your bed''( Psa 4:4), and then say what thou thinkest of, whether thou art going? |
6046 | ''Did he find it,''saith Paul,''by the flesh?'' |
6046 | ''Do not I fill heaven and earth, saith the Lord?'' |
6046 | ''Do ye think that the Scripture saith in vain, The spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy?'' |
6046 | ''Do you think that love letters are not desired between lovers? |
6046 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite, though he has gained''to a higher strain of desires,''when God taketh away his soul?'' |
6046 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite?'' |
6046 | ''For what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6046 | ''Happy art thou, O Israel, who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord, the shield of thy help, and who is the sword of thy excellency?'' |
6046 | ''Has it a corn? |
6046 | ''Hath he said it, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6046 | ''He can not deliver his soul, nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6046 | ''He gives light to them that sit in darkness, and in the shadow of death,''what to do? |
6046 | ''How do you know that?'' |
6046 | ''How shall I give thee up, Ephraim?'' |
6046 | ''How then can I do this great wickedness,''said he,''and sin against God?'' |
6046 | ''How?'' |
6046 | ''I am the way,''saith Christ; but to what? |
6046 | ''I will,''said David,''behave myself wisely in a perfect way; O when wilt thou come unto me?'' |
6046 | ''If David then call him Lord, how is he his Son?'' |
6046 | ''If our sins be upon us, and we pine away in them, how should we then live?'' |
6046 | ''If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?'' |
6046 | ''Is Ephraim,''saith he,''my dear son?'' |
6046 | ''Is John Bunyan safe?'' |
6046 | ''Is not my word like as a fire, saith the Lord; and like a hammer, that breaketh the rock in pieces?'' |
6046 | ''Let her alone, why trouble ye her?'' |
6046 | ''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6046 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''Ought not Christ to have suffered? |
6046 | ''Shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? |
6046 | ''Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right''in His famous distributing of judgment? |
6046 | ''Shall one man sin,''said Moses,''and wilt Thou be wroth with all the congregation?'' |
6046 | ''Shall they fall,''saith he,''and not arise? |
6046 | ''So forcible and mighty are they in operation'';''is there not life and mettle in them? |
6046 | ''So then, what shall I say to those that have thus bespattered me? |
6046 | ''The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?'' |
6046 | ''The wife of the bosom lies at him, saying, O do not cast thyself away; if thou takest this course, what shall I do? |
6046 | ''Then I said, But, Lord, what is believing?'' |
6046 | ''Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a council, and said, What do we? |
6046 | ''They have all received of his fulness, and grace for grace''; and will he shut thee out? |
6046 | ''Thus saith the Lord, The heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool, where is the house that ye build unto me? |
6046 | ''What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6046 | ''What kind of preacher is he?'' |
6046 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''What shall we say then? |
6046 | ''What shall we then say that Abraham, our father as pertaining to the flesh, hath found?'' |
6046 | ''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | ''What, thought I, is there but one sin that is unpardonable? |
6046 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said David,''in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6046 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said the prophet,''in the days of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6046 | ''Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way?'' |
6046 | ''Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?'' |
6046 | ''Who in the heaven can be compared unto the Lord? |
6046 | ''Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
6046 | ''Who knoweth the power or God''s anger?'' |
6046 | ''Who shall condemn? |
6046 | ''Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6046 | ''Who would set the briers and thorns against Me in battle? |
6046 | ''Why boasteth thou thyself in mischief,''said David,''O mighty man? |
6046 | ''Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him?'' |
6046 | ''Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6046 | ''Wot ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias? |
6046 | ''Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky, and of the earth, but how is it that ye do not discern this time?'' |
6046 | ''[ 30]''Will you rebel against the king? |
6046 | ''[ 335]''Was Adam bad before he eat the forbidden fruit? |
6046 | ''[ 336]''How can a man say his prayers without a word being read or uttered? |
6046 | ''[ 337]''How do men speak with their feet?'' |
6046 | ''[ 339]''How can we comprehend that which can not be comprehended, or know that which passeth knowledge? |
6046 | ''[ 340]''Who was the founder of the state or priestly domination over religion? |
6046 | ''[ 341] What is meant by the drum of Diabolus and other riddles mentioned in The Holy War? |
6046 | ''[ 343] Can''sin be driven out of the world by suffering? |
6046 | ''[ 345]''What men die two deaths at once? |
6046 | ''[ 346]''Are men ever in heaven and on earth at the same time? |
6046 | ''[ 347]''Can a beggar be worth ten thousand a- year and not know it? |
6046 | ''[ 38]''What can be the meaning of this( trumpeters), they neither sound boot and saddle, nor horse and away, nor a charge? |
6046 | ''[ 83]''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | ''[ 8] He inquired of his father--''Whether we were of the Israelites or no? |
6046 | ( 1 Peter 4:18) Canst thou answer this question, sinner? |
6046 | ( 2 Peter 2:13) And let me ask, Did God give his Word to justify your wickedness? |
6046 | ( 2 Tim 2:5) But you will say, What is it to strive lawfully? |
6046 | ( Ca nt 8:6,7) But who finds this heat in love so much as for one poor quarter of an hour together? |
6046 | ( Eze 22:14) What sayest thou? |
6046 | ( Eze 9:4,8, Isa 10:20- 22, 11:11,16, Jer 23:3, Joel 2:32) But what is a remnant to the whole piece? |
6046 | ( Heb 11:6) God must be known, else how can the sinner propound him as his end, his ultimate end? |
6046 | ( Heb 6:6) Poor trembler, wouldst thou crucify the Son of God afresh? |
6046 | ( Isa 14) They that see thee shall narrowly look upon thee, and consider thee, saying, Is this the man? |
6046 | ( Isa 3:9) Where is the man that maketh the Almighty God his delight, and that designeth his glory in the world? |
6046 | ( Isa 53:1) When the prophet speaks of the saved under this metaphor of gleaning, how doth he amplify the matter? |
6046 | ( Isa 6:10- 13) But what is a tenth? |
6046 | ( Jer 30:11) If it be so, I say, what had become of us, if we had had no Intercessor? |
6046 | ( Jer 31:7) What shall I say? |
6046 | ( Jer 3:14) That saying of Paul is much like this,"Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize?" |
6046 | ( Luke 9:25) and so, consequently, or,''What shall a man give in exchange( for himself) for his soul?'' |
6046 | ( Matt 26:21- 23) Who questioned the salvation of the foolish virgins? |
6046 | ( Matt 3:10) Poor sinner, awake; eternity is coming, and HIS SON, they are both coming to judge the world; awake, art yet asleep, poor sinner? |
6046 | ( Matt 3:12, 13:30) But mark,"There shall be a handful": What is a handful, when compared with the whole heap? |
6046 | ( Num 23:19) Hath Christ given us glory, and shall we not have it? |
6046 | ( Phil 3:14) But what do you mean by these three questions? |
6046 | ( Prov 16:8) What is it for me to claim a house, or a farm, without right? |
6046 | ( Psa 19:13) Must that wicked one touch my soul? |
6046 | ( Psa 31:22) And now where was his hope, in the right gospel discovery of it? |
6046 | ( Psa 50:3,4) And now, what will be found in that day to be the portion of them that in this day do not come to God by Christ? |
6046 | ( Rev 1:17,18) Why should Christ bring in his life to comfort John, if it was not a life advantageous to him? |
6046 | ( Rom 3:23, 5:1,2) But, I say again, who will propound God for his end that knows him not, that knows him not aright? |
6046 | ( Rom 7:24)( c.) How dost thou find thyself under the most high enjoyment of grace in this world? |
6046 | ( Zech 12:10, John 19, Heb 12:14, Psa 19:12)( c.) How do they show themselves to be true under the third? |
6046 | ( e.) O, but will he not be weary? |
6046 | ( g) And if at any time they can, or shall, meet with each other again, and nobody never the wiser, O, what courting will be betwixt sin and the soul? |
6046 | --that is, to recover or redeem his lost soul to liberty? |
6046 | --what shall, what would, yea, what would not a man, if he had it, give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | 17 Many readers will cry out, Who then can be saved? |
6046 | 17 Seventy times seven times a day we sometimes sin against our brother; but how many times, in that day, do we sin against God? |
6046 | 2. Who may have it? |
6046 | 2. Who may have this life? |
6046 | 20 We will, therefore, state it again-- Are men saved by grace? |
6046 | 25 How pointed and faithful are these words? |
6046 | 25 What can I render unto thee, my God, for such unspeakable blessedness? |
6046 | 32 What can we render to the Lord? |
6046 | 33 Take holiness away out of heaven, and what is heaven? |
6046 | 36 But alas, what are these? |
6046 | 4 What can withstand the will of Christ, that all his should behold and partake of his glory? |
6046 | 52. Who now dare say we throw away Our goods or liberty, When God''s most holy Word doth say We gain thus much thereby? |
6046 | 6 What conduct? |
6046 | 8 What heart can conceive the glorious worship of heaven? |
6046 | A Christian, and spend thy time, thy strength, and parts, for things that perish in the using? |
6046 | A certain man had a fruitless fig tree planted in his vineyard; but by whom was it planted there? |
6046 | A conduct of angels:"Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
6046 | A rainbow round about the throne, in sight; in whose sight? |
6046 | A sick body is a burden to the soul, and a wounded spirit is a burden to the body;''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | Afraid of what? |
6046 | After I had been thus for some considerable time, another thought came into my mind; and that was, whether we were of the Israelites, or no? |
6046 | After this, that other doubt did come with strength upon me, But how if the day of grace should be past and gone? |
6046 | Again I ask, Hast thou considered what truth, as to matter of fact, there is in the things whereof thou standest accused? |
6046 | Again, Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Again, are the people of God to behave themselves to the glory of God the Father? |
6046 | Again, how did Satan ply it against Peter, when he desired to have him, that he might sift him as wheat? |
6046 | Again, if Christ be the altar of incense, how stands he as a priest by that altar to offer the prayers of all the saints thereon, before the throne? |
6046 | Again, suppose the father should scourge and chasten the son for such offence, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6046 | Again, what a continuation of this alarm was there also at the birth of Jesus, which was about three months after John Baptist was born? |
6046 | Again, would the people learn to be covetous? |
6046 | Again,"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6046 | Again; Hast thou found a failure in all others that might have been entertained to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Again; when Esau threatened to slay his brother, Rebecca sent him away, saying,"Why should I be deprived also of you both in one day?" |
6046 | Again; why not live upon Christ alway? |
6046 | Alas, but how shall I come? |
6046 | All covetousness is idolatry; but what is that, or what will you call it, when men are religious for filthy lucre''s sake? |
6046 | All this is made to appear by the angels that fell; for when fallen, what was heaven to them? |
6046 | Also before his friends, how bold was he? |
6046 | Also to Simon Magus for but undervaluing of it? |
6046 | Also when the mariners inquired of Jonah, saying,"What is thine occupation, and whence comest thou? |
6046 | Also, if he ask me, What is become of the portion of goods that he gave me? |
6046 | Also, when Job had God present with him, making manifest the goodness of his great heart to him, what doth he say? |
6046 | Am I coming, indeed, to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Am I in a case to be thus near mine end? |
6046 | Am I one of the elect? |
6046 | And I ask, Why doth the wife-- that is, as the loving hind-- love to be in the presence of her husband? |
6046 | And Paul, when he said, he could wish that himself were accursed from Christ, for the vehement desire that he had that the Jews might be saved? |
6046 | And again,"Beware of men,"& c. when I had answered him, that blessed be God I was well, he said, What is the occasion of your being here? |
6046 | And again,"If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? |
6046 | And again,''My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God, when shall I come and appear before God?'' |
6046 | And are they willing, God helping them, to run hazards for his name, for the love they bear to him? |
6046 | And are we not in him, in him, even as so considered? |
6046 | And before I go further, what might I yet say to fasten this reason upon the truly gracious soul? |
6046 | And by what is this righteousness by thee applied to thyself? |
6046 | And can a holy and just God require that we give thanks to him in his name, if it was not effectually done for us by him? |
6046 | And can death, or sin, or the grave hold us, when God saith,''Give up?'' |
6046 | And can it be imagined that Christ alone shall be like the foolish ostrich, hardened against his young, yea, against his members? |
6046 | And did he license any one, and if so, who, to alter, add to, or diminish from it? |
6046 | And dost thou indeed say,"Hallowed be thy name"with thy heart? |
6046 | And dost thou not do the deeds of the flesh? |
6046 | And doth God come to the sinner, and the sinner again go to God in a saving way by him, and by him only? |
6046 | And doth all this stir up in thy heart some breathing after Him? |
6046 | And doth it not also make thee more earnestly to groan after the Lord Jesus? |
6046 | And doth this demonstrate the reformation of your church? |
6046 | And for the opening of this we must consider, first, How and through Whom this grace doth come to be, first, free to us, and, secondly, unchangeable? |
6046 | And from the sense and feeling of torment, he would give, yea, what would he not give, in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | And further, said he, can not one man teach another to pray? |
6046 | And good reason; for since they would not with us come to him now they have time, why should they stand with us when judgment is come? |
6046 | And have these desires put thy soul to the flight? |
6046 | And he turned to the woman, and said unto Simon, Seest thou this woman? |
6046 | And here those sayings are of their own natural force:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6046 | And how can that be, if he saveth not to the uttermost them that come unto God by him? |
6046 | And how if I should not? |
6046 | And how is this resented by them? |
6046 | And how little conscience is there made of prayer between God and the soul in secret, unless the Spirit of supplication be there to help? |
6046 | And how sayest thou now? |
6046 | And how sayest thou, for to name no more, dost thou with thy affection and conscience thus question? |
6046 | And how sayest thou? |
6046 | And how then? |
6046 | And how, then, can he come to him by Christ? |
6046 | And if God''s will should be done on earth as it is in heaven, must it not be thy ruin? |
6046 | And if Satan meets thee, and asketh, Whither goest thou? |
6046 | And if he breaks up one of these bags, who can tell what he can do? |
6046 | And if he goes about to do this, is not the law of the land against him? |
6046 | And if he hath said it, will he not make it good, I mean even thy salvation? |
6046 | And if he knows not the Father and the Son, how can he come? |
6046 | And if he saith, See, ye"blind that have eyes,"who shall hinder it? |
6046 | And if it be a blessing to have this fear, is it not wisdom to increase in it? |
6046 | And if it be asked, But what will become of the threatening wherewith he threatened the offender? |
6046 | And if so, did he give His church any other than that most beautiful and comprehensive form called the Lord''s Prayer? |
6046 | And if so, how can their service to God have anything like acceptation from the hand of God, that is done, not in, but without the fear of God? |
6046 | And if so, what shall we then think of the soul for which is prepared, and that of God, the most rich and excellent vessel in the world? |
6046 | And if there is so much in the pride of his countenance, what is there, think you, in the pride of his heart? |
6046 | And if these be acts that speak a condescension, what will you count of Christ''s standing up as an Advocate to plead the cause of his people? |
6046 | And if this gentle check will not do, then read the other, Shall we say, Let us do evil that good may come? |
6046 | And indeed what joy or what rejoicing is like rejoicing here? |
6046 | And indeed, take this away, and what ground can there be laid for any man to persevere in good works? |
6046 | And indeed, the soul that doth thus by practice, though with his mouth-- as who doth not? |
6046 | And is it thus with thy soul indeed? |
6046 | And is not this a needy time; doth not such an one want abundance of grace? |
6046 | And is not this love worthy of all acceptation at the hands and hearts of all coming sinners? |
6046 | And is not this the very ground of thy hoping that God will save thee from the wrath to come? |
6046 | And is there no other way to the Father but by his blood, and through the veil, that is to say, his flesh? |
6046 | And is there not a great deal in it? |
6046 | And is there not all the reason in the world for this? |
6046 | And is this all? |
6046 | And let me ask further, is not he a madman who, being loaded with combustible matter, will run headlong into the fire upon a bravado? |
6046 | And must you needs be upon the extremes? |
6046 | And now what would a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | And now, Adam, what do you mean to do? |
6046 | And now, what can this accuser say? |
6046 | And now, when body and soul are thus united, who can imagine what glory they both possess? |
6046 | And now,''what shall a man,''what would a man, but what can a man that has lost his soul, himself, and his all,''give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | And said, moreover, that they could not wait upon me any longer; but said to me, Then you confess the indictment, do you not? |
6046 | And since he can be both merciful and just in the salvation of sinners, why may he not also save them from death and hell? |
6046 | And so I may say, What think you of ten thousand more besides? |
6046 | And so doing, has it not also accommodated thee with all the aforenamed conveniences? |
6046 | And so with Paul, who tremblingly said,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6046 | And the ministers of the gospel they also cry, Lord,"who hath believed our report? |
6046 | And the reason is, because he that envieth a sinner, hath forgotten himself, that he is as bad; and how can he then fear God? |
6046 | And the reasons are weighty, for by them he proves the tree is not good; how then can it yield good fruit? |
6046 | And the same I say of his Advocate''s office- What is an advocate without the exercise of his office? |
6046 | And then, to engage us in our soul to the duty, he adds one of his wonderful mercies to the world, for a motive,"Fear ye not me?" |
6046 | And this leads me first to inquire into what, by these words the apostle must, of necessity, presuppose? |
6046 | And thou liar, what wilt thou do? |
6046 | And to put a question upon thy objection- What is a sacrifice without a priest, and what is a priest without a sacrifice? |
6046 | And what angels but those that ministered to him here in the day of his humiliation? |
6046 | And what can Satan say against this plea? |
6046 | And what chains are so heavy as those that discourage thee? |
6046 | And what did you reply? |
6046 | And what did you reply? |
6046 | And what did you reply? |
6046 | And what else? |
6046 | And what follows? |
6046 | And what follows? |
6046 | And what honour like that of being a holy man of God? |
6046 | And what if God will cross his book, and blot out the handwriting that is against thee, and not let thee know it as yet? |
6046 | And what if thou waitest upon God all thy days? |
6046 | And what if you should not? |
6046 | And what is this second veil, in, at, or through which, as the phrase is, we must, by blood, enter into the holiest? |
6046 | And what life, but death in its perfection? |
6046 | And what matter can be found in the soul for humility to work by so well, as by a sight that I have been and am an abominable sinner? |
6046 | And what more fearful than the bottomless pit of hell? |
6046 | And what need of an Advocate''s office to be exercised, if Christ, as sacrifice and Priest, was thought sufficient by God? |
6046 | And what saith the words before the text but the same--''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6046 | And what shall this man do? |
6046 | And what should a man come to God for, that can live in the world without him? |
6046 | And what sympathy and feeling would his arguments flow from? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what thunder did Zaccheus hear or see? |
6046 | And what use doth he make of this? |
6046 | And what was that? |
6046 | And what was the conclusion? |
6046 | And what will become of them concerning whom the Lord has said already,''I will not take up their names into my lips''? |
6046 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God? |
6046 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God?'' |
6046 | And what will not love suffer? |
6046 | And what will you do whose hearts go after your covetousness? |
6046 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6046 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6046 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6046 | And when a Christian comes to know this, should Christ as Advocate be hid, what could bear him up? |
6046 | And when they had found him, they wonderingly asked him,"Rabbi, when camest thou hither?" |
6046 | And when ye did eat, and when ye did drink, did not ye eat for yourselves, and drink for yourselves?" |
6046 | And where is the man that chooseth to go to hell? |
6046 | And where it is most, how far short of perfect acts is it? |
6046 | And where wilt thou leave thy glory? |
6046 | And who can be thankful for a mercy that is not sensible that they want it, have it, and have it of mercy? |
6046 | And who can now object against the deliverance of the child of God? |
6046 | And who can think that he should be quiet, when men take the right course to escape his hellish snares? |
6046 | And who dares to limit the Almighty? |
6046 | And who was that but Jesus Christ, even the person speaking in the text? |
6046 | And who was that, but he that"spoiled principalities and powers,"when he did hang upon the tree, triumphing over them thereon? |
6046 | And why a door of hope, but that by it, God''s people, when afflicted, should go out by it from despair by hope? |
6046 | And why doth he not concern himself with them? |
6046 | And why is it thee? |
6046 | And why is the breaking of the heart compared to the breaking of the bones? |
6046 | And why not now, as well as formerly? |
6046 | And why should a man cumber himself with what is his, when the good of all that is in Christ is laid, and to be laid out for him? |
6046 | And why so? |
6046 | And why so? |
6046 | And why then should not we have also in reserve for Christ? |
6046 | And why thus consider, but that a door might be opened for hope to exercise itself upon God by this? |
6046 | And why, to show, by these, the exceeding riches of his grace to the ages to come, through Christ Jesus? |
6046 | And why? |
6046 | And why? |
6046 | And will he be a favourable no more? |
6046 | And will not this, when they know it, yield them comfort? |
6046 | And will their agreement of hell yield them comfort? |
6046 | And will you, says Unbelief, in such a case as you now are, presume to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | And wilt thou hang back or be sullen, because thou art none of the first? |
6046 | And wilt thou judge him that doth thus? |
6046 | And wilt thou say these are things that are not? |
6046 | And would I, as was said before, be thoroughly saved, to wit, from the filth as from the guilt? |
6046 | And yet darest thou say to God, Our Father? |
6046 | And yet dost thou out of thy blasphemous throat suffer these words to come, even our Father? |
6046 | And yet who so idle as they in the time of their prosperity? |
6046 | And you that were sometime alienated, and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled[ but how?] |
6046 | And you, that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled,"how? |
6046 | And''the thunder of his power who can understand?'' |
6046 | And''what and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up where he was before?'' |
6046 | And, Fourth, what it was for him to be raised unto Israel? |
6046 | And, indeed, if people once say to God, by way of doubt,''Wherein hast thou loved us?'' |
6046 | And,"O God, why hast thou cast us off for ever?" |
6046 | And,"who shall separate us from the love of Christ"our Lord? |
6046 | Are great saints only to have the kingdom, and the glory everlasting? |
6046 | Are great works only to be rewarded? |
6046 | Are his saints precious to them? |
6046 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6046 | Are not these therefore strong desires? |
6046 | Are our fruits meet for repentance? |
6046 | Are the narratives of these mighty tempests in his spirit plain matters of fact? |
6046 | Are the words of God called by the name of the fear of the Lord? |
6046 | Are there any sins now that will fly upon this Saviour like so many lions, or raging devils, if He take in hand to redeem man? |
6046 | Are there bowels in you that are wicked, and will they be wrought upon by an importuning beggar? |
6046 | Are these the tokens of a blessed man?" |
6046 | Are they enemies to Thee? |
6046 | Are they lawful things which thou desirest? |
6046 | Are they so dreadful in their receipt and sentence? |
6046 | Are they such things as thou takest pleasure in? |
6046 | Are they tender of sinning against Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Are they that are justified by Christ''s blood such as have need yet to be saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6046 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6046 | Are they things Divine, or things natural? |
6046 | Are they things heavenly, or things earthly? |
6046 | Are they things holy, or things unholy? |
6046 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ yet such as have need of being saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ, such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need of being saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need to be saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such, after that, as have need also of saving by Christ''s intercession? |
6046 | Are thy sins so dear, so sweet, so desireable, so profitable to thee, that thou wilt venture a burning in hell fire for them till thou art burnt out? |
6046 | Are we profanely apt to judge of God harshly, as of one that would gather where he had not strawn? |
6046 | Are we tempted to distrust God? |
6046 | Are you stronger than he that made the heavens, and that holdeth angels in everlasting chains? |
6046 | Art not able to conclude, that to be saved is better than to burn in hell? |
6046 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6046 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6046 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6046 | Art thou a fool in thyself? |
6046 | Art thou a sinner of the first rate, of the biggest size? |
6046 | Art thou almost like Elymas the sorcerer, that sought to turn the deputy from the faith? |
6046 | Art thou also willing that he should decide the matter? |
6046 | Art thou begotten of God by his Word? |
6046 | Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Art thou coming, indeed? |
6046 | Art thou coming? |
6046 | Art thou coming? |
6046 | Art thou coming? |
6046 | Art thou crossed, disappointed, and waylaid, and overthrown in all thy foolish ways and doings? |
6046 | Art thou followed with affliction, and dost thou hear God''s angry voice in thy afflictions? |
6046 | Art thou indeed weary of the service of thy old master the devil, sin, and the world? |
6046 | Art thou jogged, and shaken, and molested at the hearing of the Word? |
6046 | Art thou most dejected when thou art at prayer? |
6046 | Art thou not come to discourse the Lord in prayer? |
6046 | Art thou not like to fare well, when thou hast embraced him, coming sinner? |
6046 | Art thou not willing to come faster? |
6046 | Art thou now in the favour of God? |
6046 | Art thou returning to God? |
6046 | Art thou righteous in the judgment of God? |
6046 | Art thou righteous? |
6046 | Art thou righteous? |
6046 | Art thou such an one? |
6046 | Art thou that readest these lines such an one? |
6046 | Art thou then made to see thy condition how bad it is, and that the way out of it is by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Art thou truly born again? |
6046 | Art thou unrighteous in thyself? |
6046 | Art thou visited in the night seasons with dreams about thy state, and that thou art in danger of being lost? |
6046 | Art thou weary of them? |
6046 | Art thy sins of diverse sorts? |
6046 | As God said to Coniah,''Did not thy father eat and drink, and do judgment and justice, and then it was well with him? |
6046 | As HE said,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6046 | As the mad prophet also saith of God, in another case,''Hath he said, and shall he not do it? |
6046 | As to the things of God, what shall I say? |
6046 | As who should say, My brethren, are you aware what you do? |
6046 | As who should say, My brethren, are you tempted, are you accused, have you sinned, has Satan prevailed against you? |
6046 | As who should say, What would heaven yield to me for delights, if I was there without my God? |
6046 | As, whether there were in truth a God or Christ, or no? |
6046 | Ask him where this God is? |
6046 | Ask the awakened man, or the man that is under the convictions of the law, if he doth not feel? |
6046 | Ask the carnal man to whom he prays? |
6046 | At another time, I remember I was again much under the question, Whether the blood of Christ was sufficient to save my soul? |
6046 | At last the visitor comes and sets his soul at ease, by persuading of him that he belongs to God: and what then? |
6046 | At which I was as if I had been raised out of a grave, and cried out again, Lord, how couldest thou find out such a word as this? |
6046 | Ay, but says the soul,''How can I reckon thus, when sin is yet strong in me?'' |
6046 | Ay, but when? |
6046 | Ay, that is well for you, Paul; but what advantage have we thereby? |
6046 | Aye, but this is a high pitch, how should we come by such princely spirits? |
6046 | Aye, saith he, to whom is that spoken? |
6046 | Aye, wherefore indeed? |
6046 | Because Christ died for me, shall I therefore spit in his face? |
6046 | Beelzebub? |
6046 | Behold, the Lord God will help me; who is he that shall condemn me? |
6046 | Behold, the angels cover their faces when they speak of his glory, how then shall not Satan bend before him? |
6046 | Believe, that is true; but how now must he conceive in his mind of Christ for the encouraging of him so to do? |
6046 | Besides, if men be made righteous, they are so; and if by a righteousness which the law commendeth, how can fault be found with them by the law? |
6046 | Besides, if the promise and God''s grace, without Christ''s blood, would have saved us, wherefore then did Christ die? |
6046 | Besides, to assert the contrary, what doth it but lessen sin, and make the advocateship of Jesus Christ superfluous? |
6046 | Besides, what arguments so prevailing as such as are purely gospel? |
6046 | Besides, who knows of all the ways by which the Almighty will inflict His just revenges upon the souls of damned sinners? |
6046 | Bold sinner, how darest thou tempt God, by laughing at the breach of his holy law? |
6046 | Bunyan, speaking of private prayer, keenly inquires, will God not hear thee"except thou comest before him with some eloquent oration?" |
6046 | But Abraham''s body is now dead? |
6046 | But David answered,"What have I to do with you, ye sons of Zeruiah, that ye should this day be adversaries unto me? |
6046 | But I am afraid the day of grace is past; and if it should be so, what should I do then? |
6046 | But I ask such, if the Father and Son be not unspeakably free to show mercy, why was this clause put into our commission to preach the gospel? |
6046 | But I can not pray, says one, therefore how should I persevere? |
6046 | But I say doth not this sufficiently show, had we but eyes to see it, what a sad and deplorable creature the child of God of himself is? |
6046 | But I say, if it be so, what need all this mercy? |
6046 | But I say, what is this to him that would fain be saved by Christ? |
6046 | But I say, why all these, thus named? |
6046 | But Jesus, our Advocate, answers as David, What have I to do with thee, O Satan? |
6046 | But Nathanael answered him,"Whence knowest thou me?" |
6046 | But Paul, what moved thee thus to do? |
6046 | But after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour appeared"--what then? |
6046 | But again; what mystery is desirable to be known that is not to be found in Jesus Christ, as Priest, Prophet, or King of saints? |
6046 | But are they the people on whom God doth magnify the riches of his grace? |
6046 | But are you willing, said he, to stand to the judgment of the church? |
6046 | But art thou sure thou canst? |
6046 | But ask him how, or under what notion he is to be considered there? |
6046 | But by what spirit is it then that I am brought again into fears, even into the fears of damnation, and so into bondage? |
6046 | But can any imagine that Christ will pray for them as Priest for whom he will not plead as Advocate? |
6046 | But could he not deliver him, or did the Lord forsake him? |
6046 | But could not we have been saved if Christ had not died? |
6046 | But could that heal it, could he not taste, truly taste, or rightly relish this forgiveness? |
6046 | But did He indeed suffer the torments of Hell? |
6046 | But did he prevail against him? |
6046 | But did you not fear it before? |
6046 | But do these people know what they do? |
6046 | But do they believe that thus it is with them? |
6046 | But do you think that these people did ever feel the power and majesty of the Word of God to break their hearts? |
6046 | But do you think that this outcry was caused by unbelief? |
6046 | But does the carnal world covet this, this spirit, and the blessed graces of it? |
6046 | But doth not the Scripture say,"Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life"? |
6046 | But doth not their thus living, abiding, and retaining a being(or what you will call it), demonstrate the greatness and might of the soul? |
6046 | But doth that promise suppose a willingness in us, as a condition of God''s making us willing? |
6046 | But doth the blind Pharisee think his state is such? |
6046 | But doth the guilt and burden of sin so keep them down that they can by no means lift up themselves? |
6046 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
6046 | But for what purpose? |
6046 | But hath not the law promises as well as threatenings? |
6046 | But have you no other way to discover the things of the Gospel, how they are done with a legal principle, but those you have already made mention of? |
6046 | But have you yet any other considerations to move us to fear God with child- like fear? |
6046 | But how and if I should delight in them before I am aware? |
6046 | But how are they distinguished from the Gentiles? |
6046 | But how came he by that repentance? |
6046 | But how came he to be a"new creature,"since none can create but God? |
6046 | But how came he to be affected with this? |
6046 | But how came he to bring his soul into so good a temper? |
6046 | But how came they clean? |
6046 | But how came they thus patiently to endure? |
6046 | But how came they to hear it? |
6046 | But how came this to be so? |
6046 | But how can that be, did they not come to us through the very sides of mercy? |
6046 | But how can this be done by him? |
6046 | But how can you tell you have faith? |
6046 | But how comes it to pass that thou art so hearty, that thou settest thy face against so much wind and weather? |
6046 | But how could God have respect to Abel, if Abel was not pleasing in his sight? |
6046 | But how could a holy God say,''Live,''to such a sinful people? |
6046 | But how did they tempt him? |
6046 | But how do they deliver them? |
6046 | But how doth God kill with this law, or covenant? |
6046 | But how doth he take that away but by a severe chastising of his soul for it, until he has made him weary of it? |
6046 | But how doth that appear? |
6046 | But how doth the soul carry it towards God, when He offereth to deal with it under and by this dispensation of grace? |
6046 | But how if I should have sinned the sin unpardonable, or that called the sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6046 | But how if we do? |
6046 | But how is the Lord righteous? |
6046 | But how long, prophet, wilt thou wait? |
6046 | But how much more may we behold the love that God hath bestowed upon us, in that he hath given us to his Son, and also given his Son for us? |
6046 | But how must he do that? |
6046 | But how must this be? |
6046 | But how now must this fool be made wise? |
6046 | But how shall I come hither? |
6046 | But how shall they escape all those dangerous and damnable opinions, that, like rocks and quicksands, are in the way in which they are going? |
6046 | But how shall we know that such men are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | But how should I do? |
6046 | But how should I know whether Christ do so knock at my heart as to be desirous to come in? |
6046 | But how should I prove[ or try] the goodness of mine own righteousness by the death and blood of Christ? |
6046 | But how should this rule in our hearts? |
6046 | But how should we find out what sinners shall be saved? |
6046 | But how should we know it, said he? |
6046 | But how should we try our graces now? |
6046 | But how then is what he doth accepted of God? |
6046 | But how was Jesus Christ made of God to be sin for us? |
6046 | But how will he do that? |
6046 | But how, if Sarah be barren? |
6046 | But how, if Sarah be past age? |
6046 | But how, if the day of grace should now be past and gone? |
6046 | But how, if they have exceeded many in sin, and so made themselves far more abominable? |
6046 | But how, if they have not faith and repentance? |
6046 | But how, if they want those things, those graces, power, and heart, without which they can not come? |
6046 | But how, if when I come at him he should ask me, Where I have all this while been? |
6046 | But how, if whilst thou lookest for it to come to thee at one door, it should come to thee in at another? |
6046 | But how? |
6046 | But how? |
6046 | But if God deals thus with a man, how can he otherwise think but that he is a reprobate, a graceless, Christless, and faithless one? |
6046 | But if a false faith is so forcible, what is a true? |
6046 | But if this be the sin unpardonable, why is it called the sin against the Holy Ghost, and not rather the sin against the Son of God? |
6046 | But if thou art not come, what can make thee happy? |
6046 | But if we do not use forms of prayer, how shall we teach our children to pray? |
6046 | But is it possible that He should so soon give infinite justice a satisfaction, a complete satisfaction? |
6046 | But is not Christ the gate or entrance into this heavenly place? |
6046 | But is not the door of mercy shut against some before they die? |
6046 | But is not the reward that God hath promised to his saints, for their good works to be enjoyed only here? |
6046 | But is not this a sign of madness, of madness unto perfection? |
6046 | But is not this great grace, that we should thus be called upon to come to God for mercy? |
6046 | But is not this the way to make Christ to loath us? |
6046 | But is there any comfort in being hanged with company? |
6046 | But it may be asked, When was this done to Christ, or what sacrifice of consecration had he precedent to the offering up of himself for our sins? |
6046 | But may it not come again as a spirit of bondage, to put me into my first fears for my good? |
6046 | But may one not be equally engaged for both? |
6046 | But might not Christ die for our sins but he needs must bear their guilt or burden? |
6046 | But must their obstinacy rule? |
6046 | But never let such a wicked thought pass through thy heart, saying,"This evil is of the Lord; what should I wait for the Lord any longer?" |
6046 | But now how doth God lose it? |
6046 | But now, how shall this man be reclaimed from this sin? |
6046 | But now, wouldst thou honour thy King? |
6046 | But one sin that layeth the soul without the reach of God''s mercy; and must I be guilty of that? |
6046 | But perhaps some may say, What need was there that Jesus Christ should do all this? |
6046 | But said, Hold; not so many, which is the first? |
6046 | But shall Christ take our cause in hand, and shall we doubt of good success? |
6046 | But shall I be daunted at this? |
6046 | But shall Manasseh come off thus? |
6046 | But shall such ever come to glory? |
6046 | But shall the will of heaven stoop to the will of hell? |
6046 | But shall this ever be said of Christ? |
6046 | But should I grant that which is indeed impossible-- namely, that thou art justified by the law; what then? |
6046 | But since I have lusts and desires both ways, how shall I know to which my soul adheres? |
6046 | But since I was sealed to the day of redemption, I have grievously sinned against God, have not I, therefore, cause to fear, as before? |
6046 | But some may say, How will they seek to enter in? |
6046 | But some may say, What is the meaning of this word able? |
6046 | But some may say, Wherein doth the saving grace of the Spirit appear? |
6046 | But some may say, what need of the righteousness of one that is naturally God? |
6046 | But still, I say, the question is, How comest thou to know that thou art righteous in the judgment of God? |
6046 | But suppose that at his return he should find his own cattle in that pound, would he now carry it toward them as he did unto the other? |
6046 | But suppose this great person should second his suit, and send to this sorry creature again, what would she say now? |
6046 | But the most of men do that which you forbid, and why may not we? |
6046 | But the question is now, how we should attain to, and live in, the exercise of this blessed and comely grace? |
6046 | But the third thing touched in the question was this-- What may such an one receive of God who is under the curse of the law? |
6046 | But then I turn the tables, and say, But where shall I be shortly? |
6046 | But then how as a Lamb is he in the midst of the throne? |
6046 | But then, sayest thou, how shall I escape? |
6046 | But then, some will say, since it is so difficult, how may we do without danger? |
6046 | But they are Satan''s captives; he takes them captive at his will, and he is stronger than they: how then can they come? |
6046 | But they are dead, dead in trespasses and sins, how shall they then come? |
6046 | But this is God''s complaint,''Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? |
6046 | But this, I say, is a very great block in his way when he meddles with the children; God has an interest in them-"Hath God cast away his people? |
6046 | But though I do wait, yet if I be not elected to eternal life, what good will all my waiting do me? |
6046 | But to come to the point: what righteousness hath that man that hath no works? |
6046 | But to come to the question-- What is it to be saved? |
6046 | But to the second thing, which is this, How far may such an one go? |
6046 | But upon what is this princely fearless service of God grounded? |
6046 | But was David, in a strict sense, without fault in all things else? |
6046 | But was ever heard the like to what Jesus Christ has done for sinners? |
6046 | But was not his faith exercised, or tried, about his willingness too? |
6046 | But was there not something of moment in this clause of the commission? |
6046 | But what a shame is this to man, that God should subject all his creatures to him, and he should refuse to stoop his heart to God? |
6046 | But what are all these righteousnesses? |
6046 | But what are they? |
6046 | But what are they? |
6046 | But what are we to understand by faith? |
6046 | But what did he do with our sins, for he had them upon his back? |
6046 | But what did he speak to them? |
6046 | But what do you mean by these words-- the old covenant as the old covenant? |
6046 | But what do you mean by those expressions? |
6046 | But what do you mean, John? |
6046 | But what does he? |
6046 | But what doth he mean by the dross? |
6046 | But what doth she do under all this trial? |
6046 | But what emboldened him thus to do? |
6046 | But what good will their covenant of death then do them? |
6046 | But what ground hast thou for this thy hope? |
6046 | But what had Joshua antecedent to this glorious and heavenly clothing? |
6046 | But what had he spoken? |
6046 | But what has God prepared this vessel for, and what has He put into it? |
6046 | But what if a man in this his progress hath one sinful thought? |
6046 | But what is all this to one that neither sees his sickness, that sees nothing of a wound? |
6046 | But what is all this to you that are not concerned in this privilege? |
6046 | But what is he? |
6046 | But what is it that a heart that is destitute of the fear of God will not do? |
6046 | But what is it that has got thy heart, and that keeps it from thy Saviour? |
6046 | But what is it then to be of these? |
6046 | But what is it to wait upon him according to his counsel? |
6046 | But what is that to them that never saw ought but beauty, and that never tasted anything but sweetness in sin? |
6046 | But what is the answer of Christ? |
6046 | But what is the matter? |
6046 | But what is the reason of that? |
6046 | But what is this iniquity? |
6046 | But what kind of sinners shall then be saved? |
6046 | But what law is that which hath not power to command our obedience in the point of our justification with God? |
6046 | But what men were to ascend with him, but, as was said afore, the men that''came out of the graves after his resurrection?'' |
6046 | But what must be done with them? |
6046 | But what necessity is there that the heart must be broken? |
6046 | But what need all these offices of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | But what need these things be asserted, promised, or prayed for? |
6046 | But what needs that, if mercy could save the soul without the redemption that is by him? |
6046 | But what of that, if yet he be unable to fetch us off when charged for sin at the bar, and before the face of a righteous judge? |
6046 | But what promises in the Scripture do you find your hope built upon? |
6046 | But what said the Lord unto him? |
6046 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6046 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6046 | But what saith the Word? |
6046 | But what saith the Word? |
6046 | But what saith the apostle? |
6046 | But what saith the sinful soul to this? |
6046 | But what says the distressed man? |
6046 | But what shall we say, when there must be added to that the heart blood of the Son of God, and all to make our salvation complete? |
6046 | But what should a Christian do, when God has broke his heart, to keep it tender? |
6046 | But what should be the reason of that? |
6046 | But what should be the reason that some that are coming to Christ should be so lamentably cast down and buffeted with temptations? |
6046 | But what should be the reason? |
6046 | But what should he believe? |
6046 | But what should such men do in that kingdom that comes by gift, where grace and mercy reigns? |
6046 | But what then are sinners the better for the death and blood of Christ? |
6046 | But what then do we mean when we say, justification will stand with a state of imperfection? |
6046 | But what then doth he mean by the redemption of this purchased possession? |
6046 | But what then was the altar? |
6046 | But what then? |
6046 | But what was Paul but a broken- hearted and a contrite sinner? |
6046 | But what was Paul? |
6046 | But what was it that made him thus slothful? |
6046 | But what was it that made them join their works of the law with Christ, but their unbelief, whose foundation was ignorance and fear? |
6046 | But what was it that moved so upon his heart, as to cause him to do this thing? |
6046 | But what was it to be lifted up from the earth? |
6046 | But what was it? |
6046 | But what was the affliction? |
6046 | But what was the cause of their making this excuse? |
6046 | But what was the reason thereof, I mean the reason from God? |
6046 | But what was the reason? |
6046 | But what was this to a personal performing the commandments? |
6046 | But what were the things that their eyes had seen, that would so damnify them should they be forgotten? |
6046 | But what will he do with him as he is an Advocate? |
6046 | But what will not love do? |
6046 | But what will you say to a soul in this condition? |
6046 | But what would they do if there were not one always at the right hand of God, by intercession, taking away these kind of iniquities? |
6046 | But what would you have us poor creatures to do that can not tell how to pray? |
6046 | But what, did they now love David? |
6046 | But what, then, are the works of the law? |
6046 | But what? |
6046 | But when I heard it, Lord, thought I, if this be true, what shall I do, and what will become of all this people, yea, and of this preacher too? |
6046 | But when he shall see the thief that was saved on the cross stand by, as clothed with beauteous glory, what further can he be able to object? |
6046 | But when must we conclude we have kept the law? |
6046 | But when, Lord, wilt thou laugh at, and mock at, the impenitent? |
6046 | But when? |
6046 | But whence should the soul thus receive sin? |
6046 | But where do you find that ever the Lord did thus rowl9 in his bowels for and after any self- righteous man? |
6046 | But where doth Jesus Christ, in all the word of the New Testament, expressly speak to a returning backslider with words of grace and peace? |
6046 | But where hadst thou that heart that gives entertainment to these thoughts, these heavenly thoughts? |
6046 | But wherein lieth the depth of this wisdom of God in our salvation, if man''s righteousness can save him? |
6046 | But which is the way to make one that is wild, or a madman, sober? |
6046 | But who are these? |
6046 | But who can tell, though there should not be saved so many as there shall, but thou mayest be one of that few? |
6046 | But who doth he personate if he says, This is a house for the soul; for the body is part of him that says, Our house? |
6046 | But who is this that can do this? |
6046 | But who must look upon it? |
6046 | But who told thee that thy soul was such an excellent thing as by thy practice thou declarest thou believest it to be? |
6046 | But who, when called, was there in the world, in whom grace shone so bright as in him? |
6046 | But why could they not learn that song? |
6046 | But why did Christ offer Himself in sacrifice? |
6046 | But why did God let Him die? |
6046 | But why did He spill His precious blood? |
6046 | But why did He suffer the pains of Hell? |
6046 | But why did he commit his soul to him? |
6046 | But why did he do all this? |
6046 | But why did these do thus? |
6046 | But why do I talk thus? |
6046 | But why do the righteous desire to be with Christ? |
6046 | But why do you wonder at a work of conviction and conversion? |
6046 | But why doth Job after this manner thus speak to God? |
6046 | But why doth the devil do thus? |
6046 | But why go back again, seeing that is the next way to hell? |
6046 | But why is God so delighted in the exercise of this grace of hope? |
6046 | But why is all this? |
6046 | But why is it given to him? |
6046 | But why not attain to a performance? |
6046 | But why not in the name of an angel? |
6046 | But why not possible now to be holden of death? |
6046 | But why so? |
6046 | But why speaks he so particularly? |
6046 | But why speedily? |
6046 | But why was the firstborn of men coupled with unclean beasts, but because they are both unclean? |
6046 | But why wonder, and think they are fools? |
6046 | But why would God so order it, that life should be had nowhere else but in Jesus Christ? |
6046 | But why, then, is His death so slighted by some? |
6046 | But why? |
6046 | But will it not, think you, strangely put to silence all such thoughts, and words, and reasons of the ungodly before the bar of God? |
6046 | But will riches profit in the day of wrath? |
6046 | But will that good meal that I ate last week, enable me, without supply, to do a good day''s work in this? |
6046 | But will the plea do? |
6046 | But will you be willing, said he, that two indifferent persons shall determine the case, and will you stand by their judgment? |
6046 | But with what death? |
6046 | But would God have given the world such an account of his sufferings, that by one offering he did perfect for ever them that are sanctified? |
6046 | But would He have done this for inconsiderable things? |
6046 | But would he believe it? |
6046 | But would they do thus if they knew the severity of the law? |
6046 | But would they have done so, think you, if at the same time the fear of God had had its full play in the soul, in the army? |
6046 | But would you have us sit still and do nothing? |
6046 | But would you not have the people of God stand in fear of his rod, and be afraid of his judgments? |
6046 | But would you not have us mind our worldly concerns? |
6046 | But would you not have us rejoice at the sight and sense of the forgiveness of our sins? |
6046 | But yet all the things of God were kept out of my sight, and still the tempter followed me with, But whither must you go when you die? |
6046 | But you may ask me, What the laver or molten sea should signify to us in the New Testament? |
6046 | But you may say, How shall I know that I fear God? |
6046 | But you may say, What is it to exercise this grace aright? |
6046 | But you will say, How should we try our graces? |
6046 | But you will say,"Then why did God give the law, if we can not have salvation by following of it?" |
6046 | But you will say--"But who are those that are thus under the law?" |
6046 | But''how shall I give thee up, Ephraim? |
6046 | But, Are they within the reach and power of Shall- come? |
6046 | But, Harry, said I, why do you swear and curse thus? |
6046 | But, I say, how can these Scriptures be fulfilled, if he that would indeed be saved, as before said, has sinned the sin unpardonable? |
6046 | But, I say, if he knows him not, how can he propound him as the end? |
6046 | But, I say, if the sight of heaven, at so vast a distance, is so excellent a prospect, what will it look like when one is in it? |
6046 | But, I say, was this fear, that is called now the fear of God, anything else, but a dread of the greatness of power of the king? |
6046 | But, I say, what is all this to them that have him not for their Advocate? |
6046 | But, I say, what is man without this soul, or wherein lieth this pre- eminence over a beast? |
6046 | But, I say, what is the reason some so prize what others so despise, since they both stand in need of the same grace and mercy of God in Christ? |
6046 | But, I say, what is this to them that are not admitted to a privilege in the advocate- office of Christ? |
6046 | But, I say, why offended at this? |
6046 | But, I say, why so unconcerned? |
6046 | But, I say,''Would they not change places? |
6046 | But, Lord, give an instance; when was it, or where? |
6046 | But, Lord, how wilt thou quench their boundless thirst? |
6046 | But, USE FOURTH.--Is it so? |
6046 | But, alas, I am blind, and can not see; what shall I do now? |
6046 | But, alas, I have nothing to carry with me; how then should I go? |
6046 | But, as Paul says of himself, and of those that were saved by grace in his day,"What then? |
6046 | But, brave soul, pray tell me what the things are that discourage thee, and that weaken thy strength in the way? |
6046 | But, but few comparatively will be concerned with this use; for where is he that doth this? |
6046 | But, do the broken in spirit believe this? |
6046 | But, said he, how shall we know that you have received a gift? |
6046 | But, said he, what if you should forbear awhile, and sit still, till you see further how things will go? |
6046 | But, said he, who shall be judge between you, for you take the Scriptures one way, and they another? |
6046 | But, saith Justice Keelin, who was the judge in that court? |
6046 | But, saith the Christian, I am dull and stupid that way, will not Christ be shuff13 and shy with me because of this? |
6046 | But, saith the soul, how, if after I have received a pardon, I should commit treason again? |
6046 | But, says Justice Keelin, what have you against the Common Prayer Book? |
6046 | But, says Moses,"Who is a God like unto thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?" |
6046 | But, you will say, can a man use Gospel ordinances with a legal spirit? |
6046 | But, you will say, it is like, How should this be made manifest and appear? |
6046 | By way of question; what are the things thou desirest, are they lawful or unlawful? |
6046 | By what law? |
6046 | By what will? |
6046 | By whom or by what is this fear wrought in the heart? |
6046 | Called Christian, how many times have thy sins laid thee upon a sick- bed, and, to thine and others''thinking, at the very mouth of the grave? |
6046 | Can a holy, a just, and a righteous God, once think( with honour to his name) of saving such a vile creature as I am? |
6046 | Can a man at the same time be a proud man, and fear God too? |
6046 | Can he contradict our Advocate? |
6046 | Can he excuse himself? |
6046 | Can he overstand the charge, the accusation, the sentence, and condemnation? |
6046 | Can he prove that Christ has no interest in the saints''inheritance? |
6046 | Can he prove that we are at age, or that our several parts of the heavenly house are already delivered into our own power? |
6046 | Can he speak for himself? |
6046 | Can it be a privilege for me to be annoyed with my infirmities, and to have my best duties infected with it? |
6046 | Can it be imagined, sin being what it is, and God what he is-- to wit, a revenger of disobedience-- but that one time or other man must smart for sin? |
6046 | Can it me a mercy for me to be troubled with my corruptions? |
6046 | Can none of these severally, nor all of them jointly, save a man from hell, unless Christ also become our Advocate? |
6046 | Can not a man be saved unless his heart be broken? |
6046 | Can not all the angels do it? |
6046 | Can not an angel do it? |
6046 | Can not he transform himself thus into an angel of light? |
6046 | Can not his eyes, which are as a flame of fire, see in my words, thoughts, and actions enough to make me culpable of the wrath of God? |
6046 | Can not man by any means redeem his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him? |
6046 | Can not one sinner save another? |
6046 | Can not you submit, and, notwithstanding, do as much good as you can, in a neighbourly way, without having such meetings? |
6046 | Can such a one as I am, live in glory? |
6046 | Can the body hear? |
6046 | Can the body see? |
6046 | Can the thistle produce grapes, or the noxious weeds corn? |
6046 | Can the waters quench it? |
6046 | Can there be a miss of the loss of such an one? |
6046 | Can there be any greater comfort ministered to thee than to know thy person stands just before God? |
6046 | Can there be hope for me?'' |
6046 | Can these fear God? |
6046 | Can they do that at all times which they can do at some times? |
6046 | Can they pray, believe, love, fear, repent, and bow before God always alike? |
6046 | Can we, by a new birth, say"Our Father?" |
6046 | Can you give me further reason yet to convict me of the truth of what you say? |
6046 | Can you grapple with the judgment of God? |
6046 | Can you not be content to be damned for your sins against the law, but you must sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6046 | Can you say you desire, when you pray? |
6046 | Can you wrestle with the Almighty? |
6046 | Canst thou answer it, sinner? |
6046 | Canst thou be content to be put off with a belly well filled, and a back well clothed? |
6046 | Canst thou defend thyself? |
6046 | Canst thou drink hell- fire? |
6046 | Canst thou hear of Christ, His bloody sweat and death, and not be taken with it, and not be grieved for it, and also converted by it? |
6046 | Canst thou hear that the load of thy sins did break the very heart of Christ, and spill His precious blood? |
6046 | Canst thou hear this, and not be concerned? |
6046 | Canst thou hear this, and not have thy ears to tingle and burn on thy head? |
6046 | Canst thou imagine thou shalt at the day of account out- face God, or make him believe thou wast what thou wast not? |
6046 | Canst thou in faith say, Father, Father, to God? |
6046 | Canst thou indeed, with the rest of the saints, cry, Our Father? |
6046 | Canst thou not so much as once soberly think of thy dying hour, or of whither thy sinful life will drive thee then? |
6046 | Canst thou now that readest or hearest these lines turn thy back, and go on in your sins? |
6046 | Canst thou produce the birthright? |
6046 | Canst thou read this, and not feel thy conscience begin to throb and dag? |
6046 | Canst thou say unto him as David,"Judge me, O God, and plead my cause"( Psa 43:1)? |
6046 | Canst thou see thy misery? |
6046 | Canst thou set so light of Heaven, of God, of Christ, and the salvation of thy poor, yet precious soul? |
6046 | Carest thou not for this? |
6046 | Carry the solemn inquiry to the throne of grace, Have I passed from death unto life? |
6046 | Change!--with whom? |
6046 | Charles II, hearing of it, asked the learned D.D.,''How a man of his great erudition could sit to hear a tinker preach?'' |
6046 | Chris.--What good motions? |
6046 | Christ made himself known to his disciples in breaking of bread; who would not, then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6046 | Christ made himself known to them in breaking of bread; who, who would not then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6046 | Christian man, dost thou hear? |
6046 | Christian, are you actively engaged in fulfilling the duties of your course? |
6046 | Come, sinner, let us apply it: How long is it since thou began to fear that Jesus Christ will not receive thee? |
6046 | Coming sinner, take notice of this; we use to plead practices with men, and why not with God likewise? |
6046 | Coming sinner, what thinkest thou? |
6046 | Consdier man what I have said, And judge of things aright; When all men''s cards are fully played, Whose will abide the light? |
6046 | Consider, I say, has he made a hedge and a wall to stop thee? |
6046 | Consider, thou sayest, all my strength is gone, and therefore how should I wait? |
6046 | Consider, was it man that had offended? |
6046 | Could He not have suffered without His so suffering? |
6046 | Could he not, think you, have stooped from the cross to the ground, and have laid hold on some honester man, if he would? |
6046 | Could not the grace of the Father save us without this condescension of the Son? |
6046 | Couldst thou invent a more full, free, or larger promise? |
6046 | Cry, if thou wilt, O, when wilt thou come unto me? |
6046 | Deny this, and it follows that God accepteth men without respect to righteousness; and then what follows that, but that Christ is dead in vain? |
6046 | Devote myself to it, you will say, how is that? |
6046 | Did Gideon, think you, believe that he was so strong in grace as he was? |
6046 | Did God send his Holy Spirit into the hearts of his people, to that end that you should taunt at it? |
6046 | Did He bleed for sin? |
6046 | Did I say that hearty, fervent, and constant prayer flowed from this fear of God? |
6046 | Did I say, personal virtues? |
6046 | Did he not, even when he desired life, yet break with God in the day when conditions of life were propounded to him? |
6046 | Did not Aaron fall; yea, and Moses himself? |
6046 | Did not Christ die for us; and dying for us, are we not become dead to the law by the death of his body? |
6046 | Did not I tell thee before, that a man must be righteous before he doth one good work, or he can never be righteous? |
6046 | Did the similar feeling of Job or David spring from these polluted fountains? |
6046 | Did these, then, see their graces so clear, as they saw themselves by their sins to be unworthy ones? |
6046 | Did they all know that he was to be betrayed of Judas? |
6046 | Did you never read that Scripture which saith,"Israel, which followed after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness"? |
6046 | Did you never read what God did to Ananias and Sapphira for telling but one lie against it? |
6046 | Didst thou ever burn any of thy children in the fire to idols? |
6046 | Didst thou ever curse, and swear, and deny Christ? |
6046 | Didst thou ever kill anybody? |
6046 | Didst thou ever use enchantments and conjuration? |
6046 | Do God''s people keep holy fasts? |
6046 | Do I love Christ, his Father, his saints, his words, and ways? |
6046 | Do I see salvation is nowhere but in Christ? |
6046 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
6046 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6046 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6046 | Do not I know that I am exalted this day to be king of righteousness, and king of peace? |
6046 | Do not even almost all pursue this world, their lusts and pleasures? |
6046 | Do not these fears hinder thee from profiting in hearing or reading of the Word? |
6046 | Do not these fears keep thee back from laying hold of the promise of salvation by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thou hast had, indeed, any true comfort from the Word and Spirit of God? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thy first fears were wrought by the Holy Spirit of God? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee question whether there was ever a work of grace wrought in thy soul? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee sometimes think, that it is in vain for thee to wait upon the Lord any longer? |
6046 | Do not these fears tend to the hardening of thy heart, and to the making of thee desperate? |
6046 | Do not these fears tend to the stirring up of blasphemies in thy heart against God? |
6046 | Do not these fears weaken thy heart in prayer? |
6046 | Do such fear God? |
6046 | Do they cry out after the Lord Jesus, to save them? |
6046 | Do they cry out of the insufficiency of their own righteousness, as to justification in the sight of God? |
6046 | Do they fear God? |
6046 | Do they fear God? |
6046 | Do they fly from it, as from the face of a deadly serpent? |
6046 | Do they not know the law? |
6046 | Do they savour Christ in his Word, and do they leave all the world for his sake? |
6046 | Do they see more worth and merit in one drop of Christ''s blood to save them, than in all the sins of the world to damn them? |
6046 | Do they slight Thy groans, Thy tears, Thy blood, Thy death, Thy resurrection and intercession, Thy second coming again in heavenly glory? |
6046 | Do they slight Thy merits? |
6046 | Do they, do you think, fear God? |
6046 | Do you come to church, you know what I mean; to the parish church, to hear Divine service? |
6046 | Do you know them now? |
6046 | Do you know them now? |
6046 | Do you know what that willful sin is? |
6046 | Do you mean the covenant of the Law, or the covenant to the Gospel? |
6046 | Do you not hear the prophets, how they press faith in Jesus, and life by faith in him? |
6046 | Do you not know that they are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Do you not know them? |
6046 | Do you think it is to say a few words over before or among a people? |
6046 | Do you think that Ephraim would have looked after salvation, had not God first confounded him with the guilt of the sins of his youth? |
6046 | Do you think that I do mean that my righteousness will save me without Christ? |
6046 | Do you think that Manasseh would have regarded the Lord, had He not suffered his enemies to have prevailed against him? |
6046 | Do you think that he that repents, believes, loves, fears, or humbles himself before God, and acts in other graces too, doth always know what he doth? |
6046 | Do you think that love- letters are not desired between lovers? |
6046 | Do you think that the woman with her two mites cast in all that she desired to cast into the treasury of God? |
6046 | Do you think, I say, that the Lord Jesus did not think before he spake? |
6046 | Does thy hand and heart tremble? |
6046 | Dost fly to him that is a Saviour from the wrath to come, for life? |
6046 | Dost thou at some time see some little excellency in Christ? |
6046 | Dost thou delight in them? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou find that there is but very little sanctifying grace in thy soul? |
6046 | Dost thou know by what it is that God makes a man righteous? |
6046 | Dost thou know what the unpardonable sin, the sin against the Holy Ghost, is? |
6046 | Dost thou know where that is by or with which God makes a man righteous? |
6046 | Dost thou like these wicked blasphemies? |
6046 | Dost thou love thine own soul? |
6046 | Dost thou love thy friends, dost thou love thine enemies, dost thou love thy family or relations, or the church of God? |
6046 | Dost thou mourn for them, pray against them, and hate thyself because of them? |
6046 | Dost thou not inwardly, and with indignation against sin, say, O that I might never, never feel one such motion more? |
6046 | Dost thou not see the very paw of the devil in them; yea, in every one of thy ten confessions? |
6046 | Dost thou not understand me? |
6046 | Dost thou see and find in thee iniquity and unrighteousness? |
6046 | Dost thou see in thee all manner of wickedness? |
6046 | Dost thou see that thou art very much void of sanctification? |
6046 | Dost thou see thy sins? |
6046 | Dost thou see thyself in Christ, and canst thou come to God as a member of him? |
6046 | Dost thou see thyself surrounded with enemies? |
6046 | Dost thou strive to imitate Christ in all the works of righteousness, which God doth command of thee, and prompt thee forward to? |
6046 | Dost thou study, by all honest and lawful ways, to advance the name, holiness, and majesty of God? |
6046 | Dost thou therefore see thyself in such a sad condition as this? |
6046 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6046 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6046 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6046 | Dost thou think that the way that thou art in will lead thee to the strait gate, sinner? |
6046 | Dost thou understand me, sinful soul? |
6046 | Dost thou want a new heart? |
6046 | Dost thou want faith? |
6046 | Dost thou want grace of any sort? |
6046 | Dost thou want strength against thy lusts, against the devil''s temptations? |
6046 | Dost thou want strength to carry thee through afflictions of body, and afflictions of spirit, through persecutions? |
6046 | Dost thou want the Spirit? |
6046 | Dost thou want wisdom? |
6046 | Doth He sometimes give thee some secret persuasions, though scarcely discernible, that thou mayest attain, and get an interest in Him? |
6046 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us with God, to plead with him for us against the devil? |
6046 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us, and that of his mere grace and love? |
6046 | Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly and with cold devotions? |
6046 | Doth he hope? |
6046 | Doth he then command that his mercy should be offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Doth his promise fail for evermore? |
6046 | Doth iniquity prevail against thee? |
6046 | Doth it look like what hath any coherence with reason or mercy, for a man to abuse his friend? |
6046 | Doth it say,"and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out?" |
6046 | Doth justice call for the blood of that nature that sinned? |
6046 | Doth justice say that this blood, if it be not the blood of One that is really and naturally God, it will not give satisfaction to infinite justice? |
6046 | Doth justice say, that it must not only have satisfaction for sinners, but they that are saved must be also washed and sanctified with this blood? |
6046 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ but by the drawing,& c., of the Father? |
6046 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Doth not everybody see the folly of such arguings? |
6046 | Doth not the ground groan under you? |
6046 | Doth not thy finding of this in thee cause thee to fly from a depending on thy own doings? |
6046 | Doth not thy heart twitter at being saved? |
6046 | Doth not thy mouth water? |
6046 | Doth such a one believe? |
6046 | Doth the law command thee to do good, and nothing but good, and that with all thy soul, heart, and delight? |
6046 | Doth the text say,"Come?" |
6046 | Doth thy heart and conversation agree with this passage? |
6046 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6046 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6046 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6046 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6046 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6046 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6046 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6046 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6046 | Eighth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Eleventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Enter upon the solemn inquiry, Have I sought the gate? |
6046 | Esau did despise his birthright, saying, What good will this birthright do me? |
6046 | Especially if the judge be just, and knows me altogether, as the God of heaven does? |
6046 | Fifth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | First, Art thou indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | First, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | For how can a man act righteousness but from a principle of righteousness? |
6046 | For how can it otherwise be, since there is holiness and justice in God? |
6046 | For how can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord? |
6046 | For if sin be so dreadful a thing as to wring the heart of the Son of God, how shall a poor wretched sinner be able to bear it? |
6046 | For if the most potent parts of the soul are engaged in their service, what, think you, do the more inferior do? |
6046 | For if they reject the word of the Lord,"what wisdom is in them?" |
6046 | For so the question implies--''What will a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | For some cause he was treated with great liberality for those times; the extent of it may be seen by one justice asking him,''Is your God Beelzebub?'' |
6046 | For the fear of God is to stand in awe of him, but how can that be done if we do not set him before us? |
6046 | For the first of these, namely,''WHAT OR WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6046 | For they are now profane to amazement; and sometimes I have thought one thing, and sometimes another; that is, why God should suffer it so to be? |
6046 | For to what purpose should a man desire, or what fruits will desire bring him whose desires shall not be granted? |
6046 | For upon this one question, Am I come, or, am I not? |
6046 | For what is the ground of despair, but a conceit that sin has shut the soul out of all interest in happiness? |
6046 | For what saith the Scripture? |
6046 | For what will my weak and newly converted brethren think of it, but that I was not so strong indeed as I was in word? |
6046 | For wherein shall it be known here, that I and thy people have found grace in thy sight, is it not in that thou goest with us? |
6046 | For who can bear or grapple with the wrath of God? |
6046 | For who can do righteousness without he be principled so to do? |
6046 | For whom can so precious an inheritance be intended? |
6046 | For why are these things thus recorded, but to show to sinners what he can do, to the praise and glory of his grace? |
6046 | For why may not God be merciful, and why may not God be just? |
6046 | For zeal, where is that also? |
6046 | For''hope that is seen, is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? |
6046 | For, Was the first covenant made with the first Adam? |
6046 | Fourth, Art thou come to the Lord Jesus? |
6046 | Fourth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Friend, if thou canst fit thyself, what need hast thou of Christ? |
6046 | Go away? |
6046 | Go to him, did I say? |
6046 | God charged our sins upon Christ, and that in their guilt and burden, what remaineth but that the charge was real or feigned? |
6046 | God gave testimony of him by signs and wonders--''Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
6046 | God gave them intimation of a better country, and their minds did cleave to it with desires of it; and what then? |
6046 | God is true, his Word is true; and to help us to hope in him, how many times has he fulfilled it to others, and that before our eyes? |
6046 | Grant it; yet what law takes notice of the plea of one who doth professedly act as an enemy? |
6046 | Guilt and despair, what are they? |
6046 | Hackney, April 1850 THE GREATNESS OF THE SOUL, AND UNSPEAKABLENESS OF THE LOSS THEREOF''OR WHAT SHALL A MAN GIVE IN EXCHANGE FOR HIS SOUL?'' |
6046 | Had I ever, in all my lifetime, one sinful thought passed through my heart since I was born; yea or no? |
6046 | Had he no place clean? |
6046 | Had not now these men desires that were mighty? |
6046 | Had our sins betrayed us into and under Satan''s slavery? |
6046 | Had sin set us at an indefinite distance from God? |
6046 | Has God forbidden thee? |
6046 | Has he adopted us into his family? |
6046 | Has he crossed thee in all thou puttest thy hand unto? |
6046 | Has man given himself for sin? |
6046 | Has man lain at wait for opportunities for sin? |
6046 | Has man, that he might enjoy his sin, brought himself to a morsel of bread? |
6046 | Has man, when he has found his sin, pursued it with all his heart? |
6046 | Has sin wounded, bruised thy soul, and broken thy bones? |
6046 | Hast no affection but what is brutish? |
6046 | Hast no judgment? |
6046 | Hast no soul? |
6046 | Hast thou Jesus Christ for thine Advocate? |
6046 | Hast thou a cause moving thee to come? |
6046 | Hast thou also considered the justness of the Judge? |
6046 | Hast thou any enticing touches of the Word of God upon thy mind? |
6046 | Hast thou been a witch? |
6046 | Hast thou been with him, and prayed him to plead thy cause, and cried unto him to undertake for thee? |
6046 | Hast thou committed it? |
6046 | Hast thou desired him to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Hast thou entertained him? |
6046 | Hast thou escaped, O my soul, from the net of the infernal fowler? |
6046 | Hast thou four children? |
6046 | Hast thou heart- shaken apprehensions when deep sleep is upon thee, of hell, death, and judgment to come? |
6046 | Hast thou in thee the spirit of adoption? |
6046 | Hast thou no conscience? |
6046 | Hast thou no sins? |
6046 | Hast thou not cursed them in thine heart many a time? |
6046 | Hast thou not known? |
6046 | Hast thou not reason? |
6046 | Hast thou received the spirit of adoption? |
6046 | Hast thou seen thy state to be desperate, if the Lord Jesus doth not undertake to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Hast thou then fled, or dost thou indeed fly to it? |
6046 | Hast thou waited on the Lord so long as the Lord hath waited on thee? |
6046 | Hast thou well improved what thou hast received already? |
6046 | Hast thou, thinkest thou, found anything so good as Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Hast thou, through desires, betaken thyself to thy heels? |
6046 | Hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
6046 | Hath God required these things at your hands? |
6046 | Hath God showed thee that thou art by nature under the curse of his law? |
6046 | Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and Hell? |
6046 | Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies?" |
6046 | Hath it not a most vehement flame? |
6046 | Hath not the least creature that hath life, more of God in it than these? |
6046 | Hath not this God great love for sinners? |
6046 | Hath the Holy Ghost, hath the world, or hath thy conscience? |
6046 | Have I been grafted into Christ? |
6046 | Have I the right work of God on my soul? |
6046 | Have not I told thee already that there is no such thing as a ceasing to be? |
6046 | Have not thy groans gone up to heaven from every corner of thy house? |
6046 | Have they faith? |
6046 | Have they hope? |
6046 | Have they pardon of sin? |
6046 | Have they righteousness? |
6046 | Have they strength to do the work of God in their generations, or any other thing that God would have them do? |
6046 | Have they that shall be saved, awakenings about their state by nature? |
6046 | Have they that shall be saved, faith? |
6046 | Have thy sins corrupted thy wounds, and made them putrefy and stink? |
6046 | Have we comfort, or consolation? |
6046 | Have we sinned? |
6046 | Have we the Spirit, or the fruits thereof? |
6046 | Have you forgot the close, the milk house, the stable, the barn, and the like, where God did visit your soul? |
6046 | Have you never a hill Mizar to remember? |
6046 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | He also expects this at our hands, saying,"Who will rise up for me against the evil doers? |
6046 | He answered me in a great chafe, What would the devil do for company, if it were not for such as I am?'' |
6046 | He asked me why? |
6046 | He feared God; and what then? |
6046 | He forsakes him--''My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
6046 | He hath given us his Son,"How shall he not with him also freely give us all things?" |
6046 | He hath this Abishai, and that Abishai, that presently steps in against him, saying, Shall not this rebel''s sins destroy him in hell? |
6046 | He imagined that he could bear these small afflictions with patience; but''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | He is indeed the great deliverer; but what is a deliverer to them that never saw themselves in bondage, as was said before? |
6046 | He is near that justifieth me; who will contend with me? |
6046 | He is not ashamed of us, though now in heaven; why should we be ashamed of him before this adulterous and sinful generation? |
6046 | He is thy Creator; is it not seemly for creatures to fear and reverence their Creator? |
6046 | He is thy Father; is it not seemly for children to reverence and fear their Father? |
6046 | He is thy King; is it not seemly for subjects to fear and reverence their King? |
6046 | He is unwearied in his pleading for us; why should we faint and be dismayed while we plead for him? |
6046 | He never said to him,''Why hast thou done so?'' |
6046 | He pleads for us before the holy angels; why should not we plead for him before princes? |
6046 | He pleads for us to save our souls; why should not we plead for him to sanctify his name? |
6046 | He pleads for us, against fallen angels; why should we not plead for him against sinful vanities? |
6046 | He pleads for us, though our cause is bad; why should not we plead for him, since his cause is good? |
6046 | He ran to him, he kneeled down to him, and asked, and that before a multitude,''Good master, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?'' |
6046 | He said that I was ignorant, and did not understand the Scriptures; for how, said he, can you understand them when you know not the original Greek? |
6046 | He said unto me, By what scripture? |
6046 | He said, How then? |
6046 | He said, which of the Scriptures do you understand literally? |
6046 | He saith himself, they that come to him,& c., shall find rest unto their souls; hast thou found rest in him for thy soul? |
6046 | He sanctified us with his blood; but why should the Father have thanks for this? |
6046 | He was to offer it, and how? |
6046 | He was, and was his Son, before he was revealed--''What is his name, and what is his Son''s name, if thou canst tell?'' |
6046 | He will receive perfection, immortality, heaven, and glory; and what is folded up in these things, who can tell? |
6046 | Hear, did I say? |
6046 | Heartily spoken; but how did he perform his promise? |
6046 | Hence David, when he speaks of heaven, says,''Whom have I in heaven but thee?'' |
6046 | Hence it follows that Christ will be ashamed of some; but why not ashamed of others? |
6046 | Here is nought but open war, acts of hostility, and shameful rebellion, on the sinner''s side; and what delight can God take in that? |
6046 | His cause; what is his cause? |
6046 | His fee- who shall pay him his fee? |
6046 | House and land, trades and honours, places and preferments, what are they to salvation? |
6046 | How are those treated in this world who are entitled to so glorious, so exalted, so eternal, and unchangeable an inheritance in the world to come? |
6046 | How art thou when thou thinkest that thou thyself hast grace? |
6046 | How came that to pass? |
6046 | How came they by their faith? |
6046 | How came they white? |
6046 | How camest thou to see thy need of this righteousness? |
6046 | How can I judge amiss, when I judge as I feel? |
6046 | How can I then be accepted by a holy and sin- abhorring God? |
6046 | How can it possibly be? |
6046 | How can they have any to Godward that are enemies to him in their minds by wicked works? |
6046 | How can they pray or make conscience of the duty that fear not God? |
6046 | How can those that are accustomed to do evil, do that which is commanded in this particular? |
6046 | How can we judge of a preacher''s good will, but by''peace on his lips?'' |
6046 | How canst thou find in thy heart to set thyself against grace, against such grace as offereth mercy to thee? |
6046 | How could he join in their thanks, and praises, and blessings of him for ever and ever, in whose favour, mercy, and grace, they are not concerned? |
6046 | How did he ply it with Christ against Joshua the high- priest? |
6046 | How did he ply16 it against that good man Job, if possibly he might have obtained his destruction in hell- fire? |
6046 | How do the heirs to immortality conduct themselves in such a prospect? |
6046 | How do they show themselves to be true under the first of these? |
6046 | How do they show themselves to be true under the second? |
6046 | How dost thou find them in outward trials? |
6046 | How dost thou find thyself in the inward workings of sin? |
6046 | How dost thou like being saved? |
6046 | How dost thou like the discovery of that which thou thinkest is grace in other men? |
6046 | How doth that appear? |
6046 | How far? |
6046 | How if I never see the sun rise more? |
6046 | How if the first voice that rings to- morrow morning in my heavy ears be,''Arise, ye dead, and come to judgment?'' |
6046 | How if you have over- stood the time of mercy? |
6046 | How is that? |
6046 | How is that? |
6046 | How is this great object to be accomplished? |
6046 | How it appears that they that are saved, are saved by grace? |
6046 | How many are there in the world whose heart Satan hath filled with a belief that their state and condition for another world is good? |
6046 | How many good souls has he driven to these conclusions, who afterwards have been made to unsay all again? |
6046 | How many have, in all ages, been kept from coming to God aright by the terrors of the world? |
6046 | How many in Israel were destroyed for that which Aaron, Gideon, and Manasseh, unworthily did in their day? |
6046 | How many pay undue respect to buildings in which public prayer is offered up? |
6046 | How many struggling fits had Israel with God in the wilderness? |
6046 | How many times are some men put in mind of death by sickness upon themselves, by graves, by the death of others? |
6046 | How many times are they put in mind of hell by reading the Word, by lashes of conscience, and by some that go roaring in despair out of this world? |
6046 | How many times did they declare that there they feared him not? |
6046 | How many times hast thou had heaven and salvation offered to thee freely, wouldst thou but break thy league with this great enemy of God? |
6046 | How many times, think you, did Israel stand in need of pardon, from Egypt, until they came to Canaan? |
6046 | How many times, when Israel provoked the Lord to anger, did he yet defer to destroy them? |
6046 | How much of God dost thou think is in these things? |
6046 | How now, thought I, is this the sign of an upright soul, to desire to serve God, when all is taken from him? |
6046 | How rapid were his thoughts--''Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?'' |
6046 | How rich was Jesus Christ? |
6046 | How sayest thou, sinner? |
6046 | How shall I deliver thee, Israel? |
6046 | How shall I make thee as Admah? |
6046 | How shall I set thee as Zeboim? |
6046 | How shall he be brought, wrought, and made, to be out of love with it? |
6046 | How shall they come then? |
6046 | How shall this be proved? |
6046 | How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" |
6046 | How shall we, who are impure and unclean by nature and by practice, draw near unto him who is so infinitely holy? |
6046 | How should he be the Christ, and yet come out of Galilee, out of which ariseth no prophet? |
6046 | How should he contain hopes of life? |
6046 | How should the Lord put any trust in thee? |
6046 | How should we strive? |
6046 | How so? |
6046 | How then can his desires be granted, who himself refused to have them answered? |
6046 | How then can they do anything with that godly reverence of his holy Majesty that is and must be essential to every good work? |
6046 | How then can we be hindered of our hope? |
6046 | How then shall a bad man, any bad man, the best bad man upon earth, think to set himself by his best things just in the sight of God? |
6046 | How then shall the conscience of the burdened sinner by rightly quieted, if he perceiveth not the grace of God? |
6046 | How then should they do good? |
6046 | How then, may some say, doth it become ours? |
6046 | How then? |
6046 | How then? |
6046 | How will men that have before them a little honour, a little profit, a little pleasure, strive? |
6046 | How will the heavens echo of joy, when the Bride, the Lamb''s wife, shall come to dwell with her husband for ever? |
6046 | How, if He had come, having taken a commandment from His Father to damn you, and to send you to the devils in Hell? |
6046 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that hath not felt the burden of the wrath of God? |
6046 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that never was sensible of the sorrows of the one, nor distressed with the pains of the other? |
6046 | How, then, canst thou stand clear from guilt in thy soul who neglectest to act faith in the blood of the Lamb? |
6046 | How, then, could they object that the time was not come for Christ to be born? |
6046 | How? |
6046 | How? |
6046 | I a m under the force of it, and this is my continual cry, What shall I render to the Lord for all the benefits which he has bestowed upon me? |
6046 | I am the basest of creatures, I could even spew at myself? |
6046 | I answer, Art thou sensible that thou hast an action commenced against thee in that high court of justice that is above? |
6046 | I answer, Hast thou well considered the nature of the crime wherewith thou standest charged at the bar of God? |
6046 | I ask, Hast thou entertained him so to be? |
6046 | I ask, and wherefore then served the wood by which the sacrifices were burned? |
6046 | I asked her if she was sick? |
6046 | I asked him wherein? |
6046 | I come now to the second thing into which we are to inquire, and that is, WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6046 | I come now to the third question, namely, But why should we strive? |
6046 | I doubt I do not come as I should do? |
6046 | I have also asked those that pass by the way,"if they saw him whom my soul loveth,"and if they had anything to communicate to me? |
6046 | I query, is it possible to come up to the pattern for justification with God? |
6046 | I said, Are they infallible? |
6046 | I say again, how will they strive for this? |
6046 | I say again, if our love is so slender to our own souls, can any think that it should be more full to the souls of others? |
6046 | I say again, why is it affirmed''without shedding of blood is no remission,''if man''s good deeds can save him? |
6046 | I say, Art thou sensible of this? |
6046 | I say, What hast thou seen in him? |
6046 | I say, Who told thee so? |
6046 | I say, dost thou this, or dost thou hunt thine own soul to destroy it? |
6046 | I say, hast thou entertained Jesus Christ for thy lawyer to plead thy cause? |
6046 | I say, how glorious was it; and how sweet is it to you that have seen yourselves lost by nature? |
6046 | I say, should he say to the poor, Come to my door, ask at my door, knock at my door, and you shall find and have; would he not be counted liberal? |
6046 | I say, therefore, to thee that art thus, And why despair? |
6046 | I say, what benefit have we thereby? |
6046 | I say, what excuse can they make for themselves, when they shall be asked why they did not in the day of salvation come to Christ to be saved? |
6046 | I say, what more fearful than to be tormented there for ever with the devil and his angels? |
6046 | I say, where is he that hath taken his flight for salvation, because of the dread of the wrath to come? |
6046 | I say, where, as to justification with God? |
6046 | I think I am cast off from God, says the soul; so thou thoughtest afore, says memory, but thou wast mistaken then, and why not the like again? |
6046 | I use the means to be saved; and why? |
6046 | I was no sooner fixed upon this resolution, but that word dropped upon me,"Doth Job serve God for nought?" |
6046 | I will do unto them as they have done unto Me; and what unrighteousness is in all this? |
6046 | I.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED? |
6046 | II.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6046 | III.--WHO ARE THEY THAT ARE TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6046 | IV.--HOW IT APPEARS THAT THEY THAT ARE SAVED, ARE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6046 | If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6046 | If God be with one, who can hurt one? |
6046 | If He is, then how doth it appear? |
6046 | If a man can not now go to the throne of grace by prayer, through Christ, and so fetch grace for his support from thence, what can he do? |
6046 | If all that desire to go to heaven should come thither, verily they would make a hell of heaven; for, I say, what would they do there? |
6046 | If grace received would do, what need for more? |
6046 | If he also shall ask me, What hath been my preferment in all the time of my absence from him? |
6046 | If he asks me, By what authority I take upon me thus to reason? |
6046 | If he asks me, How I know that the law will not lay hold of me also? |
6046 | If he asks me, Who have been my companions? |
6046 | If he hath, show us where? |
6046 | If he knows not hell, and the torments thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not himself and the badness of his condition, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not the law, and the severity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not the world, and the emptiness and vanity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not what death is, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he was not willing, why did he promise? |
6046 | If heart- breaking work attend such strokes,''Why should ye be stricken any more?'' |
6046 | If it be love for a fellow- creature to give a bit of bread, a coat, a cup of cold water, what shall we call this? |
6046 | If judgment begins at the house of God, what will the end of them be that obey not the gospel of God? |
6046 | If the first come in and say, Why am I judged? |
6046 | If the object of the wrath of God, then is his case most dreadful; for who can bear, who can grapple with the wrath of God? |
6046 | If the question be asked, How a just God can save that man from death, that by sin has put himself under the sentence of it? |
6046 | If the rich man should say thus to the poor, would not he be reckoned a free- hearted man? |
6046 | If there be twenty places where there are assizes kept in this land, yet if I have offended no law, what need have I of an advocate? |
6046 | If these be worth commending then, That vainly show their might, How dare you blame those holy men That in God''s quarrel fight? |
6046 | If this be concluded in the affirmative, what follows but that Christ, though he undertook, came short in doing for us? |
6046 | If thou canst go lustily, what mean thy crutches? |
6046 | If thou sayest yea, then I ask, Who told thee that thou standest accused for transgression before the judgment- seat of God? |
6046 | If thou sayest, Yea; I ask, How comest thou righteous? |
6046 | If we do take occasion to do so, that we may drop, and be yet distilling some good doctrine upon their souls? |
6046 | If what be possible? |
6046 | If yea, then Christ had such; if no, then who can fulfil the law as he? |
6046 | In a word, Doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6046 | In a word, are they converted? |
6046 | In a word, doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6046 | In a word, who knows the power of God''s wrath, the weight of sin, the torments of hell, and the length of eternity? |
6046 | In all this, what qualification shows itself as precedent to justification? |
6046 | In time of sickness, what so set by as the doctor''s glasses and gally- pots full of his excellent things? |
6046 | In whose judgment art thou righteous? |
6046 | Indeed this may be; and therefore no similitude can be found that can fully amplify the matter,''for what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | Is Benhadad yet alive? |
6046 | Is Christ Jesus not only a priest of, and a King over, but an Advocate for his people? |
6046 | Is Christ Jesus the Lord mine Advocate with the Father? |
6046 | Is Christ Jesus the redemption; and, as such, the very door and inlet into all God''s mercies? |
6046 | Is Christ, as crucified, the way and door to all spiritual and eternal mercy? |
6046 | Is God indeed to be dallied with, and will the end be pleasant unto you? |
6046 | Is He satisfied now in the behalf of sinners by this Man''s thus suffering? |
6046 | Is Jesus Christ an Advocate with the Father for us? |
6046 | Is Jesus Christ the Saviour also become our Advocate? |
6046 | Is any merry? |
6046 | Is coming to Jesus Christ by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Is coming to Jesus Christ not by the will, wisdom, or power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Is he God''s fellow? |
6046 | Is he a fool that chooseth for himself long lasters, or he whose best things will rot in a day? |
6046 | Is he a godly man, that will serve God for nothing rather than give out? |
6046 | Is he a pleasant child? |
6046 | Is he a second God? |
6046 | Is he ever the worse for coming to Jesus Christ, or for his loving and serving of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Is he merciful; will he help thee? |
6046 | Is he of the highest order of the angels? |
6046 | Is he present; will he hear thee? |
6046 | Is he qualified for my business? |
6046 | Is he then left to fill up the measure of his iniquities? |
6046 | Is heaven reserved only for the noble and the learned, like Paul? |
6046 | Is his body dead? |
6046 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6046 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6046 | Is his name, person, and undertakings, more precious to them, than is the glory of the world? |
6046 | Is it Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Is it a sign of a fool to agree with one''s adversary while we are in the way with him, even before he delivereth us to the judge? |
6046 | Is it a time to take pleasure, and to recreate thyself in anything, before thou hast mourned and been sorry for thy sins? |
6046 | Is it attended with so many blessed privileges? |
6046 | Is it below thee? |
6046 | Is it fit to say unto God, Thou art hard- hearted? |
6046 | Is it in the judgment of God, or of man? |
6046 | Is it likely that those should have the Lord Jesus for their Advocate to plead their cause; who despise and reject his person, his Word, and ways? |
6046 | Is it not a high point of wisdom for a man to be always doing of that which lays him under the conduct of angels? |
6046 | Is it not a sign of wisdom for a man yet more and more to endeavour to interest himself in the love and protection of God? |
6046 | Is it not a sign of wisdom to depart from sins, which are the snares of death and hell? |
6046 | Is it not better to say now unto God, Do not condemn me? |
6046 | Is it not for a man to sin willingly after enlightening? |
6046 | Is it not pity, had it otherwise been the will of God, that ever thou wast made a man, for that thou settest so little by thy soul? |
6046 | Is it not rather to be wondered at, that thou hast not caught before this a thousand times a thousand falls? |
6046 | Is it not so with you in respect of your beggars that come to your door? |
6046 | Is it not strong as death, cruel as the grave, and hotter than the coals of juniper? |
6046 | Is it not therefore a wonderful mercy to be blessed with this grace of fear, that thou by it mayest be kept from final, which is damnable apostasy? |
6046 | Is it so much to be a fiddle? |
6046 | Is it so, that coming to Jesus Christ is by the Father, as aforesaid? |
6046 | Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6046 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6046 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that he will not receive them? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it surprising that the Quakers, at such a time, assumed their peculiar neatness of dress? |
6046 | Is not God as well mighty to punish as to save? |
6046 | Is not HE called? |
6046 | Is not HE glorified? |
6046 | Is not HE justified? |
6046 | Is not heaven worth thy affection? |
6046 | Is not here a door of hope? |
6046 | Is not here encouragement for those that think, for wicked hearts and lives, they have not their fellows in the world? |
6046 | Is not love of the greatest force to oblige? |
6046 | Is not the devil thy father? |
6046 | Is not the same spirit of rebellion amongst us in our days? |
6046 | Is not this God rich in mercy? |
6046 | Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? |
6046 | Is not this a great waster? |
6046 | Is not this a truth? |
6046 | Is not this amazing grace? |
6046 | Is not this an encouragement to the biggest sinners to make their application to Christ for mercy? |
6046 | Is not this grace? |
6046 | Is not this grace? |
6046 | Is not this love that passeth knowledge? |
6046 | Is not this love the wonderment of angels? |
6046 | Is not this the experience of all the godly? |
6046 | Is not this to play the fool, in the account of sinners, while angels wonder at and rejoice for thy wisdom? |
6046 | Is not this true as I have said? |
6046 | Is sin so vile a thing? |
6046 | Is the arm of the Lord shortened that he can not save? |
6046 | Is the blood of Christ, the death of Christ, the resurrection of Christ, of no more virtue than to bring in for us an uncertain salvation? |
6046 | Is the law sin? |
6046 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6046 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6046 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6046 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | Is the way dangerous in which thou art to go? |
6046 | Is the way of the just an abomination to you? |
6046 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6046 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6046 | Is there also hope to be in His children? |
6046 | Is there any among thy sins, thy companions, and foolish delights, that, like Christ, can help thee in the day of thy distress? |
6046 | Is there any law now that will curse and condemn this Saviour for standing in our persons to give satisfaction to God for the transgression of man? |
6046 | Is there any vicious propensity, the gratification of which is not included in that character? |
6046 | Is there but one sin among so many millions of sins, for which there is no forgiveness; and must I commit this? |
6046 | Is there grace for me?'' |
6046 | Is there no truth nor trust to be put in him, notwithstanding all that he hath said? |
6046 | Is there not a middle way? |
6046 | Is there not a time coming when the godly may ask the wicked what profit they have in their pleasure? |
6046 | Is there not everywhere in God''s Book a flat contradiction to this, in multitudes of promises, of invitations, of examples, and the like? |
6046 | Is there not palpably high wickedness in every one of the effects of this fear? |
6046 | Is there nothing else to be done but to make a covenant with death, and to maintain thy agreement with hell? |
6046 | Is there perfection in that righteousness? |
6046 | Is there room for me?'' |
6046 | Is there so much ground of comfort, and so much cause to be glad? |
6046 | Is there so much store in Christ, and such a ready heart in Him to give it to me? |
6046 | Is there that condition, they must believe? |
6046 | Is there to be a righteousness to clothe them with that is to be presented before Divine justice? |
6046 | Is this a truth, that the man that truly comes to God in order thereto has had his heart broken? |
6046 | Is this fear of God such an excellent thing? |
6046 | Is this he that professed, and disputed, and forsook us; but now he is come to us again? |
6046 | Is this he that separated from us, but now he is fallen with us into the same eternal damnation with us? |
6046 | Is this the gloomy fanaticism of a Puritan divine? |
6046 | Is this the sum of all, namely, That''the fear of the wicked it shall come upon him,''and that''the desire of the righteous shall be granted?'' |
6046 | Is this to serve God? |
6046 | Is this word more dear unto them? |
6046 | Is thy business slight; is it not concerning the welfare of thy soul? |
6046 | Is thy conscience awakened and convinced then, that thou art at present in a perishing state, and that thou hast need to cry to God for mercy? |
6046 | Is thy heart hard? |
6046 | Is thy heart slothful and idle? |
6046 | It casteth out the Word and love of God, without which no grace can grow in the soul; how then should the fear of God grow in a covetous heart? |
6046 | It confirms it; and this is part of the meaning of Paul in those large relations of his sufferings for Christ, saying,''Are they ministers of Christ? |
6046 | It has ofttimes come into my mind to ask, By what means it is that the gospel profession should be so tainted39 with loose and carnal gospellers? |
6046 | It is a neat and acceptable volume, but why altered? |
6046 | It is a sign of a very bad nature when the contrary shows itself; could God have done more for thee than to have put his fear in thy heart? |
6046 | It is an honour for the poor to stand up for the great and mighty; but what honour is it for the great to plead for the base? |
6046 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?" |
6046 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?'' |
6046 | It is false, said she; for when they said to him, Do you confess the indictment? |
6046 | It is not a sign of foolishness timely to prevent ruin, is it? |
6046 | It is said elsewhere,''For what is a man advantaged if he gain the whole world, and lose himself?'' |
6046 | It is said in another place;"Can a woman,"a mother,"forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? |
6046 | It is true, Mephibosheth had a check from David; for, said he,"Why wentest not thou with me, Mephibosheth?" |
6046 | It may be thy great prayer is to say,"Our Father which art in heaven,"& c. Dost thou know the meaning of the very first words of this prayer? |
6046 | It seems then, his heart was fainting; but what was the cause of his fainting? |
6046 | It was their sore temptation; for still, as some affirmed him to be the Christ, others as fast objected,''Shall Christ come out of Galilee?'' |
6046 | It will never backslide again, will it? |
6046 | It would not be reckoned of grace, but of debt; and what would follow from hence? |
6046 | Job was a man a none- such in his day for one that feared God; and who so bold with God as Job? |
6046 | John Bunyan? |
6046 | Just and justified from all things that would otherwise swallow thee up? |
6046 | Justice Keelin said, that I ought not to preach; and asked me where I had my authority? |
6046 | Know you not that this is the judgment of God upon you,"ye despisers, to behold, and wonder, and perish?" |
6046 | Lastly, Is there such mercy as this? |
6046 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Lastly, but dost thou think that thy more grace will exempt thee from temptations? |
6046 | Let our first inquiry be, whether the Saviour intended a fixed form of prayer? |
6046 | Let us stand together; who is mine adversary? |
6046 | Lightning and thunder is made a cause of rain, but lightning alone is not:''Who hath divided a water- course for the overflowing of waters? |
6046 | Look ye now, did not I tell you so? |
6046 | Lord, I have destroyed myself, can I live? |
6046 | Lord, every one of them are sins of the first rate, of the biggest size, of the blackest line, can I live? |
6046 | Lord, shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou canst pardon my sins, or by believing Thou canst not? |
6046 | Lord, what will be the fruit of these things, when for the doctrine of God there is imposed, that is, more than taught, the traditions of men? |
6046 | Lord, who desired Thee to promise? |
6046 | Lord,"who can understand his errors? |
6046 | Man knows the beginning of sin, said Spira, but who bounds the issues thereof?'' |
6046 | Many of this kind there be now in the world, both of men, and women, and children; art not thou that readest this book of this number? |
6046 | May I be saved by him?'' |
6046 | May not the glorified saints become angels? |
6046 | May not these be that sin I trow? |
6046 | May there not come out true men as well as thieves out from thence? |
6046 | May we appeal to our God, Lord, is it I? |
6046 | Men will do thus, as I said, in courts below; and why shouldst not thou approach thus to the court above? |
6046 | Mine eyes have seen vileness in the best of my doings; what, then, think you, must God needs see in them? |
6046 | Must also the general assembly and church of the first- born wait upon thee for their full portions of glory? |
6046 | Must he do what he lists? |
6046 | Must it be, if they turn themselves, or do something to merit of him to turn them? |
6046 | Must it needs be that? |
6046 | Must it needs be the great transgression? |
6046 | Must nobody seek because few are saved? |
6046 | Must not that be much more so accounted? |
6046 | Must the Son of God himself come down from heaven? |
6046 | Must there be redemption by blood added to mercy, if the soul be saved? |
6046 | Must they be bound to their own ruin, by the rebellion of their stubborn wills? |
6046 | Must we not fear falls? |
6046 | Must we, because of these temptations, incline to fall? |
6046 | My brethren, is it not reasonable that we should stand up for him in this world? |
6046 | My hope is grounded upon the promises; what else should it be grounded upon? |
6046 | My sins are more than the sands, can I live? |
6046 | My way is hid from the Lord, and my judgment is passed over from my God? |
6046 | Nay, God favoured His Son no more, finding our sins upon Him, than He would have favoured any of us; for, should we have died? |
6046 | Nay, are not the very thoughts of it altogether displeasing to thee? |
6046 | Nay, art thou not a desperate persecutor of the children of God? |
6046 | Nay, but why dost thou tempt the Lord thy God? |
6046 | Nay, do not many make his Word, and his name, and his ways, a stalking- horse to their own worldly advantages? |
6046 | Nay, further,"Have we not prophesied in Thy name? |
6046 | Nay, is it not the mark of implacable reprobates? |
6046 | Nay, was he not ready to give the lie to the angel, when he told him God was with him? |
6046 | Nay, what world, what people, what nation, for sin and transgression, could or can be compared to Jerusalem? |
6046 | Ninth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | No affection for the God that made thee? |
6046 | No man, when he buildeth his house, makes the principal parts thereof of weak or feeble timber; for how could such bear up the rest? |
6046 | No, saith the child, nor with this hand either; then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a better, a brave golden finger? |
6046 | Noah and Lot, who so holy as they in the time of their afflictions? |
6046 | Now I come to the second question-- to wit, What is it to be saved by grace? |
6046 | Now do we regret our want of greater conformity to his image? |
6046 | Now help, Lord; now, Lord Jesus, what shall I do? |
6046 | Now if all these and their works as to our justification, are rejected, where, but in Christ, is righteousness to be found? |
6046 | Now the soul is purchased by a price that the Son, the wisdom of God, thought fit to pay for the redemption thereof-- what a thing, then, is the soul? |
6046 | Now there is both comfort and honour in this; for what comfort like that of being a holy man of God? |
6046 | Now what can deliver the soul from these but grace? |
6046 | Now what can hell and death do to him that hath this mercy of God upon him? |
6046 | Now what did he do by this his carriage, but testify plainly that he was not for receiving accusations against poor sinners, whoever accused by? |
6046 | Now, I pray, what is it to be a devil, but to be under, for ever, the power and dominion of sin, an implacable spirit against God? |
6046 | Now, I remember that one day, as I was walking into the country, I was much in the thoughts of this, But how if the day of grace be past? |
6046 | Now, I would ask, what all this should signify, if a sinner, as a sinner, before he washes, or is washed, may immediately go unto the throne of grace? |
6046 | Now, being made free from sin, what follows? |
6046 | Now, how strong the motions or passions of love are, who is there that is an utter stranger thereto? |
6046 | Now, if Christ, as an Advocate, pleadeth a propitiation with God, for whose conviction doth he plead it? |
6046 | Now, if God shall count me righteous, who will be so hardy as to conclude I yet shall perish? |
6046 | Now, if a call to come hath such encouragement in it, what is a promise of receiving such, but an encouragement much more? |
6046 | Now, if so much safety flows from God''s being for one, how safe are we when God is with us? |
6046 | Now, if they be blind, how shall they come? |
6046 | Now, if this cause be faulty, why doth he live? |
6046 | Now, if thou takest such things for a grant of thy desires, and consequently concludest thyself a righteous man, how mayest thou be deceived? |
6046 | Now, is not this a blessed Christ, coming sinner? |
6046 | Now, justification and eternal salvation being both in Christ, and nowhere else to be had for men, who would not come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Now, since this is so, what can the condemned at the judgment say for themselves, why sentence of death should not be passed upon them? |
6046 | Now, the question is, how Abraham found? |
6046 | Now, then, I would be saved; but why? |
6046 | Now, then, it will be demanded, how a soul, before it was a month old, could receive sin to the making of itself unclean? |
6046 | Now, to be taught of God, what like it? |
6046 | Now, what can an intercessor do, if he is not able to answer this question? |
6046 | Now, what doth Christ plead, and what is the ground of his plea? |
6046 | Now, what is faith but a believing, a trusting, or relying act of the soul? |
6046 | Now, what is the result, but that the Advocate goes down, as well as we; we to hell, and he in esteem? |
6046 | Now, what is the signification of this name but SAVIOUR? |
6046 | Now, what remains but that we who are reconciled to God by faith in his blood are quit, discharged, and set free from the law of sin and death? |
6046 | Now, what shall God do to save these men? |
6046 | Now, what shall this man do? |
6046 | Now, what was Paul''s answer? |
6046 | Now, when Jesus was born, it is said,''Where is he that is born King of the Jews?'' |
6046 | Now, whence should all this disobedience arise? |
6046 | Now, where lieth the fault? |
6046 | Now, which of these hast thou? |
6046 | Now, will not this last his poor brethren to spend upon a great while? |
6046 | O Lord, thought I, what if I should not, indeed? |
6046 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
6046 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
6046 | O grave, where is thy victory?'' |
6046 | O how should a poor soul do this? |
6046 | O sinner, wilt thou not open? |
6046 | O thou that fearest the Lord, what is thy desire? |
6046 | O, but I am but one, and a very sorry one, too; and what is one, especially such an one as I am? |
6046 | O, then we should have you cry out, I must have Christ; what shall I do for Christ? |
6046 | Objection.-But doth not Christ as Advocate plead for his elect, though not called as yet? |
6046 | Of God, do I say; if thou wouldst but break this league with this great enemy of thy soul? |
6046 | On his arrival, he demanded,''Are all the prisoners safe?'' |
6046 | Once being at an honest woman''s house, I, after some pause, asked her how she did? |
6046 | One word also to you that are neglecters of Jesus Christ:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6046 | Or art thou ignorant of these things, and yet darest thou say, Our Father? |
6046 | Or how shall a man be able to give to others a satisfactory account of his unfeigned subjection to the gospel, that yet abides in his impenitency? |
6046 | Or how, if the next sight I see with mine eyes be the Lord in the clouds, with all his angels, raining floods of fire and brimstone upon the world? |
6046 | Or is he ever the more a fool, for flying from that which will drown thee in hell- fire, and for seeking eternal life? |
6046 | Or is his grace so far gone, and so near spent, that now he has not enough to pardon, and secure, and save one sinner more? |
6046 | Or is it not the least of thy thoughts all the day? |
6046 | Or of Heman, when he said he was free among them whom God remembered no more? |
6046 | Or the highly virtuous dame, Must I sue for mercy upon the same terms as the Magdalene? |
6046 | Or the will of Christ to the will of Satan? |
6046 | Or the will of righteousness to the will of sin? |
6046 | Or they who do us scorn? |
6046 | Or those who do our houses waste? |
6046 | Or us, who this have borne? |
6046 | Or what do you think of David, when he said he was cast off from God''s eyes? |
6046 | Or, Can God repute him so, and yet be holy and just? |
6046 | Or, Is it possible that a man that has done as he has, should yet be found a saint, and so in a saved state? |
6046 | Or, as you have it in John, will you love your life till you lose it? |
6046 | Paul did not so much as once ask him, What is your end in this question? |
6046 | Perfect righteousness, what to do? |
6046 | Perfecting holiness, what is that? |
6046 | Perhaps the word''satisfaction''will hardly be found in the Bible; and where is it said in so many words,''God is dissatisfied with our sins?'' |
6046 | Perhaps thou wilt not let go now, what, as a hypocrite, thou hast got; but"what is the hope of the hypocrite, when God taketh away his soul?" |
6046 | Peter asks thee another question, to wit,"If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" |
6046 | Ponder the path of thy feet with the greatest seriousness, thy life lies upon it; what thinkest thou? |
6046 | Poor besotted sinner, is this thy last shift? |
6046 | Poor child, thought I, what sorrow art thou like to have for thy portion in this world? |
6046 | Poor drunken sinner, what shall I say to thee? |
6046 | Poor sin- sick soul, do you consider your state more loathsome and dangerous than the leprosy? |
6046 | Power to do what? |
6046 | Prithee tell me what moved thee to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Prithee tell me, What seest thou in him to allure thee to forsake all the world, to come to him? |
6046 | Put thyself now upon this serious inquiry, Am I indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Reader, have you ever felt thus''in downright earnest''for salvation? |
6046 | Reader, have you had, at any time, equal anxiety for your soul''s health and salvation? |
6046 | Reader, our anxious inquiry should be, Have we entered in by Christ the gate? |
6046 | Reader, would''st see what may you never feel, Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel? |
6046 | Reason also says the same, for how can Blacks beget white children, when both father and mother are black? |
6046 | Reason will say, Then who will profess Christ that hath such coarse entertainment at the beginning? |
6046 | Received, into what? |
6046 | Riches and power, what is there more in the world? |
6046 | SECOND, How it appears that Christ hath power to save or cast out? |
6046 | Saith not the gospel the very same? |
6046 | Saith the soul, Can not the devil give one such comfort I trow? |
6046 | Satan often saith of us when we have sinned, as Abishai said of Shimei after he had cursed David, Shall not this man die for this? |
6046 | Satan stronger than the Almighty Redeemer? |
6046 | Saved I would be; and who is there that would not, were they in my condition? |
6046 | Say I these things as a man? |
6046 | Say they, if our iniquities be upon us, and we pine away in them, how can we then live? |
6046 | Say you so? |
6046 | Second, Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Second, But what is it for Jesus to be an Advocate for these? |
6046 | Second, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners, to the Jerusalem sinners? |
6046 | See here, a man at the foot of the ladder, now ready in will and mind, to die for his profession; but how will he carry it now? |
6046 | See here, what should we talk any more about such a fellow? |
6046 | See now, did not I tell thee that thy fears were but the consequence of strong desires? |
6046 | Seest thou a professor that prayeth not? |
6046 | Seest thou here, how saints of old were wo nt to do? |
6046 | Sermon being done, up she gets, and away she goes, and withal inquired where this Jesus the preacher dined that day? |
6046 | Seventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Shall Christ come down from Heaven to earth to declare this to sinners; and shall sinners stop their ears against these good tidings? |
6046 | Shall Christ think nothing too dear for me? |
6046 | Shall Christ weep to see thy soul going on to destruction, and will though sport thyself in that way? |
6046 | Shall God enter this complaint against thee? |
6046 | Shall God speak to man''s soul, and shall not man believe? |
6046 | Shall I be admitted into, or shut out from, that blessed kingdom? |
6046 | Shall I chide them? |
6046 | Shall I come to particulars with thee? |
6046 | Shall I flatter them? |
6046 | Shall I grieve Him with my foolish carriage? |
6046 | Shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou wilt pardon my sins, or by believing Thou wilt not? |
6046 | Shall I intreat them to hold their tongues? |
6046 | Shall I now be ashamed of the cause, ways, people, or saints of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Shall I now love ever a lust or sin? |
6046 | Shall I now speak of the place that this saved body and soul shall dwell in? |
6046 | Shall I now yield my members as instruments of righteousness, seeing my end is everlasting life? |
6046 | Shall I slight His counsel by following of my own will? |
6046 | Shall I speak of their company? |
6046 | Shall I speak of their continuance in this condition? |
6046 | Shall I speak of their heavenly raiment? |
6046 | Shall I tell thee? |
6046 | Shall Jesus Christ be interceding in heaven? |
6046 | Shall he look to God? |
6046 | Shall he look to himself? |
6046 | Shall he look to the commandment? |
6046 | Shall he stay from Christ till his heart is better? |
6046 | Shall he that speaks in righteousness give place, and he who has nothing but envy and deceit be admitted to stand his ground? |
6046 | Shall he trust to his duties? |
6046 | Shall he turn away, and not return?'' |
6046 | Shall man believe what God says, and nothing at all regard it? |
6046 | Shall not Christ, then, prevail? |
6046 | Shall not I now be holy? |
6046 | Shall not I now study, strive, and lay out myself for Him that hath laid out Himself soul and body for me? |
6046 | Shall not this lay obligation upon me? |
6046 | Shall that hinder the execution of Shall- come? |
6046 | Shall the dead arise and praise thee?'' |
6046 | Shall there any man be put to death this day in Israel, for do not I know, that I am king this day over Israel?" |
6046 | Shall they come? |
6046 | Shall they prosper that do such things? |
6046 | Shall this man lie down and despair? |
6046 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6046 | Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? |
6046 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6046 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6046 | Shall we sin because we are forgiven? |
6046 | Shall we sin because we are not under the law, but under grace? |
6046 | She, also, that is thine enemy shall see it, and shame shall cover her which saith unto thee, Where is the Lord thy God?" |
6046 | Short- sighted mortal,"shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"'' |
6046 | Should a man ask me how he should know that he loveth the children of God? |
6046 | Should we have been made a curse? |
6046 | Should we have undergone the pains of Hell? |
6046 | Should we pray for communion with God through Christ? |
6046 | Should you ask him that we mentioned but now, How long is it since you began to fear you should miss of this damsel you love so? |
6046 | Since, then, the children have Christ for their advocate, art thou a child? |
6046 | Sinner, art thou thirsty? |
6046 | Sinner, be advised; ask thy heart again, saying, Am I come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Sinner, canst thou read that Jesus Christ was made an offering for sin, and yet go in sin? |
6046 | Sinner, careless sinner, didst thou take notice of this first inference that I have drawn from my second doctrine? |
6046 | Sinner, coming sinner, art thou for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Sinner, hast thou deferred to fear the Lord? |
6046 | Sinner, hast thou obtained a broken heart? |
6046 | Sinner, if this wicked thought be in thy heart, tell me again, dost thou thus think in earnest? |
6046 | Sinner, what sayest thou? |
6046 | Sinner, what wilt thou take to make a mountain of sand that will reach as high as the sun is at noon? |
6046 | Sinner, where is now thy righteousness? |
6046 | Sinner, why shouldest thou pull vengeance down upon thee? |
6046 | Sinner, wouldst thou have mercy? |
6046 | Sinners, you have souls, can you behold a crucified Christ, and not bleed, and not mourn, and not fall in love with him? |
6046 | Sir, said I, if I may do good to one by my discourse, why may I not do good to two? |
6046 | Sir, said I, pray what do you mean by calling the people together? |
6046 | So David,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6046 | So I asked her, she being a stranger to me, what she had to say to me? |
6046 | So again saith he in the next Psalm after, as afore he had complained of the oppression of the enemy,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6046 | So again:"I was left alone,"says he,"and saw this great vision"; and what follows? |
6046 | So full is this of consolation and felicity that the apostle exclaims,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6046 | So it is here, there is a promise made indeed, but to whom? |
6046 | So that, is there righteousness in Christ? |
6046 | So, again, in another place, he saith,''Lord, how long wilt thou look on? |
6046 | So, again, speaking of the wicked, he saith,''Ye have said it is vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinance?'' |
6046 | So, of which of them hath He at any time said, This is, or shall be, made in or after Mine image, Mine own image? |
6046 | So, then, wilt thou live by the law? |
6046 | Solomon says,''The word of a king is as the roaring of a lion''; and if so, what is the Word of God? |
6046 | Some make their sighs, their tears, their prayers, and their reformations, their advocates-"Hast thou tried these, and found them wanting?" |
6046 | Some may say, Will God see that which is not? |
6046 | Some, as I said, that revolt, are shot dead upon the place; and for them, who can help them? |
6046 | Sometimes I look upon myself, and say, Where am I now? |
6046 | Soon after we set out, my father came to my brother''s, and asked his men whom his daughter rode behind? |
6046 | Soul, he suffered and did bear with the manners of Israel forty years in the wilderness; and hast thou tried him half so long? |
6046 | Still how common is the question, which one of the disciples put to his master,''Lord, are there few that be saved?'' |
6046 | Suppose a child doth grievously transgress against and offend his father, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6046 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should be made to live for ever, but without the enjoyment of God, what good would his life do him? |
6046 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should go to heaven, that golden place, what good would this do him, if he was not possessed of the God of it? |
6046 | Suppose it should be urged, that this is a doctrine tending to looseness and lasciviousness; the answer is ready--"What shall we say then? |
6046 | Suppose so many cattle in such a pound, and one goes by whose they are not, doth he concern himself? |
6046 | Suppose they staid but one quarter of an hour there after their fall, before they were cast out, what sweetness found they there, but guilt? |
6046 | Surely it hath not entered into the heart of man to conceive what ear never heard, nor mortal eye ever saw? |
6046 | Tell me, dost thou not desire to desire? |
6046 | Tell me, now, you that desire to be under the law, can you fulfil all the commands of the law, and after answer all its demands? |
6046 | Tell me, therefore, which of them will love him most? |
6046 | Tenth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | That I may know also, whether the day of grace be past with me or no? |
6046 | That also in the Romans is clear to this purpose,''Who is he that condemneth? |
6046 | That old friend of publicans and sinners? |
6046 | That our duties are imperfect, follows upon what was discoursed before; for if our graces be imperfect, how can our duties but be so too? |
6046 | That tells thee the world is not, even then when it doth most appear to be; wilt thou set thine heart upon that which is not? |
6046 | That the soul, did I say? |
6046 | The Bible had been to him a sealed book until, in a state of mental agony, he cried, What must I do to be saved? |
6046 | The END of the law-- what is the end of the law but perfect and sinless obedience? |
6046 | The Lord spake unto Manasseh, and to his people, by the prophets, but would he hear? |
6046 | The broken- hearted desireth God''s company; when wilt thou come unto me? |
6046 | The children, indeed, have the advantage of an advocate; but what is this to them that have none to plead their cause? |
6046 | The devil will tempt us, sin will assault us, men will persecute; but can they do it to everlasting? |
6046 | The end, what is that? |
6046 | The first is to question whether any are said to die and rise, by the death and resurrection of Christ? |
6046 | The first observation, or truth, drawn from the words is cleared by the text,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | The full pitcher can hold no more; then why should it go to the fountain? |
6046 | The godly are called believers; and why believers, but because they are they that have given credit to the great things of the gospel of God? |
6046 | The grace of humility, when is it? |
6046 | The graces of the Spirit-- what like them, or where here are they to be found, save in the souls of men only? |
6046 | The great question is, not as to the means, but the fact-- Have I been born again? |
6046 | The heart naturally is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; how then should there flow from such an one the fear of God? |
6046 | The judge saith, What canst thou say for thyself that sentence of death should not be passed upon thee? |
6046 | The man under the sixth head complaineth for want of temptations, but thou hast enough of them; art thou glad of them, tempted, coming sinner? |
6046 | The mercy, the pardoning preserving mercy, the mercy of the Lord is upon them, who is he then that can condemn them? |
6046 | The mind becomes entranced, and when sober reflection regains her command, we naturally inquire, Can all this have taken place in my heart? |
6046 | The name of God, what is that, but that by which he is distinguished and known from all others? |
6046 | The name of master is a name of fear--"And if I be a master, where is my fear? |
6046 | The principle, you will say, what do you mean by that? |
6046 | The question is not, Are they blind? |
6046 | The question naturally arises-- What is this''furnace of earth''in which the Lord''s words are purified? |
6046 | The question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6046 | The questions was answered with that portion of Scripture,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6046 | The righteous; who is he but the man that loveth God, and his holy will, to do it? |
6046 | The same saying in effect hath also John in the Revelation--"Who shall not fear thee, O Lord,"said he,"and glorify thy name?" |
6046 | The second question is, How should we strive? |
6046 | The second thing is, How are these brought into this Everlasting Covenant of Grace? |
6046 | The second thing that I would inquire into is this: What it is to be''ready to be offered up''? |
6046 | The snare, say you, what is that? |
6046 | The study of those scriptures, in order that the solemn question might be safely resolved,''Can such a fallen sinner rise again?'' |
6046 | The text from which he intended to preach was''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6046 | The text says''the desire of the righteous shall be granted''; what then are the desires of the righteous? |
6046 | The valley of Achor; what is that? |
6046 | The whole have no need of the physician; then why should they go to him? |
6046 | The wicked; who is he but the man that loves not God, nor to do his will? |
6046 | Their minds and consciences are defiled; how then can sweet and good proceed from thence? |
6046 | Their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness; how then can there be found one word that should please God? |
6046 | Their poison-- what is that? |
6046 | Then I ask again, Hast thou committed thy cause to him? |
6046 | Then I ask again, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him?-I say, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him? |
6046 | Then breaking out in the bitterness of my soul, I said''to myself,''with a grievous sigh, How can God comfort such a wretch as I? |
6046 | Then did that scripture seize upon my soul, He is of one mind, and who can turn him? |
6046 | Then said Christian, Why doth this man thus tremble? |
6046 | Then said Mr. Bunyan,''Have you the original?'' |
6046 | Then said Nathaniel to Jesus,''Whence knowest thou me? |
6046 | Then such a question as this,"Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?" |
6046 | Then would you have none pray but those that know they are the disciples of Christ? |
6046 | Then, I pray thee, let me inquire a little of thee, what provision thou hast made for thy soul? |
6046 | Then, why may not I doubt that I may be one of these? |
6046 | There are but three or four: and can not God miss them, and save me for all them? |
6046 | There are mansion- houses, beds of glory, and places to walk in among the angels; and who knows what they are? |
6046 | There are rewards for services, and labour of love showed to God''s name here; and who knows what they will be? |
6046 | There is death? |
6046 | There is heaven itself, the imperial heaven; does any body know what that is? |
6046 | There is hope, another grace of the Spirit bestowed upon us; and how often is that also, as to the excellency of working, made to flag? |
6046 | There is immortality and eternal life: and who knows what they are? |
6046 | There is in the text an intimation of a sense of torment''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | There is never a rebel in heaven against God, and if he should so deal on earth, must it not whirl thee down to hell? |
6046 | There is reverence, fear, and standing in awe of God''s Word and judgments, where are the excellent workings thereof to be found? |
6046 | There is the mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, and the innumerable company of angels; doth any body know what all they are? |
6046 | There will be badges of honour, harps to make merry with, and heavenly songs of triumph; doth any here know what they are? |
6046 | Therefore from that time that he heard that word,"Why persecutest thou me?" |
6046 | Therefore in this sense it may be said,''Where is the fury of the oppressor?'' |
6046 | Therefore the soul is it which is said to love God--''Saw ye him whom my soul loveth?'' |
6046 | Therefore, how can you bear the face to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Therefore, this would still stick with me, How can you tell that you are elected? |
6046 | These are also taken notice of in Job, and go there also by the name of wicked men:"Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden? |
6046 | These bloody sacrifices, what did they signify, what were they figures of, but of the bloody sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | These kill the heart; for who can bear up under the guilt of sin? |
6046 | They are all gone out of the way; how then can they walk therein? |
6046 | They bless, they all bless; they thank, they all thank; and wilt thou hold thy tongue? |
6046 | They shall come, say you, but how if they be blind, and see not the way? |
6046 | They shall, you say; but how if they will not; and, if so, then what can Shall- come do? |
6046 | Think, therefore, with thyself thus, What was it that at first did wound my heart? |
6046 | Thinkest thou that thou shalt weather it out well enough at the day of judgment? |
6046 | Third, Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Third, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered in the first place to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | This brings us to the most important of all the subjects of self- examination-- am I one of the''righteous''? |
6046 | This dastardly heart of ours, when shall it be more subdued and trodden under foot of faith? |
6046 | This is but reasonable; for if Christ stands up to plead for us, why should not we stand up to plead for him? |
6046 | This is much; but is God connected with this? |
6046 | This is not a sign that you fear me, ye offer the blind for sacrifices, where is my fear? |
6046 | This is of absolute necessity; for how can or shall a man be willing to come to Christ that knows not what he is, what God has appointed him to do? |
6046 | This is plain, not only to sense, but by the natural scope of the words,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | This is the common language,''if our transgressions be upon us, and we pine away in them, How should we then live?'' |
6046 | This is the fear that made the three thousand cry out,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6046 | This is the time, then, for Christ to stand up to plead; for now there is room for such a question- Can David''s sin stand with grace? |
6046 | This man is minded to give more to be damned, than God requires he should give to be saved; is not this an extravagant one? |
6046 | This may be answered by the question-- Was Peter justified in leaving the prison, and going to the prayer- meeting at Mary''s house? |
6046 | This snare will bring thee back again to the pit, which is hell, and then how wilt thou do to be rid of thy fear? |
6046 | This text utterly excludes the law-- what law? |
6046 | This to reason is very dreadful; for it cuts the soul down to the ground;''for a wounded spirit who[ none] can bear?'' |
6046 | This wicked world doth sentence us for our good deeds, but how then would they sentence us for our bad ones? |
6046 | This, I say, is a character above all angels; for, as the apostle said,''To which of the angels said He at anytime,''Thou art my Son?'' |
6046 | Those of the children of Israel that went from Egypt, and entered the land of Canaan, how came they thither? |
6046 | Thou biddest them be merry and lightsome; but dost thou not know that"the heart of fools is in the house of mirth?" |
6046 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou has sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6046 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost think to find mercy now? |
6046 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6046 | Thou mayest also doubt18 thy thoughts of the damned thus: If these poor creatures were in the world again, would they sin as they did before? |
6046 | Thou mayest by thy fear be driven away from God, from his worship, people, and ways, but what will that avail? |
6046 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him? |
6046 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him?'' |
6046 | Thou talkest of leaving him, but then whither wilt thou go? |
6046 | Thou thinkest to escape the pit; but what wilt thou do with the snare? |
6046 | Thou wilt say unto me, How should I know that I have done so? |
6046 | Thus also thou may say when death assaulteth thee-- O death, where is thy sting? |
6046 | Thus did Saul by the light that made him see; by it he came to Christ, and cried,''Who art thou, Lord?'' |
6046 | Thus to do is horrible; but mayest thou not judge amiss in this matter? |
6046 | Thy people, what people? |
6046 | Time was, indeed, he could hector, even hector it with God himself, saying,''What is the Almighty, that we should serve him?'' |
6046 | To be made an heir of God, of his grace, of his kingdom, and eternal glory, what is like it? |
6046 | To be saved from sin, from hell, from the wrath of God, from eternal damnation, what is like it? |
6046 | To prosper and be in health, as their soul prospers-- what, to thrive and mend in outwards no faster? |
6046 | To what end, O my soul, art thou retired into this place? |
6046 | To what may such an one attain? |
6046 | To which Bunyan replied;''Friend, dost thou speak this as from thy own knowledge, or did any other tell thee so? |
6046 | To whom could he go? |
6046 | True, the others murmured at him; but what did the Lord Jesus answer them? |
6046 | True, the right of dominion is the Lord''s; but the sinner will not suffer it, but will be all himself; saying''Who is Lord over us?'' |
6046 | True, thou mayest fear as devils do, but what will that profit? |
6046 | USE FIFTH, Again, fifthly, Is it so? |
6046 | USE FIRST.--Is justifying righteousness to be found in the person of Christ only? |
6046 | USE SECOND.--Is it so? |
6046 | USE THIRD.--But, thirdly, is it so? |
6046 | Upon what terms may he have this life? |
6046 | Upon what terms? |
6046 | Us: What us? |
6046 | V. What might be the reasons which prevailed with God to save us by grace, rather than by any other means? |
6046 | V.--WHAT MIGHT BE THE REASON MOVED GOD TO ORDAIN AND CHOOSE TO SAVE THOSE THAT HE SAVETH BY HIS GRACE, RATHER THAN BY ANY OTHER MEANS? |
6046 | Was it God that was offended? |
6046 | Was it not free grace for Christ to give Peter a loving look after he had cursed, and swore, and denied Him? |
6046 | Was it not free grace that met Paul when he was agoing to Damascus to persecute, which converted him, and made him a vessel of mercy? |
6046 | Was it not free grace to save such as those were that are spoken of in the 16th of Ezekiel, which no eye pitied? |
6046 | Was it not grace, absolute grace, that God made promise to Adam after transgression? |
6046 | Was it the removing of thy habitation, the change of thy condition, the loss of relations, estate, or the like? |
6046 | Was not here like to be a fine bargain, think you? |
6046 | Was not this a strange act, and a display of unthought- of grace? |
6046 | Was not this the way that the Lord was fain to take to make them close in with Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Was the unjust steward a fool in providing for himself for hereafter? |
6046 | Was there ever a man in the world so capable of describing the miseries of Doubting Castle, or of the Slough of Despond, as poor John Bunyan? |
6046 | Was this only the temper of wicked men then? |
6046 | We may adopt the language of the poet, and say--''Sinful soul, what hast thou done? |
6046 | We need not lay the reins on its neck and say, What care we? |
6046 | We read, in the book of Revelations, of the holy city, and that it had twelve gates, and at the gates twelve angels; but what did they do there? |
6046 | We received, by our thus being counted in him, that benefit which did precede his rising from the dead; and what was that but the forgiveness of sins? |
6046 | Well might Mr. Doe say,''What hath the devil or his agents got by putting our great gospel minister in prison?'' |
6046 | Well said, and how was it then? |
6046 | Well said, and what after that? |
6046 | Well, but how was he received by the lord of the vineyard? |
6046 | Well, but is there in truth such a thing as the obedience of faith? |
6046 | Well, but what judgment hast thou passed upon it while thou livest in thy debaucheries? |
6046 | Well, but what says God? |
6046 | Well, but whither must they go? |
6046 | Well, said I, shall I send to your master, while you abide out of sight, and make your peace with him before he sees you? |
6046 | Well, said he, to conclude, but will you promise that you will not call the people together any more? |
6046 | Well, what judgment now doth God, the righteous judge, pass upon the damsel for this? |
6046 | Well, will things that are less satisfy thy soul? |
6046 | Were a man to plead for a limb, or a member of his own, how would he plead? |
6046 | Were ever the Pharisees so profane; to whom Christ said, Ye vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
6046 | Were it granted that you kept the law, and that no man on earth could accuse you; were you therefore just before God? |
6046 | Were there no objects of pity among those that in the old world perished by the flood, or that in Sodom were burned with fire from heaven? |
6046 | Were there none but thieves there, or were the rest of that company out of his reach? |
6046 | Were we by sin subject to death? |
6046 | Were we under the curse of the law by reason of sin? |
6046 | What a devil then is sin? |
6046 | What are our desires? |
6046 | What are the desires of a righteous man? |
6046 | What are the gleanings to the whole crop? |
6046 | What are the honours and riches of this world, when compared to the glories of a crown of life? |
6046 | What are the pleasures and delights of thy soul now? |
6046 | What are the privileges of those that are actually brought into this free and glorious grace of the glorious God of Heaven and glory? |
6046 | What are the signs and tokens that thou bearest about thee, concerning how it will go with thy soul at last? |
6046 | What arguments would he use? |
6046 | What better warrant canst thou have to come, than to be bid to come of God? |
6046 | What can a man do to procure Christ, or procure faith, or love? |
6046 | What can a man say more, but that he stands in the rank of the biggest sinners? |
6046 | What can be more plain than this beautiful text? |
6046 | What can follow more clearly from this, but that amends were made by him for those souls for whose sins he suffered upon the tree? |
6046 | What can the body do as to these? |
6046 | What canst thou have more from the sweet lips of the Son of God? |
6046 | What care I, saith he, though I be seven years in chilling your heart if I can do it at last? |
6046 | What care hast thou had of securing of thy soul, and that it might be delivered from the danger that by sin it is brought into? |
6046 | What care they for God? |
6046 | What comeliness hast thou seen in his person? |
6046 | What condition is this man in? |
6046 | What demand of thine have I not fully answered? |
6046 | What did Constantine see in Christ, when he used to kiss the wounds of them that suffered for him? |
6046 | What did Daniel and the three children find in him, to make them run the hazards of the fiery furnace, and the den of lions, for his sake? |
6046 | What did, or what doth, the Lord Jesus see in us to be at all this care, and pains, and cost to save us? |
6046 | What didst thou come away from, in thy coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What do they think of themselves? |
6046 | What do you count prayer? |
6046 | What do you think of Paul? |
6046 | What do you think of the jailer? |
6046 | What do you think of the three thousand? |
6046 | What do you think the prophet desired, when he said,''O that thou wouldest rend the heavens and-- come down?'' |
6046 | What dost thou mean by can not? |
6046 | What doth the law require? |
6046 | What doth this word strive import? |
6046 | What doth this word strive import? |
6046 | What evidence have you for heaven and glory, and an inheritance among them that are sanctified? |
6046 | What followeth? |
6046 | What follows now? |
6046 | What follows? |
6046 | What follows? |
6046 | What follows? |
6046 | What folly can be greater than to labour for the meat that perisheth, and neglect the food of eternal life? |
6046 | What force, I say, is there in a faith that is begotten by truth, managed by truth, fed by truth, and preserved by the truth of God? |
6046 | What greater argument to holiness than to be made the members of the body, of the flesh, and of the bones of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What greater argument to holiness than to have our soul, our body, our life, hid and secured with Christ in God? |
6046 | What ground can a man have to believe that Christ is his Saviour, if he do not believe that He suffered for sin in his nature? |
6046 | What ground now is here for despair? |
6046 | What ground then to despair? |
6046 | What ground? |
6046 | What had Paul committed to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What has God been doing for and to his church from the beginning of the world, but extending to and exercising loving- kindness and mercy for them? |
6046 | What hast THOU found in him, sinner? |
6046 | What hast thou done? |
6046 | What hast thou found in him, since thou camest to him? |
6046 | What hast thou left behind thee? |
6046 | What hast thou thought of thy soul? |
6046 | What hath this man done against thee, that is coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What have I to do with you, that accuse the coming sinners to me? |
6046 | What higher affront or contempt can be offered to God, and what greater disdain can be shown against the gospel? |
6046 | What hinders? |
6046 | What hope therefore can I have? |
6046 | What if God will be silent to thee, is that ground of despair? |
6046 | What if a man had all the parts, yea, all the arts of men and angels? |
6046 | What if he were never so willing, if he were not of ability sufficient, what would his willingness do? |
6046 | What if it should be applied thus? |
6046 | What is Jerusalem that stood in Canaan, to that new Jerusalem that shall come down from heaven? |
6046 | What is Jordan? |
6046 | What is a house full of treasures, and all the delights of this world, if thou be empty of grace,''if thy soul be not filled with good?'' |
6046 | What is a remnant of people to the whole kingdom? |
6046 | What is a sheep, a bull, an ox, or calf, to Christ, or their blood to the blood of Christ? |
6046 | What is he that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What is he that is not coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What is heaven without God? |
6046 | What is here omitted that might have been inserted, to make the promise more full and free? |
6046 | What is his calling? |
6046 | What is his name? |
6046 | What is it then? |
6046 | What is it to be saved by grace? |
6046 | What is it to be saved? |
6046 | What is it, then? |
6046 | What is man that God should so unweariedly attend upon him, and visit him every moment? |
6046 | What is meant by this word"law"? |
6046 | What is meant or to be understood by the granting of the desires of the righteous? |
6046 | What is one in ten? |
6046 | What is the best physician alive, or all the physicians in the world, put all together, to him that knows no sickness, that is sensible of no disease? |
6046 | What is the cause that sinners can play so delightfully with sin? |
6046 | What is the promise without God''s grace, and what is that grace without a promise to bestow it on us? |
6046 | What is there in the Lord''s supper, in baptism, yea, in preaching the Word, and prayer, were they not the appointments of God? |
6046 | What it was for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6046 | What it was for this Jesus to be of the seed of David? |
6046 | What judgment hast thou made of the present state of thy soul? |
6046 | What kind of secret wishes hast thou in thy soul when thou feelest the lusts of thy flesh to rage? |
6046 | What kind of thoughts hast thou of thyself, now thou seest these desires of thine that are good so briskly opposed by those that are bad? |
6046 | What laid the cornerstone of this throne, but grace? |
6046 | What life is in Christ? |
6046 | What life is in Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What life is it that is thus the ground of his priesthood? |
6046 | What made he ready for? |
6046 | What makes grace so good to us as sin in its guilt and filth? |
6046 | What makes sin so horrible and damnable a thing in our eyes, as when we see there is nothing can save us from it but the infinite grace of God? |
6046 | What man or angel could have thought that the Jerusalem sinners had been yet on this side of an impossibility of enjoying life and mercy? |
6046 | What man? |
6046 | What mattereth it what a man gets, if by the getting thereof he loseth himself? |
6046 | What matters besides, above, or beyond the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ, and of our acceptance with God through him? |
6046 | What meant he by turning Adam out of paradise, by drowning the old world, by burning up Sodom with fire and brimstone from heaven? |
6046 | What messenger of Satan buffeted Paul? |
6046 | What more abominable than sin? |
6046 | What more can be objected? |
6046 | What more could have been said? |
6046 | What more insupportable than the dreadful wrath of an angry God? |
6046 | What must I say then? |
6046 | What must he do now? |
6046 | What must he do therefore? |
6046 | What nation, what people, what kind of sinners have not been subdued by the preaching of a crucified Christ? |
6046 | What need we go to the throne of grace for more? |
6046 | What need we pray for more? |
6046 | What now must be done? |
6046 | What now? |
6046 | What now? |
6046 | What or where wilt thou find in the Bible, so many privileges so affectionately entailed to any grace, as to this of the fear of God? |
6046 | What or who is he that would not also have ease from the guilt of sin? |
6046 | What or who is he that would not go to heaven? |
6046 | What other matters? |
6046 | What ponderous thoughts hast thou had of the greatness and of the immortality of thy soul? |
6046 | What power has he that is dead, as every natural man spiritually is, even dead in trespasses and sins? |
6046 | What power hath he, then, whereby to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What provision hast thou made for thy soul? |
6046 | What reason can I have to hope for an inheritance in eternal life? |
6046 | What saith he? |
6046 | What say you to that?" |
6046 | What say you, O you wounded sinners? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, backslider? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou now? |
6046 | What sayest thou to this, poor sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou, child of God? |
6046 | What sayest thou, man? |
6046 | What sayest thou, poor heart, to this? |
6046 | What sayest thou, poor soul? |
6046 | What sayest thou, soul? |
6046 | What sayest thou? |
6046 | What sayest thou? |
6046 | What says Christ? |
6046 | What says Job? |
6046 | What shall I do? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say to thee? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall he do now? |
6046 | What shall profit a man that has lost his soul? |
6046 | What shall the fly do now? |
6046 | What shall we say of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat? |
6046 | What shall, what shall not, a man, if he had it, if it would answer his design, give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | What should I do then? |
6046 | What society, but to be abandoned of all? |
6046 | What solace can he that is without God, though he were in heaven, have with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the prophets and angels? |
6046 | What spirit possesseth thee, and holds thee back from a sincere closure with thy Saviour? |
6046 | What stay, but a continual fall of heart and mind? |
6046 | What stronger argument to holiness than this:''If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous?'' |
6046 | What stronger than a free forgiveness of sins? |
6046 | What then can accrue to our enemy? |
6046 | What then is the acceptable form, and what the appointed medium consecrated for our access to God, by which prayer is sanctified and accepted? |
6046 | What then shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | What then should be the meaning? |
6046 | What then, said I, are any of your children ill? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What things? |
6046 | What think you of him who, when he tempted the wench to uncleanness, said to her, If thou wilt venture thy body, I''ll venture my soul? |
6046 | What think you of the first man, by whose sins there are millions now in hell? |
6046 | What think you? |
6046 | What this Jesus is? |
6046 | What this Jesus is? |
6046 | What though you do not preach? |
6046 | What thoughts, words, or actions can be clean, sufficiently to answer a perfect law that flows from this original? |
6046 | What time, you may ask, was required? |
6046 | What was it for Jesus to be of David''s seed? |
6046 | What was it for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6046 | What was it for Jesus to be raised thus up of God to Israel? |
6046 | What was that baptism but his death? |
6046 | What was that? |
6046 | What was the matter? |
6046 | What was the providence that God made use of as a means, either more remote or more near, to bring thee to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What will become of me, think you?'' |
6046 | What will become of you, if you die in this condition? |
6046 | What will become of you? |
6046 | What will he get of us by the bargain but a small pittance of thanks and love? |
6046 | What will not love bear with? |
6046 | What will they say then? |
6046 | What will you do, when God shall come to reckon for these things? |
6046 | What wilt thou do at this day, and the day of thy trial and judgment? |
6046 | What wilt thou do when thou shalt be damned in hell, because thou couldst not find in thine heart to ask for heaven? |
6046 | What wilt thou do, poor sinner? |
6046 | What wilt thou do? |
6046 | What wilt thou have me to do? |
6046 | What wonderful love doth there appear by this in the heart of our Lord Jesus, in suffering such things for our poor bodies and souls? |
6046 | What words wilt thou use to move him to compassion? |
6046 | What worth or value then can there be in any of their doings? |
6046 | What would he not give? |
6046 | What would he not part with at that day, the day in which he will see himself damned, if he had it, in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | What would man have more? |
6046 | What would she say? |
6046 | What would you have me do? |
6046 | What would you say? |
6046 | What would you think? |
6046 | What wouldst thou have? |
6046 | What zeal? |
6046 | What, I say, should be the reason, but that death assaulted him with his sting? |
6046 | What, Lord, any him? |
6046 | What, a Christian, and live as does the world? |
6046 | What, again; is there no breaking of the league that is betwixt sin and thy soul? |
6046 | What, and come to Christ as a sinner? |
6046 | What, or who is the righteous man? |
6046 | What, resolved to be a self- murderer, a soul murderer? |
6046 | What, said I, is your husband amiss, or do you go back in the world? |
6046 | What, saith the merit- monger, will you look for life by the obedience of another man? |
6046 | What, then, must it rely upon or trust in? |
6046 | What, then, should the sinner, if he could come there, do at this bar to plead? |
6046 | What, thought I, must it be no sin but this? |
6046 | What, what shall I say? |
6046 | What, will your husband leave preaching? |
6046 | What[ evil] hath he done?" |
6046 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6046 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6046 | When God roars( as ofttimes the coming soul hears him roar), what man that is coming can do otherwise than tremble? |
6046 | When God speaks, when God works, who can let it? |
6046 | When he was come into the house he sent for me out of my chamber; who, when I was come unto him, he said, Neighbour Bunyan, how do you do? |
6046 | When he was taken this last time, he was preaching on these words, viz.,"Dost thou believe on the Son of God?" |
6046 | When justice itself is pleased with a man, and speaks on his side, instead of speaking against him, we may well cry out, Who shall condemn? |
6046 | When shall Christ ride Lord, and King, and Advocate, upon the faith of his people, as he should? |
6046 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
6046 | When shall Jesus Christ our Lord be honoured by us as he ought? |
6046 | When the apostle had taken such a view of himself as to put himself into a maze, with an outcry also,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6046 | When the jailer said,"Sirs, What must I do to be saved?" |
6046 | When the jailor cried out,''Sirs, what must I do to be saved?'' |
6046 | When this was read, the clerk of the sessions said unto me, What say you to this? |
6046 | When thou art called to an account for thy neglects of so great salvation, what canst thou answer? |
6046 | When thou shalt see less sinners than thou art, bound up by angels in bundles, to burn them, where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6046 | Whence came the invisible power that struck Paul from his horse? |
6046 | Whence came this strange idea-- not limited to the poor negro, but felt by thousands who have watched over departing saints? |
6046 | Whence came those sudden suggestions, those gloomy fears, those heavenly rays of joy? |
6046 | Where doth Christ Jesus require such a qualification of those that are coming to him for life? |
6046 | Where doth it lay its head, but in their laps? |
6046 | Where has He called them His love, His dove, His fair one? |
6046 | Where is he that is coming[ but has not come], to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Where is he that is thus under pangs of love for the grace bestowed upon him by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Where is he that is''clothed with humility,''and that does what he is commanded''with all humility of mind''? |
6046 | Where is he that seeks and groans for salvation? |
6046 | Where is he? |
6046 | Where is now any room for the righteousness of men? |
6046 | Where is that jot or tittle of the law that is able to object against my doings for want of satisfaction?" |
6046 | Where is the man that pursues with all his might what but now he seemed to ask for with all his heart? |
6046 | Where now is the man that feareth the Lord? |
6046 | Where shall we begin? |
6046 | Where was the righteous forsaken? |
6046 | Where will you be found in another world? |
6046 | Where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6046 | Where, now, is room for man''s righteousness, either in the whole, or as to any part thereof? |
6046 | Where? |
6046 | Wherefore a self- righteous man is but a painted Satan, or a devil in fine clothes; but thinks he so of himself? |
6046 | Wherefore has God put this sword, WE HAVE AN ADVOCATE, into thy hand, but to fight thy way through the world? |
6046 | Wherefore hast thou anything of the truth of Christ in thy heart? |
6046 | Wherefore is it said, Begin at Jerusalem, if the Jerusalem sinner is not to have the benefit of it? |
6046 | Wherefore puttest thou thy hand in thy bosom, as being afraid to touch the hem of the garment of the Lord? |
6046 | Wherefore then served the cross? |
6046 | Wherefore thou that hast a broken heart take courage, God bids thee take courage; say therefore to thy soul,''Why are thou cast down, O my soul?'' |
6046 | Wherefore, I ask again, hast thou been with him? |
6046 | Wherefore, at present, lay the thoughts of thy election by, and ask thyself these questions: Do I see my lost condition? |
6046 | Wherefore, dost thou think, art thou told of all this, but to encourage thee to come to the throne of grace? |
6046 | Wherefore, he falls to crying out, What shall I do? |
6046 | Wherefore, wouldst thou be a praying man, a man that would pray and prevail? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherein is he to be accounted of? |
6046 | Whether goes the child, when it catcheth harm, but to its father, to its mother? |
6046 | Which of the twelve ever thought that Judas would have proved a devil? |
6046 | Which of these two covenants art thou under, soul? |
6046 | Which wouldest thou have prevail? |
6046 | While I was on this sudden thus overtaken with surprise, Wife, said I, is there ever such a scripture, I must go to Jesus? |
6046 | While Jacob was afraid of Esau, how heavily did he drive even towards the promised land? |
6046 | Whither did his desires bring him? |
6046 | Whither did they carry him? |
6046 | Whither is he like to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Whither is he to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Whither may he arrive, and yet be an undone man, under this covenant? |
6046 | Whither will you go? |
6046 | Whither wilt thou go? |
6046 | Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? |
6046 | Who are brought in?] |
6046 | Who are so lawless, so little advanced in civilization, as the poor Irish, Spaniards, or Italians? |
6046 | Who are they that are saved by grace? |
6046 | Who believes as he desires to believe? |
6046 | Who but Jesus Christ would have undertaken such a task as the salvation of the sinner is, if Jesus Christ had passed us by? |
6046 | Who but an idiot or a maniac would attempt to reduce the mental powers of all men to uniformity? |
6046 | Who can contradict it? |
6046 | Who can make them see that Christ has made blind? |
6046 | Who can stand before his indignation? |
6046 | Who dares limit the Almighty? |
6046 | Who ever was mad enough to ask Moses to intercede for him, and surely he is as able as Mary or any other saint? |
6046 | Who is He? |
6046 | Who is able to separate us from the love of Jesus Christ our Lord? |
6046 | Who is he that condemneth me? |
6046 | Who is he that condemneth? |
6046 | Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
6046 | Who is mine adversary? |
6046 | Who knows the power of his anger? |
6046 | Who knows what will become of the ark of God? |
6046 | Who put''a new song''into the mouth of David? |
6046 | Who shall do so? |
6046 | Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?'' |
6046 | Who so bold as blind Bayard? |
6046 | Who so ready to fly to the physician as those who feel their case to be desperate? |
6046 | Who so vilified as the righteous? |
6046 | Who they are that are actually brought into His free and unchangeable Covenant of Grace, and how they are brought in? |
6046 | Who told thee so? |
6046 | Who told thee so? |
6046 | Who understands them unto perfection? |
6046 | Who was it that scared Job with dreams, and terrified him with visions? |
6046 | Who will grieve for thy sorrow, that didst not count mercy worth asking for? |
6046 | Who will stand up for me against the workers of iniquity?" |
6046 | Who would knowingly go over a pearl, and yet not count it worth stooping for? |
6046 | Who would not be here? |
6046 | Who would not fear thee, said Jeremiah, O king of nations, for to thee doth it appertain? |
6046 | Who would not hope to enjoy life eternal, that has an inheritance in the God of Israel? |
6046 | Who, now seeing all this is so effectually done, shall lay anything, the least thing? |
6046 | Who, then, shall condemn when Christ has died, and doth also make intercession? |
6046 | Who? |
6046 | Who? |
6046 | Why at his trial? |
6046 | Why before them? |
6046 | Why betook not I myself to the holy Word of God? |
6046 | Why comest thou then so slowly? |
6046 | Why did I judge of his ability to save me by the voice of my shallow reason, and the voice of a guilty conscience? |
6046 | Why did I not humbly cast my soul at his blessed footstool for mercy? |
6046 | Why did he say he would receive the coming sinner? |
6046 | Why dost thou make him the object of thy scorn? |
6046 | Why dost thou put him off? |
6046 | Why dost thou sin and provoke the eyes of his glory? |
6046 | Why dost thou stop thine ear? |
6046 | Why have we not a catalogue of some holy men that were so in their own eyes, and in the judgment of the world? |
6046 | Why in his name, if he be not accepted of God? |
6046 | Why is Christ bid to gird his sword upon his thigh? |
6046 | Why is it a free and unchangeable grace? |
6046 | Why is it then, that thou livest when they are dead, and that thou hast a promise of pardon when they had not? |
6046 | Why is man''s heart compared to fallow ground, God''s Word to a plough, and his ministers to ploughmen? |
6046 | Why is the conversion of the soul compared to the grafting of a tree, if that be done without cutting? |
6046 | Why may not I expect the same when anguish and guilt is upon me?'' |
6046 | Why not another? |
6046 | Why not familiar with sinners, provided we hate their spots and blemishes, and seek that they may be healed of them? |
6046 | Why not fellowly with our carnal neighbours? |
6046 | Why not go to the poor man''s house, and give him a penny, and a Scripture to think upon? |
6046 | Why not live before him? |
6046 | Why shall thy deceived heart turn thee aside, that thou canst not deliver thy soul,''nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6046 | Why should God beseech us to reconcile to him, but that we might hope in him? |
6046 | Why should Satan molest those whose ways he knows will bring them to him? |
6046 | Why should not devils and damned souls despair? |
6046 | Why should not others arise as extensively to bless the world as Bunyan did? |
6046 | Why should the righteous partake of the same plagues with the wicked? |
6046 | Why should the saints look for any good from thee? |
6046 | Why should we strive? |
6046 | Why sittest thou still? |
6046 | Why so, I pray you? |
6046 | Why so, seeing circumcision is not one of the ten words[ commandments]? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why wilt thou not come to Jesus Christ, since thou art a Jerusalem sinner? |
6046 | Why"doth a living man complain, a man for the punishment of his sins?" |
6046 | Why, Christian, what is thy experience? |
6046 | Why, he that saith, They shall come, shall he not make it good? |
6046 | Why, he would say, I have yet with my father in store for my brethren, wherefore then seekest thou to stop his hand? |
6046 | Why, man, doth the fear of God make a man idle and slothful? |
6046 | Why, soul? |
6046 | Why, then, is it said God beholdeth every one that is proud, and abases him? |
6046 | Why, then, should we conceit that the Son will forgive these that come not to the Father by him? |
6046 | Why, then, wilt thou set thy heart upon that which is not? |
6046 | Why, thou must have a safe- conduct to heaven? |
6046 | Why, truly thus-- Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly, and with very cold devotion? |
6046 | Why, what had Jonathan done? |
6046 | Why, what is it? |
6046 | Why, what is the matter? |
6046 | Why, what is thine end in coming to Christ? |
6046 | Why, what wilt thou make of God? |
6046 | Why, who are thou? |
6046 | Why, with the Lord there is great mercy for thee? |
6046 | Why, would you have us do nothing? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Wicked men talk of heaven, and say they hope and desire to go to heaven, even while they continue wicked men; but, I say, what would they do there? |
6046 | Will He esteem thy riches? |
6046 | Will a less thing than heaven, than glory and eternal life, answer thy desires? |
6046 | Will he always call upon God? |
6046 | Will he hold him when Shall- come puts forth itself, will he then let12 him, for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Will he leave him to recover himself by the strength of his now languishing graces? |
6046 | Will he let him alone in his apostasy? |
6046 | Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6046 | Will he show wonders to such a dead dog as I am? |
6046 | Will he take this advantage to destroy the sinner? |
6046 | Will he urge that he will plead against us? |
6046 | Will it not amaze them to be unexpectedly excluded from life and salvation? |
6046 | Will it not be amazing to some of the damned themselves, to see some come to hell that then they shall see come thither? |
6046 | Will my profession, or the faith I think I have, carry me through all the trials of God''s tribunal? |
6046 | Will not a humble posture best become us when we have humbling providences in prospect? |
6046 | Will temporal things make thy soul to live? |
6046 | Will the wrath of God be a pleasant dish to thy taste? |
6046 | Will these be excuses for them, as the case now standeth with them? |
6046 | Will they do me any good when Christ comes? |
6046 | Will they not also be amazed one at another, while they remember how in their lifetime they counted themselves fellow- heirs of life? |
6046 | Will those, who have us hither cast? |
6046 | Will you not hear the errand of Christ, although He telleth you tidings of peace and salvation? |
6046 | Will you rebel against the king? |
6046 | Will you take up the cross, come after Me, and so preserve your souls from perishing? |
6046 | Will you trust to the blood that was shed upon the cross, that run down to the ground, and perished in the dust? |
6046 | Wilt not thou serve him with joyfulness in the enjoyment of all good things, even him by whom thou art to be made blessed for ever? |
6046 | Wilt thou answer this question now, or wilt thou take time to do it? |
6046 | Wilt thou by thus doing endeavour to keep them wrapt up still in the dust of the earth, there to dwell with the worm and corruption? |
6046 | Wilt thou continue to contemn and reproach the living God? |
6046 | Wilt thou not cry? |
6046 | Wilt thou stand by thy doings? |
6046 | With promises, did I say? |
6046 | With respect to thy desires, what are they? |
6046 | With that, one of them said, Who is your God? |
6046 | Witness they that live in hell; if it be proper to say they live in hell? |
6046 | Would God else have given him the heaven to dispose of to us that believe, and would he else have told us so? |
6046 | Would I share in this salvation by faith in him? |
6046 | Would not By- ends, Facing- both- ways, and Save- all, have jumped to the same conclusion? |
6046 | Would not Heaven be better to me than my sins? |
6046 | Would not His dying only of a natural death have served the turn? |
6046 | Would she not say, You mock me? |
6046 | Would the people learn to be wanton? |
6046 | Would they learn to be drunkards? |
6046 | Would you be saved by keeping the law? |
6046 | Would you have us make Christ such a drudge as to do all, while we sit idling still? |
6046 | Would you have us run into temptation, to try if they be sound or rotten? |
6046 | Would you not say, I did not think of covenants, or study the nature of them? |
6046 | Would you serve your prince so? |
6046 | Would you stand just before God thereby? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this fear of God? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of godly fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou know whether Christ is thine Advocate or no? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be saved from guilt and filth too? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be saved with a thorough salvation? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be saved? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be the servant of thy Saviour? |
6046 | Wouldst thou have the kingdom of God come indeed, and also his will to be done in earth as it is in heaven? |
6046 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine Advocate, whether he has taken in hand to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine advocate? |
6046 | Wouldst thou know, sinner, what thou art? |
6046 | Wouldst thou then know this throne of grace, where God sits to hear prayers and give grace? |
6046 | Wouldst thou willingly hold out, stand to the last, and be more than a conqueror? |
6046 | Wouldst thou, then, know the greatest things of God? |
6046 | Wouldst thou, with all thy heart, be saved by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Yea, I say again, if judgment must begin at them, will it not make thee think, What shall become of me? |
6046 | Yea, and if he ask me, Why I came home no sooner? |
6046 | Yea, and it has its followers ready at its heels continually to blow its applause abroad, saying,''Who will show us any[ other] good?'' |
6046 | Yea, and why is death suffered to slay the body? |
6046 | Yea, are they not hurtful in the day of grace? |
6046 | Yea, canst thou appeal to the Lord Jesus, who knoweth perfectly the very inmost thought of thy heart, that this is true? |
6046 | Yea, canst thou say, My soul, my soul waiteth upon God, my soul thirsteth for Him, my soul followeth hard after him? |
6046 | Yea, dost thou not vehemently desire to desire to depart and to be with Christ? |
6046 | Yea, hath the truth itself bestowed it upon us, and shall those to whom it is given, even given by Scripture of truth, be yet deprived thereof? |
6046 | Yea, if the works of a sanctified man are blameworthy, how shall the works of a bad man set him clear in the eyes of Divine justice? |
6046 | Yea, is it not meet that to every one they should confess what sorry ones they are? |
6046 | Yea, is it not reason that in all things we should study his exaltation here, since he in all things contrives our honour and glory in heaven? |
6046 | Yea, open thy heart, and take this man, not into judgment, but into mercy with thee? |
6046 | Yea, suppose the child should now, through ignorance, cry, and say, This man is now no more my father; is he, therefore, now no more his father? |
6046 | Yea, the passover being to be eaten on the even of his sufferings, with what desires did he desire to eat it with his disciples? |
6046 | Yea, what a word of worth, and goodness, and blessedness, is it to him that lies continually upon the wrath of a guilty conscience? |
6046 | Yea, what do you think John desired, when he cried out to Christ to come quickly? |
6046 | Yea, what shall we say of such that are the inventors and promoters of wickedness, as of oaths, beastly talk, or the like? |
6046 | Yea, what should they do among that company that are saved alone by grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Yea, what works of that man doth God impute to him that he yet justifies as ungodly? |
6046 | Yea, wherefore hath God also given it out that there is none other name given to men under heaven whereby we must be saved? |
6046 | Yea, why is he commanded to let it be so, if the people would bow and fall kindly under him, and heartily implore his grace without it? |
6046 | Yea,"how oft is the candle of the wicked put out?" |
6046 | Yes; for I think if I were deceived before, if I were comforted by a spirit of delusion before, why may it not be so again? |
6046 | Yet the question is, Are they absolutely or conditionally promised? |
6046 | Yet, hast thou fallen? |
6046 | You may ask me, What is it to come boldly? |
6046 | You may ask me, what those things are? |
6046 | You may ask, How should I know those shepherds? |
6046 | You read they come weeping and mourning, and with tears; they knock and they cry for mercy; but what did tears avail? |
6046 | You will say, How should I know that? |
6046 | [ 15] Was this love of God extended to him because of his personal virtues? |
6046 | [ 163] Can a man enter upon the work of the ministry from a better school than this? |
6046 | [ 17] But is he now quit? |
6046 | [ 17] Can it be imagined that when the wicked are in this distress, but that they will desire to be saved? |
6046 | [ 217] Mr. Wingate asked Bunyan why he did not follow his calling and go to church? |
6046 | [ 21] What do all their acts declare, but this, that they either know not God, or fear not what he can do unto them? |
6046 | [ 24] Seest thou the poor? |
6046 | [ 25] The trial we have before God is of otherguise importance,[26] it concerns our eternal happiness or misery; and yet dare we affront him? |
6046 | [ 2] He asked the constable what we did, where we were met together, and what we had with us? |
6046 | [ 31] And how many times are they that fear God said to be delivered both by God and his holy angels? |
6046 | [ 338]''Why was the brazen laver made of the women''s looking- glasses? |
6046 | [ 33] What is this to me, O law, that thou accusest me, and sayest that I have committed many sins? |
6046 | [ 38] But is our present need all the need that we are like to have, and the present work all the work that we have to do in the world? |
6046 | [ 39] Will it be comfort to thee to see the Saviour turn Judge? |
6046 | [ 5] The genuine disciple"who thinketh no evil"will say, Can this be so now? |
6046 | [ 5] Where is the man, except he be a willful perverter of Divine truth, who can charge the doctrines of grace with licentiousness? |
6046 | [ 6] Would you be ready to die in peace? |
6046 | [ How should we strive?] |
6046 | [ WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6046 | [ WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6046 | [ Why should we strive?] |
6046 | a promise that declares, yea, that engageth Christ Jesus to open his heart to receive the coming sinner? |
6046 | a promise that looks at the first moving of the heart after Jesus Christ? |
6046 | afraid to go to Joseph''s house? |
6046 | all who? |
6046 | and again, He beholds the proud afar off? |
6046 | and again,"O death, where is thy sting? |
6046 | and also how God doth make a man righteous with it? |
6046 | and are notions and whimsies of such credit with thee that thou must leave the foundation to follow them? |
6046 | and are you stronger than He? |
6046 | and art thou for ever resolved so to do? |
6046 | and canst thou find in thy heart to labour to lay more sins upon His back? |
6046 | and comes as it were to the borders of doubt, saying,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6046 | and falsify their words for thee? |
6046 | and fears as he desires to fear God''s name? |
6046 | and from whence would the flaming flame ascend highest, and make the most roaring noise? |
6046 | and how could Abel be yet pleasing in his sight, for the sake of his own righteousness, when it is plain that Abel had not yet done good works? |
6046 | and how if all our faith, and Christ, and Scriptures, should be but a think- so too? |
6046 | and how? |
6046 | and if to two, why not to four, and so to eight? |
6046 | and in Thy name have cast out devils?" |
6046 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6046 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6046 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6046 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6046 | and is God''s love and care of the salvation of the souls of sinners infinitely greater than is their own care for their own souls? |
6046 | and loves as he desires to love? |
6046 | and shall I count anything too dear for Him? |
6046 | and so, consequently, say unto God,"Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways; or, What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6046 | and that eternal life with God''s favour, is better than a temporal life in God''s displeasure? |
6046 | and that made the jailer cry out, and that with great trembling of soul,"Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" |
6046 | and the company of God, Christ, saints, and angels, be better than the company of Cain, Judas, Balaam, with the devils in the furnace of fire? |
6046 | and to say now, Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner? |
6046 | and to what did they make him stoop? |
6046 | and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?" |
6046 | and what course should I take to be delivered from this sad and troublesome condition? |
6046 | and what fruits in all their labour? |
6046 | and what is the criterion of Christian charity, except it be''zeal for the salvation of others in his heart?'' |
6046 | and what is the reason of that, but a persuasion that there is no help for him in God? |
6046 | and what profit should we have if we pray unto him?'' |
6046 | and what still wilt thou further do, if mercy, and blood and grace doth not prevent thee? |
6046 | and when it is committed? |
6046 | and where is the place of my rest? |
6046 | and where, when He speaketh of them, doth He express a communion that they have with Him by the similitude of conjugal love? |
6046 | and whether the holy Scriptures were not rather a fable, and cunning story, than the holy and pure Word of God? |
6046 | and why I did not content myself with following my calling? |
6046 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6046 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6046 | and why did he so long for it, but of desire to do us good? |
6046 | and why dost Thou pass such a sad sentence of condemnation upon us? |
6046 | and why may we not go to Christ in the name of the Father, as well as to the Father in the name of Christ? |
6046 | and why must he make his arrows sharp, and all, that the heart may with this sword and these arrows be shot, wounded, and made to bleed? |
6046 | and will he judge a man just that is a sinner? |
6046 | and yet all this is included in this word saved, and in the answer to that question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6046 | and, I say, as I said before, in whom is it, light, like so to shine, as in the souls of great sinners? |
6046 | and,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6046 | and,''What wouldst thou have me do?'' |
6046 | any him that cometh to thee? |
6046 | are not the things that are eternal best? |
6046 | are these the effects of a purblind spirit? |
6046 | are these the tokens of a blessed man? |
6046 | are they not rather the fruits of an eagle- eyed confidence? |
6046 | are we better than they? |
6046 | are we better than they? |
6046 | are we stronger than He?'' |
6046 | are ye made to be taken and destroyed? |
6046 | are you not ashamed of your doings? |
6046 | arise: why standest thou still? |
6046 | art thou one of them that hast cast off fear? |
6046 | art thou weary? |
6046 | art thou willing? |
6046 | because Christ is our pattern, is he not our passover? |
6046 | but how much is there of it?'' |
6046 | but how shall I come by them? |
6046 | can the floods drown it? |
6046 | can these be possessed with this grace of fear? |
6046 | canst thou give no better counsel touching those whom God hath wounded, than to send them to the ordinances of hell for help? |
6046 | canst thou imagine that such a gnat, a flea, a pismire as thou art, can take and possess the heavens, and mantle thyself up in the eternal glories? |
6046 | canst thou judge no better? |
6046 | cast a world behind thy back for the welfare of a soul? |
6046 | count convictions for sin, mournings for sin, and repentance for sin, melancholy? |
6046 | did they now choose him to be their king? |
6046 | did they say, did they do nothing while they sat before the throne? |
6046 | did you see how I turned again to those vanities from which some time before I fell? |
6046 | do they not tend to surfeit the heart, and to alienate a man and his mind from the things that are better? |
6046 | do you design the glory of God, in the salvation of your soul? |
6046 | do you not understand that God is resolved to have the mastery one way or another? |
6046 | dost thou know what thou art? |
6046 | dost thou not know that thou by so doing deferrest the coming of thy dearest Lord? |
6046 | dost thou think that God, Christ, Prophets, and Scriptures, will all lie for thee? |
6046 | doth his coming to Jesus Christ offend thee? |
6046 | doth his forsaking of his sins and pleasures offend thee? |
6046 | doth his pursuing of his own salvation offend thee? |
6046 | doth not this man deserve to be ranked among the extravagant ones? |
6046 | doth she give up her faith and hope, and return to that fear that begot the first bondage? |
6046 | fear God and a liar, and one that cries for mercies to spend them upon thy lusts? |
6046 | fear God and be proud, and covetous, a wine- bibber, and a riotous eater of flesh? |
6046 | fear God without a change of heart and life? |
6046 | fear God, and in a state of nature? |
6046 | flow they not, think you, from faith of the finest sort, and are they not bred in the bosom of a truly mortified soul? |
6046 | for a man must know before he does, else how should he divert[13] himself to do? |
6046 | for providing friends to receive him to harbour when others should turn him out of their doors? |
6046 | for to do things, but not in God''s fear, to what will it amount? |
6046 | has God bestowed a contrite spirit upon thee? |
6046 | hast thou cried out? |
6046 | hast thou cried? |
6046 | hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not? |
6046 | hath it ears? |
6046 | hath it eyes? |
6046 | have they not in them power to loose the bands of nature, and to harden the soul against sorrow? |
6046 | how came the prophet by this sight? |
6046 | how canst thou deal so unkindly with such a sweet Lord Jesus? |
6046 | how doth he behave himself in his presence? |
6046 | how he found that which some of his children sought and missed? |
6046 | how much of his Spirit, and the grace of his Word? |
6046 | how poorly will these be able to plead the virtues of the law to which they have cleaved, when God shall answer them,''Whom dost thou pass in beauty? |
6046 | how readest thou? |
6046 | how shall I come at Christ? |
6046 | if it were not for these three or four words, now how might I be comforted? |
6046 | if, at any time, any of them are mentioned, how seemingly coldly doth the record of scripture present them to us? |
6046 | in sinking into the bottom of the sea with company? |
6046 | in the body of his flesh,[ that then must be first: to what?] |
6046 | is all right with my soul? |
6046 | is man such a fool as to believe things, and yet not look after them? |
6046 | is sitting alone, pensive under God''s hand, reading the Scriptures, and hearing of sermons,& c., the way to be undone? |
6046 | is the soul so precious a thing? |
6046 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | is there not life and mettle in them? |
6046 | is thy heart still so stubborn as not to say yet,"Let us fear the Lord?" |
6046 | it is the gift of the Father--"how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him( Luke 11:13)? |
6046 | it was for sufferings; and why made he ready for them but because he saw they wrought out for him a''far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory?'' |
6046 | may not, therefore, the spirit of bondage be sent again to put me in fear, as at first? |
6046 | must he save them all? |
6046 | must ye utterly perish in your own corruptions? |
6046 | must you mind this world to the damning of your souls? |
6046 | nay, may they not both fall short? |
6046 | none for his loving Son that has showed his love, and died for thee? |
6046 | not fear in the day of evil? |
6046 | not when the iniquity of thy heels compasseth thee about? |
6046 | of works? |
6046 | or a way for the lightning of thunder to cause it to rain on the earth, where no man is: on the wilderness wherein there is no man?'' |
6046 | or art thou none of those that should look after the salvation of their soul? |
6046 | or can there be no salvation? |
6046 | or dost think thou mayest lose thy soul, and save thyself? |
6046 | or dost thou but dream thereof? |
6046 | or dost thou think that thou shalt escape the judgment? |
6046 | or doth grace teach you to plead for the flesh, or the making provision for the lusts thereof? |
6046 | or has the day of grace been suffered to pass by never to return? |
6046 | or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6046 | or how is that? |
6046 | or how would she frame an answer? |
6046 | or if Christ is the throne of grace and mercy- seat, how doth he appear before God as sitting there, to sprinkle that now with his blood? |
6046 | or if it so may be said; yet whether thou art one of them? |
6046 | or in going to hell, in burning in hell, and in enduring the everlasting pains of hell, with company? |
6046 | or must the effectualness of Christ''s merits, as touching our perseverance, be helped on by the doings of man? |
6046 | or no forgiveness of sins--"If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?" |
6046 | or of restoring what he had oft taken away? |
6046 | or shall we be base in life because God by grace hath secured us from wrath to come? |
6046 | or shall we not much matter what manner of lives we live, because we are set free from the law of sin and death? |
6046 | or that he was to be buried in Joseph''s sepulchre? |
6046 | or that he will speak for them to God for whom he will not plead against the devil? |
6046 | or that when the gate of mercy is shut up in wrath, he will at thy pleasure, and to the reversing of his own counsel, open it again to thee? |
6046 | or that your prayers come from the braying, panting, and longing of your hearts? |
6046 | or the tabernacle made with corruptible things, to the body of Christ, or heaven itself? |
6046 | or those either who are so far off from sense of, and shame for, sin, that it is the only thing they hug and embrace? |
6046 | or to say, all this is mine, but have nothing to show for it? |
6046 | or to see this great appearance of this great God, and the Lord Jesus Christ? |
6046 | or was not this man like to be a gainer by so doing? |
6046 | or what advantage can he get by his thus vexing and troubling the children of the Most High? |
6046 | or what is a remnant of wheat to the whole harvest? |
6046 | or what is he? |
6046 | or what profit have we if we keep his ways?" |
6046 | or what profit shall I have if I keep his commandments? |
6046 | or who are they that by this exhortation are called upon to come? |
6046 | or who did Christ come into the world to save, but the chief of sinners? |
6046 | or will that penny that supplied my want the other day, I say, will the same penny also, without a supply, supply my wants today? |
6046 | or will that seasonable shower which fell last year, be, without supplies, a seasonable help to the grain and grass that is growing now? |
6046 | or will the law slay both him and us, and that for the same transgression? |
6046 | or will you hate your life, and save it? |
6046 | or will you not mind your callings at all? |
6046 | or will you shun the cross to save your lives, and so run the danger of eternal damnation? |
6046 | or wilt thou be desperate, and venture all? |
6046 | or wouldst thou know if thou hast? |
6046 | or''him,''by believing thou neither wilt nor canst? |
6046 | or, Can the merits of the Lord Jesus reach, according to the law of heaven, a man in this condition? |
6046 | or, as he was in the flesh? |
6046 | or, because we should in these things follow his steps, died he not for our sins? |
6046 | or, by acts and works of the flesh? |
6046 | or, in other words,''am I born again?'' |
6046 | or, in the humble hope that your course is accomplished, are you patiently waiting the heavenly messenger? |
6046 | or, what is a handful out of the rest of the world? |
6046 | or, what need you trouble us with these nice distinctions? |
6046 | poor man, what wilt thou do when these three things beset thee? |
6046 | pull no longer; why shouldest thou be thine own executioner? |
6046 | room, I say, for man''s righteousness, as to his acceptance and justification? |
6046 | saith Satan; why, that will I. Ay, saith he, but who can do it, and prevail? |
6046 | saith the Lord; shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this?" |
6046 | saith the Lord; will ye not tremble at my presence?" |
6046 | saith the backslider that is returned, did you see how I left my God? |
6046 | saith the child, pray do not hurt me: I then have replied, Canst thou do nothing with this finger? |
6046 | says the honourable man, must I take mercy upon no higher consideration than the thief on the cross? |
6046 | seest thou the fatherless? |
6046 | seest thou thy foe in distress? |
6046 | set more by thy soul than by all the world? |
6046 | shall Christ become a drudge for you; and will you be drudges for the devil? |
6046 | shall I threaten them? |
6046 | shall not the worthiness of the Son of God be sufficient to save from the sin of man? |
6046 | shall the desire of the righteous be granted? |
6046 | shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6046 | shall we sin that grace may abound? |
6046 | should we pray for faith, for justification by grace, and a truly sanctified heart? |
6046 | sin, what art thou? |
6046 | so was he: are we tempted to commit idolatry, and to worship the devil? |
6046 | so was he: are we tempted to murder ourselves? |
6046 | so was he: are we tempted with the bewitching vanities of this world? |
6046 | such privileges as these? |
6046 | teach men to put God and his Word out of their minds, by running to merry company, by running to the world, by gossiping? |
6046 | than He that shook hands with the Father in making of the covenant? |
6046 | that he was to be crowned with thorns? |
6046 | that he was to be crucified between two thieves, and to be pierced till blood and water came out of his side? |
6046 | that he was to be scourged of the soldiers? |
6046 | that is, he is so;''is he a pleasant child?'' |
6046 | that remember thy triumphant victory? |
6046 | that the damned shall never be burned out in hell? |
6046 | that word came suddenly upon me,"What shall we then say to these things? |
6046 | the desires of the flesh, or the lusts of the spirit, whose side art thou of? |
6046 | then how should I come? |
6046 | then they may be coming to him, for aught you know; and why will ye be worse than the brute, to speak evil of the things you know not? |
6046 | thou thinkest to escape the fear; but what wilt thou do with the pit? |
6046 | thy God has bidden thee''open thy mouth wide''; he has bid thee open it wide, and promised, saying,''And I will fill it''; and wilt thou not desire? |
6046 | to believe great things, and yet not to concern himself with them? |
6046 | to hear this trump of God? |
6046 | to see him that wept and died for the sin of the world now ease his mind on Christ- abhorring sinners by rendering to them the just judgment of God? |
6046 | to the salvation of the soul? |
6046 | to truck+ with the devil?'' |
6046 | was made the curse of God for me? |
6046 | were they silent? |
6046 | what a fool has sin made of thee? |
6046 | what a privilege is this, but who believes it? |
6046 | what aileth the man thus to express himself? |
6046 | what an ass art thou become to sin? |
6046 | what are you doing? |
6046 | what care they for his Word? |
6046 | what comfort in their greatness? |
6046 | what does a righteous man desire? |
6046 | what does not the world owe to thee and to the great Being who could produce such as thee? |
6046 | what is deliverance from hell without the enjoyment of God? |
6046 | what is ease without the peace and enjoyment of God? |
6046 | what is faith to possession? |
6046 | what is he adoing now? |
6046 | what is he advantaged by his rich adventure? |
6046 | what is like being saved? |
6046 | what is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
6046 | what is there wrapped up in this Christ, this secret of God? |
6046 | what is this to the loss about which we have been speaking all this while? |
6046 | what is thy country, and of what people art thou?" |
6046 | what need we stand to prove the sun is light, the fire hot, the water wet? |
6046 | what sayest thou? |
6046 | what was it that he spake? |
6046 | what will become of you if you die in this condition? |
6046 | what, none at all? |
6046 | what, resolved to murder thine own soul? |
6046 | when he is in the Spirit, and sees in the Spirit, do you think his tongue can tell? |
6046 | when we believed, or before? |
6046 | when? |
6046 | where is thy sting? |
6046 | where is thy victory? |
6046 | where shall I see myself anon, after a few times more have passed over me? |
6046 | where will they leave their glory? |
6046 | which is all one as if he had said, Why dost thou commit murder? |
6046 | which is strongest, thinkest thou, God or thee? |
6046 | which the law as a Covenant of Works calleth for; and canst thou, being carnal, do that? |
6046 | whither shall I go when I die, if sweet Christ has not pity for my soul?'' |
6046 | whither will they fly then? |
6046 | whither wilt thou fly for help? |
6046 | who among the sons of the mighty can be likened unto the Lord?'' |
6046 | who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" |
6046 | who believes this talk? |
6046 | who can abide in the fierceness of his anger? |
6046 | who can act reason that hath not reason? |
6046 | who can deliver me? |
6046 | who compelled Thee to swear? |
6046 | who has a thimbleful thereof? |
6046 | who is able to conceive the inexpressible, inconceivable joys that are there? |
6046 | who knows the power of God''s wrath? |
6046 | who smells the stink of sin? |
6046 | who so bold with God, and who so bold with men as he? |
6046 | who then that hath the faith of him can do otherwise but desire to be with him? |
6046 | who thinks of this? |
6046 | who would not be in this condition? |
6046 | who would not be in this glory? |
6046 | who would slight convictions that are on their souls, which( if not slighted) tend so much for their good? |
6046 | why am I damned? |
6046 | why did not I give glory to the redeeming blood of Jesus? |
6046 | why in his name if his undertakings for us are not well- pleasing to God? |
6046 | why shouldest thou pull vengeance down from heaven upon thee? |
6046 | why, what shall they see? |
6046 | why? |
6046 | will he be able to stand to his refusal? |
6046 | will he pursue his desperate denial? |
6046 | will it avail? |
6046 | will this content thee, the Lord will fulfil thy desires? |
6046 | wilt thou comfort thyself with this? |
6046 | wilt thou not desire? |
6046 | wilt thou still be unwilling to hasten righteousness? |
6046 | wilt thou yet loiter in the work of thy day? |
6046 | works that are done by virtue of great grace, and the abundance of the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
6046 | would they neglect salvation as they did before? |
6046 | would they not have a more comfortable house and home for their souls?'' |
6046 | wouldst thou be saved? |
6046 | yea, and to do it more and more? |
6046 | yea, it is impossible else that he should ever cry out with all his heart,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6046 | yea, what can make that man happy that, for his not coming to Jesus Christ for life, must be damned in hell? |
6046 | yea, what like to be taught in the way that thou shalt choose? |
6046 | yea, why should not man despair of getting to heaven by his own abilities? |
6046 | you may say, what judgments? |
6049 | A new heart also will I give them; a new heart, what a one is that? |
6049 | A wounded spirit who can bear? |
6049 | A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | And God said unto Noah,or told Noah his purpose: The same way he went with Abraham:"Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do?" |
6049 | And Moses said unto the Lord, Wherefore hast thou afflicted thy servant? |
6049 | And he said, What hast thou done? 6049 And he said, Who told thee that thou wast naked? |
6049 | And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? |
6049 | And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? |
6049 | And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? |
6049 | And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? |
6049 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? 6049 And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother?" |
6049 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel? |
6049 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Why art thou wroth? 6049 And wherefore slew he him? |
6049 | And why,saith he,"dost thou ask Abishag for Adonijah? |
6049 | But can you in very deed make these things manifestly evident from the Word of God? 6049 But doth not the scripture say, that it is the Spirit of Christ that doth convince of sin?" |
6049 | But what must they do that have unbelieving ones? 6049 But women have sometimes cases, which modesty will not admit should be made known to men, what must they do then?" |
6049 | By which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you..What was that? |
6049 | Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? 6049 Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? |
6049 | Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? 6049 Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him?" |
6049 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
6049 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee,saith the Lord? |
6049 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that he shall dealin judgment"with thee?" |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? 6049 Does Satan suggest that God will not hear your stammering and chattering prayers? |
6049 | Enter in; enter into what, or whither, but into a state or place, or both? |
6049 | Fear ye not me? 6049 Fear ye not me? |
6049 | For the Lord taketh pleasure in his people,and what follows? |
6049 | For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? 6049 For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? |
6049 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? 6049 Has any man sinned? |
6049 | Hast thou eaten of the tree? |
6049 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
6049 | His father,says the text,"had not displeased him at any time in( so much as) saying, Why hast thou done so?" |
6049 | How doth God know,say they,"Can he judge through the thick cloud?" |
6049 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? |
6049 | How shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? |
6049 | I know not: am I my brother''s keeper? |
6049 | I know whom I have believed,I know him, said Paul; and what follows? |
6049 | I will,saith Christ;"I will,"saith Satan; but whose will shall stand? |
6049 | I,saith he,"even I, am he that comforteth you; who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall die"( Isa 51:12)? |
6049 | If Christ hath enlightened all men as he is God( as thou confessest) then hath he not enlightened all men as he is the Son of God? 6049 If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6049 | If I be a master, where is my fear? |
6049 | If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? 6049 In hope of eternal life,"how so? |
6049 | Is Ephraim my dear son? 6049 Is any afflicted? |
6049 | Is anything too hard for the Lord? 6049 Is it such a fast that I have chosen? |
6049 | Is not God in the height of heaven? 6049 Is not he rightly called Jacob?" |
6049 | Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? |
6049 | Is thine eye evil, because I am good? 6049 It is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth?" |
6049 | Jesus stretched forth his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6049 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? 6049 Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? |
6049 | Mine own arm brought salvation,saith he, but how? |
6049 | My God, My God,saith He,"why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
6049 | Now is My soul troubled, and what shall I say? |
6049 | Now,as the Psalmist says,"Who is this King of glory?" |
6049 | O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? |
6049 | O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6049 | Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
6049 | Seemeth it to you,saith David,"a light thing to be a king''s son- in- law?" |
6049 | Shall I not visit for these things? 6049 Shall iron break the northern iron and the steel?" |
6049 | Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? |
6049 | Shall we sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, and will they not stone us? |
6049 | Shall we- sin that grace may abound? 6049 Sinner, O why so thoughtless grown? |
6049 | Sirs, what must I do to be saved? |
6049 | Stand in awe,saith he,"and sin not"; and again,"my heart standeth in awe of thy word"; and again,"Let all the earth fear the Lord"; what is that? |
6049 | That which is afar off, and exceeding deep, who can find out? |
6049 | The Lord said,--Go, but David replied, Whither shall I go? 6049 Then cometh the end,"saith Paul,"when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father;"But when shall that be? |
6049 | This is the victory,--even our faith; and"who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth?" |
6049 | Thou tellest my wanderings: put thou my tears into thy bottle; are they not in thy book? |
6049 | Tush,say they,"they talk of being born again; what good shall a man get by that? |
6049 | Was not this man, think you, a giant? 6049 What hast thou done?" |
6049 | What is this that thou hast done? |
6049 | What shall I do to be saved? |
6049 | What shall we say then? |
6049 | What, my true servant,quoth he,"my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | What, then? 6049 What,"says he,"shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits? |
6049 | What? 6049 When he hideth his face, who then can behold him?" |
6049 | When saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee? 6049 When shall I come and appear before God?" |
6049 | Where art thou? |
6049 | Where is Abel thy brother? |
6049 | Where is Abel thy brother? |
6049 | Where is Abel? |
6049 | Where is boasting then? 6049 Where is boasting then?" |
6049 | Wherefore should I fear,said David,"in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?" |
6049 | Wherefore should I,said he? |
6049 | Wherefore slew he him? 6049 Wherefore,"saith he,"as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men,"mark that; but why? |
6049 | Whether any be justified but he that is born of God? 6049 Whether is it possible, that any can be saved, without Christ manifested within? |
6049 | Whether[ doth] and[ man] receive Christ, who receives him no into him? 6049 Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant? |
6049 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6049 | Who can stand before his indignation? 6049 Who hath known the mind of the Lord?" |
6049 | Who hath put wisdom in the inward parts? 6049 Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?" |
6049 | Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6049 | Who then can condemn? 6049 Who told thee?" |
6049 | Who will bring me into the strong city,and"wilt not thou, O God, which hadst cast us off? |
6049 | Whom have I in heaven but thee? 6049 Why art thou wroth?" |
6049 | Why hast thou hardened our heart from thy fear? |
6049 | Why,saith the prophet to God,"Art thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?" |
6049 | Will he plead against me with his great power? 6049 With what righteousness?" |
6049 | Would it not be an insufferable thing? 6049 Ye adulterers and adulteresses,"for so the covetous are called,"know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
6049 | Ye shed blood[ says God] and shall ye possess the land? 6049 [ 257] How did these sturdy rogues and their fellows make David groan, mourn, and roar? |
6049 | ''0 wretched man that I am,''& c. What complaints, what confessions, what bewailing of weakness is here? |
6049 | ''A son honoureth his father, and a servant his master: if then I be a Father, where is mine honour? |
6049 | ''A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | ''Adam, where art thou?'' |
6049 | ''And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who shall give you that which is your own?'' |
6049 | ''And it shall come to pass, that all they that look upon thee, shall flee from thee, and say, Nineveh is laid waste: who will bemoan her? |
6049 | ''And now why tarriest thou? |
6049 | ''And the Lord said, Who shall persuade Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth- Gilead? |
6049 | ''And they all with one consent began to make excuse;''--excuse for what? |
6049 | ''And when thou art spoiled, what wilt thou do? |
6049 | ''And why art thou disquieted within me? |
6049 | ''And why call ye me Lord, Lord,''saith he,''and do not, the things which I say?'' |
6049 | ''Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel; may I not wash in them and be clean?'' |
6049 | ''Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?'' |
6049 | ''Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?'' |
6049 | ''Are we better than they? |
6049 | ''Are ye able to drink of the cup that I shall drink of?'' |
6049 | ''Art thou also of Galilee? |
6049 | ''Be ye not,''saith it,''unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
6049 | ''Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? |
6049 | ''Besides,''quoth the old gentleman,''should the Prince now, as he receives the petition, ask him and say, What is thy name? |
6049 | ''But what if a man want light in his duty to the poor?'' |
6049 | ''But what if a man want light in the supper?'' |
6049 | ''But what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''Can the Ethiopian change his skin?'' |
6049 | ''Can the children of the bridechamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them?'' |
6049 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong?'' |
6049 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee? |
6049 | ''Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the days that God shall deal with thee?'' |
6049 | ''Can two walk together,''saith God,''except they be agreed?'' |
6049 | ''Canst thou by searching find out God? |
6049 | ''Canst thou thunder with a voice like him?'' |
6049 | ''Commune with your own heart upon your bed''( Psa 4:4), and then say what thou thinkest of, whether thou art going? |
6049 | ''Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'' |
6049 | ''Cut it down, why doth it cumber the ground?'' |
6049 | ''Did he find it,''saith Paul,''by the flesh?'' |
6049 | ''Did not Solomon king of Israel sin by these things? |
6049 | ''Do not I fill heaven and earth, saith the Lord?'' |
6049 | ''Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O congregation? |
6049 | ''Do ye think that the Scripture saith in vain, The spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy?'' |
6049 | ''Do you think that love letters are not desired between lovers? |
6049 | ''Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish?'' |
6049 | ''For how great is his goodness, and how great is his beauty? |
6049 | ''For if God be for us, who shall be against us? |
6049 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite, though he has gained''to a higher strain of desires,''when God taketh away his soul?'' |
6049 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite?'' |
6049 | ''For what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | ''Friend, how camest thou in hither?'' |
6049 | ''Happy art thou, O Israel, who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord, the shield of thy help, and who is the sword of thy excellency?'' |
6049 | ''Has it a corn? |
6049 | ''Hast thou found me,''said Ahab,''O mine enemy?'' |
6049 | ''Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods?'' |
6049 | ''Hath he said it, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6049 | ''Hath he said, and shall he not do it? |
6049 | ''Hath not God chosen the foolish,--the weak,--the base, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are?'' |
6049 | ''Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump?'' |
6049 | ''Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump?'' |
6049 | ''Have I been so long time with you,[ saith Christ] and yet hast thou not known me, Philip? |
6049 | ''Have any of the rulers or pharisees believed on him?'' |
6049 | ''He can not deliver his soul, nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6049 | ''He gives light to them that sit in darkness, and in the shadow of death,''what to do? |
6049 | ''Hear this, O ye that swallow up the needy, even to make the poor of the land to fail, saying, When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? |
6049 | ''Here see a soul that''s all despair; a man All hell; a spirit all wounds; who can A wounded spirit bear? |
6049 | ''How camest thou in hither?'' |
6049 | ''How camest thou in hither?'' |
6049 | ''How comes contesting for water baptism to be so much against you?'' |
6049 | ''How do you know that?'' |
6049 | ''How long wilt thou not depart from me, nor let me alone till I swallow down my spittle?'' |
6049 | ''How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity? |
6049 | ''How much more abominable and filthy is man, which drinketh iniquity like water?'' |
6049 | ''How shall I give thee up, Ephraim?'' |
6049 | ''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6049 | ''How then can I do this great wickedness,''said he,''and sin against God?'' |
6049 | ''How?'' |
6049 | ''I am the way,''saith Christ; but to what? |
6049 | ''I made a covenant with mine eyes,''said Job,''why then should I think upon a maid? |
6049 | ''I will,''said David,''behave myself wisely in a perfect way; O when wilt thou come unto me?'' |
6049 | ''If David then call him Lord, how is he his Son?'' |
6049 | ''If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him''; how then can he be fruitful in the vineyard? |
6049 | ''If our sins be upon us, and we pine away in them, how should we then live?'' |
6049 | ''If the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be seasoned?'' |
6049 | ''If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?'' |
6049 | ''Is Christ divided?'' |
6049 | ''Is Ephraim,''saith he,''my dear son?'' |
6049 | ''Is John Bunyan safe?'' |
6049 | ''Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own?'' |
6049 | ''Is not my word like as a fire, saith the Lord; and like a hammer, that breaketh the rock in pieces?'' |
6049 | ''Is not this the carpenter?'' |
6049 | ''Is there no place will serve to fit those for hell but the church, the vineyard of God?'' |
6049 | ''Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump?'' |
6049 | ''Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
6049 | ''Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
6049 | ''Let her alone, why trouble ye her?'' |
6049 | ''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6049 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''Ought not Christ to have suffered? |
6049 | ''Ought not Christ to have suffered?'' |
6049 | ''Righteous art thou, O Lord,''saith Jeremiah,''yet let me talk with thee: Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper?'' |
6049 | ''Shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? |
6049 | ''Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right''in His famous distributing of judgment? |
6049 | ''Shall one man sin,''said Moses,''and wilt Thou be wroth with all the congregation?'' |
6049 | ''Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
6049 | ''Shall they fall,''saith he,''and not arise? |
6049 | ''Should not the multitude of words be answered? |
6049 | ''So forcible and mighty are they in operation'';''is there not life and mettle in them? |
6049 | ''So then, what shall I say to those that have thus bespattered me? |
6049 | ''The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? |
6049 | ''The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?'' |
6049 | ''The righteousness which is of faith, speaketh on this wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? |
6049 | ''The wife of the bosom lies at him, saying, O do not cast thyself away; if thou takest this course, what shall I do? |
6049 | ''Then I said, But, Lord, what is believing?'' |
6049 | ''Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a council, and said, What do we? |
6049 | ''Then shame shall cover her that said unto thee, Where is the Lord thy God?'' |
6049 | ''Then thou shalt be clear from this my oath''; or,''How shall we clear ourselves?'' |
6049 | ''They have all received of his fulness, and grace for grace''; and will he shut thee out? |
6049 | ''They set their mouth against the heavens,''& c.''And they say, How doth God know? |
6049 | ''This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?'' |
6049 | ''Thus saith the Lord, The heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool, where is the house that ye build unto me? |
6049 | ''To which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son?'' |
6049 | ''Twas this that made David cry out, How great and wonderful are the works of God? |
6049 | ''What ailed thee, O Jordan, that thou wast driven back?'' |
6049 | ''What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6049 | ''What kind of preacher is he?'' |
6049 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall we say then? |
6049 | ''What shall we then say that Abraham, our father as pertaining to the flesh, hath found?'' |
6049 | ''What then? |
6049 | ''What then? |
6049 | ''What, despair of bread in a land that is full of corn? |
6049 | ''What, my son?'' |
6049 | ''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | ''What, thought I, is there but one sin that is unpardonable? |
6049 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said David,''in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6049 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said the prophet,''in the days of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6049 | ''Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way?'' |
6049 | ''Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant? |
6049 | ''Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant?'' |
6049 | ''Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6049 | ''Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?'' |
6049 | ''Who can find a virtuous woman? |
6049 | ''Who hath woe? |
6049 | ''Who in the heaven can be compared unto the Lord? |
6049 | ''Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
6049 | ''Who is he that overcometh the world,[ saith John] but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?'' |
6049 | ''Who is he that saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth it not?'' |
6049 | ''Who knoweth the power or God''s anger?'' |
6049 | ''Who shall condemn? |
6049 | ''Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6049 | ''Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6049 | ''Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos?'' |
6049 | ''Who would set the briers and thorns against Me in battle? |
6049 | ''Why boasteth thou thyself in mischief,''said David,''O mighty man? |
6049 | ''Why did John reject the Pharisees that would have been baptized( Matt 3:7), and Paul examine them that were?'' |
6049 | ''Why hast thou conceived this thing in thine heart? |
6049 | ''Why was I made to hear thy voice,''while so many more amiable and less guilty''make a wretched choice?'' |
6049 | ''Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him?'' |
6049 | ''Will a man leave the snow of Lebanon, which cometh from the rock of the field? |
6049 | ''Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6049 | ''Wilt thou,''said Festus to Paul,''go up to Jerusalem, and there be judged of these things before me?'' |
6049 | ''Wot ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias? |
6049 | ''Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky, and of the earth, but how is it that ye do not discern this time?'' |
6049 | ''[ 120] Then said Mercy, This is much like to the saying of the Beloved,''What shall be given unto thee? |
6049 | ''[ 17]''and will God indeed dwell with men on the earth?'' |
6049 | ''[ 30]''Will you rebel against the king? |
6049 | ''[ 335]''Was Adam bad before he eat the forbidden fruit? |
6049 | ''[ 336]''How can a man say his prayers without a word being read or uttered? |
6049 | ''[ 337]''How do men speak with their feet?'' |
6049 | ''[ 339]''How can we comprehend that which can not be comprehended, or know that which passeth knowledge? |
6049 | ''[ 340]''Who was the founder of the state or priestly domination over religion? |
6049 | ''[ 341] What is meant by the drum of Diabolus and other riddles mentioned in The Holy War? |
6049 | ''[ 343] Can''sin be driven out of the world by suffering? |
6049 | ''[ 345]''What men die two deaths at once? |
6049 | ''[ 346]''Are men ever in heaven and on earth at the same time? |
6049 | ''[ 347]''Can a beggar be worth ten thousand a- year and not know it? |
6049 | ''[ 38]''What can be the meaning of this( trumpeters), they neither sound boot and saddle, nor horse and away, nor a charge? |
6049 | ''[ 83]''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | ''[ 8] He inquired of his father--''Whether we were of the Israelites or no? |
6049 | ''or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue?'' |
6049 | ''what nation is there so great, who hath God so nigh unto them''as his people have, and as he''is in all things that we call upon him for? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 13) To speak nothing of the first table, where is he that hath his love manifested by the second? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 1:30,31) Where is boasting then? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 3:11) But dost thou plead still as thou didst before, and wilt thou stand thereto? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 8:13) Where is Dorcas, with her garments she used to make for the widow, and for the fatherless? |
6049 | ( 1 John 3) Shall these pass for such as believe to the saving of the soul? |
6049 | ( 1 Peter 4:18) Canst thou answer this question, sinner? |
6049 | ( 2 Peter 2:13) And let me ask, Did God give his Word to justify your wickedness? |
6049 | ( 2 Tim 2:5) But you will say, What is it to strive lawfully? |
6049 | ( Acts 9:36- 39) Yea, where is that rich man that, to his power, durst say as Job does? |
6049 | ( Ca nt 8:6,7) But who finds this heat in love so much as for one poor quarter of an hour together? |
6049 | ( Eze 22:14) What sayest thou? |
6049 | ( Eze 9:4,8, Isa 10:20- 22, 11:11,16, Jer 23:3, Joel 2:32) But what is a remnant to the whole piece? |
6049 | ( Heb 10:19- 24) Why then dost thou talk of two strings to thy bow? |
6049 | ( Heb 11:6) God must be known, else how can the sinner propound him as his end, his ultimate end? |
6049 | ( Heb 13:6, Rom 8:31) and if they be against me, what disadvantage reap I thereby; since even all this also, worketh for my good? |
6049 | ( Heb 6:6) Poor trembler, wouldst thou crucify the Son of God afresh? |
6049 | ( Heb 7:26) and for depth, it is lower than hell, who can undermine it? |
6049 | ( Hosea 8:3) But why? |
6049 | ( Isa 14) They that see thee shall narrowly look upon thee, and consider thee, saying, Is this the man? |
6049 | ( Isa 3:9) Where is the man that maketh the Almighty God his delight, and that designeth his glory in the world? |
6049 | ( Isa 53:1) When the prophet speaks of the saved under this metaphor of gleaning, how doth he amplify the matter? |
6049 | ( Isa 58:5) But why condemned then, and smiled upon now? |
6049 | ( Isa 6:10- 13) But what is a tenth? |
6049 | ( Jer 30:11) If it be so, I say, what had become of us, if we had had no Intercessor? |
6049 | ( Jer 31:7) What shall I say? |
6049 | ( Jer 3:14) That saying of Paul is much like this,"Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize?" |
6049 | ( Job 39:13- 17) Will it please thee when thou shalt see that thou hast brought forth children to the murderer? |
6049 | ( Luke 14:34) Wherewith shall the salt be salted? |
6049 | ( Luke 15:1,2) But by what answer doth Christ repel their objections? |
6049 | ( Luke 16:10- 12) And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who will commit unto you that which is your own? |
6049 | ( Luke 16:15) Hast thou taken notice of this, that God judgeth the fruit by the heart from whence it comes? |
6049 | ( Luke 22:70)''Then said they all, Art thou then the Son of God? |
6049 | ( Luke 9:25) and so, consequently, or,''What shall a man give in exchange( for himself) for his soul?'' |
6049 | ( Mal 1:8) And if so, how should he then accept of that which is not righteousness? |
6049 | ( Mark 12:31) True, he says, he did them no hurt; but did he do them good? |
6049 | ( Mark 1:4,5; Rom 6:21; Jer 7:3,5) Where shall the fruits of repentance be found? |
6049 | ( Matt 13:40- 42) Who can conceive of this terror to its full with his mind? |
6049 | ( Matt 21:31) Poor Pharisee, what a loss art thou at? |
6049 | ( Matt 23:17) I say again, What kind of righteousness shall this be called? |
6049 | ( Matt 26:21- 23) Who questioned the salvation of the foolish virgins? |
6049 | ( Matt 3:10) Poor sinner, awake; eternity is coming, and HIS SON, they are both coming to judge the world; awake, art yet asleep, poor sinner? |
6049 | ( Matt 3:12, 13:30) But mark,"There shall be a handful": What is a handful, when compared with the whole heap? |
6049 | ( Num 23:19) Hath Christ given us glory, and shall we not have it? |
6049 | ( Phil 3:14) But what do you mean by these three questions? |
6049 | ( Prov 16:8) What is it for me to claim a house, or a farm, without right? |
6049 | ( Psa 139:8) Or if a man should be so bold as to say so, Whether by so saying, he confineth Christ to that place for ever? |
6049 | ( Psa 143:1,2) And David, What if God doth thus? |
6049 | ( Psa 19:13) Must that wicked one touch my soul? |
6049 | ( Psa 31:22) And now where was his hope, in the right gospel discovery of it? |
6049 | ( Psa 35:13,14) Pharisee, Dost thou see here how contrary thou art to righteous men? |
6049 | ( Psa 50:3,4) And now, what will be found in that day to be the portion of them that in this day do not come to God by Christ? |
6049 | ( Psa 52:7) What else means this great bundle of thy own righteousness, which thou hast brought with thee into the temple? |
6049 | ( Psa 55:12,13) For, if to be debauched in open and common transgressions is odious, how odious is it for a brother to be so? |
6049 | ( Read Eze 16) Use Fifth, Is the love of God and of Christ so great? |
6049 | ( Rev 1:17,18) Why should Christ bring in his life to comfort John, if it was not a life advantageous to him? |
6049 | ( Rom 11:33)"If I speak of strength, lo, he is strong"( Job 9:19); yea,"the thunder of his power who can understand?" |
6049 | ( Rom 3:23, 5:1,2) But, I say again, who will propound God for his end that knows him not, that knows him not aright? |
6049 | ( Rom 4:16) That the promise, What promise? |
6049 | ( Rom 7:12) Why then, I say, dost thou reject the commandment of God, to keep thine own tradition? |
6049 | ( Rom 7:24)( c.) How dost thou find thyself under the most high enjoyment of grace in this world? |
6049 | ( Zech 12:10, John 19, Heb 12:14, Psa 19:12)( c.) How do they show themselves to be true under the third? |
6049 | ( c.) And the will and affections so turn away from it as they should? |
6049 | ( e.) O, but will he not be weary? |
6049 | ( g) And if at any time they can, or shall, meet with each other again, and nobody never the wiser, O, what courting will be betwixt sin and the soul? |
6049 | ( verse 10) Can the tree boast, because it is a sweeting tree,28 since it was not the tree, but God that made it such: Where is boasting then? |
6049 | ( vs. 10) Besides, what greater contempt can be cast upon Christ than by such wordy professors is cast upon him? |
6049 | ( we will now suppose what must not be granted) Was not this thy state when thou wast in thy first parents? |
6049 | --that is, to recover or redeem his lost soul to liberty? |
6049 | --that is, when he is committing wickedness--"saith the Lord: Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | --what shall, what would, yea, what would not a man, if he had it, give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | 11:30) But what is the fruit of the wicked, of the professors that are wicked? |
6049 | 13:5) Then said the guide, Do you hear him? |
6049 | 17 Many readers will cry out, Who then can be saved? |
6049 | 17 Seventy times seven times a day we sometimes sin against our brother; but how many times, in that day, do we sin against God? |
6049 | 1:28; 33:14) But what sinners are these? |
6049 | 2. Who may have it? |
6049 | 2. Who may have this life? |
6049 | 20 We will, therefore, state it again-- Are men saved by grace? |
6049 | 23:24) Yea, do not professors teach the wicked ones to be wicked? |
6049 | 25 How pointed and faithful are these words? |
6049 | 25 What can I render unto thee, my God, for such unspeakable blessedness? |
6049 | 2:14) To be short, what says Paul in the seventh to the Romans? |
6049 | 3. Who knows the utmost tendencies of sin? |
6049 | 32 What can we render to the Lord? |
6049 | 33 Take holiness away out of heaven, and what is heaven? |
6049 | 36 But alas, what are these? |
6049 | 3:2) And what says John in his first epistle, and first chapter? |
6049 | 4 What can withstand the will of Christ, that all his should behold and partake of his glory? |
6049 | 4:10); and why seekest thou to bring us into the like condemnation? |
6049 | 52. Who now dare say we throw away Our goods or liberty, When God''s most holy Word doth say We gain thus much thereby? |
6049 | 6 What conduct? |
6049 | 65:5) But what is the sentence of God concerning those? |
6049 | 7:16; Luke 6:44) What then? |
6049 | 8 What heart can conceive the glorious worship of heaven? |
6049 | 9:26)''Whom dost thou pass in beauty,''saith God? |
6049 | A Christian, and spend thy time, thy strength, and parts, for things that perish in the using? |
6049 | A Creator; what is it that a Creator can not do? |
6049 | A certain man had a fruitless fig tree planted in his vineyard; but by whom was it planted there? |
6049 | A conduct of angels:"Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
6049 | A day for a man to afflict his soul? |
6049 | A faithful Creator; what is it that one that is faithful will not do, that is, when he is engaged? |
6049 | A faithful man will encourage one much; how much more should the faithfulness of God encourage us? |
6049 | A good cause, what is that? |
6049 | A life regulated by a moral law, what hurt is in that? |
6049 | A man that nameth the name of Christ, and that departeth not from iniquity, to whom may he be compared? |
6049 | A most appalling murder has been committed;--a virtuous and pious young man is brutally murdered by his only brother:--what is the divine judgment? |
6049 | A new covenant, and why not then a new resting day to the church? |
6049 | A rainbow round about the throne, in sight; in whose sight? |
6049 | A resurrection-- of what? |
6049 | A self- righteous man therefore can come to God for mercy none otherwise than fawningly: For what need of mercy hath a righteous man? |
6049 | A sick body is a burden to the soul, and a wounded spirit is a burden to the body;''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | A type in what? |
6049 | A while after this, as was hinted before, the Christians will begin with detestation to ask what Antichrist was? |
6049 | A whoremaster, a drunkard, a thief, what are they but the devil''s baits by which he catcheth others? |
6049 | A work did I say? |
6049 | ALL; take it where you will, and in what place you will,''All is profitable'': For what? |
6049 | Afraid of what? |
6049 | After I had been thus for some considerable time, another thought came into my mind; and that was, whether we were of the Israelites, or no? |
6049 | After this He led them into His garden, where was great variety of flowers; and he said, Do you see all these? |
6049 | After this, she thought she saw two very ill- favoured ones standing by her bedside, and saying, What shall we do with this woman? |
6049 | After this, that other doubt did come with strength upon me, But how if the day of grace should be past and gone? |
6049 | Again I ask, Hast thou considered what truth, as to matter of fact, there is in the things whereof thou standest accused? |
6049 | Again, But do you not follow them with clamours and out- cries, that their communion, even amongst themselves, is unwarrantable? |
6049 | Again, But who has the perfect knowledge of all these things? |
6049 | Again, Did not Moses write of the Saviour that was to come afterwards into the world? |
6049 | Again, How basely do they behave themselves, how unlike are they to win, that think it enough to keep company with the hindmost? |
6049 | Again, Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Again, Was the man a good man? |
6049 | Again, What kind of righteousness of thine, is this, that standeth in a misplacing, and so consequently in a misesteeming of God''s commands? |
6049 | Again, are the people of God to behave themselves to the glory of God the Father? |
6049 | Again, how did Satan ply it against Peter, when he desired to have him, that he might sift him as wheat? |
6049 | Again, if Christ be the altar of incense, how stands he as a priest by that altar to offer the prayers of all the saints thereon, before the throne? |
6049 | Again, if thy parents, and thou also, be godly, how happy a thing is this? |
6049 | Again, if you say he hath no other body but his church, then I ask, What that was that was taken down from the cross? |
6049 | Again, is there such a length? |
6049 | Again, see Peter''s testimony of this Son of Mary; When Jesus asked his disciples, whom say ye that I am? |
6049 | Again, shall God, who is the truth, Say there is heaven and hell And shall men play that trick of youth To say, But who can tell? |
6049 | Again, suppose the father should scourge and chasten the son for such offence, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6049 | Again, what a continuation of this alarm was there also at the birth of Jesus, which was about three months after John Baptist was born? |
6049 | Again, what needed the woman to have a place of shelter in the wilderness, when there was no war made against her? |
6049 | Again, would the people learn to be covetous? |
6049 | Again,"Whether I am come to one of the days of the thousand years?" |
6049 | Again,"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6049 | Again,''If they hear not Moses and the prophets,''& c. As if he had said, Thou wouldst have me send one from the dead unto them; what needs that? |
6049 | Again,''Is it not yet a very little while, and Lebanon shall be turned into a fruitful field, and the fruitful field shall be esteemed as a forest? |
6049 | Again,''What is man, that he should be clean? |
6049 | Again; Hast thou found a failure in all others that might have been entertained to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Again; when Esau threatened to slay his brother, Rebecca sent him away, saying,"Why should I be deprived also of you both in one day?" |
6049 | Again; why not live upon Christ alway? |
6049 | Ah, Mind, why didst thou do those things That now do work my woe? |
6049 | Ah, Will, why was thou thus inclin''d Me ever to undo? |
6049 | Alas, but how shall I come? |
6049 | All God''s children are criers-- cannot you be quiet without you have a bellyful of the milk of God''s Word? |
6049 | All covetousness is idolatry; but what is that, or what will you call it, when men are religious for filthy lucre''s sake? |
6049 | All our anxious inquiries should be, Is Emmanuel in Heart- castle? |
6049 | All they,''that is, that are in hell, shall say,''Art thou also become weak as we? |
6049 | All this is made to appear by the angels that fell; for when fallen, what was heaven to them? |
6049 | All this is taught us by the spoons; for what need is there of spoons where there is nothing to eat but strong meat? |
6049 | All this, what does it argue, I say, but thy diffidence of God? |
6049 | Also before his friends, how bold was he? |
6049 | Also that he may deny to give them that grace that would preserve them from sin, without being guilty of their damnation? |
6049 | Also to Simon Magus for but undervaluing of it? |
6049 | Also when the mariners inquired of Jonah, saying,"What is thine occupation, and whence comest thou? |
6049 | Also whether reprobation be the cause of condemnation? |
6049 | Also your neighbours are diligent for things that will perish; and will you be slothful for things that will endure for ever? |
6049 | Also, if he ask me, What is become of the portion of goods that he gave me? |
6049 | Also, what if she had laid wait round about him, to espy if he was not otherwise behind her back than he was before her face? |
6049 | Also, when Job had God present with him, making manifest the goodness of his great heart to him, what doth he say? |
6049 | Also, wouldst thou know what a sad thing it is for any to turn their backs upon the gospel of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Am I a new creature in Him? |
6049 | Am I coming, indeed, to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Am I in a case to be thus near mine end? |
6049 | Am I one of the elect? |
6049 | Amaziah having sinned against the Lord, he sends to him a prophet to reprove him; but Amaziah says,''Forbear, why shouldest thou be smitten?'' |
6049 | And I ask, Why doth the wife-- that is, as the loving hind-- love to be in the presence of her husband? |
6049 | And I say again, if one sin, the least sin deserveth all these things, what thinkest thou do all thy sins deserve? |
6049 | And I say again, this is the work of a Creator, and a Creator can maintain it in its gallantry, FOOTNOTE? |
6049 | And I say again, wherefore has he so plainly told us of his greatness, and of what he can do? |
6049 | And Jesus said to them,''Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts?'' |
6049 | And Paul asked them, Whether they had yet''received the Holy Ghost?'' |
6049 | And Paul, when he said, he could wish that himself were accursed from Christ, for the vehement desire that he had that the Jews might be saved? |
6049 | And a new heart and a new man must have objects of delight that are new, and like himself;''Old things are passed away''; why? |
6049 | And again( Gal 3:2,5 compared together),''Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law,[ saith the Apostle] or by the hearing of faith?'' |
6049 | And again, What he hath made crooked, who can make straight? |
6049 | And again, some of them that are for infant baptism die for that as a truth? |
6049 | And again, where Judas( not Iscariot) said; Lord, how is it, that thou wilt manifest thyself to us, and not unto the world? |
6049 | And again,"Beware of men,"& c. when I had answered him, that blessed be God I was well, he said, What is the occasion of your being here? |
6049 | And again,"If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? |
6049 | And again,"If thou, Lord, shouldst mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?" |
6049 | And again,"Whom shall I send, and who will go for US?" |
6049 | And again,''Am I a sea, or a whale, that thou settest a watch over me? |
6049 | And again,''My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God, when shall I come and appear before God?'' |
6049 | And again,''When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts?'' |
6049 | And albeit, saith Satan, thou prayest sometimes, yet is not thy heart possessed with a belief that God will not regard thee? |
6049 | And albeit, saith Satan, thou prayest sometimes, yet is not thy heart possessed with a belief that God will not regard thee? |
6049 | And all the rest they baptized, were they not left free to join themselves for their convenience and edification? |
6049 | And are not all His holy doctrines also stamped with the same Divine sanction? |
6049 | And are not these pleasant sights? |
6049 | And are not you the same? |
6049 | And are they willing, God helping them, to run hazards for his name, for the love they bear to him? |
6049 | And are we not in him, in him, even as so considered? |
6049 | And are you able thus to imitate him? |
6049 | And are you willing to stand by their judgment in the case? |
6049 | And art thou now as perfectly innocent as ever was Jesus Christ? |
6049 | And as he went down deeper, he said,''Grave, where is thy victory?'' |
6049 | And before I go further, what might I yet say to fasten this reason upon the truly gracious soul? |
6049 | And by what is this righteousness by thee applied to thyself? |
6049 | And can a holy and just God require that we give thanks to him in his name, if it was not effectually done for us by him? |
6049 | And can death, or sin, or the grave hold us, when God saith,''Give up?'' |
6049 | And can it be imagined that Christ alone shall be like the foolish ostrich, hardened against his young, yea, against his members? |
6049 | And can you prove it by the scripture? |
6049 | And canst thou tell me who saves thee? |
6049 | And consequently how could he lift up his face unto God? |
6049 | And could you at any time, with ease, get off the guilt of sin,[275] when, by any of these ways, it came upon you? |
6049 | And did ever God send an ordinance to be a pest and plague to his people?'' |
6049 | And did he do it before he had need to do it? |
6049 | And did he do thus indeed? |
6049 | And did he license any one, and if so, who, to alter, add to, or diminish from it? |
6049 | And did he not behave himself valiantly? |
6049 | And did none of these things discourage you? |
6049 | And did the Father reveal His Son to you? |
6049 | And did the old man give him money to set up with? |
6049 | And did they make them welcome? |
6049 | And did you ask him what man this was, and how you must be justified by Him? |
6049 | And did you do as you were bidden? |
6049 | And did you endeavour to mend? |
6049 | And did you not then believe, and do you not still believe, that you were true members of Christ, though less perfect? |
6049 | And did you pray to God that He would bless your counsel to them? |
6049 | And did you presently fall under the power of this conviction? |
6049 | And did you think he spake true? |
6049 | And did you think yourself well then? |
6049 | And did you, said he, when I came up against this town of Mansoul, heartily wish that I might not have the victory over you? |
6049 | And didst thou fear the lake and pit? |
6049 | And do I desire to be found in Him; knowing by the Word, and feeling by the teaching of His Spirit, that I am totally lost in myself? |
6049 | And do the things that truly are divine, Before thee more than gold or rubies shine? |
6049 | And do they in thy conscience bear more sway To govern thee in faith and holiness, Than thou canst with thy heart and mouth express? |
6049 | And do you think that the words of your book are certainly true? |
6049 | And do you think the Lord will sit still, as I may say, and let thy tongue run as it lists, and yet never bring you to an account for the same? |
6049 | And dost thou count this a corrupted grain of Babylon''s treasure? |
6049 | And dost thou desire this medicine? |
6049 | And dost thou indeed say,"Hallowed be thy name"with thy heart? |
6049 | And dost thou not do the deeds of the flesh? |
6049 | And dost thou not rejoice in secret, that thou art the same that thou ever wert? |
6049 | And dost thou think that these are but threatenings, or that our King has not power to execute his words? |
6049 | And dost thou think, this is, indeed, the way to be righteous? |
6049 | And dost thou think, wast thou there now, that thou art able to wrestle with the judgment of God? |
6049 | And doth God come to the sinner, and the sinner again go to God in a saving way by him, and by him only? |
6049 | And doth all this stir up in thy heart some breathing after Him? |
6049 | And doth he not make his pots according to his pleasure? |
6049 | And doth he take charge of them as a Creator? |
6049 | And doth immodest apparel, with stretched- out necks, naked breasts, a made speech, and mincing gaits,& c., argue mortification of lusts? |
6049 | And doth it not also make thee more earnestly to groan after the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | And doth not the Lord as well require the sign of baptism now, as of circumcision then? |
6049 | And doth this demonstrate the reformation of your church? |
6049 | And doth this look like a visible church- state? |
6049 | And fools hate knowledge?'' |
6049 | And for the opening of this we must consider, first, How and through Whom this grace doth come to be, first, free to us, and, secondly, unchangeable? |
6049 | And from sense and reason they will have ground to think so; for who now is left in the world any more to make head against them? |
6049 | And from the sense and feeling of torment, he would give, yea, what would he not give, in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | And further, said he, can not one man teach another to pray? |
6049 | And gain, how came it thither, how got the soul possession of it, while it was unjustified? |
6049 | And good reason; for since they would not with us come to him now they have time, why should they stand with us when judgment is come? |
6049 | And have these desires put thy soul to the flight? |
6049 | And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?" |
6049 | And he said, I know not: Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
6049 | And he said, how long Would it have been, e''er you had understood This thing, had you not with my heifer plow''d? |
6049 | And he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding- garment?'' |
6049 | And he turned to the woman, and said unto Simon, Seest thou this woman? |
6049 | And here those sayings are of their own natural force:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6049 | And his name not be but of a common regard on that day? |
6049 | And how are they to consider of themselves, even then when they first are apprehensive of their need of this righteousness? |
6049 | And how bitterly did David mourn for his son, who died in his wickedness? |
6049 | And how can a man that went last time out of his closet to be naught, have the face to come thither again? |
6049 | And how can that be, if he saveth not to the uttermost them that come unto God by him? |
6049 | And how cold is the love of many at this day? |
6049 | And how could the people believe and embrace it? |
6049 | And how could we have seen it to purpose, had not God left some to themselves? |
6049 | And how did he carry it there? |
6049 | And how did his good wife take it, when she saw that he had no amendment, but that he returned with the dog to his vomit, to his old courses again? |
6049 | And how did you do then? |
6049 | And how do they deceive souls? |
6049 | And how doth God the Holy Ghost save thee? |
6049 | And how else could they obey that command that bids them rejoice in tribulation, and glorify God in the fires? |
6049 | And how hath Christ lightened every man if not within him?" |
6049 | And how if I should not? |
6049 | And how if thou shouldst come but one quarter of an hour too late? |
6049 | And how is this resented by them? |
6049 | And how kindly did our Lord Jesus take it, to see the little children run tripping before him, and crying, Hosannah to the Son of David? |
6049 | And how little conscience is there made of prayer between God and the soul in secret, unless the Spirit of supplication be there to help? |
6049 | And how many did Samson slay with the jaw- bone of an ass? |
6049 | And how must it be reckoned to them? |
6049 | And how say you? |
6049 | And how sayest thou now? |
6049 | And how sayest thou, for to name no more, dost thou with thy affection and conscience thus question? |
6049 | And how sayest thou? |
6049 | And how sayest thou? |
6049 | And how seldom do they trouble their heads, to have their minds taken up with thoughts of the better? |
6049 | And how then? |
6049 | And how then? |
6049 | And how was He revealed unto you? |
6049 | And how were they served that are mentioned in the 13th of Luke,''for staying till the door was shut?'' |
6049 | And how, then, can he come to him by Christ? |
6049 | And if God''s will should be done on earth as it is in heaven, must it not be thy ruin? |
6049 | And if Satan meets thee, and asketh, Whither goest thou? |
6049 | And if he breaks up one of these bags, who can tell what he can do? |
6049 | And if he goes about to do this, is not the law of the land against him? |
6049 | And if he hath said it, will he not make it good, I mean even thy salvation? |
6049 | And if he knows not the Father and the Son, how can he come? |
6049 | And if he saith, See, ye"blind that have eyes,"who shall hinder it? |
6049 | And if it be a blessing to have this fear, is it not wisdom to increase in it? |
6049 | And if it be asked, But what will become of the threatening wherewith he threatened the offender? |
6049 | And if not to think of him, while at a distance, how can you endure to be in his presence? |
6049 | And if our sun seems angry, hides his face, Shall it go down, shall night possess this place? |
6049 | And if so, Whether they might not obtain at least, some little of the mercy, as well as those women? |
6049 | And if so, did he give His church any other than that most beautiful and comprehensive form called the Lord''s Prayer? |
6049 | And if so, how can their service to God have anything like acceptation from the hand of God, that is done, not in, but without the fear of God? |
6049 | And if so, what follows? |
6049 | And if so, what shall we then think of the soul for which is prepared, and that of God, the most rich and excellent vessel in the world? |
6049 | And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" |
6049 | And if there is so much in the pride of his countenance, what is there, think you, in the pride of his heart? |
6049 | And if these be acts that speak a condescension, what will you count of Christ''s standing up as an Advocate to plead the cause of his people? |
6049 | And if they are mute when dealt with by vessels of clay, what will they do when they shall be rebuked by the flames of a devouring fire? |
6049 | And if they shall not escape that neglect, then how shall they escape that reject and turn their back upon''so great a salvation?'' |
6049 | And if this gentle check will not do, then read the other, Shall we say, Let us do evil that good may come? |
6049 | And if thou dost, thou wilt run into the bosom of Christ and of God, and then what harm will that do thee? |
6049 | And if thou shouldest be so now, what hast thou gained thereby? |
6049 | And if we know not every one of all these things to the full, how shall we know to the full the love of Christ which saveth us from them all? |
6049 | And if ye be followers of that which is good, who will harm you( 1 Peter 3:13)? |
6049 | And if you ask, How is it possible that this should be done? |
6049 | And if your brethren only you salute, What more than they do ye? |
6049 | And if, as unto Solomon, God should Propound to thee, What wouldst thou have? |
6049 | And in that he saith''There remains a rest,''referring to that of David, what is it, if it signifies not, that the other rests remain not? |
6049 | And in the land of peace thou trustedst, then how wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan?'' |
6049 | And indeed so he does with"Adam, where art thou?" |
6049 | And indeed what joy or what rejoicing is like rejoicing here? |
6049 | And indeed, take this away, and what ground can there be laid for any man to persevere in good works? |
6049 | And indeed, the soul that doth thus by practice, though with his mouth-- as who doth not? |
6049 | And into what church did Philip baptize the eunuch, or the apostle the jailor and his house? |
6049 | And is all this no good? |
6049 | And is hope, that this day is approaching, a reviving cordial to thee? |
6049 | And is it not reason that they who did this horrid villany, should have their doings laid before their faces upon the tables of their heart? |
6049 | And is it possible it should be forgotten, or that, by it, our joy, light, and heaven should not be made the sweeter to all eternity? |
6049 | And is it thus with thy soul indeed? |
6049 | And is not Boaz, with whose maids thou wast, One of the nearest kinsmen that thou hast? |
6049 | And is not his will the only rule of his mercy? |
6049 | And is not this a needy time; doth not such an one want abundance of grace? |
6049 | And is not this love worthy of all acceptation at the hands and hearts of all coming sinners? |
6049 | And is not this the very ground of thy hoping that God will save thee from the wrath to come? |
6049 | And is not this, said he, a shame? |
6049 | And is that all? |
6049 | And is that all? |
6049 | And is that within the creature, or without, that worketh the new birth?" |
6049 | And is there no other way to the Father but by his blood, and through the veil, that is to say, his flesh? |
6049 | And is there not a great deal in it? |
6049 | And is there not all the reason in the world for this? |
6049 | And is there toward us love in Christ that passeth knowledge? |
6049 | And is this all? |
6049 | And is this to keep the first table; yea, the first branch of that table, which saith,"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God?" |
6049 | And it was so indeed, thought Mr. Badman; was my troubles only the effects of my distemper, and because ill vapours got up into my brain? |
6049 | And let me ask further, is not he a madman who, being loaded with combustible matter, will run headlong into the fire upon a bravado? |
6049 | And look, did not I tell you? |
6049 | And may he not, without he give offence to thee, lay hold by electing love and mercy on whom himself pleaseth? |
6049 | And must baptism be such a rock of offence to professors, that very few will enquire after it, or submit to it? |
6049 | And must those that shall live to see those days, rejoice when these things begin to come to pass? |
6049 | And must we be all alone? |
6049 | And must you needs be upon the extremes? |
6049 | And now I add, Is not this to deliver them to the devil( 1 Cor 5), or to put them to shame before all that see your acts? |
6049 | And now I ask what kind of christian correspondency you have with them? |
6049 | And now I ask, What was the reason that God continued his presence with this church notwithstanding this transgression? |
6049 | And now had he had a heart to do for Mansoul, what could he do for it or wherein could he be profitable to her? |
6049 | And now having said this much, wherein have I derogated from the glory and holiness of Christ? |
6049 | And now is it not to be wondered at, and are we not to be affected herewith, saying, And wilt thou set thine eye upon such an one? |
6049 | And now what would a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | And now, Adam, what do you mean to do? |
6049 | And now, behold, when Jacob had been told That there was corn in Egypt to be sold, He said unto his sons, Why stand ye thus? |
6049 | And now, what can this accuser say? |
6049 | And now, when body and soul are thus united, who can imagine what glory they both possess? |
6049 | And now,''what shall a man,''what would a man, but what can a man that has lost his soul, himself, and his all,''give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | And observe, it is not said, that Noah shut the door, but the Lord shut him in: If God shuts in or out, who can alter it? |
6049 | And of what nation? |
6049 | And on the other hand, how often has the disjointing of the body, and the breakings thereof, occasioned the expiration of the spirit? |
6049 | And p. 26. where in answer to this question of mine; Why did the Man Christ hang on the cross on Mount Calvary? |
6049 | And said, moreover, that they could not wait upon me any longer; but said to me, Then you confess the indictment, do you not? |
6049 | And sayest thou so, my dear? |
6049 | And shall not God avenge his own elect, which cry day and night unto him?" |
6049 | And shall not I? |
6049 | And shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive be delivered? |
6049 | And shall we not imitate our Lord, nor the church that was immediately acted[21] by him in this, and the churches their fellows? |
6049 | And shall we not take that notice thereof as to follow the Lord Jesus and the churches herein? |
6049 | And she said, Come, James, canst thou tell me who made thee? |
6049 | And she''shall be glad for them''; for what? |
6049 | And since he can be both merciful and just in the salvation of sinners, why may he not also save them from death and hell? |
6049 | And so I may say, What think you of ten thousand more besides? |
6049 | And so doing, has it not also accommodated thee with all the aforenamed conveniences? |
6049 | And so with Paul, who tremblingly said,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6049 | And suppose they were the truly godly that made the first assault, can they be blamed? |
6049 | And that if they had light therein, they would as willingly do it as you? |
6049 | And that is according to the whole stream of scripture: For by one offering, What was that? |
6049 | And the Lord said unto him, Wherewith? |
6049 | And the ministers of the gospel they also cry, Lord,"who hath believed our report? |
6049 | And the reason is, because he that envieth a sinner, hath forgotten himself, that he is as bad; and how can he then fear God? |
6049 | And the reasons are weighty, for by them he proves the tree is not good; how then can it yield good fruit? |
6049 | And the same I say of his Advocate''s office- What is an advocate without the exercise of his office? |
6049 | And the scorners delight in their scorning? |
6049 | And then he answers himself:''Is not destruction to the wicked, and a strange punishment to the workers of iniquity?'' |
6049 | And then what doth he get thereby but loss and damage? |
6049 | And then, I pray you, what is left unto God, and what can he call his own? |
6049 | And then, to engage us in our soul to the duty, he adds one of his wonderful mercies to the world, for a motive,"Fear ye not me?" |
6049 | And then,& c. And why was not this done on the seventh day sabbath? |
6049 | And then,''what profit hath he that hath laboured for the wind?'' |
6049 | And they knew it: Why, did they not know it before? |
6049 | And this is one ground( at least) why he hanged on the cross,& c. Ha Friend? |
6049 | And this is that which Peter intends when he saith,"And if ye be followers of that which is good, who will harm you?" |
6049 | And this leads me first to inquire into what, by these words the apostle must, of necessity, presuppose? |
6049 | And thou liar, what wilt thou do? |
6049 | And thus much doth this man Christ Jesus testify unto us where he saith he shall glorify me; mark,"He shall glorify;"( saith the Son of Mary)but how? |
6049 | And to distressed Jonah, said the Lord, Dost thou well to be angry for the gourd? |
6049 | And to put a question upon thy objection- What is a sacrifice without a priest, and what is a priest without a sacrifice? |
6049 | And was not there a time when you did not so well understand the nature and extent of pride and covetousness as now you do? |
6049 | And was that all? |
6049 | And was there not in all these things love, and love that was infinite? |
6049 | And was this all? |
6049 | And were they all served so? |
6049 | And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? |
6049 | And what angels but those that ministered to him here in the day of his humiliation? |
6049 | And what can Satan say against this plea? |
6049 | And what can our pretended giants do or say in comparison of these? |
6049 | And what can such an one say for himself in the judgment, that shall be charged with the abuse of love? |
6049 | And what canst thou earn a day? |
6049 | And what chains are so heavy as those that discourage thee? |
6049 | And what company shall we have there? |
6049 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
6049 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
6049 | And what day so fit as the Lord''s day for this? |
6049 | And what did Badman do after his wife was dead? |
6049 | And what did they say else? |
6049 | And what did you do then? |
6049 | And what did you do then? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you say to him? |
6049 | And what else? |
6049 | And what else? |
6049 | And what else? |
6049 | And what encouragement has a man to suffer for Christ, whose heart can not believe, and whose soul he can not commit to God to keep it? |
6049 | And what follows? |
6049 | And what follows? |
6049 | And what follows? |
6049 | And what good will my vanities do, when death says he will have no nay? |
6049 | And what harm will that do thee? |
6049 | And what hath he received of thy hand? |
6049 | And what honour like that of being a holy man of God? |
6049 | And what if God will cross his book, and blot out the handwriting that is against thee, and not let thee know it as yet? |
6049 | And what if thou waitest upon God all thy days? |
6049 | And what if you should not? |
6049 | And what is it that makes you so desirous to go to Mount Zion? |
6049 | And what is this second veil, in, at, or through which, as the phrase is, we must, by blood, enter into the holiest? |
6049 | And what life, but death in its perfection? |
6049 | And what matter can be found in the soul for humility to work by so well, as by a sight that I have been and am an abominable sinner? |
6049 | And what more fearful than the bottomless pit of hell? |
6049 | And what nation is there so great, that hath statutes and judgments so righteous, as all this law,''said Moses, which I set before you this day?'' |
6049 | And what need of an Advocate''s office to be exercised, if Christ, as sacrifice and Priest, was thought sufficient by God? |
6049 | And what need was there of any of this, if Paul could, as he would, have departed from iniquity? |
6049 | And what revenge hast thou in thy heart against every thought of disobedience? |
6049 | And what said Faithful to you then? |
6049 | And what said he then? |
6049 | And what said he then? |
6049 | And what said the neighbours to him? |
6049 | And what saith the words before the text but the same--''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | And what saw you else in the way? |
6049 | And what sayest thou to thy perverting, knowingly, the right purport and intent of the law? |
6049 | And what says the Apostle? |
6049 | And what shall he do now, that is a stranger to this breadth, made mention of in the text? |
6049 | And what shall he do when he comes? |
6049 | And what shall this man do? |
6049 | And what should a man come to God for, that can live in the world without him? |
6049 | And what sympathy and feeling would his arguments flow from? |
6049 | And what than fire? |
6049 | And what the son of my vows? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what thunder did Zaccheus hear or see? |
6049 | And what use doth he make of this? |
6049 | And what was that? |
6049 | And what was the conclusion? |
6049 | And what was the other thing? |
6049 | And what was the reason you did not? |
6049 | And what will become of them concerning whom the Lord has said already,''I will not take up their names into my lips''? |
6049 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God? |
6049 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God?'' |
6049 | And what will not love suffer? |
6049 | And what will you do whose hearts go after your covetousness? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And when a Christian comes to know this, should Christ as Advocate be hid, what could bear him up? |
6049 | And when a man is down, you know, what can he do? |
6049 | And when did the Spirit of Christ convince thee of sin, because thou didst not believe in him? |
6049 | And when did we see thee an hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister to thee? |
6049 | And when the hand of the rulers are chief in a trespass, who can keep their people from being drowned in that trespass? |
6049 | And when they had found him, they wonderingly asked him,"Rabbi, when camest thou hither?" |
6049 | And when unto her mother- in- law she came, Art thou, said she, my daughter come again? |
6049 | And when ye did eat, and when ye did drink, did not ye eat for yourselves, and drink for yourselves?" |
6049 | And where hast thou been working? |
6049 | And where is it, within or without?" |
6049 | And where is the man that chooseth to go to hell? |
6049 | And where is this man, that was born of the virgin, that we may come to the Father by him? |
6049 | And where it is most, how far short of perfect acts is it? |
6049 | And where that practical holiness that formerly used to be seen in the houses, lives and conversations of professors? |
6049 | And where wilt thou leave thy glory? |
6049 | And whereabout does he dwell? |
6049 | And whereas thou askest, is not he a deceiver, that exhorts people to anything else than the light of Christ? |
6049 | And whereas thou asketh, whether the fault be then in God, or in that thou callest his light, or in the creature? |
6049 | And whereas you ask me, Whither away? |
6049 | And whereas you ask me,"What is that which worketh faith? |
6049 | And whereas you ask me,"do they that are born of God commit sin?" |
6049 | And whereas you ask, What is the sight of God? |
6049 | And wherefore doth he thus, but to beget an expectation in them of their salvation and deliverance? |
6049 | And whether doth he that is born of God commit sin? |
6049 | And whether it be lawful for them so to do?" |
6049 | And whether it be not lawful for them so to do? |
6049 | And who can abide the fierceness of his anger? |
6049 | And who can be thankful for a mercy that is not sensible that they want it, have it, and have it of mercy? |
6049 | And who can contradict him? |
6049 | And who can now object against the deliverance of the child of God? |
6049 | And who can say, my heart is clean? |
6049 | And who can think that he should be quiet, when men take the right course to escape his hellish snares? |
6049 | And who could have found in their hearts to shut the door upon such an one? |
6049 | And who could have thought, that the other had been a good man? |
6049 | And who dares to limit the Almighty? |
6049 | And who then shall dare to blame this our age consumed; or say that our years be cut off? |
6049 | And who was that but Jesus Christ, even the person speaking in the text? |
6049 | And who was that, but he that"spoiled principalities and powers,"when he did hang upon the tree, triumphing over them thereon? |
6049 | And who will dare to make any addition to holy writ? |
6049 | And who with him again but they? |
6049 | And who with them but Mr. Badman? |
6049 | And whose be the sheep that feed upon them? |
6049 | And whose portrait is Bunyan describing here? |
6049 | And whose word shall stand? |
6049 | And why a door of hope, but that by it, God''s people, when afflicted, should go out by it from despair by hope? |
6049 | And why are the women commanded silence there, if they may congregate by themselves, and set up and manage worship there? |
6049 | And why can they not as well keep the other sabbaths? |
6049 | And why candlesticks, if they were not to hold the candles? |
6049 | And why did you not bring them along with you? |
6049 | And why do the scriptures say,"that through this man is preached to us the forgiveness of sins?" |
6049 | And why do they with pride trick up the body, if it be not to provoke both themselves and others to lusts? |
6049 | And why dost thou take notice of the mote That''s in thy brother''s eye; but dost not note The beam that''s in thine own? |
6049 | And why doth he not concern himself with them? |
6049 | And why follow the apish fashions of the world? |
6049 | And why for raiment are ye taking thought? |
6049 | And why is it thee? |
6049 | And why is the breaking of the heart compared to the breaking of the bones? |
6049 | And why may not I give it the name of a shew; when you call it a symbol, and compare it to a gentleman''s livery? |
6049 | And why might they not be a type of gospel sermons? |
6049 | And why not now, as well as formerly? |
6049 | And why shall he that doth most for God in this world, enjoy most of him in that which is to come? |
6049 | And why should a man cumber himself with what is his, when the good of all that is in Christ is laid, and to be laid out for him? |
6049 | And why should a man so carelessly cast away himself, by giving heed to a stranger? |
6049 | And why should it not be accounted to him for righteousness? |
6049 | And why should not credence be given to that gospel that is confirmed by blood, the blood of the Son of God himself? |
6049 | And why should not the kings have it granted unto them, that she should fall by their hand? |
6049 | And why should we not have the benefit of the righteousness, while we are ungodly, since it was completed for us while we were yet ungodly? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why then should not we have also in reserve for Christ? |
6049 | And why thus consider, but that a door might be opened for hope to exercise itself upon God by this? |
6049 | And why, but because God himself maintains the enmity? |
6049 | And why, to show, by these, the exceeding riches of his grace to the ages to come, through Christ Jesus? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And will he be a favourable no more? |
6049 | And will not this, when they know it, yield them comfort? |
6049 | And will their agreement of hell yield them comfort? |
6049 | And will you, says Unbelief, in such a case as you now are, presume to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | And wilt thou hang back or be sullen, because thou art none of the first? |
6049 | And wilt thou judge him that doth thus? |
6049 | And wilt thou not regard? |
6049 | And wilt thou pursue the dry stubble?'' |
6049 | And wilt thou say these are things that are not? |
6049 | And with his works he perfected his faith? |
6049 | And with that she plucked out her letter,[28] and read it, and said to them, What now will ye say to this? |
6049 | And without this, what is to be seen in the church of God? |
6049 | And would I, as was said before, be thoroughly saved, to wit, from the filth as from the guilt? |
6049 | And would it not be an insufferable thing? |
6049 | And would you be doing this? |
6049 | And ye say, Wherein have we despised thy name?'' |
6049 | And yet darest thou say to God, Our Father? |
6049 | And yet dost thou out of thy blasphemous throat suffer these words to come, even our Father? |
6049 | And yet who so idle as they in the time of their prosperity? |
6049 | And you are sure he was of this opinion? |
6049 | And you that were sometime alienated, and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled[ but how?] |
6049 | And you ungodly children, how are your ungodly parents that lived and died ungodly, now in the pains of hell also? |
6049 | And you, that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled,"how? |
6049 | And"who hath required this at your hand?" |
6049 | And''the thunder of his power who can understand?'' |
6049 | And''what and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up where he was before?'' |
6049 | And''will ye weary my God also?'' |
6049 | And, By what means have you so persevered therein? |
6049 | And, Fourth, what it was for him to be raised unto Israel? |
6049 | And, How got you into the way? |
6049 | And, Sir, you, as all our neighbours know, are a very observing man, pray, therefore, what do you think of them? |
6049 | And, Use First, Is there such breadth, and length, and depth, and height in God, for us? |
6049 | And, What he did in the world? |
6049 | And, are there no public Christians, or public christian meetings, but them of your way? |
6049 | And, in reason, how could it be otherwise? |
6049 | And, indeed, if people once say to God, by way of doubt,''Wherein hast thou loved us?'' |
6049 | And, listening still, she thought she heard another answer it, saying-- For why? |
6049 | And, moreover, my brother, thou talkest of ease in the grave; but hast thou forgotten the hell, whither for certain the murderers go? |
6049 | And, said Christiana to Mr. Great- heart, Sir, will you do as we? |
6049 | And, therefore, what need have they that one should be sent unto them in another way? |
6049 | And, whether there was a secret or mystery in this work containing the truth of some higher thing? |
6049 | And,"O God, why hast thou cast us off for ever?" |
6049 | And,"who shall separate us from the love of Christ"our Lord? |
6049 | And,''Will ye rebel against the king?'' |
6049 | Answer, friend, dost thou put no difference betwixt the speaking of Christ without, and believing in Christ without? |
6049 | Any thing but truth; but I would know how sincerely righteous they were that were justified without works? |
6049 | Are God''s people a suffering people? |
6049 | Are all the elect, the seed, the saved, the vessels of mercy, the chosen and peculiar? |
6049 | Are great saints only to have the kingdom, and the glory everlasting? |
6049 | Are great works only to be rewarded? |
6049 | Are her plagues pleasant or easy to be borne? |
6049 | Are his feet shod with the Gospel of peace? |
6049 | Are his loins girt about with truth? |
6049 | Are his ministers slothful in tendering this unto you? |
6049 | Are his saints precious to them? |
6049 | Are my prayers lost? |
6049 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6049 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6049 | Are not even ye,"saith Paul,"in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6049 | Are not my words verbatim these? |
6049 | Are not some, yea the most, the children of the flesh, the rest, the lost, the vessels of wrath, of dishonour, and the children of perdition? |
6049 | Are not the seven churches in Asia called by name of candlesticks? |
6049 | Are not these therefore strong desires? |
6049 | Are not these things rather a sign that the utter overthrow of the church of God is at the door? |
6049 | Are not they part of the scriptures of truth? |
6049 | Are not you commanded to keep out of the church all that are not circumcised? |
6049 | Are not, now- a- days, the bulk of professors like those that''strain at a gnat and swallow a camel?'' |
6049 | Are our fruits meet for repentance? |
6049 | Are the narratives of these mighty tempests in his spirit plain matters of fact? |
6049 | Are the words of God called by the name of the fear of the Lord? |
6049 | Are there any sins now that will fly upon this Saviour like so many lions, or raging devils, if He take in hand to redeem man? |
6049 | Are there bowels in you that are wicked, and will they be wrought upon by an importuning beggar? |
6049 | Are there yet any more sons in my womb, That may your husbands be in time to come? |
6049 | Are these the tokens of a blessed man?" |
6049 | Are these"spirits of just men made perfect"-the angel- ministering spirits which are sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? |
6049 | Are they enemies to Thee? |
6049 | Are they lawful things which thou desirest? |
6049 | Are they not all of equal authority? |
6049 | Are they not death without, and unbelief within? |
6049 | Are they purified, are they clean that name the name of Christ? |
6049 | Are they so dreadful in their receipt and sentence? |
6049 | Are they such things as thou takest pleasure in? |
6049 | Are they tender of sinning against Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Are they that are justified by Christ''s blood such as have need yet to be saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6049 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6049 | Are they the glorified inhabitants of the Celestial City? |
6049 | Are they things Divine, or things natural? |
6049 | Are they things heavenly, or things earthly? |
6049 | Are they things holy, or things unholy? |
6049 | Are they to be the audible mouth there, before all, to God? |
6049 | Are they to think, that they are righteous or sinners? |
6049 | Are things thus ordered? |
6049 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ yet such as have need of being saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ, such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need of being saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need to be saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such, after that, as have need also of saving by Christ''s intercession? |
6049 | Are thy sins so dear, so sweet, so desireable, so profitable to thee, that thou wilt venture a burning in hell fire for them till thou art burnt out? |
6049 | Are we for war? |
6049 | Are we now almost got past the Enchanted Ground? |
6049 | Are we profanely apt to judge of God harshly, as of one that would gather where he had not strawn? |
6049 | Are we stronger than he?'' |
6049 | Are we tempted to distrust God? |
6049 | Are we truly convinced of sin, and converted to Christ? |
6049 | Are ye not CARNAL, CARNAL, CARNAL? |
6049 | Are ye so foolish? |
6049 | Are you a married man? |
6049 | Are you a married man? |
6049 | Are you at that door, my brother? |
6049 | Are you brought out of the dark dungeon of this world into Christ? |
6049 | Are you come out of it? |
6049 | Are you commanded to reject them; If yea, where is it? |
6049 | Are you going to the heavenly country? |
6049 | Are you in affliction for your profession? |
6049 | Are you not sensible that such a one As I, can certainly thereof make trial? |
6049 | Are you not sorry for what you have done? |
6049 | Are you so hasty? |
6049 | Are you stronger than he that made the heavens, and that holdeth angels in everlasting chains? |
6049 | Art become freakish? |
6049 | Art bound for hell against all wind and weather? |
6049 | Art bound for hell, against all wind and weather? |
6049 | Art like to him, that needs must step a mile At every stride, or think it not worth while To follow Christ? |
6049 | Art not able to conclude, that to be saved is better than to burn in hell? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art one of those whose fears do go beyond Their faith? |
6049 | Art thou a Publican? |
6049 | Art thou a buyer, and do things grow dear? |
6049 | Art thou a fish, O man, art thou a fish? |
6049 | Art thou a fool in thyself? |
6049 | Art thou a professor? |
6049 | Art thou a seller, and do things grow dear? |
6049 | Art thou a sinner of the first rate, of the biggest size? |
6049 | Art thou almost like Elymas the sorcerer, that sought to turn the deputy from the faith? |
6049 | Art thou also willing that he should decide the matter? |
6049 | Art thou begotten of God by his Word? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Art thou coming, indeed? |
6049 | Art thou coming? |
6049 | Art thou coming? |
6049 | Art thou coming? |
6049 | Art thou convinced that she is nothing more? |
6049 | Art thou crossed, disappointed, and waylaid, and overthrown in all thy foolish ways and doings? |
6049 | Art thou followed with affliction, and dost thou hear God''s angry voice in thy afflictions? |
6049 | Art thou got into the right way? |
6049 | Art thou in Christ''s righteousness? |
6049 | Art thou indeed weary of the service of thy old master the devil, sin, and the world? |
6049 | Art thou jogged, and shaken, and molested at the hearing of the Word? |
6049 | Art thou most dejected when thou art at prayer? |
6049 | Art thou not a graceless wretch? |
6049 | Art thou not a graceless wretch? |
6049 | Art thou not come to discourse the Lord in prayer? |
6049 | Art thou not it which hath dried the sea, the waters of the great deep, that hath made the depths of the sea a way for the ransomed to pass over?" |
6049 | Art thou not like to fare well, when thou hast embraced him, coming sinner? |
6049 | Art thou not planted by the water- side? |
6049 | Art thou not willing to come faster? |
6049 | Art thou now in the favour of God? |
6049 | Art thou resolved to follow me? |
6049 | Art thou resolved to strip? |
6049 | Art thou returning to God? |
6049 | Art thou righteous in the judgment of God? |
6049 | Art thou righteous? |
6049 | Art thou righteous? |
6049 | Art thou such an one? |
6049 | Art thou taken? |
6049 | Art thou that readest these lines such an one? |
6049 | Art thou then made to see thy condition how bad it is, and that the way out of it is by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Art thou therefore discharged and unladen of these things? |
6049 | Art thou to buy or sell? |
6049 | Art thou troubled with cross children, cross relations, cross neighbours? |
6049 | Art thou truly born again? |
6049 | Art thou unladen of the things of this world, as pride, pleasures, profits, lusts, vanities? |
6049 | Art thou unrighteous in thyself? |
6049 | Art thou visited in the night seasons with dreams about thy state, and that thou art in danger of being lost? |
6049 | Art thou weary of them? |
6049 | Art thy sins of diverse sorts? |
6049 | Art weary? |
6049 | Art[ thou] resolved to follow me? |
6049 | As David said,"Shall I lift up mine yes to the hills? |
6049 | As God said to Coniah,''Did not thy father eat and drink, and do judgment and justice, and then it was well with him? |
6049 | As HE said,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6049 | As Moses said, and that long before the law was given,"Sirs, ye are brethren, why do ye wrong one another?" |
6049 | As Paul saith, What communion hath light with darkness? |
6049 | As for example; Would a parishioner learn to be proud? |
6049 | As for instance at home; could not some of those called Baptists die in opposing infant baptism? |
6049 | As he saith again, Am I not an apostle? |
6049 | As if he had said, Do you profess Christianity? |
6049 | As if he should say, what need have they that one should be sent to them from the dead? |
6049 | As many as walk according to this rule: What rule? |
6049 | As soon as ever God had touched the jailer, he cries out,''Men and brethren, what must I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | As the mad prophet also saith of God, in another case,''Hath he said, and shall he not do it? |
6049 | As the sabbath of months, of years, and the jubilee? |
6049 | As to the query, What reason is there, why the Lord should suffer any of his ordinances to be lost? |
6049 | As to the second head, what need is there that the righteousness of Christ should be imputed, where men are righteous first? |
6049 | As to the things of God, what shall I say? |
6049 | As touching the beauty and goodness that was in the object unto which they were allured; What was it? |
6049 | As who should say, My brethren, are you aware what you do? |
6049 | As who should say, My brethren, are you tempted, are you accused, have you sinned, has Satan prevailed against you? |
6049 | As who should say, What would heaven yield to me for delights, if I was there without my God? |
6049 | As who should say, Wherefore do I deny myself of those mercies and privileges that the men of this world enjoy? |
6049 | As yet despise you the offers of peace, and deliverance? |
6049 | As yet will ye refuse the golden offers of Shaddai, and trust to the lies and falsehoods of Diabolus? |
6049 | As"Ely said to Hannah, How long wilt thou be drunken? |
6049 | As, how many good men and good women do unawares, through their uncircumspectness, drive their own children down into the deep? |
6049 | As, whether there were in truth a God or Christ, or no? |
6049 | As, who should say, My brethren, are you troubled and persecuted for your faith? |
6049 | Ask him where this God is? |
6049 | Ask the awakened man, or the man that is under the convictions of the law, if he doth not feel? |
6049 | Ask the carnal man to whom he prays? |
6049 | Ask the rich man spoken of in the ensuing treatise, who was the fool-- he or Lazarus? |
6049 | Ask thy heart, What evil dost thou see in sin? |
6049 | At another time, I remember I was again much under the question, Whether the blood of Christ was sufficient to save my soul? |
6049 | At last the visitor comes and sets his soul at ease, by persuading of him that he belongs to God: and what then? |
6049 | At last there came a grave person to the gate, named Good- will, who asked who was there? |
6049 | At that Pliable began to be offended, and angrily said to his fellow, Is this the happiness you have told me all this while of? |
6049 | At the Lord''s table, I do eat; what though? |
6049 | At this( as I said) you object, and say,''Did I ever find baptism a pest or plague to churches? |
6049 | At which I was as if I had been raised out of a grave, and cried out again, Lord, how couldest thou find out such a word as this? |
6049 | Ay, but says the soul,''How can I reckon thus, when sin is yet strong in me?'' |
6049 | Ay, but when didst thou see thyself a lost creature for want of faith in the son of Mary? |
6049 | Ay, but when? |
6049 | Ay, that is well for you, Paul; but what advantage have we thereby? |
6049 | Aye, but Lord, what wilt thou do to quench their thirst? |
6049 | Aye, but this is a high pitch, how should we come by such princely spirits? |
6049 | Aye, saith he, to whom is that spoken? |
6049 | Aye, wherefore indeed? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou consider? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear what a striving there is between the vine- dresser and the husbandman, for thy life? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, fruitless Christian, do not thine ears tingle? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, fruitless professor, hast thou heard all these things? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, hast thou heard all these things? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, hast thou subscribed, hast thou called thyself by the name of Jacob, and surnamed thyself by the name of Israel? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, what fruit hast thou? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Barren professor, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Be patient then, my brethren; but how long? |
6049 | Be ruled by me, and go back; who knows whither such a brain- sick fellow will lead you? |
6049 | Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
6049 | Because Christ died for me, shall I therefore spit in his face? |
6049 | Because the neglect of the law will be sure to damn them; therefore wouldst thou put poor souls to follow that which will not save them? |
6049 | Because then it had been in vain for the Lord to have given the scriptures to teach men out of, either concerning himself or themselves: Why? |
6049 | Because''the children are partakers of flesh and blood; he also himself likewise took part of the same''; To what end? |
6049 | Beelzebub? |
6049 | Behold, I was left alone, these, where had they been?'' |
6049 | Behold, the Lord God will help me; who is he that shall condemn me? |
6049 | Behold, the angels cover their faces when they speak of his glory, how then shall not Satan bend before him? |
6049 | Being justified freely by his grace: How? |
6049 | Believe, that is true; but how now must he conceive in his mind of Christ for the encouraging of him so to do? |
6049 | Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
6049 | Believing what? |
6049 | Besides, if men be made righteous, they are so; and if by a righteousness which the law commendeth, how can fault be found with them by the law? |
6049 | Besides, if the promise and God''s grace, without Christ''s blood, would have saved us, wherefore then did Christ die? |
6049 | Besides, if this be granted, why had not God respect to Cain''s offering, as well as to Abel''s? |
6049 | Besides, oppression makes a wise man mad; and when a man is mad what evils will he not do? |
6049 | Besides, the great things that he desired, were to be delivered from going to hell, and who would, willingly? |
6049 | Besides, the proposition is universal, why then should you be the chief intended? |
6049 | Besides, the threatening being pressed with an''How shall we escape?'' |
6049 | Besides, to assert the contrary, what doth it but lessen sin, and make the advocateship of Jesus Christ superfluous? |
6049 | Besides, to what particular church was the epistle to the Hebrews wrote? |
6049 | Besides, was the gospel so freely, so frequently, so fully tendered to thee, and yet hast thou rejected all these things? |
6049 | Besides, what arguments so prevailing as such as are purely gospel? |
6049 | Besides, who knows of all the ways by which the Almighty will inflict His just revenges upon the souls of damned sinners? |
6049 | Blessed are they that do make peace; for why? |
6049 | Bold sinner, how darest thou tempt God, by laughing at the breach of his holy law? |
6049 | Both those of Peter, and the first of John? |
6049 | Brethren what profit is''t if a man saith That he hath faith, and hath not works; can faith Save him? |
6049 | Brother, said Christian, what shall we do? |
6049 | Bunyan, speaking of private prayer, keenly inquires, will God not hear thee"except thou comest before him with some eloquent oration?" |
6049 | But Abraham''s body is now dead? |
6049 | But David answered,"What have I to do with you, ye sons of Zeruiah, that ye should this day be adversaries unto me? |
6049 | But I am afraid the day of grace is past; and if it should be so, what should I do then? |
6049 | But I ask such, if the Father and Son be not unspeakably free to show mercy, why was this clause put into our commission to preach the gospel? |
6049 | But I ask, how came nature to be so weak, but through sin? |
6049 | But I can not pray, says one, therefore how should I persevere? |
6049 | But I fear I am lost and cast away, Sentence is past, and who reverse it may? |
6049 | But I have let myself to another, even to the King of princes; and how can I, with fairness, go back with thee? |
6049 | But I know you have made strong objections against him; prithee, what can he say for himself? |
6049 | But I say doth not this sufficiently show, had we but eyes to see it, what a sad and deplorable creature the child of God of himself is? |
6049 | But I say, if it be so, what need all this mercy? |
6049 | But I say, suppose it should be granted, is it because reprobation made him incapable, or sin? |
6049 | But I say, what can the church do more to the sinners or open profane? |
6049 | But I say, what is this to him that would fain be saved by Christ? |
6049 | But I say, where is thy love to thine enemy? |
6049 | But I say, wherein is the proposition offensive? |
6049 | But I say, who can tell, who can tell altogether, what and how much the Father delighted in his Son before the world began? |
6049 | But I say, who understandeth this? |
6049 | But I say, why all these, thus named? |
6049 | But I say, why did John call them vipers? |
6049 | But I would ask these men,''If the word of God came out from them? |
6049 | But I, poor I, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | But Jesus, our Advocate, answers as David, What have I to do with thee, O Satan? |
6049 | But Mr. Bunyan replied: Sin doth distinguish a man from a beast; is sin therefore the gift of God? |
6049 | But Naomi replied, Wherefore will ye, My daughters, thus resolve to go with me? |
6049 | But Nathanael answered him,"Whence knowest thou me?" |
6049 | But Paul, what moved thee thus to do? |
6049 | But after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour appeared"--what then? |
6049 | But again, Why should you be so angry with my brother, for joining of a sinner and a liar together? |
6049 | But again; what mystery is desirable to be known that is not to be found in Jesus Christ, as Priest, Prophet, or King of saints? |
6049 | But alas, what thief, what tyrant, what devil is there that may not conquer after this sort? |
6049 | But all along Christ compareth his love to ours; now, why doth he so, if they be so much alike? |
6049 | But all these will fail you; for what think you? |
6049 | But all this while, where''s he whose golden rays Drives night away and beautifies our days? |
6049 | But am I daunted? |
6049 | But am I so? |
6049 | But are not good works the righteousness of faith? |
6049 | But are the other righteousnesses of no use to us? |
6049 | But are there no dissuasive arguments to lay before such, to prevent their future misery? |
6049 | But are these words of faith? |
6049 | But are they the people on whom God doth magnify the riches of his grace? |
6049 | But are you out of that wilderness mentioned? |
6049 | But are you sure it is the same that we look for? |
6049 | But are you willing, said he, to stand to the judgment of the church? |
6049 | But art thou blind? |
6049 | But art thou sure thou canst? |
6049 | But as Adam fell with us in him, so did he not by faith rise with us in him? |
6049 | But as to the intercession of Christ, who can come in to help upon the account of such innocency or worth? |
6049 | But as to the matter in hand, What positive precept do they transgress that will not reject him that God bids us receive, if he want light in baptism? |
6049 | But ask him how, or under what notion he is to be considered there? |
6049 | But at the end of all this promised pardon for a million of years-- what then? |
6049 | But be the candles down, and scattered too, Some lying here, some there? |
6049 | But by what rule then would you gather persons into church communion? |
6049 | But by what rule would you receive them into fellowship with yourselves? |
6049 | But by what spirit is it then that I am brought again into fears, even into the fears of damnation, and so into bondage? |
6049 | But can any imagine that Christ will pray for them as Priest for whom he will not plead as Advocate? |
6049 | But can not the church, and every woman in it, build up themselves without their woman''s meetings? |
6049 | But can women no other way be built up in their most holy faith, but by meetings of their own without their men? |
6049 | But can you commit your soul to their ministry, and join with them in prayer; and yet not count them meet for other gospel privileges? |
6049 | But can you imagine how the people of the corporation were taken with this entertainment? |
6049 | But canst thou not now repent and turn? |
6049 | But could he not deliver him, or did the Lord forsake him? |
6049 | But could not we have been saved if Christ had not died? |
6049 | But could that heal it, could he not taste, truly taste, or rightly relish this forgiveness? |
6049 | But could the house of Lebanon, though a fortified place, assault Damascus? |
6049 | But could they persuade any to be of their opinion? |
6049 | But did He indeed suffer the torments of Hell? |
6049 | But did he prevail against him? |
6049 | But did none of them follow you, to persuade you to go back? |
6049 | But did not Mr. Badman marry again quickly? |
6049 | But did not the neighbours take notice of this alteration that Mr. Badman had made? |
6049 | But did they take from him all that ever he had? |
6049 | But did this man rise again from the dead, that very man, with that very body wherewith he was crucified? |
6049 | But did this young Badman accustom himself to such filthy kind of language? |
6049 | But did you never give an occasion to men to call you by this name? |
6049 | But did you not come by the house of the Interpreter? |
6049 | But did you not fear it before? |
6049 | But did you not see the house that stood there on the top of the hill, on the side of which Moses met you? |
6049 | But did you not, with your vain life, damp all that you by words used by way of persuasion to bring them away with you? |
6049 | But did you take his counsel? |
6049 | But did you tell them of your own sorrow, and fear of destruction? |
6049 | But did you, said he, when you were at a stand, pluck out and read your note? |
6049 | But do kings use to die for captive slaves? |
6049 | But do kings use to die for captive slaves? |
6049 | But do not bad masters condemn themselves in condemning the badness of their servants? |
6049 | But do not the scriptures make mention of a Christ within? |
6049 | But do these people know what they do? |
6049 | But do they believe that thus it is with them? |
6049 | But do you speak seriously, and in good earnest? |
6049 | But do you think Mr. Badman would have been so base? |
6049 | But do you think it is because of the first? |
6049 | But do you think that the men that do thus, do think that they do so vilely, so abominably? |
6049 | But do you think that these people did ever feel the power and majesty of the Word of God to break their hearts? |
6049 | But do you think that this outcry was caused by unbelief? |
6049 | But do you think these men saw the strength of the Jews now? |
6049 | But do you think this is certain? |
6049 | But does the carnal world covet this, this spirit, and the blessed graces of it? |
6049 | But dost thou plead by thy righteousness, for mercy for thyself? |
6049 | But doth not a man bring forth fruit unto God, that walketh orderly according to the ten commandments? |
6049 | But doth not the Scripture say,"Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life"? |
6049 | But doth not their thus living, abiding, and retaining a being(or what you will call it), demonstrate the greatness and might of the soul? |
6049 | But doth that install it in that place and dignity, that was never intended for it? |
6049 | But doth that promise suppose a willingness in us, as a condition of God''s making us willing? |
6049 | But doth the blind Pharisee think his state is such? |
6049 | But doth the guilt and burden of sin so keep them down that they can by no means lift up themselves? |
6049 | But doth this bloody city spill this blood by herself simply, as she is the adulterated whore? |
6049 | But farther, thou sayest; Is it not the whole mystery of salvation, God manifested in the flesh? |
6049 | But first, do you know which of the Badmans I mean? |
6049 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
6049 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
6049 | But for what cause? |
6049 | But for what purpose? |
6049 | But further: Do we not all agree, that men that preach the gospel should do it like workmen that need not be ashamed? |
6049 | But good Sir, are you now for unwritten verities? |
6049 | But good Sir, why so short- winded? |
6049 | But had one not need to walk with a guard, and to have a sentinel stand at one''s door for this? |
6049 | But had the maid no friend to look after her? |
6049 | But hath he no better thoughts of his own good deeds, which are by the law? |
6049 | But hath not the law promises as well as threatenings? |
6049 | But have you no other way to discover the things of the Gospel, how they are done with a legal principle, but those you have already made mention of? |
6049 | But have you yet any other considerations to move us to fear God with child- like fear? |
6049 | But he answereth, What, mean ye to weep, and to break my heart? |
6049 | But he said, Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts? |
6049 | But his father would, as you intimate, sometimes rebuke him for his wickedness; pray how would he carry it then? |
6049 | But hold, dost thou do it with the Publican''s heart, sense, dread and simplicity? |
6049 | But hold, stay; wherefore? |
6049 | But how and if I should delight in them before I am aware? |
6049 | But how are they distinguished from the Gentiles? |
6049 | But how are we by this man forgiven this? |
6049 | But how are we justified by this man''s obedience? |
6049 | But how are your neighbours for quietness? |
6049 | But how came Diotrephes so lately into our parts? |
6049 | But how came he by that repentance? |
6049 | But how came he to be a"new creature,"since none can create but God? |
6049 | But how came he to be affected with this? |
6049 | But how came he to bring his soul into so good a temper? |
6049 | But how came the apostle by this confidence of his well- being and of his share in another world? |
6049 | But how came they clean? |
6049 | But how came they thus patiently to endure? |
6049 | But how came they to hear it? |
6049 | But how came this to be so? |
6049 | But how camest thou in this condition? |
6049 | But how can God respect a man, before he respect his offering? |
6049 | But how can a man be sorry for it, that has neither sight nor sense of it? |
6049 | But how can that be, did they not come to us through the very sides of mercy? |
6049 | But how can that be, since no affliction for the present seems joyous? |
6049 | But how can that be, where the heart is not sanctified and made holy? |
6049 | But how can this be done by him? |
6049 | But how can you tell you have faith? |
6049 | But how comes it to pass that thou art so hearty, that thou settest thy face against so much wind and weather? |
6049 | But how comes this to be a SIGN of the approach of the ruin of Antichrist? |
6049 | But how could God have respect to Abel, if Abel was not pleasing in his sight? |
6049 | But how could a holy God say,''Live,''to such a sinful people? |
6049 | But how could be either the one or the other, if the seventh day sabbath was taught to men by the light of nature, which is the moral law? |
6049 | But how could he be naked, when before he had made himself an apron? |
6049 | But how could he be naked, when before he had made himself an apron? |
6049 | But how could he so quickly run out, for I perceive it was in little time, by what you say? |
6049 | But how did he undertake them? |
6049 | But how did it happen that you came out of your country this way? |
6049 | But how did they make that out? |
6049 | But how did they tempt him? |
6049 | But how do they deliver them? |
6049 | But how do you think to get in at the gate? |
6049 | But how dost thou know that thou shalt continue therein? |
6049 | But how dost thou prove that? |
6049 | But how doth God kill with this law, or covenant? |
6049 | But how doth God the Father save thee? |
6049 | But how doth he take that away but by a severe chastising of his soul for it, until he has made him weary of it? |
6049 | But how doth it happen that you come so late? |
6049 | But how doth that appear? |
6049 | But how doth the soul carry it towards God, when He offereth to deal with it under and by this dispensation of grace? |
6049 | But how if I should have sinned the sin unpardonable, or that called the sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | But how if this path should lead us out of the way? |
6049 | But how if we do? |
6049 | But how indifferent? |
6049 | But how is it that they are there? |
6049 | But how is it that you came alone? |
6049 | But how is the Lord righteous? |
6049 | But how is this resented? |
6049 | But how is this similitude pertinent? |
6049 | But how little of this is found among men? |
6049 | But how long ago? |
6049 | But how long, prophet, wilt thou wait? |
6049 | But how much more may we behold the love that God hath bestowed upon us, in that he hath given us to his Son, and also given his Son for us? |
6049 | But how much more now? |
6049 | But how much more then when he comes To grapple with thy heart; To bind with thread thy toes and thumbs,[4] And fetch thee in his cart? |
6049 | But how must he do that? |
6049 | But how must he take away the curse? |
6049 | But how must that be done? |
6049 | But how must this be done, but as we take them off with the snuffers, and put them in these snuff- dishes? |
6049 | But how must this be done? |
6049 | But how must this be? |
6049 | But how now must this fool be made wise? |
6049 | But how shall Christ by this rod, sword, or spirit of his mouth, consume this wicked, this mystery of iniquity? |
6049 | But how shall I be ascertained that I also shall be entertained? |
6049 | But how shall I bring it to pass? |
6049 | But how shall I come hither? |
6049 | But how shall I know that I am born again? |
6049 | But how shall kings do it? |
6049 | But how shall they escape all those dangerous and damnable opinions, that, like rocks and quicksands, are in the way in which they are going? |
6049 | But how shall we do to see some of them? |
6049 | But how shall we know that such men are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But how shall we know when this time is come? |
6049 | But how should I do? |
6049 | But how should I know whether Christ do so knock at my heart as to be desirous to come in? |
6049 | But how should I prove[ or try] the goodness of mine own righteousness by the death and blood of Christ? |
6049 | But how should I serve God? |
6049 | But how should a poor soul do to run? |
6049 | But how should this rule in our hearts? |
6049 | But how should we find out what sinners shall be saved? |
6049 | But how should we know it, said he? |
6049 | But how should we try our graces now? |
6049 | But how then doth it say, that the knowledge of God is manifested in them? |
6049 | But how then is he clear from having a hand in the death of him that perisheth? |
6049 | But how then is what he doth accepted of God? |
6049 | But how then must Jesus Christ, first save us from the filth? |
6049 | But how then must they see him? |
6049 | But how was Jesus Christ made of God to be sin for us? |
6049 | But how were they that had got the victory? |
6049 | But how will he do that? |
6049 | But how will he make her naked? |
6049 | But how will this man die? |
6049 | But how will you prove that there was a church, a rightly constituted church, at Rome, besides that in Aquila''s house? |
6049 | But how, if Sarah be barren? |
6049 | But how, if Sarah be past age? |
6049 | But how, if the day of grace should now be past and gone? |
6049 | But how, if they have exceeded many in sin, and so made themselves far more abominable? |
6049 | But how, if they have not faith and repentance? |
6049 | But how, if they want those things, those graces, power, and heart, without which they can not come? |
6049 | But how, if when I come at him he should ask me, Where I have all this while been? |
6049 | But how, if whilst thou lookest for it to come to thee at one door, it should come to thee in at another? |
6049 | But how, or why doth the leaf, or the fig fall from the tree? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But if God deals thus with a man, how can he otherwise think but that he is a reprobate, a graceless, Christless, and faithless one? |
6049 | But if He parts with His righteousness to us, what will He have for Himself? |
6049 | But if I fly, some will blame me: what must I do now? |
6049 | But if a false faith is so forcible, what is a true? |
6049 | But if faith doth so naturally cause good works, what then is the reason that God''s people find it so hard a matter to be fruitful in good works? |
6049 | But if he had done as you have supposed, what had he done worse than what he hath done already? |
6049 | But if indeed the first day of the week be the new christian sabbath, why is there no more spoken of its institution in the testament of Christ? |
6049 | But if it be changed, then how can it be the same? |
6049 | But if they should not, ask them yet again If formerly they did not entertain One CHRISTIAN, a Pilgrim? |
6049 | But if this be the sin unpardonable, why is it called the sin against the Holy Ghost, and not rather the sin against the Son of God? |
6049 | But if thou art not come, what can make thee happy? |
6049 | But if thy God thou wilt not hearken to, What can the swallow, ant, or spider do? |
6049 | But if we do not use forms of prayer, how shall we teach our children to pray? |
6049 | But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe my words?'' |
6049 | But is it asked how are we to see that that is invisible, or to imagine bliss that is past our understanding? |
6049 | But is it not a good heart that hath good thoughts? |
6049 | But is it not a shame for a man to defile himself with that vice which he rebuketh in another? |
6049 | But is it not a wonder they got not from him his certificate, by which he was to receive his admittance at the Celestial Gate? |
6049 | But is it possible that He should so soon give infinite justice a satisfaction, a complete satisfaction? |
6049 | But is not Christ the gate or entrance into this heavenly place? |
6049 | But is not the door of mercy shut against some before they die? |
6049 | But is not the reward that God hath promised to his saints, for their good works to be enjoyed only here? |
6049 | But is not this a shame for them that are such? |
6049 | But is not this a sign of madness, of madness unto perfection? |
6049 | But is not this great grace, that we should thus be called upon to come to God for mercy? |
6049 | But is not this the way to make Christ to loath us? |
6049 | But is there a member who dares to violate them? |
6049 | But is there any comfort in being hanged with company? |
6049 | But is there yet another reason why this holy duty should, in special as it is, be commanded to be performed on the first day of the week? |
6049 | But is there, therefore, no need at all of good works, because a man is justified before God without them? |
6049 | But is this a sign of the approach of the ruin of Antichrist? |
6049 | But is this all the wit thou hast? |
6049 | But is this the common custom of princes? |
6049 | But it may be asked, When was this done to Christ, or what sacrifice of consecration had he precedent to the offering up of himself for our sins? |
6049 | But let us return again to Mr. Badman; had he any children by his wife? |
6049 | But may it not come again as a spirit of bondage, to put me into my first fears for my good? |
6049 | But may my sin be forgiven? |
6049 | But may one not be equally engaged for both? |
6049 | But may we not fly in a time of persecution? |
6049 | But met you with no opposition before you set out of doors? |
6049 | But might not Christ die for our sins but he needs must bear their guilt or burden? |
6049 | But might not God have kept Adam from inclining, if he would? |
6049 | But might they not be healed by humbling themselves? |
6049 | But must their obstinacy rule? |
6049 | But must this wall, I say, consist chiefly in outward glory, in the glory of earthly things? |
6049 | But my husband is an unbeliever; what shall I do? |
6049 | But never let such a wicked thought pass through thy heart, saying,"This evil is of the Lord; what should I wait for the Lord any longer?" |
6049 | But now I would inquire: Had Israel done the commandment, if they had eaten the passover raw, or boiled in water? |
6049 | But now how doth God lose it? |
6049 | But now if other men should do as this man, how many universal churches should we have? |
6049 | But now, how shall this man be reclaimed from this sin? |
6049 | But now, what thing is that which is greater than his body, save the altar, his Divinity on which it was offered? |
6049 | But now, when didst thou feel the power of this first part of the Scripture, the law, so mighty as to strike thee dead? |
6049 | But now, wouldst thou honour thy King? |
6049 | But of what? |
6049 | But one sin that layeth the soul without the reach of God''s mercy; and must I be guilty of that? |
6049 | But perhaps some may ask me, WHAT INIQUITY THEY MUST DEPART FROM THAT RELIGIOUSLY NAME THE NAME OF CHRIST? |
6049 | But perhaps some may say, What need was there that Jesus Christ should do all this? |
6049 | But perhaps thy heart is so hard, and thy mind so united to the pleasing of thy vile affections, that thou wilt say,''What care I for my servant? |
6049 | But pray how can you tell that he did not care for the company of such? |
6049 | But pray tell me, Did you meet nobody in the Valley of Humility? |
6049 | But pray, Sir, what other sign have you by which you can prove that Mr. Badman died in his sins, and so in a state of damnation? |
6049 | But pray, Sir, where was it that Christian and Faithful met Talkative? |
6049 | But put the case I had failed herein, Doth this warrant your unlawful practice? |
6049 | But said, Hold; not so many, which is the first? |
6049 | But saith the open profane, why can not we be reckoned saints also? |
6049 | But say you,"Did he put and end to the law for them who still live in transgression?" |
6049 | But say you,''We have now found an advocate for sin against God, in the breach of one of HIS holy commands?'' |
6049 | But say you,''Wherein lies the force of this man''s argument against baptism as to its place, worth, and continuance?'' |
6049 | But say you,''Who taught you to divide betwixt Christ and his precepts, that you word it at such a rate? |
6049 | But sayest thou, I will be righteous in myself that I may have wherewith to commend me to God, when I go to him for mercy? |
6049 | But says one, Would you have us singular? |
6049 | But secondly, I pray where was Christ when he spake those words? |
6049 | But shall Christ take our cause in hand, and shall we doubt of good success? |
6049 | But shall I be daunted at this? |
6049 | But shall I speak the truth for you? |
6049 | But shall Manasseh come off thus? |
6049 | But shall he not lose his body before he come again? |
6049 | But shall such ever come to glory? |
6049 | But shall the will of heaven stoop to the will of hell? |
6049 | But shall they be my God, or shall I have Of them so foul and impious a thought, To think that from the curse they can me save? |
6049 | But shall this ever be said of Christ? |
6049 | But shall we be sure of it? |
6049 | But should I grant that which is indeed impossible-- namely, that thou art justified by the law; what then? |
6049 | But show me something out of the Word against it, will you? |
6049 | But since I have lusts and desires both ways, how shall I know to which my soul adheres? |
6049 | But since I was sealed to the day of redemption, I have grievously sinned against God, have not I, therefore, cause to fear, as before? |
6049 | But since he can do so, why doth he suffer this, and that thing to appear, to act, and do so horribly repugnant to his word? |
6049 | But some love not the method of your first; Romance they count it, throw''t away as dust, If I should meet with such, what should I say? |
6049 | But some may say, How will they seek to enter in? |
6049 | But some may say, What is the meaning of this word able? |
6049 | But some may say, Wherein doth the saving grace of the Spirit appear? |
6049 | But some may say, what need of the righteousness of one that is naturally God? |
6049 | But still the question is, Whether God by this his determination doth not lay a necessity on the creature to sin? |
6049 | But still when a fresh dish was set before them, they would whisperingly say to each other, What is it? |
6049 | But still, I say, the question is, How comest thou to know that thou art righteous in the judgment of God? |
6049 | But suppose that at his return he should find his own cattle in that pound, would he now carry it toward them as he did unto the other? |
6049 | But suppose they were all baptized, because they had light therein, what then? |
6049 | But suppose this great person should second his suit, and send to this sorry creature again, what would she say now? |
6049 | But surely I may begin this time enough, a year or two hence, may I not? |
6049 | But the most of men do that which you forbid, and why may not we? |
6049 | But the question is now, how we should attain to, and live in, the exercise of this blessed and comely grace? |
6049 | But the third thing touched in the question was this-- What may such an one receive of God who is under the curse of the law? |
6049 | But then I turn the tables, and say, But where shall I be shortly? |
6049 | But then how as a Lamb is he in the midst of the throne? |
6049 | But then, sayest thou, how shall I escape? |
6049 | But then, some will say, since it is so difficult, how may we do without danger? |
6049 | But they are Satan''s captives; he takes them captive at his will, and he is stronger than they: how then can they come? |
6049 | But they are dead, dead in trespasses and sins, how shall they then come? |
6049 | But this is God''s complaint,''Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? |
6049 | But this, I say, is a very great block in his way when he meddles with the children; God has an interest in them-"Hath God cast away his people? |
6049 | But thou wilt say unto me, Why do men profess the name of Christ that love not to depart from iniquity? |
6049 | But though I do wait, yet if I be not elected to eternal life, what good will all my waiting do me? |
6049 | But to accept of grace, especially when it is free grace, grace that reigns, grace from the throne, how sweet is it? |
6049 | But to come to the point: what righteousness hath that man that hath no works? |
6049 | But to come to the question-- What is it to be saved? |
6049 | But to come to the second question, that is, Why these twelve angels are said to stand at the gate? |
6049 | But to lay open my folly at last thou sayest, Doth not the scripture say, Christ is within you, except ye be reprobates? |
6049 | But to slight grace, to do despite to the Spirit of grace, to prefer our own works to the derogating from grace, what is it but to contemn God? |
6049 | But to the second thing, which is this, How far may such an one go? |
6049 | But upon what is this princely fearless service of God grounded? |
6049 | But was David, in a strict sense, without fault in all things else? |
6049 | But was ever heard the like to what Jesus Christ has done for sinners? |
6049 | But was he not afraid of the judgments of God that did fly about at that time? |
6049 | But was not Adam unexpectedly surprised? |
6049 | But was not his faith exercised, or tried, about his willingness too? |
6049 | But was not this man, think you, a giant, a pillar in this house? |
6049 | But was that a sufficient shelter against either thorn or thistle? |
6049 | But was there not something of moment in this clause of the commission? |
6049 | But were not these gentlemen more afraid of losing their own places and preferments, than of the king''s losing of his toll and custom? |
6049 | But were you not afraid, good Sir, when you saw him come out with his club? |
6049 | But what Jesus? |
6049 | But what a shame is this to man, that God should subject all his creatures to him, and he should refuse to stoop his heart to God? |
6049 | But what acts of disobedience do we indulge them in? |
6049 | But what aileth the Pharisee? |
6049 | But what an entrance into life is here? |
6049 | But what answer hath God prepared for these objections? |
6049 | But what are all these righteousnesses? |
6049 | But what are they? |
6049 | But what are they? |
6049 | But what are they? |
6049 | But what are we to understand by faith? |
6049 | But what are we to understand in gospel days, by going out of the house of the Lord, for or by sin? |
6049 | But what be these certain circumstances? |
6049 | But what be these other precepts? |
6049 | But what blessedness doth follow the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, to one that is yet ungodly? |
6049 | But what can be the end of those that are proud in the decking of themselves after their antic manner? |
6049 | But what could not the law do? |
6049 | But what could they say for themselves, why they came not? |
6049 | But what day is this? |
6049 | But what day? |
6049 | But what did he do with our sins, for he had them upon his back? |
6049 | But what did he speak to them? |
6049 | But what did she do to you? |
6049 | But what did the raven then do? |
6049 | But what did you think when he fetched you down to the ground at the first blow? |
6049 | But what do we more than talk of them? |
6049 | But what do we talk of them? |
6049 | But what do you mean by Mr. Badman''s breaking? |
6049 | But what do you mean by these words-- the old covenant as the old covenant? |
6049 | But what do you mean by those expressions? |
6049 | But what do you mean, John? |
6049 | But what does he? |
6049 | But what doth he get in this world, more than travail and sorrow, vexation of spirit, and disappointment? |
6049 | But what doth he mean by the dross? |
6049 | But what doth she do under all this trial? |
6049 | But what doth your arguing reprove?'' |
6049 | But what emboldened him thus to do? |
6049 | But what followed? |
6049 | But what follows? |
6049 | But what follows? |
6049 | But what follows? |
6049 | But what fruit doth God expect? |
6049 | But what good will their covenant of death then do them? |
6049 | But what ground had he for his so saying? |
6049 | But what ground hast thou for this thy hope? |
6049 | But what had Joshua antecedent to this glorious and heavenly clothing? |
6049 | But what had he spoken? |
6049 | But what has God prepared this vessel for, and what has He put into it? |
6049 | But what have they got by all they have done, either against the head or body of the same? |
6049 | But what have you met with? |
6049 | But what have you seen? |
6049 | But what have you to show at that gate, that may cause that the gate should be opened to you? |
6049 | But what if a man in this his progress hath one sinful thought? |
6049 | But what if they that were stung, could not, because of the swelling of their face, look up to the brazen serpent? |
6049 | But what is all this to one that neither sees his sickness, that sees nothing of a wound? |
6049 | But what is all this to the DEAD world-- to them that love to be dead? |
6049 | But what is all this to you that are not concerned in this privilege? |
6049 | But what is ankle- deep to that which followeth after? |
6049 | But what is committing of the soul to God? |
6049 | But what is he? |
6049 | But what is impossible to a Creator? |
6049 | But what is it that a heart that is destitute of the fear of God will not do? |
6049 | But what is it that has got thy heart, and that keeps it from thy Saviour? |
6049 | But what is it then to be of these? |
6049 | But what is it to a child? |
6049 | But what is it to be of the works of the law, or under the law? |
6049 | But what is it to believe in Christ: and what to have faith in his blood? |
6049 | But what is it to believe that he is Messias, or Christ? |
6049 | But what is it to turn from the law to the Lord? |
6049 | But what is it to wait upon him according to his counsel? |
6049 | But what is that to them that never saw ought but beauty, and that never tasted anything but sweetness in sin? |
6049 | But what is the answer of Christ? |
6049 | But what is the cause of all this slaying, and the reason of this abundance of corpses? |
6049 | But what is the matter? |
6049 | But what is the meaning of this? |
6049 | But what is the reason of that? |
6049 | But what is the second thing whereby you would prove a discovery of a work of grace in the heart? |
6049 | But what is the spirit of the world? |
6049 | But what is there in my proposition, that men, considerate, can be offended at? |
6049 | But what is this doctrine? |
6049 | But what is this iniquity? |
6049 | But what judgments do you mean? |
6049 | But what kind of being had the seventh day sabbath, and other Jewish rites and ceremonies, that by Christ''s resurrection were taken away? |
6049 | But what kind of sinners shall then be saved? |
6049 | But what law is that which hath not power to command our obedience in the point of our justification with God? |
6049 | But what man in the world can do this whose heart is not seasoned with the love of God and the love of Christ? |
6049 | But what manner of nakedness was it? |
6049 | But what men were to ascend with him, but, as was said afore, the men that''came out of the graves after his resurrection?'' |
6049 | But what more false than such a conclusion? |
6049 | But what must be done with them? |
6049 | But what necessity is there that the heart must be broken? |
6049 | But what need I grant you, that which can not be proved? |
6049 | But what need all these offices of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But what need these things be asserted, promised, or prayed for? |
6049 | But what needs that, if mercy could save the soul without the redemption that is by him? |
6049 | But what needs that? |
6049 | But what of that, if yet he be unable to fetch us off when charged for sin at the bar, and before the face of a righteous judge? |
6049 | But what of that, since the wrinkles that are in their faces threaten not us but them? |
6049 | But what of that? |
6049 | But what promises in the Scripture do you find your hope built upon? |
6049 | But what righteousness have you of your own, to which you so dearly are wedded, that it may not be let go, for the sake of Christ? |
6049 | But what said the Lord unto him? |
6049 | But what saith it? |
6049 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6049 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6049 | But what saith the Word of God? |
6049 | But what saith the Word? |
6049 | But what saith the Word? |
6049 | But what saith the apostle? |
6049 | But what saith the apostle? |
6049 | But what saith the jealous Lord? |
6049 | But what saith the scripture? |
6049 | But what saith the sinful soul to this? |
6049 | But what salvation? |
6049 | But what says the distressed man? |
6049 | But what shall I do, I can not depart therefrom as I should? |
6049 | But what shall I do, who am so cold, slothful, and heartless, that I can not find any heart to do any work for God in this world? |
6049 | But what shall I now do, saith the sinner? |
6049 | But what shall I say unto them? |
6049 | But what shall we say, when there must be added to that the heart blood of the Son of God, and all to make our salvation complete? |
6049 | But what should I thus discourse of the degrees of the torments of the damned souls in hell? |
6049 | But what should a Christian do, when God has broke his heart, to keep it tender? |
6049 | But what should be the reason of that? |
6049 | But what should be the reason that some that are coming to Christ should be so lamentably cast down and buffeted with temptations? |
6049 | But what should be the reason that such a good man should be all his days so much in the dark? |
6049 | But what should be the reason? |
6049 | But what should he believe? |
6049 | But what should he mean by that? |
6049 | But what should men believe with the heart? |
6049 | But what should such men do in that kingdom that comes by gift, where grace and mercy reigns? |
6049 | But what should they believe? |
6049 | But what should we do with such kind of saints? |
6049 | But what then are sinners the better for the death and blood of Christ? |
6049 | But what then do we mean when we say, justification will stand with a state of imperfection? |
6049 | But what then doth he mean by the redemption of this purchased possession? |
6049 | But what then was the altar? |
6049 | But what then? |
6049 | But what then? |
6049 | But what then? |
6049 | But what things are they? |
6049 | But what unbecoming language is this for the children of the same father, members of the same body, and heirs of the same glory, to be accustomed to? |
6049 | But what was Paul but a broken- hearted and a contrite sinner? |
6049 | But what was Paul? |
6049 | But what was Sheshach? |
6049 | But what was it that made him thus slothful? |
6049 | But what was it that made them join their works of the law with Christ, but their unbelief, whose foundation was ignorance and fear? |
6049 | But what was it that made you so afraid of this sight? |
6049 | But what was it that moved so upon his heart, as to cause him to do this thing? |
6049 | But what was it to be lifted up from the earth? |
6049 | But what was it? |
6049 | But what was the affliction? |
6049 | But what was the cause of their making this excuse? |
6049 | But what was the cause of your carrying of it thus to the first workings of God''s blessed Spirit upon you? |
6049 | But what was the reason thereof, I mean the reason from God? |
6049 | But what was the reason? |
6049 | But what was the spirit of Diotrephes? |
6049 | But what was this curse? |
6049 | But what was this to a personal performing the commandments? |
6049 | But what were the chargers a type of? |
6049 | But what were the things that their eyes had seen, that would so damnify them should they be forgotten? |
6049 | But what were the tongs a type of? |
6049 | But what were these chains a type of? |
6049 | But what were these golden spoons a type of? |
6049 | But what were they used about the candlestick to do? |
6049 | But what were those instruments a type of? |
6049 | But what will he do with him as he is an Advocate? |
6049 | But what will not love do? |
6049 | But what will not love do? |
6049 | But what will they do when the axe is fetched out? |
6049 | But what will they do with her? |
6049 | But what will you say to a soul in this condition? |
6049 | But what would they do if there were not one always at the right hand of God, by intercession, taking away these kind of iniquities? |
6049 | But what would you have us poor creatures to do that can not tell how to pray? |
6049 | But what''s the bush, whose pricks, like tenter- hooks, Do scratch and claw the finest lady''s hands, Or rend her clothes, if she too near it stands? |
6049 | But what''s the reason? |
6049 | But what, because they are not baptized, have they not Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But what, did they now love David? |
6049 | But what, if when he hath used it, he still continueth dark about it; what will you advise him now? |
6049 | But what, then, are the works of the law? |
6049 | But what, then, must we understand by these lavers, and by this sacrifice being washed in them, in order to its being burned upon the altar? |
6049 | But what? |
6049 | But what? |
6049 | But when I heard it, Lord, thought I, if this be true, what shall I do, and what will become of all this people, yea, and of this preacher too? |
6049 | But when did you give him such a rebuke? |
6049 | But when he shall see the thief that was saved on the cross stand by, as clothed with beauteous glory, what further can he be able to object? |
6049 | But when must we conclude we have kept the law? |
6049 | But when shall this be? |
6049 | But when will that be? |
6049 | But when, Lord, wilt thou laugh at, and mock at, the impenitent? |
6049 | But when? |
6049 | But when? |
6049 | But whence came this but from an inward feeling by faith of the love of God, and of Christ, which passeth knowledge? |
6049 | But whence must this come? |
6049 | But whence should the soul thus receive sin? |
6049 | But where are they here forbidden to teach them other truths before they be baptized? |
6049 | But where do you find that ever the Lord did thus rowl9 in his bowels for and after any self- righteous man? |
6049 | But where doth Jesus Christ, in all the word of the New Testament, expressly speak to a returning backslider with words of grace and peace? |
6049 | But where hadst thou that heart that gives entertainment to these thoughts, these heavenly thoughts? |
6049 | But where is she? |
6049 | But where is the fruit of this repentance? |
6049 | But where should we find him? |
6049 | But where were they taken, or about what were they found? |
6049 | But wherein lieth the depth of this wisdom of God in our salvation, if man''s righteousness can save him? |
6049 | But which is the way to make one that is wild, or a madman, sober? |
6049 | But who are these? |
6049 | But who are they that must thus be feared? |
6049 | But who can tell, though there should not be saved so many as there shall, but thou mayest be one of that few? |
6049 | But who doth he personate if he says, This is a house for the soul; for the body is part of him that says, Our house? |
6049 | But who is it that can live by grace? |
6049 | But who is this that can do this? |
6049 | But who knows all this? |
6049 | But who must look upon it? |
6049 | But who told thee that thy soul was such an excellent thing as by thy practice thou declarest thou believest it to be? |
6049 | But who understands this, who believes it? |
6049 | But who, quoth he, do you think this is? |
6049 | But who, when called, was there in the world, in whom grace shone so bright as in him? |
6049 | But why are the ungodly held forth under the notion of a rich man? |
6049 | But why can you indulge the baptists in many acts of disobedience? |
6049 | But why could it not be that they should perish other where? |
6049 | But why could they not learn that song? |
6049 | But why did Christ offer Himself in sacrifice? |
6049 | But why did God let Him die? |
6049 | But why did He spill His precious blood? |
6049 | But why did He suffer the pains of Hell? |
6049 | But why did he commit his soul to him? |
6049 | But why did he do all this? |
6049 | But why did he not come through? |
6049 | But why did not you look for the steps? |
6049 | But why did not young Badman run away from this master, as he ran away from the other? |
6049 | But why did these do thus? |
6049 | But why did you not answer these parts of my argument? |
6049 | But why do I talk thus? |
6049 | But why do YOU throw out FAITH? |
6049 | But why do the righteous desire to be with Christ? |
6049 | But why do you put in these cautionary words, They must not sell always as dear, nor buy always as cheap as they can? |
6049 | But why do you wonder at a work of conviction and conversion? |
6049 | But why doth Job after this manner thus speak to God? |
6049 | But why doth the devil do thus? |
6049 | But why go back again, seeing that is the next way to hell? |
6049 | But why is God so delighted in the exercise of this grace of hope? |
6049 | But why is all this? |
6049 | But why is covetousness called idolatry? |
6049 | But why is it given to him? |
6049 | But why is it said, Let him''dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue?'' |
6049 | But why it is said, Generations? |
6049 | But why must he be imposed upon? |
6049 | But why must the instruments be laid upon the tables? |
6049 | But why must the women have shame- facedness, since they live honestly as the men? |
6049 | But why not attain to a performance? |
6049 | But why not in the name of an angel? |
6049 | But why not meddle with Cain, since he was a murderer? |
6049 | But why not possible now to be holden of death? |
6049 | But why not? |
6049 | But why peace first? |
6049 | But why rejoice in this? |
6049 | But why should HE be rebuked, that said he was for Christ? |
6049 | But why should they be so set against him, since they also despise the way that he forsook? |
6049 | But why so much offended at this? |
6049 | But why so? |
6049 | But why speaks he so particularly? |
6049 | But why speedily? |
6049 | But why stand off? |
6049 | But why standest thou thus at the door? |
6049 | But why the seventh day? |
6049 | But why then did he thus abhor them? |
6049 | But why then were they baptized? |
6049 | But why then were they not circumcised? |
6049 | But why to Abel? |
6049 | But why was he crucified there for the sins of his children? |
6049 | But why was he true God and true man? |
6049 | But why was not all this done on the seventh day? |
6049 | But why was the firstborn of men coupled with unclean beasts, but because they are both unclean? |
6049 | But why wilt thou seek for ease this way, seeing so many dangers attend it? |
6049 | But why wonder, and think they are fools? |
6049 | But why would God so order it, that life should be had nowhere else but in Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But why would they take from us the Holy Scriptures? |
6049 | But why( some may say) must we come out? |
6049 | But why, I say, is this day, on which our Lord rose from the dead, nominated as it is? |
6049 | But why, good Sir, do you sigh so deeply; is it for ought else than that for the which, as you have perceived, I myself am concerned? |
6049 | But why, may some say, do you make so homely a comparison? |
6049 | But why, or by what, art thou persuaded that thou hast left all for God and Heaven? |
6049 | But why, then, is His death so slighted by some? |
6049 | But why? |
6049 | But why? |
6049 | But why? |
6049 | But will it not be counted a trespass against the Lord of the city whither we are bound, thus to violate His revealed will? |
6049 | But will it not, think you, strangely put to silence all such thoughts, and words, and reasons of the ungodly before the bar of God? |
6049 | But will riches profit in the day of wrath? |
6049 | But will that good meal that I ate last week, enable me, without supply, to do a good day''s work in this? |
6049 | But will the plea do? |
6049 | But will you be willing, said he, that two indifferent persons shall determine the case, and will you stand by their judgment? |
6049 | But will you promise me to mend? |
6049 | But with the voice of my thanksgiving, I Will offer sacrifice to thee on high, And pay my vows which I have vow''d, each one, For why? |
6049 | But with what death? |
6049 | But would God have given the world such an account of his sufferings, that by one offering he did perfect for ever them that are sanctified? |
6049 | But would He have done this for inconsiderable things? |
6049 | But would he believe it? |
6049 | But would they do thus if they knew the severity of the law? |
6049 | But would they have done so, think you, if at the same time the fear of God had had its full play in the soul, in the army? |
6049 | But would you be imitating of, or accomplishing such a righteousness? |
6049 | But would you have us sit still and do nothing? |
6049 | But would you not have the people of God stand in fear of his rod, and be afraid of his judgments? |
6049 | But would you not have us mind our worldly concerns? |
6049 | But would you not have us rejoice at the sight and sense of the forgiveness of our sins? |
6049 | But wouldest thou change places with them? |
6049 | But ye ungodly fathers, how are your ungodly children roaring now in hell? |
6049 | But ye will say, Who are those ignorant persons, that shall find no favour at that day? |
6049 | But yet all the things of God were kept out of my sight, and still the tempter followed me with, But whither must you go when you die? |
6049 | But you ask me,''If outward and bodily conformity be become a crime?'' |
6049 | But you ask,''Is my peace maintained in a way of disobedience? |
6049 | But you ask,''Might they do so when they came into Canaan?'' |
6049 | But you bid me tell you,''What I mean by spirit baptism?'' |
6049 | But you descant; Is baptism one of the laws of Christ? |
6049 | But you may ask me, What the laver or molten sea should signify to us in the New Testament? |
6049 | But you may ask, How did God deal with sinners before this righteousness was actually in being? |
6049 | But you may ask, what is that righteousness, with which a Christian is made righteous before he doth righteousness? |
6049 | But you may say, How shall I know that I fear God? |
6049 | But you may say, What is it to exercise this grace aright? |
6049 | But you may say, how can you prove that conscience is not of the same nature, of the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | But you object,''Must our love to the unbaptized indulge them in an act of disobedience? |
6049 | But you saw more than this, did you not? |
6049 | But you say, Doth it not lead to God all that follow it? |
6049 | But you tell me,''I use the arguments of the paedo- baptist, to wit, But where are infants forbidden to be baptized?'' |
6049 | But you will say, How doth the law kill and strike dead the poor creatures? |
6049 | But you will say, How should we try our graces? |
6049 | But you will say, The scripture saith, he that descended is the same that ascended, which to me( say you) implies, none but the Spirit''s ascending? |
6049 | But you will say, What, will not the Lord have mercy on ignorant souls? |
6049 | But you will say, Who shall stand when he appears? |
6049 | But you will say, doth not the scripture say, that it is the Spirit of Christ that doth make manifest or convince of sin? |
6049 | But you will say, might they not be deceived? |
6049 | But you will say, upon what then was the threatening and the command to punish grounded? |
6049 | But you will say, what lies are those, that the devil beguileth poor souls withal? |
6049 | But you will say,"Then why did God give the law, if we can not have salvation by following of it?" |
6049 | But you will say--"But who are those that are thus under the law?" |
6049 | But"who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord?" |
6049 | But''how shall I give thee up, Ephraim? |
6049 | But, Again, Wouldest thou have mercy for thy righteousness? |
6049 | But, Are they within the reach and power of Shall- come? |
6049 | But, Harry, said I, why do you swear and curse thus? |
6049 | But, I pray, what, and how many, were the things wherein you differed? |
6049 | But, I pray, will you tell me why you ask me such questions? |
6049 | But, I say, how can these Scriptures be fulfilled, if he that would indeed be saved, as before said, has sinned the sin unpardonable? |
6049 | But, I say, how will they fail? |
6049 | But, I say, if he knows him not, how can he propound him as the end? |
6049 | But, I say, if the sight of heaven, at so vast a distance, is so excellent a prospect, what will it look like when one is in it? |
6049 | But, I say, if thou do it graciously, then a reward followeth;"For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? |
6049 | But, I say, was this fear, that is called now the fear of God, anything else, but a dread of the greatness of power of the king? |
6049 | But, I say, what is all this to them that have him not for their Advocate? |
6049 | But, I say, what is man without this soul, or wherein lieth this pre- eminence over a beast? |
6049 | But, I say, what is the reason some so prize what others so despise, since they both stand in need of the same grace and mercy of God in Christ? |
6049 | But, I say, what is this to them that are not admitted to a privilege in the advocate- office of Christ? |
6049 | But, I say, why is it repeated? |
6049 | But, I say, why offended at this? |
6049 | But, I say, why so unconcerned? |
6049 | But, I say,''Would they not change places? |
6049 | But, Lord, give an instance; when was it, or where? |
6049 | But, Lord, how wilt thou quench their boundless thirst? |
6049 | But, Sir, Are none but those of your way the public Christians? |
6049 | But, Sir, said she, what is this pill good for else? |
6049 | But, Sir, said the old gentleman, how could you guess that I am such a man, since I came from such a place? |
6049 | But, Sir, since you are not peremptory in your proof; how came you to be so absolute in your practice? |
6049 | But, Sir, was not this it that made my good Christian''s burden fall from off his shoulder, and that made him give three leaps for joy? |
6049 | But, Sir, who have I pleaded for, in the denial of any one ordinance of God? |
6049 | But, USE FOURTH.--Is it so? |
6049 | But, What, What hast thou done by thy righteousness? |
6049 | But, alas, I am blind, and can not see; what shall I do now? |
6049 | But, alas, I have nothing to carry with me; how then should I go? |
6049 | But, as Paul says of himself, and of those that were saved by grace in his day,"What then? |
6049 | But, brave soul, pray tell me what the things are that discourage thee, and that weaken thy strength in the way? |
6049 | But, but few comparatively will be concerned with this use; for where is he that doth this? |
6049 | But, do the broken in spirit believe this? |
6049 | But, good neighbour Wiseman, be pleased to tell me who this man was, and why you conclude him so miserable in his death? |
6049 | But, may some say, what good will it do a man to know that the love of Christ passeth knowledge? |
6049 | But, mother, what is it like? |
6049 | But, my good companion, do you know the way to this desired place? |
6049 | But, pray Sir, while it is fresh in my mind, do you hear anything of his wife and children? |
6049 | But, pray, what said my Lord to my rudeness? |
6049 | But, pray, why do you ask me this question? |
6049 | But, said Christian, are there no turnings nor windings, by which a stranger may lose his way? |
6049 | But, said Christian, will your practice stand a trial at law? |
6049 | But, said he, how shall we know that you have received a gift? |
6049 | But, said he, what if you should forbear awhile, and sit still, till you see further how things will go? |
6049 | But, said he, who shall be judge between you, for you take the Scriptures one way, and they another? |
6049 | But, saith Justice Keelin, who was the judge in that court? |
6049 | But, saith the Christian, I am dull and stupid that way, will not Christ be shuff13 and shy with me because of this? |
6049 | But, saith the soul, how, if after I have received a pardon, I should commit treason again? |
6049 | But, says Justice Keelin, what have you against the Common Prayer Book? |
6049 | But, says Moses,"Who is a God like unto thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?" |
6049 | But, sluggard, is it not a shame for thee To be outdone by pismires? |
6049 | But, you will say, What needs all this ado, and why is all this time and pains spent in speaking to this that is surely believed already? |
6049 | But, you will say, can a man use Gospel ordinances with a legal spirit? |
6049 | But, you will say, it is like, How should this be made manifest and appear? |
6049 | By his being able to judge by nature, that there is such a thing as sin; as Christ saith,"Why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?" |
6049 | By rest here, must needs be understood those not elect, because set one in opposition to the other; and if not elect, what then but reprobate? |
6049 | By way of question; what are the things thou desirest, are they lawful or unlawful? |
6049 | By what law? |
6049 | By what law? |
6049 | By what will? |
6049 | By which of the ten commandments is trusting to our own righteousness forbidden? |
6049 | By which professors seem willingly led, though against so many plain commands and examples, written as with a sun beam, that he that runs may read? |
6049 | By whom or by what is this fear wrought in the heart? |
6049 | Called Christian, how many times have thy sins laid thee upon a sick- bed, and, to thine and others''thinking, at the very mouth of the grave? |
6049 | Can a holy, a just, and a righteous God, once think( with honour to his name) of saving such a vile creature as I am? |
6049 | Can a loving husband abide to be always from a beloved spouse? |
6049 | Can a man at the same time be a proud man, and fear God too? |
6049 | Can a man be happy that is ignorant that he is hanging over hell by the poor weak thread of an uncertain life? |
6049 | Can a man be happy, that is ignorant that he is without God and Christ, and hope? |
6049 | Can a man believe in Christ and not be hated by the devil? |
6049 | Can any think that God should take That pains, to form a man So like himself, only to make Him here a moment stand? |
6049 | Can any think that trees are the things taken care of here? |
6049 | Can darkness agree with light? |
6049 | Can he contradict our Advocate? |
6049 | Can he excuse himself? |
6049 | Can he make a profession of this Christ, and that sweetly and convincingly, and the children of Satan hold their tongue? |
6049 | Can he overstand the charge, the accusation, the sentence, and condemnation? |
6049 | Can he prove that Christ has no interest in the saints''inheritance? |
6049 | Can he prove that we are at age, or that our several parts of the heavenly house are already delivered into our own power? |
6049 | Can he speak for himself? |
6049 | Can his heart now endure, or can his hands be strong? |
6049 | Can it be a privilege for me to be annoyed with my infirmities, and to have my best duties infected with it? |
6049 | Can it be imagined that those''that paint themselves did ever repent of their pride?'' |
6049 | Can it be imagined, sin being what it is, and God what he is-- to wit, a revenger of disobedience-- but that one time or other man must smart for sin? |
6049 | Can it me a mercy for me to be troubled with my corruptions? |
6049 | Can no good thing come to us out of this? |
6049 | Can none of these severally, nor all of them jointly, save a man from hell, unless Christ also become our Advocate? |
6049 | Can not a man be saved unless his heart be broken? |
6049 | Can not all the angels do it? |
6049 | Can not an angel do it? |
6049 | Can not he transform himself thus into an angel of light? |
6049 | Can not his eyes, which are as a flame of fire, see in my words, thoughts, and actions enough to make me culpable of the wrath of God? |
6049 | Can not man by any means redeem his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him? |
6049 | Can not one sinner save another? |
6049 | Can not we love their persons, parts, graces, but we must love their sins?'' |
6049 | Can not you submit, and, notwithstanding, do as much good as you can, in a neighbourly way, without having such meetings? |
6049 | Can olives, brethren, on a fig- tree grow, Or figs on vines? |
6049 | Can pride be where a soul for mercy craves? |
6049 | Can repentance be where godly sorrow is not? |
6049 | Can such a one as I am, live in glory? |
6049 | Can the body hear? |
6049 | Can the body see? |
6049 | Can the same reason, or anything like it, for refusing baptism, be given now?'' |
6049 | Can the thistle produce grapes, or the noxious weeds corn? |
6049 | Can the waters quench it? |
6049 | Can there be a miss of the loss of such an one? |
6049 | Can there be any greater comfort ministered to thee than to know thy person stands just before God? |
6049 | Can there be hope for me?'' |
6049 | Can there now be any thing more plain? |
6049 | Can these fear God? |
6049 | Can these teach him to manage his knowledge well? |
6049 | Can they do that at all times which they can do at some times? |
6049 | Can they pray, believe, love, fear, repent, and bow before God always alike? |
6049 | Can we wonder that such a state of society was not long permitted to exist? |
6049 | Can we wonder that those who preached the holy, humbling, self- denying doctrines of the cross, were persecuted to the death? |
6049 | Can we, by a new birth, say"Our Father?" |
6049 | Can you behold every one that he is proud, and abase him, and bind their faces in secret? |
6049 | Can you build and leave out a stone in the foundation? |
6049 | Can you call for the waters of the sea, and cause them to cover the face of the ground? |
6049 | Can you cast all, and rest all, upon the love of Christ? |
6049 | Can you count the number of the stars, or stay the bottles of heaven? |
6049 | Can you give me further reason yet to convict me of the truth of what you say? |
6049 | Can you grapple with the judgment of God? |
6049 | Can you not be content to be damned for your sins against the law, but you must sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | Can you not do as your neighbours do, carry the world, sin, lust, pleasure, profit, esteem among men, along with you? |
6049 | Can you not stay and take these along with you? |
6049 | Can you not tell how you knocked? |
6049 | Can you remember by what means you find your annoyances, at times, as if they were vanquished? |
6049 | Can you say you desire, when you pray? |
6049 | Can you stop the sun from running his course, and hinder the moon from giving her light? |
6049 | Can you wrestle with the Almighty? |
6049 | Canst thou answer it, sinner? |
6049 | Canst thou be content to be put off with a belly well filled, and a back well clothed? |
6049 | Canst thou commend thyself''to every man''s conscience in the sight of God?'' |
6049 | Canst thou defend thyself? |
6049 | Canst thou drink hell- fire? |
6049 | Canst thou hear of Christ, His bloody sweat and death, and not be taken with it, and not be grieved for it, and also converted by it? |
6049 | Canst thou hear that the load of thy sins did break the very heart of Christ, and spill His precious blood? |
6049 | Canst thou hear this, and not be concerned? |
6049 | Canst thou hear this, and not have thy ears to tingle and burn on thy head? |
6049 | Canst thou imagine thou shalt at the day of account out- face God, or make him believe thou wast what thou wast not? |
6049 | Canst thou in faith say, Father, Father, to God? |
6049 | Canst thou indeed, with the rest of the saints, cry, Our Father? |
6049 | Canst thou live in the water; canst thou live always, and nowhere else, but in the water? |
6049 | Canst thou not so much as once soberly think of thy dying hour, or of whither thy sinful life will drive thee then? |
6049 | Canst thou now that readest or hearest these lines turn thy back, and go on in your sins? |
6049 | Canst thou produce the birthright? |
6049 | Canst thou read this, O thou wicked sinner, and yet go on in sin? |
6049 | Canst thou read this, and not feel thy conscience begin to throb and dag? |
6049 | Canst thou say unto him as David,"Judge me, O God, and plead my cause"( Psa 43:1)? |
6049 | Canst thou say, from blessed experience,''His flesh is meat indeed, and His blood is drink indeed?'' |
6049 | Canst thou see thy misery? |
6049 | Canst thou set so light of Heaven, of God, of Christ, and the salvation of thy poor, yet precious soul? |
6049 | Canst thou think of this, and defer repentance one hour longer? |
6049 | Canst thou, after a due examination of thyself, say that as to these things thou art innocent and clear? |
6049 | Carest thou not for this? |
6049 | Carry the solemn inquiry to the throne of grace, Have I passed from death unto life? |
6049 | Cast devils out, done wonders in the same? |
6049 | Change!--with whom? |
6049 | Charles II, hearing of it, asked the learned D.D.,''How a man of his great erudition could sit to hear a tinker preach?'' |
6049 | Chris.--What good motions? |
6049 | Christ indeed could mount up( Acts 1:9), but me, poor me, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | Christ made himself known to his disciples in breaking of bread; who would not, then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6049 | Christ made himself known to them in breaking of bread; who, who would not then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6049 | Christian man, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Christian, are you actively engaged in fulfilling the duties of your course? |
6049 | Christiana and her sons? |
6049 | Civil commerce you will have with the worst, and what more have you with these? |
6049 | Come, Samuel, are you willing that I should catechise you also? |
6049 | Come, neighbour Pliable, how do you do? |
6049 | Come, pr''ythee bird, I pr''ythee come away, Why should this net thee take, when''scape thou may? |
6049 | Come, said Christiana, will you eat a bit, a little to sweeten your mouths, while you sit here to rest your legs? |
6049 | Come, sinner, let us apply it: How long is it since thou began to fear that Jesus Christ will not receive thee? |
6049 | Come, tell me, do you keep it from the dust, Yea, wind it also duly up you must? |
6049 | Coming sinner, take notice of this; we use to plead practices with men, and why not with God likewise? |
6049 | Coming sinner, what thinkest thou? |
6049 | Consdier man what I have said, And judge of things aright; When all men''s cards are fully played, Whose will abide the light? |
6049 | Consequently, who can understand the love that saves him from them? |
6049 | Consider thus with thyself, Would I be glad to have all, every one of my sins to come in against me, to inflame the justice of God against me? |
6049 | Consider thus, Would I be glad to have all, and every one of the ten commandments, to discharge themselves against my soul? |
6049 | Consider, I say, has he made a hedge and a wall to stop thee? |
6049 | Consider, What conviction of thy goodness can the actions that flow from such a spirit give unto observers? |
6049 | Consider, thou sayest, all my strength is gone, and therefore how should I wait? |
6049 | Consider, was it man that had offended? |
6049 | Could He not have suffered without His so suffering? |
6049 | Could he not, think you, have stooped from the cross to the ground, and have laid hold on some honester man, if he would? |
6049 | Could it remove from the place on which God had set it? |
6049 | Could not the grace of the Father save us without this condescension of the Son? |
6049 | Could the state have selected a fitter tool for their purposes? |
6049 | Couldst thou invent a more full, free, or larger promise? |
6049 | Counsel Second, Wouldest thou improve this love? |
6049 | Cry, if thou wilt, O, when wilt thou come unto me? |
6049 | Cry, why so? |
6049 | Cumber- ground, how many hopeful, inclinable, forward people, hast thou by thy fruitless and unprofitable life, kept out of the vineyard of God? |
6049 | Cut him down, why cumbereth he the ground? |
6049 | Dark- land, said the guide; doth not that lie up on the same coast with the City of Destruction? |
6049 | Death quaketh, and destruction falleth down dead at our feet: What, then, can stand before us? |
6049 | Deep calleth unto deep: What''s that? |
6049 | Deny this, and it follows that God accepteth men without respect to righteousness; and then what follows that, but that Christ is dead in vain? |
6049 | Depart: what quite? |
6049 | Devote myself to it, you will say, how is that? |
6049 | Did Abel offer his best? |
6049 | Did Christ''s two- fold righteousness qualify him for that work of righteousness, that was of God designed for him to do? |
6049 | Did Formalist and Hypocrite turn off into bye ways at the foot of the hill Difficulty, and miserably perish? |
6049 | Did Giant Slay- good intend me this favour when he stopped me, and resolved to let me go no further? |
6049 | Did Gideon, think you, believe that he was so strong in grace as he was? |
6049 | Did God send his Holy Spirit into the hearts of his people, to that end that you should taunt at it? |
6049 | Did He bleed for sin? |
6049 | Did He bleed for sins? |
6049 | Did I call him before an atheist? |
6049 | Did I ever exclaim, in the agony of my spirit,"What must I do to be saved?" |
6049 | Did I ever feel a deep concern about my soul? |
6049 | Did I ever see my danger as a sinner? |
6049 | Did I say before, that religion is their pretence? |
6049 | Did I say before, that the God of glory is desirous to be seen of us? |
6049 | Did I say that hearty, fervent, and constant prayer flowed from this fear of God? |
6049 | Did I say, it is fruitful? |
6049 | Did I say, our Lord had here in former days his country- house, and that He loved here to walk? |
6049 | Did I say, personal virtues? |
6049 | Did Ignorance, who perished from the way, say to the pilgrims,''You go so fast, I must stay awhile behind?'' |
6049 | Did Mistrust and Timorous run back for fear of the persecuting lions, Church and State? |
6049 | Did any of them know of your coming? |
6049 | Did ever God tell thee thou shalt live half a year or two months longer? |
6049 | Did ever God tell thee thou shalt live half a year, or two months longer? |
6049 | Did ever any of your carnal acquaintance take knowledge of a difference of your language and conduct? |
6049 | Did good men then go to see him in his last sickness? |
6049 | Did he break his leg then? |
6049 | Did he finish his work thereon? |
6049 | Did he intend, that after he had rifled my pockets, I should go to Gaius, mine host? |
6049 | Did he not, even when he desired life, yet break with God in the day when conditions of life were propounded to him? |
6049 | Did he often carry it thus to her? |
6049 | Did not Aaron fall; yea, and Moses himself? |
6049 | Did not Christ die for us; and dying for us, are we not become dead to the law by the death of his body? |
6049 | Did not God know best what was best to do them good? |
6049 | Did not Haman lead Mordecai in his state by the hand of anger? |
6049 | Did not I direct thee the way to the little wicket- gate? |
6049 | Did not I tell thee before, that a man must be righteous before he doth one good work, or he can never be righteous? |
6049 | Did not the Shepherds bid us beware of the flatterers? |
6049 | Did not we tell thee of these things? |
6049 | Did she desire thee to come with her to this place? |
6049 | Did she talk thus openly? |
6049 | Did the similar feeling of Job or David spring from these polluted fountains? |
6049 | Did these, then, see their graces so clear, as they saw themselves by their sins to be unworthy ones? |
6049 | Did they all know that he was to be betrayed of Judas? |
6049 | Did they show wherein this way is so dangerous? |
6049 | Did they suffer? |
6049 | Did we not run, ride, labour, and strive abundantly, if it might have been, for the good of thy soul, though now a damned soul? |
6049 | Did we not see, from the Delectable Mountains, the gate of the city? |
6049 | Did we not sound an alarm in thine ears, by the trumpet of God''s word day after day? |
6049 | Did we not tell thee sin would damn thy soul? |
6049 | Did we not tell thee that they who loved their sins should be damned at this dark and gloomy day, as thou art like to be? |
6049 | Did we not tell thee that without conversion there was no salvation? |
6049 | Did we not venture our goods, our names, our lives? |
6049 | Did you cry me mercy so long as you had hopes that you might prevail against me? |
6049 | Did you hear no talk of neighbour Pliable? |
6049 | Did you meet with no other assault as you came? |
6049 | Did you never read that Scripture which saith,"Israel, which followed after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness"? |
6049 | Did you never read what God did to Ananias and Sapphira for telling but one lie against it? |
6049 | Did you never read, that''the dragon persecuteth the woman?'' |
6049 | Did you then so well know his life? |
6049 | Didst thou believe, when thou saidst it, That God knew thy heart? |
6049 | Didst thou ever burn any of thy children in the fire to idols? |
6049 | Didst thou ever curse, and swear, and deny Christ? |
6049 | Didst thou ever kill anybody? |
6049 | Didst thou ever use enchantments and conjuration? |
6049 | Didst thou never hear of the intolerable roarings of the damned ones that are therein? |
6049 | Didst thou never hear or read that doleful saying in Luke 16, how the sinful man cries out among the flames,''One drop of water to cool my tongue?'' |
6049 | Didst thou not blush when thou laidst it down? |
6049 | Do God''s people keep holy fasts? |
6049 | Do I look alone to Christ for righteousness, and depend only on Him for holiness? |
6049 | Do I love Christ, his Father, his saints, his words, and ways? |
6049 | Do I renounce my own righteousness, as well as abhor my sins? |
6049 | Do I see salvation is nowhere but in Christ? |
6049 | Do I see that all other ways, whether of sin or self- righteousness, lead to hell? |
6049 | Do I study to please Him, as well as hope to enjoy Him? |
6049 | Do it therefore, and say, why should any thing have my heart but God, but Christ? |
6049 | Do men either Pluck grapes of thorns, or figs or thistles gather? |
6049 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
6049 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?'' |
6049 | Do n''t you hear a noise? |
6049 | Do n''t you remember how undaunted they were when they stood before the judge? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I know that I am exalted this day to be king of righteousness, and king of peace? |
6049 | Do not even almost all pursue this world, their lusts and pleasures? |
6049 | Do not most decline these things when they either call for their purses or their persons to help in this and such like works as these? |
6049 | Do not most rather seek to push away our feet from taking hold of the path of life, or else lay snares for us in the way? |
6049 | Do not publicans the same? |
6049 | Do not the rich men o''er you tyrannise; And hale ye to their courts; that worthy name By which you''re call''d do not they blaspheme? |
6049 | Do not these fears hinder thee from profiting in hearing or reading of the Word? |
6049 | Do not these fears keep thee back from laying hold of the promise of salvation by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thou hast had, indeed, any true comfort from the Word and Spirit of God? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thy first fears were wrought by the Holy Spirit of God? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee question whether there was ever a work of grace wrought in thy soul? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee sometimes think, that it is in vain for thee to wait upon the Lord any longer? |
6049 | Do not these fears tend to the hardening of thy heart, and to the making of thee desperate? |
6049 | Do not these fears tend to the stirring up of blasphemies in thy heart against God? |
6049 | Do not these fears weaken thy heart in prayer? |
6049 | Do stocks or stones answer prayers? |
6049 | Do such fear God? |
6049 | Do they cry out after the Lord Jesus, to save them? |
6049 | Do they cry out of the insufficiency of their own righteousness, as to justification in the sight of God? |
6049 | Do they drink wine in bowls? |
6049 | Do they fear God? |
6049 | Do they fear God? |
6049 | Do they fly from it, as from the face of a deadly serpent? |
6049 | Do they lie too open to their spiritual foes? |
6049 | Do they live in pleasures, and spend their days in wealth? |
6049 | Do they not know the law? |
6049 | Do they savour Christ in his Word, and do they leave all the world for his sake? |
6049 | Do they say that that blood of his which was shed without the gates of Jerusalem, doth not wash away sin, yea, all sin from him that believes? |
6049 | Do they see more worth and merit in one drop of Christ''s blood to save them, than in all the sins of the world to damn them? |
6049 | Do they slight Thy groans, Thy tears, Thy blood, Thy death, Thy resurrection and intercession, Thy second coming again in heavenly glory? |
6049 | Do they slight Thy merits? |
6049 | Do they think that God can not be even with them? |
6049 | Do they think they shall know themselves then, or that they shall rejoice to see themselves in that bliss? |
6049 | Do they want a right frame of spirit? |
6049 | Do they, do you think, fear God? |
6049 | Do we indeed see Christ by the eye of faith? |
6049 | Do we know how our sins provoke God? |
6049 | Do we know the manner and temper of their King? |
6049 | Do we not see That all these things from us a fleeting be? |
6049 | Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? |
6049 | Do we think that the prophet prophesieth here against trees, against the natural cedars of Lebanon? |
6049 | Do ye think that th''scripture saith in vain, The spirit that lusts to hate, doth in you reign? |
6049 | Do you allow their signing with the cross? |
6049 | Do you allow their sprinkling? |
6049 | Do you believe it? |
6049 | Do you come to church, you know what I mean; to the parish church, to hear Divine service? |
6049 | Do you count them pure with the wicked balances? |
6049 | Do you delight to have your hand against every man?'' |
6049 | Do you find this? |
6049 | Do you know him, then? |
6049 | Do you know them now? |
6049 | Do you know them now? |
6049 | Do you know what that willful sin is? |
6049 | Do you know who they are, whence they come, and what is their purpose in setting down before the town of Mansoul? |
6049 | Do you long for the milk of the promises? |
6049 | Do you mean the covenant of the Law, or the covenant to the Gospel? |
6049 | Do you mean, how came I at first to look after the good of my soul? |
6049 | Do you more to the openly prophane, yea, to all wizards and witches in the land? |
6049 | Do you not find sometimes, as if those things were vanquished, which at other times are your perplexity? |
6049 | Do you not hear the prophets, how they press faith in Jesus, and life by faith in him? |
6049 | Do you not know that he is far more above us, than we are above our horse or mule that is without understanding? |
6049 | Do you not know that he may refuse to elect who he will, without abusing of them? |
6049 | Do you not know that they are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Do you not know them? |
6049 | Do you not remember that one of the Shepherds bid us beware of the Enchanted Ground? |
6049 | Do you not reserve to yourself the liberty of judging what they say? |
6049 | Do you not see that the sceptre is departed from Judah? |
6049 | Do you not see that those things that are spoken of as forerunners of my coming, are accomplished? |
6049 | Do you not see the time that Daniel spake of is accomplished also? |
6049 | Do you not thereby intimate that a man may sometimes do so? |
6049 | Do you not think sometimes of the country from whence you came? |
6049 | Do you not yet bear away with you some of the things that then you were conversant withal? |
6049 | Do you now know, that the resurrection of the body, and glory to follow, is the very quintessence of the gospel of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Do you see yonder hill? |
6049 | Do you so run? |
6049 | Do you so run? |
6049 | Do you so run? |
6049 | Do you suffer? |
6049 | Do you think it is seemly for the church to parrot it against her husband? |
6049 | Do you think it is to say a few words over before or among a people? |
6049 | Do you think that Ephraim would have looked after salvation, had not God first confounded him with the guilt of the sins of his youth? |
6049 | Do you think that God gave the woman her hair, that she might deck herself, and set off her fleshly beauty therewith? |
6049 | Do you think that I am such a fool as to think God can see no further than I? |
6049 | Do you think that I do mean that my righteousness will save me without Christ? |
6049 | Do you think that Manasseh would have regarded the Lord, had He not suffered his enemies to have prevailed against him? |
6049 | Do you think that he that repents, believes, loves, fears, or humbles himself before God, and acts in other graces too, doth always know what he doth? |
6049 | Do you think that love- letters are not desired between lovers? |
6049 | Do you think that that maid''s master would have been troubled at the loss of her, if he had not lost, with her, his gain? |
6049 | Do you think that the woman with her two mites cast in all that she desired to cast into the treasury of God? |
6049 | Do you think that you are stronger than he? |
6049 | Do you think those will ever come thither? |
6049 | Do you think your eyes dazzle? |
6049 | Do you think, I say, that the Lord Jesus did not think before he spake? |
6049 | Do you want spiritual bread? |
6049 | Do you want strength against Satan''s temptations? |
6049 | Do you want strength of grace? |
6049 | Do''st not behold the net? |
6049 | Does Christ dwell in my heart by faith? |
6049 | Does he appear in his glory? |
6049 | Does he honour riches, and power, and wisdom, by descending in one of these classes? |
6049 | Does he take the shield of faith, and helmet of salvation? |
6049 | Does he take the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God? |
6049 | Does thy hand and heart tremble? |
6049 | Dost fly to him that is a Saviour from the wrath to come, for life? |
6049 | Dost keep thine eye upon what thou hast done, And yet hast licence to look on the sun? |
6049 | Dost not thou see that thou art called a thief and a robber, that hast either climbed up to, or crept in at another place than the door? |
6049 | Dost think that such a sinner as thou art shall be heard of God? |
6049 | Dost thou Do well, said God, to be so angry now? |
6049 | Dost thou at some time see some little excellency in Christ? |
6049 | Dost thou believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6049 | Dost thou believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6049 | Dost thou bring forth fruit unto God? |
6049 | Dost thou continually neglect to come to Christ, and usest arguments in thine own heart to satisfy thy soul with so doing? |
6049 | Dost thou count all things but poor, lifeless, empty, vain things, without communion with him? |
6049 | Dost thou count his company more precious than the whole world? |
6049 | Dost thou delight in them? |
6049 | Dost thou delight to sin against plain commands? |
6049 | Dost thou desire to be with them( Prov 24:1)? |
6049 | Dost thou examine thyself whether thou be in the faith or no, having a command in Scripture so to do? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou find that there is but very little sanctifying grace in thy soul? |
6049 | Dost thou give diligence to make thy calling and election sure, because God commanded it in Scripture? |
6049 | Dost thou hear, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Dost thou hear, barren professor? |
6049 | Dost thou in deed and in truth believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6049 | Dost thou know by what it is that God makes a man righteous? |
6049 | Dost thou know the God with whom now thou hast to do? |
6049 | Dost thou know what the unpardonable sin, the sin against the Holy Ghost, is? |
6049 | Dost thou know where that is by or with which God makes a man righteous? |
6049 | Dost thou know whether the day of grace will last a week longer or no? |
6049 | Dost thou like these wicked blasphemies? |
6049 | Dost thou love thine own soul? |
6049 | Dost thou love thy friends, dost thou love thine enemies, dost thou love thy family or relations, or the church of God? |
6049 | Dost thou love to be talking of him-- and also to be walking with him? |
6049 | Dost thou mourn for them, pray against them, and hate thyself because of them? |
6049 | Dost thou not inwardly, and with indignation against sin, say, O that I might never, never feel one such motion more? |
6049 | Dost thou not see the very paw of the devil in them; yea, in every one of thy ten confessions? |
6049 | Dost thou not understand me? |
6049 | Dost thou plead by thy righteousness for mercy for thyself? |
6049 | Dost thou profess the name of Christ, and dost thou pretend to be a man departing from iniquity? |
6049 | Dost thou profess the name of Christ, and dost thou pretend to be a man departing from iniquity? |
6049 | Dost thou religiously name the name of Christ? |
6049 | Dost thou see a soul that has the image of God in him? |
6049 | Dost thou see and find in thee iniquity and unrighteousness? |
6049 | Dost thou see in thee all manner of wickedness? |
6049 | Dost thou see that thou art very much void of sanctification? |
6049 | Dost thou see the vileness of thy heart, the fruit of sin? |
6049 | Dost thou see thy sins? |
6049 | Dost thou see thyself in Christ, and canst thou come to God as a member of him? |
6049 | Dost thou see thyself surrounded with enemies? |
6049 | Dost thou show to others how thou lovest righteousness, by taking opportunities to do righteousness? |
6049 | Dost thou slight and scorn the counsels contained in the Scriptures, and continue in so doing? |
6049 | Dost thou so covet more, as not to be Affected with the grace bestowed on thee? |
6049 | Dost thou strive to imitate Christ in all the works of righteousness, which God doth command of thee, and prompt thee forward to? |
6049 | Dost thou study, by all honest and lawful ways, to advance the name, holiness, and majesty of God? |
6049 | Dost thou suffer for righteousness''sake? |
6049 | Dost thou therefore see thyself in such a sad condition as this? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul His fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that the way that thou art in will lead thee to the strait gate, sinner? |
6049 | Dost thou think, that God hath eyes of flesh, or that he seeth as man sees? |
6049 | Dost thou thus practise, because thou wouldest be taught to do outward acts of righteousness, and because thou wouldest provoke others to do so too? |
6049 | Dost thou understand me, sinful soul? |
6049 | Dost thou walk like one that is bought with a price, even with the price of precious blood? |
6049 | Dost thou want a new heart? |
6049 | Dost thou want faith? |
6049 | Dost thou want grace of any sort? |
6049 | Dost thou want strength against thy lusts, against the devil''s temptations? |
6049 | Dost thou want strength to carry thee through afflictions of body, and afflictions of spirit, through persecutions? |
6049 | Dost thou want the Spirit? |
6049 | Dost thou want wisdom? |
6049 | Dost thou''bear about in thy body the dying of the Lord Jesus?'' |
6049 | Dost want or meat, or drink, or cloth? |
6049 | Doth God find me so, when he seeth that the righteousness of his Son is upon me, being made over to me by an act of his grace? |
6049 | Doth He sometimes give thee some secret persuasions, though scarcely discernible, that thou mayest attain, and get an interest in Him? |
6049 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us with God, to plead with him for us against the devil? |
6049 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us, and that of his mere grace and love? |
6049 | Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly and with cold devotions? |
6049 | Doth a wanton eye argue shamefacedness? |
6049 | Doth he entreat you, for fear of you? |
6049 | Doth he hope? |
6049 | Doth he not here, by the lost sheep, mean the poor Publican? |
6049 | Doth he then command that his mercy should be offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Doth he touch thee with is dirty garments; or doth he annoy thee with his stinking breath? |
6049 | Doth his company sweeten all things-- and his absence embitter all things? |
6049 | Doth his posture of standing so like a man condemned offend thee? |
6049 | Doth his promise fail for evermore? |
6049 | Doth iniquity prevail against thee? |
6049 | Doth it look like what hath any coherence with reason or mercy, for a man to abuse his friend? |
6049 | Doth it not suit many a feeble mind? |
6049 | Doth it say,"and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out?" |
6049 | Doth justice call for the blood of that nature that sinned? |
6049 | Doth justice say that this blood, if it be not the blood of One that is really and naturally God, it will not give satisfaction to infinite justice? |
6049 | Doth justice say, that it must not only have satisfaction for sinners, but they that are saved must be also washed and sanctified with this blood? |
6049 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ but by the drawing,& c., of the Father? |
6049 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Doth not God by these things ofttimes call our sins to remembrance, and provoke us to amendment of life? |
6049 | Doth not everybody see the folly of such arguings? |
6049 | Doth not the ground groan under you? |
6049 | Doth not the whole course of their way declare it to their face? |
6049 | Doth not thy finding of this in thee cause thee to fly from a depending on thy own doings? |
6049 | Doth not thy heart twitter at being saved? |
6049 | Doth not thy mouth water? |
6049 | Doth she not speak very smoothly, and give you a smile at the end of a sentence? |
6049 | Doth she not wear a great purse by her side; and is not her hand often in it, fingering her money, as if that was her heart''s delight? |
6049 | Doth such a one believe? |
6049 | Doth the law call for satisfaction for our sins? |
6049 | Doth the law command thee to do good, and nothing but good, and that with all thy soul, heart, and delight? |
6049 | Doth the poor Publican stand to vex thee? |
6049 | Doth the text say,"Come?" |
6049 | Doth this prove that baptism is essential to church communion? |
6049 | Doth thy heart and conversation agree with this passage? |
6049 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6049 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6049 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6049 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6049 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6049 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6049 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6049 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6049 | Doth wanton talk argue chastity? |
6049 | Doth your hearts fail you? |
6049 | Eighth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Eleventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Elias indeed had a chariot sent him to ride in thither, and went up by it into that holy place( 2 Kings 2:11): but I, poor I, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | Else how can that assembly say AMEN at their prayer or giving of thanks? |
6049 | Enoch is there, because God took him( Gen 5:24), but as for me, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | Enter upon the solemn inquiry, Have I sought the gate? |
6049 | Esau did despise his birthright, saying, What good will this birthright do me? |
6049 | Especially if the judge be just, and knows me altogether, as the God of heaven does? |
6049 | Even Judas could as boldly ask,''Master, is it I''who shall betray Thee? |
6049 | Even thou that hast received the promise of forgiveness: How then can they do it with pleasure, who eat, and forget the Lord? |
6049 | Everybody will cry up the goodness of men; but who is there that is, as he should, affected with the goodness of God? |
6049 | Examine again, Dost thou labour after those qualifications that the Scriptures do describe a child of God by? |
6049 | Examine, Dost thou stand in awe of sinning against God, because he hath in the Scriptures commanded thee to abstain from it? |
6049 | FIRST, How they are to be considered? |
6049 | FOOTNOTE:[ 1]''Who is weak, and I am not weak? |
6049 | Farther, if all be true that this man hath said, how comes it to pass that the subjects of Shaddai are so enslaved in all places where they come? |
6049 | Fearing, that came on pilgrimage out of his parts? |
6049 | Fifth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Fifthly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6049 | First, Art thou indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | First, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6049 | First, Prithee when didst thou begin to be righteous? |
6049 | First, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | First, saith he, If women may praise God together for mercies received for the church of God, or for themselves? |
6049 | First,''Then came the Jews round about him, and said unto him, How long dost thou make us to doubt? |
6049 | For a brother in nature and religion to be so? |
6049 | For a man to be content with this kind of faith, and to look to go to salvation by it, what to God is a greater provocation? |
6049 | For as truly as thou sayest of thy fruitless tree, Cut it down, why doth it cumber the ground? |
6049 | For he asketh me very devoutly,''Whether any unbaptized persons were concerned in these epistles?'' |
6049 | For how can a man act righteousness but from a principle of righteousness? |
6049 | For how can a man repent of that of which he hath neither sight nor sense? |
6049 | For how can it otherwise be, since there is holiness and justice in God? |
6049 | For how can the servant of this my Lord talk with this my Lord? |
6049 | For how can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord? |
6049 | For if he did not heed who himself had baptized, much less did he heed who were baptized by others? |
6049 | For if it be the initiating ordinance, it entereth them into the church: What church? |
6049 | For if sin be so dreadful a thing as to wring the heart of the Son of God, how shall a poor wretched sinner be able to bear it? |
6049 | For if the most potent parts of the soul are engaged in their service, what, think you, do the more inferior do? |
6049 | For if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and sinners appear? |
6049 | For if they reject the word of the Lord,"what wisdom is in them?" |
6049 | For my part, I am out of charity with myself; who then should be in love with me? |
6049 | For of what should a man repent? |
6049 | For should the saints enjoy all this But for a certain time, O, how would they their mark then miss, And at this thing repine? |
6049 | For so the question implies--''What will a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | For some cause he was treated with great liberality for those times; the extent of it may be seen by one justice asking him,''Is your God Beelzebub?'' |
6049 | For such a man will thus conclude, that since the Creator of all is with him, what but creatures are there to be against him? |
6049 | For the fear of God is to stand in awe of him, but how can that be done if we do not set him before us? |
6049 | For the first of these, namely,''WHAT OR WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6049 | For they are now profane to amazement; and sometimes I have thought one thing, and sometimes another; that is, why God should suffer it so to be? |
6049 | For to what purpose should a man desire, or what fruits will desire bring him whose desires shall not be granted? |
6049 | For upon this one question, Am I come, or, am I not? |
6049 | For was it not pleasant to this hypocrite, think you, to speak thus well of himself at this time? |
6049 | For what am I thus tormented? |
6049 | For what bondage greater than to be kept in blindness? |
6049 | For what did you bring yourself into this condition? |
6049 | For what glory is it, if when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? |
6049 | For what greater dignity can be put upon man''s righteousness, than to admit it? |
6049 | For what is God''s design in the work of conviction for sin, and in his awakening of the conscience about it? |
6049 | For what is the ground of despair, but a conceit that sin has shut the soul out of all interest in happiness? |
6049 | For what journey, I pray you? |
6049 | For what men? |
6049 | For what pain of death was his body capable of, when his soul was separate from it? |
6049 | For what portion of God is there,''for that sin,''from above, and what inheritance of the Almighty from on high?'' |
6049 | For what saith the Scripture? |
6049 | For what will my weak and newly converted brethren think of it, but that I was not so strong indeed as I was in word? |
6049 | For what''s the life of man? |
6049 | For what? |
6049 | For when, thinks the enemy, will these fools be so desirous to sit down, as when they are weary? |
6049 | For wherein can grace or love more appear than in his laying down his life for us? |
6049 | For wherein shall it be known here, that I and thy people have found grace in thy sight, is it not in that thou goest with us? |
6049 | For who can bear or grapple with the wrath of God? |
6049 | For who can do righteousness without he be principled so to do? |
6049 | For who can endure a boar in a vineyard; a man of sin in a holy temple; or a dragon in heaven? |
6049 | For who doth not perceive, but when those that sit aloft are vile, and corrupt themselves, they corrupt the whole region and country where they are? |
6049 | For who is prouder than you professors? |
6049 | For who wouldest thou have it; for another, or for thyself? |
6049 | For whom can so precious an inheritance be intended? |
6049 | For why are these things thus recorded, but to show to sinners what he can do, to the praise and glory of his grace? |
6049 | For why may not God be merciful, and why may not God be just? |
6049 | For zeal, where is that also? |
6049 | For''hope that is seen, is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? |
6049 | For''what good is there to the owners thereof, saving the beholding of them with their eyes?'' |
6049 | For, First, Is it better that thou receive judgment in this world, or that thou stay for it to be condemned with the ungodly in the next? |
6049 | For, Was the first covenant made with the first Adam? |
6049 | For, What iniquity is, who knows not? |
6049 | For, did Abel offer? |
6049 | For, pray, what was the flock, and who Christ''s sheep under the law, but the house and people of Israel? |
6049 | For, while a man remains faithless and ignorant of the gospel, to what doth his obedient temper of mind incline? |
6049 | Fourth, Art thou come to the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | Fourth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Fourthly, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6049 | Friend, I did not ask thee why the Jews did put him to death? |
6049 | Friend, Who hath despised the day of small things? |
6049 | Friend, dost thou speak this as from thy own knowledge, or did any other tell thee so? |
6049 | Friend, if thou canst fit thyself, what need hast thou of Christ? |
6049 | Friend, what harm is it to join a dog and a wolf together? |
6049 | Friend, what is this to the purpose? |
6049 | Friend, whither away? |
6049 | Friend, will the law shew a man that his righteousness is sin and dung? |
6049 | Friends, Solomon saith, that''The desire of the slothful killeth him''; and if so, what will slothfulness itself do to those that entertain it? |
6049 | From what? |
6049 | From whence come wars and fights, come they not hence, Ev''n from th''inordinate concupiscence That in your members prompts to variance? |
6049 | Further, I make a question upon three scriptures, Whether all the saints, even in the primitive times, were baptized with water? |
6049 | Further, suppose I should grant this groundless notion, Were not the Jews in Old Testament times to enter the church by circumcision? |
6049 | GREAT- HEART, What could they say against it? |
6049 | Gaal mocked at Abimelech, and said, Who is Abimelech that we should serve him? |
6049 | Gentlemen, whence came you, and whither go you? |
6049 | Go away? |
6049 | Go to him, did I say? |
6049 | God charged our sins upon Christ, and that in their guilt and burden, what remaineth but that the charge was real or feigned? |
6049 | God gave testimony of him by signs and wonders--''Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
6049 | God gave them intimation of a better country, and their minds did cleave to it with desires of it; and what then? |
6049 | God is true, his Word is true; and to help us to hope in him, how many times has he fulfilled it to others, and that before our eyes? |
6049 | God''s people wish well to the souls of others, and wilt not thou wish well to thy own? |
6049 | God, or the Pharisee? |
6049 | Good morrow, my good neighbour, Mr. Attentive; whither are you walking so early this morning? |
6049 | Grant it; yet what law takes notice of the plea of one who doth professedly act as an enemy? |
6049 | Guilt and despair, what are they? |
6049 | Hackney, April 1850 THE GREATNESS OF THE SOUL, AND UNSPEAKABLENESS OF THE LOSS THEREOF''OR WHAT SHALL A MAN GIVE IN EXCHANGE FOR HIS SOUL?'' |
6049 | Had I ever, in all my lifetime, one sinful thought passed through my heart since I was born; yea or no? |
6049 | Had he injured man at all? |
6049 | Had he no place clean? |
6049 | Had he not also now hold of the shield of faith? |
6049 | Had he notice beforehand, and warning of the danger? |
6049 | Had he then such a good trade, for all he was such a bad man? |
6049 | Had not now these men desires that were mighty? |
6049 | Had our sins betrayed us into and under Satan''s slavery? |
6049 | Had sin set us at an indefinite distance from God? |
6049 | Had this Christ of God, our friend, given all he had to save us, had not his love been wonderful? |
6049 | Had you ever any talk with him about it? |
6049 | Had you no talk with him before you came out? |
6049 | Had you not thoughts of leaving off praying? |
6049 | Has God forbidden thee? |
6049 | Has He given it to thee, my reader? |
6049 | Has he adopted us into his family? |
6049 | Has he chosen that day? |
6049 | Has he concealed any of thy righteousness, or has he secretly informed against thee that thou art an hypocrite, and superstitious? |
6049 | Has he crossed thee in all thou puttest thy hand unto? |
6049 | Has he on the breastplate of righteousness? |
6049 | Has he that need of you, that we are sure you have of him? |
6049 | Has man given himself for sin? |
6049 | Has man lain at wait for opportunities for sin? |
6049 | Has man, that he might enjoy his sin, brought himself to a morsel of bread? |
6049 | Has man, when he has found his sin, pursued it with all his heart? |
6049 | Has sin wounded, bruised thy soul, and broken thy bones? |
6049 | Has the enmity of the human heart by nature changed? |
6049 | Hast been among the thieves? |
6049 | Hast no affection but what is brutish? |
6049 | Hast no judgment? |
6049 | Hast no soul? |
6049 | Hast quite forgot how thou wast wo nt to pray, And cry out for forgiveness night and day? |
6049 | Hast thou Jesus Christ for thine Advocate? |
6049 | Hast thou a cause moving thee to come? |
6049 | Hast thou a wife and children? |
6049 | Hast thou a wife? |
6049 | Hast thou also considered the justness of the Judge? |
6049 | Hast thou an heart to be sorry for this wickedness? |
6049 | Hast thou an heart to be sorry for this wickedness? |
6049 | Hast thou any enticing touches of the Word of God upon thy mind? |
6049 | Hast thou any lease of thy life? |
6049 | Hast thou any lease of thy life? |
6049 | Hast thou been a witch? |
6049 | Hast thou been digg''d about and dunged too, Will neither patience nor yet dressing do? |
6049 | Hast thou been with him, and prayed him to plead thy cause, and cried unto him to undertake for thee? |
6049 | Hast thou committed it? |
6049 | Hast thou desired him to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?" |
6049 | Hast thou entertained him? |
6049 | Hast thou escaped, O my soul, from the net of the infernal fowler? |
6049 | Hast thou escaped? |
6049 | Hast thou four children? |
6049 | Hast thou fruit becoming the care of God, the protection of God, the wisdom of God, the patience and husbandry of God? |
6049 | Hast thou fulfilled the whole law, and not offended in one point? |
6049 | Hast thou given thyself to the Lord? |
6049 | Hast thou heart- shaken apprehensions when deep sleep is upon thee, of hell, death, and judgment to come? |
6049 | Hast thou in thee the spirit of adoption? |
6049 | Hast thou lost thy friend for the sake of thy profession? |
6049 | Hast thou made it thy business to give unto God the things that are God''s, and unto Caesar the things that are his, according as God has commanded? |
6049 | Hast thou no conscience? |
6049 | Hast thou no sins? |
6049 | Hast thou not cursed them in thine heart many a time? |
6049 | Hast thou not known? |
6049 | Hast thou not reason? |
6049 | Hast thou purged thyself from the pollutions and motions of sin that dwell in the flesh, and work in thy own members? |
6049 | Hast thou received the spirit of adoption? |
6049 | Hast thou seen thy state to be desperate, if the Lord Jesus doth not undertake to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Hast thou taken delight in being defrauded and beguiled? |
6049 | Hast thou that''godly sorrow''that''worketh repentance to salvation, not to be repented of?'' |
6049 | Hast thou then fled, or dost thou indeed fly to it? |
6049 | Hast thou valued sin at a higher rate than thy soul, than God, Christ, angels, saints, and communion with them in eternal blessedness and glory? |
6049 | Hast thou waited on the Lord so long as the Lord hath waited on thee? |
6049 | Hast thou well improved what thou hast received already? |
6049 | Hast thou''renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in craftiness?'' |
6049 | Hast thou, for the sake of thy faith and profession thereof, lost thy part in the world? |
6049 | Hast thou, thinkest thou, found anything so good as Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Hast thou, through desires, betaken thyself to thy heels? |
6049 | Hath God been so bountiful in making out himself about the supper, that few or none that own ordinances scruple it? |
6049 | Hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
6049 | Hath God required these things at your hands? |
6049 | Hath God showed thee that thou art by nature under the curse of his law? |
6049 | Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and Hell? |
6049 | Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and hell? |
6049 | Hath Jesus performed righteousness to cover us, and spilled blood to wash us? |
6049 | Hath he been digging about thee? |
6049 | Hath he been dunging of thee? |
6049 | Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies?" |
6049 | Hath he said it, and shall he not bring it to pass?" |
6049 | Hath he spoken, and shall not make it good?'' |
6049 | Hath it not a most vehement flame? |
6049 | Hath it not hindered many in their pilgrimage? |
6049 | Hath not Moses told them the danger of living in sin? |
6049 | Hath not man''s wisdom interposed to darken this part of God''s counsel? |
6049 | Hath not the least creature that hath life, more of God in it than these? |
6049 | Hath not this God great love for sinners? |
6049 | Hath that Christ that was with God the Father before the world was, no other body but his church? |
6049 | Hath the God of wisdom set them on foot among us? |
6049 | Hath the Holy Ghost, hath the world, or hath thy conscience? |
6049 | Hath the ministration of God no glory? |
6049 | Have I been grafted into Christ? |
6049 | Have I such an argument, in all my little book? |
6049 | Have I the right work of God on my soul? |
6049 | Have it? |
6049 | Have not I told thee already that there is no such thing as a ceasing to be? |
6049 | Have not thy groans gone up to heaven from every corner of thy house? |
6049 | Have they at no time, think you, convictions of sin, and so consequently fears that their state is dangerous? |
6049 | Have they faith? |
6049 | Have they hope? |
6049 | Have they lost a good frame of heart? |
6049 | Have they lost their peace with the world? |
6049 | Have they lost their spiritual defence? |
6049 | Have they no more peace with this world? |
6049 | Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
6049 | Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
6049 | Have they not had my ministers and servants sent unto them and coming as from me? |
6049 | Have they not the means of grace? |
6049 | Have they pardon of sin? |
6049 | Have they righteousness? |
6049 | Have they strength to do the work of God in their generations, or any other thing that God would have them do? |
6049 | Have they that shall be saved, awakenings about their state by nature? |
6049 | Have they that shall be saved, faith? |
6049 | Have thy sins corrupted thy wounds, and made them putrefy and stink? |
6049 | Have we comfort, or consolation? |
6049 | Have we not talked of what he did at the Red Sea, and in the land of Ham many years ago, and have we forgot him now? |
6049 | Have we sinned? |
6049 | Have we the Spirit, or the fruits thereof? |
6049 | Have we the faith of this? |
6049 | Have ye not read Of Job, how patiently he suffered? |
6049 | Have ye not seen in him what was God''s end; How he doth pity and great love extend? |
6049 | Have you any more things to ask me about my beginning to come on pilgrimage? |
6049 | Have you commended your apprehensions soberly and submissively to those you call Independents and Presbyters? |
6049 | Have you felt the alarm in your soul under a sense of sin and judgment? |
6049 | Have you forgot the close, the milk house, the stable, the barn, and the like, where God did visit your soul? |
6049 | Have you learned to cry,''My Father?'' |
6049 | Have you lost any of your cattle, or what is the matter? |
6049 | Have you never a hill Mizar to remember? |
6049 | Have you not heard many complain that they are weary of church- communion, because of church contention? |
6049 | Have you not"in your flock a male?" |
6049 | Have you soberly, and submissively commended your apprehensions to those congregations in London, that are not of your persuasion in the case in hand? |
6049 | Have you the staggers? |
6049 | Have you these? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having these to look to, what should stagger our faith, or deject our hope? |
6049 | He also expects this at our hands, saying,"Who will rise up for me against the evil doers? |
6049 | He answered me in a great chafe, What would the devil do for company, if it were not for such as I am?'' |
6049 | He asked again if they had aught to say for themselves, why the sentence that they confessed that they had deserved should not be passed upon them? |
6049 | He asked me if I had a family? |
6049 | He asked me why? |
6049 | He asked them, Why? |
6049 | He begins with this question, Whether women fearing God may meet to pray together, and whether it be lawful for them so to do? |
6049 | He can not strut, vapour, and swagger as thou dost? |
6049 | He erreth in A CIRCUMSTANCE, thou errest in A SUBSTANCE; who must bear these errors? |
6049 | He feared God; and what then? |
6049 | He forsakes him--''My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
6049 | He hath given us his Son,"How shall he not with him also freely give us all things?" |
6049 | He hath this Abishai, and that Abishai, that presently steps in against him, saying, Shall not this rebel''s sins destroy him in hell? |
6049 | He imagined that he could bear these small afflictions with patience; but''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | He is indeed the great deliverer; but what is a deliverer to them that never saw themselves in bondage, as was said before? |
6049 | He is near that justifieth me; who will contend with me? |
6049 | He is not ashamed of us, though now in heaven; why should we be ashamed of him before this adulterous and sinful generation? |
6049 | He is thy Creator; is it not seemly for creatures to fear and reverence their Creator? |
6049 | He is thy Father; is it not seemly for children to reverence and fear their Father? |
6049 | He is thy King; is it not seemly for subjects to fear and reverence their King? |
6049 | He is unwearied in his pleading for us; why should we faint and be dismayed while we plead for him? |
6049 | He knocked, therefore, more than once or twice, saying--"May I now enter here? |
6049 | He loved to live high, but his hands refused to labour; and what else can the end of such an one be but that which the wise man saith? |
6049 | He never said to him,''Why hast thou done so?'' |
6049 | He pleads for us before the holy angels; why should not we plead for him before princes? |
6049 | He pleads for us to save our souls; why should not we plead for him to sanctify his name? |
6049 | He pleads for us, against fallen angels; why should we not plead for him against sinful vanities? |
6049 | He pleads for us, though our cause is bad; why should not we plead for him, since his cause is good? |
6049 | He ran away, you say, but whither did he run? |
6049 | He ran to him, he kneeled down to him, and asked, and that before a multitude,''Good master, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?'' |
6049 | He said that I was ignorant, and did not understand the Scriptures; for how, said he, can you understand them when you know not the original Greek? |
6049 | He said unto me, By what scripture? |
6049 | He said, How then? |
6049 | He said, which of the Scriptures do you understand literally? |
6049 | He saith himself, they that come to him,& c., shall find rest unto their souls; hast thou found rest in him for thy soul? |
6049 | He saith not as the hypocrite,"Because I am innocent, surely his anger shall turn from me"( Jer 2:35); or"What have we spoken so much against thee?" |
6049 | He sanctified us with his blood; but why should the Father have thanks for this? |
6049 | He shall take of mine; What is that? |
6049 | He that feareth not to be burned in the fire, how will he fear the heat of weather? |
6049 | He that hath by faith received the spirit of holiness, shall not he be holy? |
6049 | He that hath his word shall then speak it faithfully, for''what is the chaff to the wheat? |
6049 | He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father; and how sayest thou then, Shew us the Father? |
6049 | He that is ungodly, hath a want of righteousness, even of the inward righteousness of works: but what must become of him? |
6049 | He that opened stepped out after him, and said, Thou trembling one, what wantest thou? |
6049 | He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? |
6049 | He that was in darkness, or he that was in light? |
6049 | He that was in everlasting joy, or he that was in everlasting torments? |
6049 | He that was in hell, or he that was in heaven? |
6049 | He was God, a Creator, then; and is he not God now? |
6049 | He was to offer it, and how? |
6049 | He was wroth: and why? |
6049 | He was, and was his Son, before he was revealed--''What is his name, and what is his Son''s name, if thou canst tell?'' |
6049 | He will receive perfection, immortality, heaven, and glory; and what is folded up in these things, who can tell? |
6049 | He will reckon them up so fast, and so fully, that thou wilt cry, Lord, when did I do this? |
6049 | He, in whose heart the Holy Spirit has raised the solemn inquiry, What must I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | Hear, did I say? |
6049 | Heartily spoken; but how did he perform his promise? |
6049 | Hence David said again,''Whom have I in heaven but thee?'' |
6049 | Hence David, when he speaks of heaven, says,''Whom have I in heaven but thee?'' |
6049 | Hence he saith,''Is Christ divided,''or separate from his servants? |
6049 | Hence it follows that Christ will be ashamed of some; but why not ashamed of others? |
6049 | Hence see what it is to grieve the Spirit of God: for He only is the Comforter: and if He withdraws His influences, who or what can comfort us? |
6049 | Hence such a time is rightly said to be a time to try us, or to find out what we are, and is there no good in this? |
6049 | Her plagues are death, and mourning, and famine, and fire( Rev 18:8); are these things to be overlooked? |
6049 | Her things are slain, and stink already, by the weapons that are made mention of before; what then will her carcase do? |
6049 | Here is no consideration of what capacity the people might be of, that were to be persecuted; but what matters what they are? |
6049 | Here is nought but open war, acts of hostility, and shameful rebellion, on the sinner''s side; and what delight can God take in that? |
6049 | Here now is a man an hungered, what must he feed upon? |
6049 | His cause; what is his cause? |
6049 | His fee- who shall pay him his fee? |
6049 | His song was this: The Lord is only my support, And he that doth me feed; How can I then want anything Whereof I stand in need? |
6049 | His, or the Pharisee''s? |
6049 | Hold, saith the apostle; stay a little here; first remember this, Is it meet to say unto God, What doest thou? |
6049 | Honest asked his landlord, if there were any store of good people in the town? |
6049 | Honest asked, why it was said that the Saviour is said to come''out of a dry ground''; and also, that''He had no form or comeliness in him?'' |
6049 | Honest( when they were all sat down) asked Mr. Contrite, and the rest, in what posture their town was at present? |
6049 | Honest, interrupting of him, said, Did you see the two men asleep in the arbour? |
6049 | House and land, trades and honours, places and preferments, what are they to salvation? |
6049 | How are all things out of order? |
6049 | How are those treated in this world who are entitled to so glorious, so exalted, so eternal, and unchangeable an inheritance in the world to come? |
6049 | How art thou when thou thinkest that thou thyself hast grace? |
6049 | How believe you, as touching the resurrection of the dead? |
6049 | How came that about, since you were now reformed? |
6049 | How came that about? |
6049 | How came that to pass? |
6049 | How came they by their faith? |
6049 | How came they white? |
6049 | How came you to think at first of so doing as you do now? |
6049 | How camest thou by the burden at first? |
6049 | How camest thou to see thy need of this righteousness? |
6049 | How can I judge amiss, when I judge as I feel? |
6049 | How can I then be accepted by a holy and sin- abhorring God? |
6049 | How can a sense of thy own baseness, of the vileness of thy heart, and of the holiness of God, stand with such a carriage? |
6049 | How can he be a victor over himself that is led up and down by the nose by his own passions? |
6049 | How can he know so much as the extent of the love of Christ in common? |
6049 | How can he that carrieth himself basely in the sight of men, think he yet well behaveth himself in the sight of God? |
6049 | How can it possibly be? |
6049 | How can such poor women as we hold out in a way so full of troubles as this way is, without a friend and defender? |
6049 | How can that man say, I love God, who from his very heart shrinketh from trusting in him? |
6049 | How can they have any to Godward that are enemies to him in their minds by wicked works? |
6049 | How can they pray or make conscience of the duty that fear not God? |
6049 | How can those that are accustomed to do evil, do that which is commanded in this particular? |
6049 | How can we judge of a preacher''s good will, but by''peace on his lips?'' |
6049 | How canst thou find in thy heart to set thyself against grace, against such grace as offereth mercy to thee? |
6049 | How could he join in their thanks, and praises, and blessings of him for ever and ever, in whose favour, mercy, and grace, they are not concerned? |
6049 | How did Abraham groan for Ishmael? |
6049 | How did he break it? |
6049 | How did he ply it with Christ against Joshua the high- priest? |
6049 | How did he ply16 it against that good man Job, if possibly he might have obtained his destruction in hell- fire? |
6049 | How did this Christ bring in redemption for man? |
6049 | How do men come by this righteousness and everlasting life? |
6049 | How do the heirs to immortality conduct themselves in such a prospect? |
6049 | How do they seek to stifle them? |
6049 | How do they show themselves to be true under the first of these? |
6049 | How do they show themselves to be true under the second? |
6049 | How do you know that these sayings are true? |
6049 | How do you know that? |
6049 | How do you mean? |
6049 | How dost thou believe? |
6049 | How dost thou find them in outward trials? |
6049 | How dost thou find thyself in the inward workings of sin? |
6049 | How dost thou like being saved? |
6049 | How dost thou like the discovery of that which thou thinkest is grace in other men? |
6049 | How dost thou like thyself, as considered possessed with a body of sin, and as feeling and finding that sin worketh in thy members? |
6049 | How dost thou show before men the truth of thy turning to God? |
6049 | How doth God the Son save thee? |
6049 | How doth that appear? |
6049 | How far do you think he may be before? |
6049 | How far is it thither? |
6049 | How far may such an one go? |
6049 | How far might they go on in pilgrimage in their day, since they notwithstanding were thus miserably cast away? |
6049 | How far? |
6049 | How frenzily he imagines? |
6049 | How hard are these things? |
6049 | How he carried it? |
6049 | How if I never see the sun rise more? |
6049 | How if the first voice that rings to- morrow morning in my heavy ears be,''Arise, ye dead, and come to judgment?'' |
6049 | How if you have over- stood the time of mercy? |
6049 | How ill- favouredly do they look, that have their nose and lips eaten off with the canker? |
6049 | How is iniquity in thine eye, when severed from the guilt and punishment that attends it? |
6049 | How is it now? |
6049 | How is it, dost thou show most mercy to thy dog, 36 or to thine enemy, to thy swine, or to the poor? |
6049 | How is it, then, that thou art so quickly turned aside? |
6049 | How is it, then, that thou hast run away from thy king? |
6049 | How is that? |
6049 | How is that? |
6049 | How is the word buried under the clods of their hearts for months, yea years together? |
6049 | How is this great object to be accomplished? |
6049 | How it appears that they that are saved, are saved by grace? |
6049 | How long must this be my state? |
6049 | How long will Antichrist still hold up his head in this country? |
6049 | How long? |
6049 | How look thy duties in thine eyes, I mean thy duties which thou doest in the service of God? |
6049 | How many Mahomet? |
6049 | How many are there in the world that pray for their children, and cry for them, and are ready to die[ for them]? |
6049 | How many are there in the world whose heart Satan hath filled with a belief that their state and condition for another world is good? |
6049 | How many are there that do not know that man consisteth of a body made of dust, and of an immortal soul? |
6049 | How many good souls has he driven to these conclusions, who afterwards have been made to unsay all again? |
6049 | How many have they in all ages hanged, burned, starved, drowned, racked, dismembered, and murdered, both openly and in secret? |
6049 | How many have, in all ages, been kept from coming to God aright by the terrors of the world? |
6049 | How many in Israel were destroyed for that which Aaron, Gideon, and Manasseh, unworthily did in their day? |
6049 | How many pay undue respect to buildings in which public prayer is offered up? |
6049 | How many poor souls hath Bonner to answer for, think you, and several filthy blind priests? |
6049 | How many prayers, sighs, and tears, are there wrung from their hearts upon this account? |
6049 | How many seasons have you spent in vain? |
6049 | How many sermons and other mercies did I, of my patience, afford you? |
6049 | How many souls do you think Balaam, with his deceit, will have to answer for? |
6049 | How many souls have they been the means of destroying by their ignorance and corrupt doctrine? |
6049 | How many struggling fits had Israel with God in the wilderness? |
6049 | How many the Pharisees, that hired the soldiers to say the disciples stole away Jesus? |
6049 | How many times are some men put in mind of death by sickness upon themselves, by graves, by the death of others? |
6049 | How many times are they put in mind of hell by reading the Word, by lashes of conscience, and by some that go roaring in despair out of this world? |
6049 | How many times did they declare that there they feared him not? |
6049 | How many times hast thou had heaven and salvation offered to thee freely, wouldst thou but break thy league with this great enemy of God? |
6049 | How many times have you disappointed me? |
6049 | How many times, think you, did Israel stand in need of pardon, from Egypt, until they came to Canaan? |
6049 | How many times, when Israel provoked the Lord to anger, did he yet defer to destroy them? |
6049 | How much hast thou been grieved to see others break God''s law, and to find temptations in thyself to do it? |
6049 | How much hast thou been grieved to see others break God''s law, and to find temptations in thyself to do it? |
6049 | How much hath the peace of Christians been broken by an uncharitable interpretation of words and actions? |
6049 | How much more then is he merciful and gracious, even in but mentioning terms of reconciliation? |
6049 | How much more then must we needs be at loss as to the fullness of the knowledge of the love of Christ? |
6049 | How much more then when light shall be against light in three ranks? |
6049 | How much more will it perplex thee to think, that thou hadst not a care of thy own? |
6049 | How much of God dost thou think is in these things? |
6049 | How needful is it, then, that we endeavour''the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace?'' |
6049 | How now, good fellow, whither away after this burdened manner? |
6049 | How now, thought I, is this the sign of an upright soul, to desire to serve God, when all is taken from him? |
6049 | How often didst thou hear us tell thee of these things? |
6049 | How often have they sustained[ thee in] thy hunger, clothed thy nakedness? |
6049 | How rapid were his thoughts--''Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?'' |
6049 | How rich was Jesus Christ? |
6049 | How say you to these things, Do you make an open profession of them without dissembling? |
6049 | How sayest thou, sinner? |
6049 | How sayest thou, young comer, is not this the case with thy soul? |
6049 | How shall I deliver thee, Israel? |
6049 | How shall I make thee as Admah? |
6049 | How shall I set thee as Zeboim? |
6049 | How shall he be brought, wrought, and made, to be out of love with it? |
6049 | How shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious? |
6049 | How shall they come then? |
6049 | How shall this be proved? |
6049 | How shall we escape,''if we turn away from him that speaketh from heaven?'' |
6049 | How shall we get to be sharers thereof? |
6049 | How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" |
6049 | How shall we, who are impure and unclean by nature and by practice, draw near unto him who is so infinitely holy? |
6049 | How should I escape being by them torn in pieces? |
6049 | How should he be the Christ, and yet come out of Galilee, out of which ariseth no prophet? |
6049 | How should he contain hopes of life? |
6049 | How should the Lord put any trust in thee? |
6049 | How should the desires depart from it with that fervency as they should? |
6049 | How should the soul abhor it as it should? |
6049 | How should we strive? |
6049 | How shouldest thou rejoice, that the same faith should dwell both in thy parents and thee? |
6049 | How sick art thou of sin? |
6049 | How so? |
6049 | How so? |
6049 | How stands it between God and your soul now? |
6049 | How stands the country affected towards you? |
6049 | How then can God put any trust in such people, or how can remission be extended to us for the sake of that? |
6049 | How then can any good be done to those whose conscience is worse than that? |
6049 | How then can good fruit grow from such a root, the root of all evil? |
6049 | How then can his desires be granted, who himself refused to have them answered? |
6049 | How then can it be but that light should be against light in this house, and that in a military posture? |
6049 | How then can the world judge of the condition of the saints? |
6049 | How then can they do anything with that godly reverence of his holy Majesty that is and must be essential to every good work? |
6049 | How then can this sabbath now be kept? |
6049 | How then can we be hindered of our hope? |
6049 | How then hath every man Christ, or the light of Christ within him? |
6049 | How then shall I look Him in the face at His coming? |
6049 | How then shall a bad man, any bad man, the best bad man upon earth, think to set himself by his best things just in the sight of God? |
6049 | How then shall it be thought that they should be so silly, to turn a company of weak women loose to be abused by the fallen angels? |
6049 | How then shall the conscience of the burdened sinner by rightly quieted, if he perceiveth not the grace of God? |
6049 | How then should his brethren that survive him, and that tread in his very steps, approve of the sentence that by this book is pronounced against him? |
6049 | How then should they do good? |
6049 | How then will it be with thee? |
6049 | How then, if God should cast you into Turkey, where Mahomet reigns as Lord? |
6049 | How then, may some say, doth it become ours? |
6049 | How then? |
6049 | How then? |
6049 | How then? |
6049 | How therefore, is the knowledge of the true Christ to be attained unto, that we may be saved by him? |
6049 | How ungainly he carries it under convictions, counsels, and his present apprehension of things? |
6049 | How was Esau served for staying too long before he came for the blessing? |
6049 | How was Isaac and Rebecca grieved for the miscarriage of Esau? |
6049 | How was Lot''s wife served for running lazily, and for giving but one look behind her, after the things she left in Sodom? |
6049 | How was the bloody spirit of Saul trod down, when David met him at the mouth of the cave, and also at the hill Hachilah( 1 Sam 24; 26)? |
6049 | How was the hostile spirit of Esau trod down of God, when he came out to meet his poor naked brother, with no less than four hundred armed men? |
6049 | How will men that have before them a little honour, a little profit, a little pleasure, strive? |
6049 | How will the heavens echo of joy, when the Bride, the Lamb''s wife, shall come to dwell with her husband for ever? |
6049 | How will they shine? |
6049 | How will you describe right fear? |
6049 | How, if He had come, having taken a commandment from His Father to damn you, and to send you to the devils in Hell? |
6049 | How, not tempted? |
6049 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that hath not felt the burden of the wrath of God? |
6049 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that never was sensible of the sorrows of the one, nor distressed with the pains of the other? |
6049 | How, then, canst thou stand clear from guilt in thy soul who neglectest to act faith in the blood of the Lamb? |
6049 | How, then, could they object that the time was not come for Christ to be born? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | I a m under the force of it, and this is my continual cry, What shall I render to the Lord for all the benefits which he has bestowed upon me? |
6049 | I also ask, in what charger our gospel passover is now dressed up and set before the people? |
6049 | I am Joseph your own brother; And doth my father live? |
6049 | I am baptiz''d, what then? |
6049 | I am not of the number of them that say,"What profit should we have if we pray unto God?" |
6049 | I am sorry that I was so foolish, and am made to wonder that I am not now as Lot''s wife; for wherein was the difference betwixt her sin and mine? |
6049 | I am the basest of creatures, I could even spew at myself? |
6049 | I answer, Art thou sensible that thou hast an action commenced against thee in that high court of justice that is above? |
6049 | I answer, Hast thou well considered the nature of the crime wherewith thou standest charged at the bar of God? |
6049 | I answer, though I have not asserted it, yet let me ask, which is more odious, hell or sin? |
6049 | I ask again, wherein dost thou think the blessedness of heaven consists? |
6049 | I ask thee how it looks, and how thou likest it, suppose there were no guilt or punishment to attend thy love to, or commission of it? |
6049 | I ask, Hast thou entertained him so to be? |
6049 | I ask, What should it do there before, or to what purpose is it there, if it be not acted? |
6049 | I ask, Why has the world such hold of thee? |
6049 | I ask, and wherefore then served the wood by which the sacrifices were burned? |
6049 | I ask, did he tell you so? |
6049 | I ask, then, if there were ever anything that had a being antecedent to, or before God? |
6049 | I asked her if she was sick? |
6049 | I asked him further, how that man''s righteousness could be of that efficacy to justify another before God? |
6049 | I asked him wherein? |
6049 | I believe so; but pray tell me, did any of her other children hearken to her words, so as to be bettered in their souls thereby? |
6049 | I believe that Christ will save me; what hurt is this to my neighbour? |
6049 | I come now to the second thing into which we are to inquire, and that is, WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6049 | I come now to the third question, namely, But why should we strive? |
6049 | I deem I have half a guess of you; your name is Old Honesty, is it not? |
6049 | I doubt I do not come as I should do? |
6049 | I have also asked those that pass by the way,"if they saw him whom my soul loveth,"and if they had anything to communicate to me? |
6049 | I have given Him my faith, and sworn my allegiance to Him; how, then, can I go back from this, and not be hanged as a traitor? |
6049 | I have often been amazed in my mind at this text, for how could Jesus Christ have said such a word if he had not been able to perform it? |
6049 | I have told you, that this, though it were granted, cometh not up to the question; for we ask not,''whether they were so baptized? |
6049 | I know the wise men of this world, of whom there are many, will say as to what I now press you unto; Who can shew us any good in it? |
6049 | I love Christ because he will save me; what hurt is this to any? |
6049 | I marvel what injury the Lord Jesus hath done this man, that he should have such indifferent thoughts of coming to God by him? |
6049 | I might further add, how often have we agreed in our judgment? |
6049 | I pray let me hear your judgment of extortion, what it is, and when committed? |
6049 | I promise you this was enough to discourage; but did they make an end here? |
6049 | I query, is it possible to come up to the pattern for justification with God? |
6049 | I remember he alleged many a Scripture, but those I valued not; the Scriptures, thought I, what are they? |
6049 | I remember the question that God asked Job,"Where,"saith he,"wast thou when I laid the foundation of the earth? |
6049 | I remember what Abner said to Asahel,"Turn thee aside, from following me; wherefore should I smite thee to the ground? |
6049 | I said, Are they infallible? |
6049 | I say again, how will they strive for this? |
6049 | I say again, if our love is so slender to our own souls, can any think that it should be more full to the souls of others? |
6049 | I say again, should any so conclude hence, would not all experience prove him void of truth? |
6049 | I say again, tell me before the first blow is given, wilt thou turn? |
6049 | I say again, why is it affirmed''without shedding of blood is no remission,''if man''s good deeds can save him? |
6049 | I say how easily might he have said this, and then have popt in those two verses above quoted, and so have killed the old one? |
6049 | I say, Art thou a Pharisee? |
6049 | I say, Art thou sensible of this? |
6049 | I say, How easily might they thus have objected? |
6049 | I say, What hast thou given to God thereby? |
6049 | I say, What hast thou seen in him? |
6049 | I say, Who told thee so? |
6049 | I say, dost thou see thyself in him? |
6049 | I say, dost thou this, or dost thou hunt thine own soul to destroy it? |
6049 | I say, hast thou entertained Jesus Christ for thy lawyer to plead thy cause? |
6049 | I say, he puts great difference between these, and that other sort that say, When will the Sabbath be gone, that we may be at our worldly business? |
6049 | I say, how glorious was it; and how sweet is it to you that have seen yourselves lost by nature? |
6049 | I say, if Mr. Badman was here to object thus unto you, what would be your reply? |
6049 | I say, should he say to the poor, Come to my door, ask at my door, knock at my door, and you shall find and have; would he not be counted liberal? |
6049 | I say, therefore, to thee that art thus, And why despair? |
6049 | I say, was it not worth being in the furnace and in the den to see such things as these? |
6049 | I say, what benefit have we thereby? |
6049 | I say, what excuse can they make for themselves, when they shall be asked why they did not in the day of salvation come to Christ to be saved? |
6049 | I say, what less than a river could do it? |
6049 | I say, what more fearful than to be tormented there for ever with the devil and his angels? |
6049 | I say, what will such say when they shall read that the Publican did only acknowledge his iniquity, and found grace and favour at the hand of God? |
6049 | I say, what wilt thou say to this? |
6049 | I say, where is he that hath taken his flight for salvation, because of the dread of the wrath to come? |
6049 | I say, where is the honour they should put upon them? |
6049 | I say, where, as to justification with God? |
6049 | I say, why are things thus left with us? |
6049 | I say, will thy conscience justify thee here? |
6049 | I say, wouldst thou go to heaven, because it is a place that is holy, or because it is a place remote from the pains of hell? |
6049 | I suppose they did commence much together; for else with whom should this beast make war, and how should the church escape? |
6049 | I tell you this is no easy matter; if it were, what need all those prayers, sighs, watchings? |
6049 | I then demand what precept bids you do this? |
6049 | I think I am cast off from God, says the soul; so thou thoughtest afore, says memory, but thou wast mistaken then, and why not the like again? |
6049 | I think it a high favour that they were hanged before we came hither; who knows else what they might have done to such poor women as we are? |
6049 | I use the means to be saved; and why? |
6049 | I was no sooner fixed upon this resolution, but that word dropped upon me,"Doth Job serve God for nought?" |
6049 | I went out from you full, but now I come, As it hath pleased God, quite empty home: Why then call ye me Naomi? |
6049 | I will do unto them as they have done unto Me; and what unrighteousness is in all this? |
6049 | I will for this worship Christ as he has bid me; what hurt is this to anybody? |
6049 | I wold know by what scripture you do it? |
6049 | I.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED? |
6049 | II.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6049 | III.--WHO ARE THEY THAT ARE TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6049 | IV.--HOW IT APPEARS THAT THEY THAT ARE SAVED, ARE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6049 | If Christ be the way, verity, and life, how can there be any life then without Christ? |
6049 | If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6049 | If God be for us, who can be against us?--Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God''s elect? |
6049 | If God be with one, who can hurt one? |
6049 | If God would blow upon a man, who can help it? |
6049 | If God, when man had broke the law, had yet with all severity kept the world to the utmost condition of it, had he then been unjust? |
6049 | If He is, then how doth it appear? |
6049 | If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil; but if well, why smitest thou me? |
6049 | If Jesus be so sweet to faith below, who can tell what He is in full fruition above? |
6049 | If Samson''s riddle was so puzzling, what shall we think of this? |
6049 | If a man can not now go to the throne of grace by prayer, through Christ, and so fetch grace for his support from thence, what can he do? |
6049 | If a sense of some sin,[ for who sees all? |
6049 | If all that build do build to suit The glory of their state, What orator, though most acute, Can fully heaven relate? |
6049 | If all that desire to go to heaven should come thither, verily they would make a hell of heaven; for, I say, what would they do there? |
6049 | If any say, Who''s there? |
6049 | If any say, that these things may argue pride as well as carnal lusts; well, but why are they proud? |
6049 | If grace received would do, what need for more? |
6049 | If he also shall ask me, What hath been my preferment in all the time of my absence from him? |
6049 | If he asks me, By what authority I take upon me thus to reason? |
6049 | If he asks me, How I know that the law will not lay hold of me also? |
6049 | If he asks me, Who have been my companions? |
6049 | If he hath, show us where? |
6049 | If he knows not hell, and the torments thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not himself and the badness of his condition, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not the law, and the severity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not the world, and the emptiness and vanity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not what death is, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he was not willing, why did he promise? |
6049 | If heart- breaking work attend such strokes,''Why should ye be stricken any more?'' |
6049 | If heaven has gates, and they shall be shut, how wilt thou go in thither? |
6049 | If it be asked, Who did appoint that meeting made mention of in Acts 12:12? |
6049 | If it be good and godly, why may it not be accepted? |
6049 | If it be love for a fellow- creature to give a bit of bread, a coat, a cup of cold water, what shall we call this? |
6049 | If it be said water baptism is not there intended, let them shew me how many baptisms there are besides water baptism? |
6049 | If it be, why is it not embraced? |
6049 | If it cost Lot''s wife dear for but looking back, shall not it cost them much dearer, that are going back, that are gone back again? |
6049 | If judgment begins at the house of God, what will the end of them be that obey not the gospel of God? |
6049 | If mercy, what mercy? |
6049 | If no, do you not dissemble? |
6049 | If not, how do they differ? |
6049 | If nothing should by us be had When we are gone from hence, But vanities, while here? |
6049 | If palaces that princes build, Which yet are made of clay, Do so amaze when much beheld, Of heaven what shall we say? |
6049 | If so, I ask, dost thou, according to the exhortation here,''Depart from iniqnity?'' |
6049 | If so, then what is that worth, or value, that is in the grace itself? |
6049 | If so, then, in the next place, what will become of them that are grown weary before they are got half way thither? |
6049 | If so, what had she to say? |
6049 | If so; why do you so much dissemble with all the world, in print; to pretend you submit to others''judgment, and yet abide to condemn their judgments? |
6049 | If the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Ghost, are gracious, if they were not all gracious, what would it profit? |
6049 | If the children of God shall''scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly, and the sinner appear?'' |
6049 | If the conduct of many professors were so vile, as there can be no doubt but that it was, how gross must have been that of the openly profane? |
6049 | If the counsel of Gamaliel was good when given to the enemies of God''s people, why not fit to be given to Christians themselves? |
6049 | If the dead rise not, what shall I be the better for all my trouble that here I meet with for the gospel of Christ? |
6049 | If the first come in and say, Why am I judged? |
6049 | If the life that is attended with so many troubles, is so loath to be let go by us, what is the life above? |
6049 | If the object of the wrath of God, then is his case most dreadful; for who can bear, who can grapple with the wrath of God? |
6049 | If the question be asked, How a just God can save that man from death, that by sin has put himself under the sentence of it? |
6049 | If the rich man should say thus to the poor, would not he be reckoned a free- hearted man? |
6049 | If the very looks of God be so terrible, what will his blows be, think you? |
6049 | If the world, which God sets light by, is counted a thing of that worth with men; what is Heaven, which God commendeth? |
6049 | If there be a difference in the light, show it wherein; whether in the nature, or otherwise?" |
6049 | If there be twenty places where there are assizes kept in this land, yet if I have offended no law, what need have I of an advocate? |
6049 | If therefore all the light that is in thee Be darkness, how great must that darkness be? |
6049 | If these be worth commending then, That vainly show their might, How dare you blame those holy men That in God''s quarrel fight? |
6049 | If they ask what light? |
6049 | If they differ, where lieth the difference? |
6049 | If they farther ask, why, what is that? |
6049 | If they say, they retain the day, but change their manner of observation thereof; I ask, who has commanded them so to do? |
6049 | If this be concluded in the affirmative, what follows but that Christ, though he undertook, came short in doing for us? |
6049 | If this be faith,( sayest thou) to profess him born, dead, risen and ascended without, then is there any unbeliever in England? |
6049 | If this be so, then what should they do here, Who in their antic pranks of pride appear? |
6049 | If this kind of worship may be performed, without their conduct and government? |
6049 | If thou canst go lustily, what mean thy crutches? |
6049 | If thou say, because God hath not chosen them, as well as chosen others: I answer,''Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
6049 | If thou sayest yea, then I ask, Who told thee that thou standest accused for transgression before the judgment- seat of God? |
6049 | If thou sayest, Yea; I ask, How comest thou righteous? |
6049 | If thou wouldst know whether man be still in that state by nature that God did place him in? |
6049 | If thou wouldst know whether the man were first beguiled, or the woman that God made an help- mate for him? |
6049 | If we do take occasion to do so, that we may drop, and be yet distilling some good doctrine upon their souls? |
6049 | If we have such ill speed at our first setting out, what may we expect betwixt this and our journey''s end? |
6049 | If what be possible? |
6049 | If what be possible? |
6049 | If ye be buffeted for your faults, for what God''s word calls faults, what thank have you from God, or good men, though you take it patiently? |
6049 | If yea, then Christ had such; if no, then who can fulfil the law as he? |
6049 | If you bid him wait, do you not encourage him to live in sin, as much as I do? |
6049 | If you say no, as it is your wonted course; then again I ask you, what that was in which he did bear the sins of his children? |
6049 | If you say no, what means your sour carriage to the people of God? |
6049 | If young Badman feared not the damnation of his soul, do you think that the consideration of impairing of his body would have deterred him therefrom? |
6049 | If"judgment must begin at the house of God,--what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
6049 | If''the wrath of a king is as messengers of death''( Prov 16:14), if the wrath of the king''is as the roaring of a lion,''what is the wrath of God? |
6049 | In Job''s day this was bewailed, that none or but a few said,"Where is God my maker, who giveth songs in the night?" |
6049 | In a word, Doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6049 | In a word, are they converted? |
6049 | In a word, doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6049 | In a word, who knows the power of God''s wrath, the weight of sin, the torments of hell, and the length of eternity? |
6049 | In all this, what qualification shows itself as precedent to justification? |
6049 | In his Jerusalem Sinner Saved he thus argues''Why despair? |
6049 | In love to God, in love to men, in holy love, in love unfeigned? |
6049 | In the faith of what? |
6049 | In time of sickness, what so set by as the doctor''s glasses and gally- pots full of his excellent things? |
6049 | In what glory will they appear? |
6049 | In whose judgment art thou righteous? |
6049 | Indeed the Word saith,"He hath blinded their eyes, lest they should see,"& c. But now we are by ourselves, what do you think of such men? |
6049 | Indeed this may be; and therefore no similitude can be found that can fully amplify the matter,''for what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | Indeed who can bear up, and who Can from these shakings run? |
6049 | Instructions did I say? |
6049 | Is Antichrist down and dead to ought but your faith? |
6049 | Is Benhadad yet alive? |
6049 | Is Christ Jesus not only a priest of, and a King over, but an Advocate for his people? |
6049 | Is Christ Jesus the Lord mine Advocate with the Father? |
6049 | Is Christ Jesus the redemption; and, as such, the very door and inlet into all God''s mercies? |
6049 | Is Christ then the image of the Father, simply, as considered of the same divine and eternal excellency with him? |
6049 | Is Christ, as crucified, the way and door to all spiritual and eternal mercy? |
6049 | Is God indeed to be dallied with, and will the end be pleasant unto you? |
6049 | Is He satisfied now in the behalf of sinners by this Man''s thus suffering? |
6049 | Is He the one, the chief object of our soul? |
6049 | Is He the only hope of my soul, and the only confidence of my heart? |
6049 | Is Jesus Christ an Advocate with the Father for us? |
6049 | Is Jesus Christ the Saviour also become our Advocate? |
6049 | Is any fountain of so strange a nature, At once to send forth sweet and bitter water? |
6049 | Is any merry? |
6049 | Is coming to Jesus Christ by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Is coming to Jesus Christ not by the will, wisdom, or power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Is fellowship with God the Father, and His Son, Jesus Christ, so prized by me, as to seek it, and to esteem it above all things? |
6049 | Is godly fear delightful unto thee, That fear that God himself delights to see Bear sway in them that love him? |
6049 | Is grace thy proper element? |
6049 | Is he God''s fellow? |
6049 | Is he a fool that chooseth for himself long lasters, or he whose best things will rot in a day? |
6049 | Is he a godly man, that will serve God for nothing rather than give out? |
6049 | Is he a pleasant child? |
6049 | Is he a second God? |
6049 | Is he ever the worse for coming to Jesus Christ, or for his loving and serving of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Is he in health, or doth he cease to be? |
6049 | Is he merciful; will he help thee? |
6049 | Is he not slothful, is not he careless, is he not without discretion? |
6049 | Is he of the highest order of the angels? |
6049 | Is he present; will he hear thee? |
6049 | Is he qualified for my business? |
6049 | Is he that is a servant to corruption a victor? |
6049 | Is he that is led away with divers lusts a victor? |
6049 | Is he then left to fill up the measure of his iniquities? |
6049 | Is he therefore the author of your perishing, or his eternal reprobation either? |
6049 | Is heaven reserved only for the noble and the learned, like Paul? |
6049 | Is his body dead? |
6049 | Is his heel taken in the spider''s web? |
6049 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6049 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6049 | Is his name, person, and undertakings, more precious to them, than is the glory of the world? |
6049 | Is it I?'' |
6049 | Is it Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Is it a sign of a fool to agree with one''s adversary while we are in the way with him, even before he delivereth us to the judge? |
6049 | Is it a time to take pleasure, and to recreate thyself in anything, before thou hast mourned and been sorry for thy sins? |
6049 | Is it a way that my parents brought me up in, put me apprentice to, or that by providence I was first thrust into? |
6049 | Is it an inward one? |
6049 | Is it as separate from these, beauteous, or ill- favoured? |
6049 | Is it attended with so many blessed privileges? |
6049 | Is it because I have not accepted thy offering? |
6049 | Is it because I love holiness? |
6049 | Is it because the grace that he receiveth differeth from the grace that the elect are saved by? |
6049 | Is it because they think themselves unworthy of their holy fellowship? |
6049 | Is it because they think themselves unworthy of their holy fellowship? |
6049 | Is it because they would honour God? |
6049 | Is it because thou wouldst be saved from hell, or because thou wouldst be freed from sin? |
6049 | Is it below thee? |
6049 | Is it by something done within them, or by something done without them?" |
6049 | Is it by something that is done within them, or by something done without them? |
6049 | Is it covetousness? |
6049 | Is it fair to make the necessity of a woman in bondage a law to women at liberty? |
6049 | Is it fit to say unto God, Thou art hard- hearted? |
6049 | Is it fleshly lusts? |
6049 | Is it for righteousness''sake that thou sufferest? |
6049 | Is it for the sake of righteousness that thou sufferest? |
6049 | Is it in the judgment of God, or of man? |
6049 | Is it intended to represent that prayerful, watchful, personal investigation into Divine truth, which ought to precede church- fellowship? |
6049 | Is it likely that those should have the Lord Jesus for their Advocate to plead their cause; who despise and reject his person, his Word, and ways? |
6049 | Is it meet to think that a little child should handle Goliath as David did? |
6049 | Is it not a high point of wisdom for a man to be always doing of that which lays him under the conduct of angels? |
6049 | Is it not a sign of wisdom for a man yet more and more to endeavour to interest himself in the love and protection of God? |
6049 | Is it not a sign of wisdom to depart from sins, which are the snares of death and hell? |
6049 | Is it not a wicked thing to make bars to communion, where God hath made none? |
6049 | Is it not a wickedness to make that a wall of division betwixt us which God never commanded to be so? |
6049 | Is it not better that we bear those tokens and marks in our flesh that bespeak us to belong to Christ, than those that declare us to be none of his? |
6049 | Is it not better to say now unto God, Do not condemn me? |
6049 | Is it not common now- a- days, for parents to be brought into bondage and servitude by their children? |
6049 | Is it not for a man to sin willingly after enlightening? |
6049 | Is it not in the four evangelists, the prophets, and epistles of the apostles? |
6049 | Is it not pity, had it otherwise been the will of God, that ever thou wast made a man, for that thou settest so little by thy soul? |
6049 | Is it not rather to be wondered at, that thou hast not caught before this a thousand times a thousand falls? |
6049 | Is it not reasonable that man should believe God in the proffer of the gospel and life by it? |
6049 | Is it not so with you in respect of your beggars that come to your door? |
6049 | Is it not strong as death, cruel as the grave, and hotter than the coals of juniper? |
6049 | Is it not the least in thy thoughts? |
6049 | Is it not the same by the which I have called thee? |
6049 | Is it not therefore a wonderful mercy to be blessed with this grace of fear, that thou by it mayest be kept from final, which is damnable apostasy? |
6049 | Is it not to trick up the body? |
6049 | Is it our flesh that hangeth on our bones, which lusteth against the spirit? |
6049 | Is it possible that he should heedlessly enter the vortex, and be again drawn into wretchedness? |
6049 | Is it possible that this tender, thus offered to the reprobate, should by him be thus received and embraced, and he live thereby? |
6049 | Is it so much to be a fiddle? |
6049 | Is it so much to be a fiddle? |
6049 | Is it so to the present day under a faithful ministry? |
6049 | Is it so, that coming to Jesus Christ is by the Father, as aforesaid? |
6049 | Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6049 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6049 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that he will not receive them? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it surprising that the Quakers, at such a time, assumed their peculiar neatness of dress? |
6049 | Is it that our hearts might be estranged from him, and that we still should love the world? |
6049 | Is it that we should live by sense? |
6049 | Is it the substance, is it the thing signified? |
6049 | Is it their duty to help to carry on prayer in public assemblies with men, as they? |
6049 | Is it thy delight to think of Him, hear of Him, speak of Him, abide in Him, and live upon Him? |
6049 | Is not Christ the head, and we the members? |
6049 | Is not God as well mighty to punish as to save? |
6049 | Is not HE called? |
6049 | Is not HE glorified? |
6049 | Is not HE justified? |
6049 | Is not each thing we have a dying? |
6049 | Is not he also the price, the ground, and bottom of our happiness, both in this world and that which is to come? |
6049 | Is not heaven worth thy affection? |
6049 | Is not here a door of hope? |
6049 | Is not here encouragement for those that think, for wicked hearts and lives, they have not their fellows in the world? |
6049 | Is not here the house of the forest of Lebanon mentioned as another besides the temple? |
6049 | Is not love of the greatest force to oblige? |
6049 | Is not such a day, the day that bends us, humbleth us, and that makes us bow before God, for our faults committed in our prosperity? |
6049 | Is not that the very entering ordinance? |
6049 | Is not the devil thy father? |
6049 | Is not the life much more Than meat; Is not the body far before The clothes thereof? |
6049 | Is not the light of God sufficient in itself, to lead to god all that follow it, yea, or nay? |
6049 | Is not the same spirit of rebellion amongst us in our days? |
6049 | Is not the secrets of thy heart open unto him? |
6049 | Is not this God rich in mercy? |
6049 | Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? |
6049 | Is not this a great waster? |
6049 | Is not this a truth? |
6049 | Is not this amazing grace? |
6049 | Is not this an encouragement to the biggest sinners to make their application to Christ for mercy? |
6049 | Is not this blasphemy? |
6049 | Is not this enough to make any poor soul begin his race? |
6049 | Is not this grace? |
6049 | Is not this grace? |
6049 | Is not this love that passeth knowledge? |
6049 | Is not this love the wonderment of angels? |
6049 | Is not this now far off from some professors in the world? |
6049 | Is not this strange? |
6049 | Is not this the experience of all the godly? |
6049 | Is not this to condemn God, that thou mightest be righteous? |
6049 | Is not this to play the fool, in the account of sinners, while angels wonder at and rejoice for thy wisdom? |
6049 | Is not this true as I have said? |
6049 | Is nothing so secret but it will be revealed? |
6049 | Is she drowned I tro? |
6049 | Is she lost? |
6049 | Is she not to be silent before him, and to look to his laws, rather than her own fictions? |
6049 | Is sin so vile a thing? |
6049 | Is that very Man, with that very body, within you, yea, or no? |
6049 | Is the Lamb the nourishment of thy soul, and the portion of thy heart? |
6049 | Is the arm of the Lord shortened that he can not save? |
6049 | Is the blood of Christ, the death of Christ, the resurrection of Christ, of no more virtue than to bring in for us an uncertain salvation? |
6049 | Is the doctrine offered to thee so? |
6049 | Is the doctrine offered unto thee so? |
6049 | Is the fault in God, if any perish? |
6049 | Is the law sin? |
6049 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6049 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6049 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6049 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | Is the truth? |
6049 | Is the very being of sin rooted out of thy tabernacle? |
6049 | Is the way dangerous in which thou art to go? |
6049 | Is the way of the just an abomination to you? |
6049 | Is the way safe or dangerous? |
6049 | Is the whole world set against thee for thy love to God, to Christ, his cause, and righteousness? |
6049 | Is there a Slough of Despond to be passed, and a hill Difficulty to be overcome? |
6049 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6049 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6049 | Is there also hope to be in His children? |
6049 | Is there any among thy sins, thy companions, and foolish delights, that, like Christ, can help thee in the day of thy distress? |
6049 | Is there any good that lives there? |
6049 | Is there any great harm in that? |
6049 | Is there any law now that will curse and condemn this Saviour for standing in our persons to give satisfaction to God for the transgression of man? |
6049 | Is there any vicious propensity, the gratification of which is not included in that character? |
6049 | Is there but one sin among so many millions of sins, for which there is no forgiveness; and must I commit this? |
6049 | Is there grace for me?'' |
6049 | Is there hope? |
6049 | Is there hope? |
6049 | Is there more precepts or precedents for the supper, than baptism? |
6049 | Is there more reason, more equity, more holiness in thy traditions, than in the holy, and just, and good commandments of God? |
6049 | Is there no better merchandise to trade in than what comes from hell, or out of the bowels of the earth? |
6049 | Is there no precept for this practice, that it must be thus despised, as a matter of little use? |
6049 | Is there no truth nor trust to be put in him, notwithstanding all that he hath said? |
6049 | Is there no way to come to God but by the faith of him? |
6049 | Is there not a cause, saith he, lies bleeding upon the ground, and no man of heart or spirit to put a check to the bold blasphemer? |
6049 | Is there not a middle way? |
6049 | Is there not a time coming when the godly may ask the wicked what profit they have in their pleasure? |
6049 | Is there not everywhere in God''s Book a flat contradiction to this, in multitudes of promises, of invitations, of examples, and the like? |
6049 | Is there not palpably high wickedness in every one of the effects of this fear? |
6049 | Is there nothing else to be done but to make a covenant with death, and to maintain thy agreement with hell? |
6049 | Is there nothing of God, of his wisdom and power and goodness to be seen in thunder, and lightning, in hailstones? |
6049 | Is there nothing written therein but what you understand? |
6049 | Is there perfection in that righteousness? |
6049 | Is there room for me?'' |
6049 | Is there so much ground of comfort, and so much cause to be glad? |
6049 | Is there so much store in Christ, and such a ready heart in Him to give it to me? |
6049 | Is there that condition, they must believe? |
6049 | Is there to be a righteousness to clothe them with that is to be presented before Divine justice? |
6049 | Is there unrighteousness with God? |
6049 | Is there, in this place, any relief for pilgrims that are weary and faint in the way? |
6049 | Is this a truth, that the man that truly comes to God in order thereto has had his heart broken? |
6049 | Is this fear of God such an excellent thing? |
6049 | Is this he that professed, and disputed, and forsook us; but now he is come to us again? |
6049 | Is this he that separated from us, but now he is fallen with us into the same eternal damnation with us? |
6049 | Is this the gloomy fanaticism of a Puritan divine? |
6049 | Is this the love and care Of Jesus for the men that pilgrims are? |
6049 | Is this the righteousness you would imitate? |
6049 | Is this the sum of all, namely, That''the fear of the wicked it shall come upon him,''and that''the desire of the righteous shall be granted?'' |
6049 | Is this the way of your retaliation? |
6049 | Is this the way to the Celestial City? |
6049 | Is this to serve God? |
6049 | Is this word more dear unto them? |
6049 | Is thy body to be disfigured, dismembered, starved, hanged, or burned for the faith and profession of the gospel? |
6049 | Is thy business slight; is it not concerning the welfare of thy soul? |
6049 | Is thy conscience awakened and convinced then, that thou art at present in a perishing state, and that thou hast need to cry to God for mercy? |
6049 | Is thy heart hard? |
6049 | Is thy heart slothful and idle? |
6049 | Is thy life at stake-- is that like to go for thy profession, for thy harmless profession of the gospel? |
6049 | Is thy mind always musing on him? |
6049 | Is wisdom to die with you? |
6049 | Is your heart full of mammon, or pride, or debauchery? |
6049 | Is''t not a shame, a stinking shame to be Cast forth God''s vineyard as a barren tree? |
6049 | It casteth out the Word and love of God, without which no grace can grow in the soul; how then should the fear of God grow in a covetous heart? |
6049 | It confirms it; and this is part of the meaning of Paul in those large relations of his sufferings for Christ, saying,''Are they ministers of Christ? |
6049 | It has ofttimes come into my mind to ask, By what means it is that the gospel profession should be so tainted39 with loose and carnal gospellers? |
6049 | It is a neat and acceptable volume, but why altered? |
6049 | It is a sign of a very bad nature when the contrary shows itself; could God have done more for thee than to have put his fear in thy heart? |
6049 | It is an honour for the poor to stand up for the great and mighty; but what honour is it for the great to plead for the base? |
6049 | It is beset everywhere with evil angels, who would rob thee of thy soul, What now? |
6049 | It is counted a heinous crime for a man to run his sword at the picture of a king, how much more to shed the blood of the image of God? |
6049 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at Heaven''s gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it? |
6049 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?" |
6049 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?'' |
6049 | It is false, said she; for when they said to him, Do you confess the indictment? |
6049 | It is not a sign of foolishness timely to prevent ruin, is it? |
6049 | It is said elsewhere,''For what is a man advantaged if he gain the whole world, and lose himself?'' |
6049 | It is said in another place;"Can a woman,"a mother,"forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? |
6049 | It is this: Do you experience this first part of this description of it? |
6049 | It is true that you have said; but pray how many sorts of pride are there? |
6049 | It is true, Mephibosheth had a check from David; for, said he,"Why wentest not thou with me, Mephibosheth?" |
6049 | It learnt, It learnt: But of who but of its dam, or of the lioness to whom she had put it to learn to do such things? |
6049 | It makes one tremble to hear those who profess to follow Christ in the regeneration, crying, What harm is there in this game and the other diversion? |
6049 | It mattereth not who brought thee in hither, whether God or the devil, or thine own vain- glorious heart; but hast thou fruit? |
6049 | It may be thou hast a father, mother, brother,& c., going post- haste to heaven, wouldst thou be willing to be left behind them? |
6049 | It may be thy great prayer is to say,"Our Father which art in heaven,"& c. Dost thou know the meaning of the very first words of this prayer? |
6049 | It seems then, his heart was fainting; but what was the cause of his fainting? |
6049 | It was their sore temptation; for still, as some affirmed him to be the Christ, others as fast objected,''Shall Christ come out of Galilee?'' |
6049 | It will never backslide again, will it? |
6049 | It will not be said then, Did you believe? |
6049 | It would not be reckoned of grace, but of debt; and what would follow from hence? |
6049 | Jesus also( saith the apostle) that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered: Where? |
6049 | Job was a man a none- such in his day for one that feared God; and who so bold with God as Job? |
6049 | Job, in order to his repentance, cries unto God,''Show me wherefore thou contendest with me?'' |
6049 | John Bunyan? |
6049 | John, what have you done? |
6049 | Just and justified from all things that would otherwise swallow thee up? |
6049 | Justice Keelin said, that I ought not to preach; and asked me where I had my authority? |
6049 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? |
6049 | Know you not that it is written, that he that cometh not in by the door,"but climbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber?" |
6049 | Know you not that this is the judgment of God upon you,"ye despisers, to behold, and wonder, and perish?" |
6049 | Know''st not thy Lord by fruit is glorified? |
6049 | Labour to be patient under this mighty hand of God, and be not hasty to say, When will the rod be laid aside? |
6049 | Lastly, Is there such mercy as this? |
6049 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Lastly, but dost thou think that thy more grace will exempt thee from temptations? |
6049 | Lazarus, who was he? |
6049 | Let me alone, let me fetch my blow, or''Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'' |
6049 | Let our first inquiry be, whether the Saviour intended a fixed form of prayer? |
6049 | Let these things learn us to cease from man,"whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be accounted of?" |
6049 | Let thy conscience speak, I say, is it not prepared for thee, thou being an ungodly man? |
6049 | Let us stand together; who is mine adversary? |
6049 | Lightning and thunder is made a cause of rain, but lightning alone is not:''Who hath divided a water- course for the overflowing of waters? |
6049 | Lights upon a hill, and candles on a candlestick, and shall not they shine? |
6049 | Look again,"Hast thou an arm like God"( Job 40:9), an arm like his for length and strength? |
6049 | Look before thee; dost thou see this narrow way? |
6049 | Look to the heavens, and behold, and consider the stars, how high are they? |
6049 | Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth'': Why, who art thou? |
6049 | Look ye now, did not I tell you so? |
6049 | Look, doth it not go along by the way- side? |
6049 | Lord, I have destroyed myself, can I live? |
6049 | Lord, every one of them are sins of the first rate, of the biggest size, of the blackest line, can I live? |
6049 | Lord, shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou canst pardon my sins, or by believing Thou canst not? |
6049 | Lord, what will be the fruit of these things, when for the doctrine of God there is imposed, that is, more than taught, the traditions of men? |
6049 | Lord, who desired Thee to promise? |
6049 | Lord,"who can understand his errors? |
6049 | Lord,"who can understand his errors?" |
6049 | Lord,"who knoweth the power of thine anger? |
6049 | Lord,"who knoweth the power of thine anger?" |
6049 | Make( saith Christ) the tree good, and his fruit good; or the tree evil, and his fruit evil: Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
6049 | Man knows the beginning of sin, said Spira, but who bounds the issues thereof?'' |
6049 | Manoah said, Now let thy words be true; How shall we use the child, What must we do? |
6049 | Manoah then arose, and went his way, And when he came, he said, Art thou the man That spakest to my wife? |
6049 | Many of this kind there be now in the world, both of men, and women, and children; art not thou that readest this book of this number? |
6049 | Mark how David handleth the messenger that brought him tidings of the death of Saul: says he, How dost thou know that Saul is dead? |
6049 | Mark them; for what? |
6049 | Mark, and when they were ALONE; according to that of the prophet,''Whom shall he teach knowledge, and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? |
6049 | Mark,''a just man,''''a righteous man,''''his righteous soul,''& c. But how obtained he this character? |
6049 | May I be saved by him?'' |
6049 | May I not say before God? |
6049 | May I now go back, and go up to the wicket- gate? |
6049 | May I speak a few words in my own defence? |
6049 | May a man be a visible saint without light therein? |
6049 | May he have a good conscience without light therein? |
6049 | May not the glorified saints become angels? |
6049 | May not these be that sin I trow? |
6049 | May there not come out true men as well as thieves out from thence? |
6049 | May we appeal to our God, Lord, is it I? |
6049 | May we have entertainment here, or must We further go? |
6049 | May you indeed receive persons into the church unprepared for the Lord''s supper; yea, unprepared for that, with other solemn appointments? |
6049 | Meaning, who would be at the charge to have a wife that can have a whore when he listeth? |
6049 | Men will do thus, as I said, in courts below; and why shouldst not thou approach thus to the court above? |
6049 | Met you with nothing else in that valley? |
6049 | Might not their eyes dazzle, and they might think they did see such a thing, when indeed there was no such matter? |
6049 | Mine eyes have seen vileness in the best of my doings; what, then, think you, must God needs see in them? |
6049 | Moreover, I would ask with what face thou canst look the Lord Jesus in the face, whose name thou hast profaned by thine iniquity? |
6049 | Mother, can not you do me some good? |
6049 | Much of your lives are past; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | Must God be called to an account by you, why he giveth more light about the supper than baptism? |
6049 | Must I be a Christian, says the Jew? |
6049 | Must I slight them as they slight me, or nay? |
6049 | Must a gift, and a little of the glory of the butterfly, make thee that thou shalt not do for, and honour to, thy father and mother? |
6049 | Must a little of the glory of the butterfly make thee not honour thy father and mother? |
6049 | Must also the general assembly and church of the first- born wait upon thee for their full portions of glory? |
6049 | Must he do what he lists? |
6049 | Must here be the beginning of my bliss? |
6049 | Must here the burden fall from off my back Must here the strings that bound it to me crack? |
6049 | Must it be, if they turn themselves, or do something to merit of him to turn them? |
6049 | Must it needs be that? |
6049 | Must it needs be the great transgression? |
6049 | Must nobody seek because few are saved? |
6049 | Must not that be much more so accounted? |
6049 | Must the Son of God himself come down from heaven? |
6049 | Must there be redemption by blood added to mercy, if the soul be saved? |
6049 | Must they be bound to their own ruin, by the rebellion of their stubborn wills? |
6049 | Must they not perish rather? |
6049 | Must thy reason, nay, thy lust, be the ruler, orderer, and disposer of his grace? |
6049 | Must we go to hell, and be damned, for want of faith in water baptism? |
6049 | Must we not fear falls? |
6049 | Must we, because of these temptations, incline to fall? |
6049 | My brethren, is it not reasonable that we should stand up for him in this world? |
6049 | My brother, said he, rememberest thou not how valiant thou hast been heretofore? |
6049 | My fifth query was,"Is that very man with that very body within you, yea, or no?" |
6049 | My hope is grounded upon the promises; what else should it be grounded upon? |
6049 | My last argument, you say, is this:''The world may wonder at your carriage to these unbaptized persons, in keeping them out of communion?'' |
6049 | My little bird, how canst thou sit And sing amidst so many thorns? |
6049 | My second query was,"What is the church of God redeemed by from the curse of law? |
6049 | My senses, how were you beguil''d When you said sin was good? |
6049 | My seventh query was,"Hath that Christ that was with God the Father before the world was, no other body but his church?" |
6049 | My sins are more than the sands, can I live? |
6049 | My soul is also sore vexed, but thou, O Lord, how long? |
6049 | My way is hid from the Lord, and my judgment is passed over from my God? |
6049 | Namely, which Peter spake: This is the way in which the Spirit is given? |
6049 | Nay rather, will not this, like a millstone about thy neck, drown thee in the deeps of hell? |
6049 | Nay, God favoured His Son no more, finding our sins upon Him, than He would have favoured any of us; for, should we have died? |
6049 | Nay, are not the very thoughts of it altogether displeasing to thee? |
6049 | Nay, art thou not a desperate persecutor of the children of God? |
6049 | Nay, but why dost thou tempt the Lord thy God? |
6049 | Nay, but, said Mr. Bunyan, have you the very self- same original copies that were written by the penmen of the scriptures, prophets and apostles? |
6049 | Nay, do not even these things declare that you would take it away if you could? |
6049 | Nay, do not many make his Word, and his name, and his ways, a stalking- horse to their own worldly advantages? |
6049 | Nay, do not they rather owe him something for his labour he bestowed on them, as Philemon did to Paul? |
6049 | Nay, do they not rather declare to the world that they have repented of their profession? |
6049 | Nay, do you not see with your eyes daily, that perseverance is a very great part of the cross? |
6049 | Nay, dost thou know what original sin means? |
6049 | Nay, doth not this argue, that thy heart is a rotten, cankered, and besotted heart? |
6049 | Nay, further,"Have we not prophesied in Thy name? |
6049 | Nay, hast thou not learned the wicked ones thy ways? |
6049 | Nay, have not all the prophets from Samuel, with all those that follow after, prophesied, and foretold these things? |
6049 | Nay, in this I will assert nothing, but rather inquire:--What hast thou gained by all this thy righteousness? |
6049 | Nay, is it not the mark of implacable reprobates? |
6049 | Nay, say they, why may not we as well as he? |
6049 | Nay, was he not ready to give the lie to the angel, when he told him God was with him? |
6049 | Nay, what petition of any kind is there in thy vain- glorious oration from first to last? |
6049 | Nay, what world, what people, what nation, for sin and transgression, could or can be compared to Jerusalem? |
6049 | Nay, you must make two questions of this one; that is, what is it for faith to come, and in what manner doth it come? |
6049 | Need I read you a lecture? |
6049 | Neither is baptism any thing? |
6049 | Ninth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | No affection for the God that made thee? |
6049 | No man, when he buildeth his house, makes the principal parts thereof of weak or feeble timber; for how could such bear up the rest? |
6049 | No, saith the child, nor with this hand either; then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a better, a brave golden finger? |
6049 | No; if Isaiah, with his mighty eloquence, again appeared among mortals, again would his cry be heard,''Who hath believed our report?'' |
6049 | No; the poor, the despised in this world, claim kindred with him--''Is not this the carpenter''s son?'' |
6049 | No? |
6049 | Noah and Lot, who so holy as they in the time of their afflictions? |
6049 | Noah and Lot, who so holy as they, in the day of their affliction? |
6049 | Noah and Lot, who so idle as they in the day of their prosperity? |
6049 | Nor are we now, as at the peep of light, To question, is it day, or is it night? |
6049 | Nor can any man propound such an essential way to cut off boasting as this, which is of God''s providing: for what has man here to boast of? |
6049 | Nor was this but the least of what he did, But the outside of what he suffered? |
6049 | Nor yet of thy poor soul some pity take? |
6049 | Not sullenly saying like that wicked king, Why should I wait on the Lord any longer? |
6049 | Nothing of this hath been done by him in this life, and therefore how can any such be recorded for him in the book of life? |
6049 | Now I come to the second question-- to wit, What is it to be saved by grace? |
6049 | Now I have conquered your Diabolus, you come to me for favour, but why did you not help me against the mighty? |
6049 | Now I will add, but what if he that can give a shilling, giveth nothing? |
6049 | Now do we regret our want of greater conformity to his image? |
6049 | Now do you call conscience the light of Christ? |
6049 | Now dost thou mean the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | Now help, Lord; now, Lord Jesus, what shall I do? |
6049 | Now here some may object, and say, Since the way to God by these door were so wide, why doth Christ say the way and gate is narrow? |
6049 | Now here''s the holiness that should them save, Or, as a preparation, go before, To move God to do for them less or more? |
6049 | Now if God noble angels did not spare Because they did transgress, will he forbear Poor dust and ashes? |
6049 | Now if all these and their works as to our justification, are rejected, where, but in Christ, is righteousness to be found? |
6049 | Now if he means their ordinary sabbaths, or that called the seventh day sabbath, why doth he join the winter thereto? |
6049 | Now if it be asked, What promise is entailed to our first day sabbath? |
6049 | Now if the Captain, their king Apollion, be made to yield, how can his followers stand their ground? |
6049 | Now if these things be so, how can the love that saveth us from them be known or understood to the full? |
6049 | Now if you would know who this Lord Jesus is, look into Acts 10:28 and you shall see it was Jesus of Nazareth; would you know who that was? |
6049 | Now let the man that professes the name of Christ religiously, consider with himself, unto what sin or vanity am I most inclined; Is it pride? |
6049 | Now men can let their tongues run at random, as we used to say; now they will be apt to say, Our tongues are our own, who shall control them? |
6049 | Now necessity walks about the streets, crying, Who is on the Lord''s side? |
6049 | Now saith reason, how shall I come thither? |
6049 | Now seeing the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ is so nigh, even at the doors, what doth this speak to all sorts of people( under heaven) but this? |
6049 | Now some may say, But what shall we do to depart from iniquity? |
6049 | Now that the lions are removed, may we not fear that hypocrites will thrust themselves into our churches? |
6049 | Now the Pharisee, like Haman, saith in his heart, To whom would the king delight to do honour, more than to myself? |
6049 | Now the Spirit of Christ that leads also, but whither? |
6049 | Now the question is, who shall prevail? |
6049 | Now the soul is purchased by a price that the Son, the wisdom of God, thought fit to pay for the redemption thereof-- what a thing, then, is the soul? |
6049 | Now then, did the Publican this of his own head, or from his now mind? |
6049 | Now there is both comfort and honour in this; for what comfort like that of being a holy man of God? |
6049 | Now this is a daring thing: I know their lies, saith he; and shall he not recompense for this? |
6049 | Now this righteousness, the apostle casteth away, as was shewn before;''Not having mine own righteousness( saith he) which is of the law''; why? |
6049 | Now we are come to the pinch, viz., Whether it be that of water, or no? |
6049 | Now what can deliver the soul from these but grace? |
6049 | Now what can hell and death do to him that hath this mercy of God upon him? |
6049 | Now what did he do by this his carriage, but testify plainly that he was not for receiving accusations against poor sinners, whoever accused by? |
6049 | Now wherein doth it appear that he was without spot and blemish, but as he walked in the law? |
6049 | Now, I pray, what is it to be a devil, but to be under, for ever, the power and dominion of sin, an implacable spirit against God? |
6049 | Now, I remember that one day, as I was walking into the country, I was much in the thoughts of this, But how if the day of grace be past? |
6049 | Now, I say, when this part of the book of life shall be opened, what can be found in it, of the good deeds and heaven- born actions of wicked men? |
6049 | Now, I would ask, what all this should signify, if a sinner, as a sinner, before he washes, or is washed, may immediately go unto the throne of grace? |
6049 | Now, as they came up to these places, behold, the gardener stood in the way, to whom the Pilgrims said, Whose goodly vineyards and gardens are these? |
6049 | Now, being made free from sin, what follows? |
6049 | Now, how strong the motions or passions of love are, who is there that is an utter stranger thereto? |
6049 | Now, how then do you give them their liberty? |
6049 | Now, if Christ, as an Advocate, pleadeth a propitiation with God, for whose conviction doth he plead it? |
6049 | Now, if God shall count me righteous, who will be so hardy as to conclude I yet shall perish? |
6049 | Now, if a call to come hath such encouragement in it, what is a promise of receiving such, but an encouragement much more? |
6049 | Now, if a child has such tenderness for a useless member, how much more tender is the Son of God to his afflicted members? |
6049 | Now, if he can not know them, from what principle should he will them? |
6049 | Now, if she, with her children, are in bondage, how canst thou expect by them to be made free? |
6049 | Now, if so much safety flows from God''s being for one, how safe are we when God is with us? |
6049 | Now, if they be blind, how shall they come? |
6049 | Now, if this cause be faulty, why doth he live? |
6049 | Now, if thou takest such things for a grant of thy desires, and consequently concludest thyself a righteous man, how mayest thou be deceived? |
6049 | Now, if when she had things to trade with, her dealers left her; how shall she think of a trade, when she has nothing to traffic with? |
6049 | Now, is not this a blessed Christ, coming sinner? |
6049 | Now, it may be asked what is the throne of grace? |
6049 | Now, justification and eternal salvation being both in Christ, and nowhere else to be had for men, who would not come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Now, madam, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Now, shall a soul where the word and Spirit of Christ dwells, be a soul without good works? |
6049 | Now, since I show thee all these mysteries, How canst thou hate me, or me scandalize? |
6049 | Now, since this is so, what can the condemned at the judgment say for themselves, why sentence of death should not be passed upon them? |
6049 | Now, since this is thus, quoth he, can you be kept by any prince in more slavery, and in greater bondage, than you are under this day? |
6049 | Now, the question is, how Abraham found? |
6049 | Now, then, I would be saved; but why? |
6049 | Now, then, it will be demanded, how a soul, before it was a month old, could receive sin to the making of itself unclean? |
6049 | Now, thought Christian, what shall I do? |
6049 | Now, to be taught of God, what like it? |
6049 | Now, what can an intercessor do, if he is not able to answer this question? |
6049 | Now, what doth Christ plead, and what is the ground of his plea? |
6049 | Now, what is faith but a believing, a trusting, or relying act of the soul? |
6049 | Now, what is the result, but that the Advocate goes down, as well as we; we to hell, and he in esteem? |
6049 | Now, what is the signification of this name but SAVIOUR? |
6049 | Now, what remains but that we who are reconciled to God by faith in his blood are quit, discharged, and set free from the law of sin and death? |
6049 | Now, what shall God do to save these men? |
6049 | Now, what shall this man do? |
6049 | Now, what was Paul''s answer? |
6049 | Now, when Jesus was born, it is said,''Where is he that is born King of the Jews?'' |
6049 | Now, when thou hast thought on these things fairly, answer thyself in these few questions: Is not this arrogancy? |
6049 | Now, whence should all this disobedience arise? |
6049 | Now, where lieth the fault? |
6049 | Now, which of these hast thou? |
6049 | Now, who will meet me in this dark entry? |
6049 | Now, will not this last his poor brethren to spend upon a great while? |
6049 | O Lord, thought I, what if I should not, indeed? |
6049 | O blessed face and holy grace, When shall we see this day? |
6049 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
6049 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
6049 | O grave, where is thy victory?'' |
6049 | O how should a poor soul do this? |
6049 | O my brethren,''what manner of persons ought we to be,''who have subscribed to the Lord, and have called ourselves by the name of Israel? |
6049 | O my brother, if He will but go along with us, what need we be afraid of ten thousands that shall set themselves against us? |
6049 | O my reader, would you be one of the glorified inhabitants of that city whose builder and maker is God? |
6049 | O sinner, wilt thou not open? |
6049 | O that godly plea of Samuel:''Behold here I am,''says he,''witness against me, before the Lord, and before his anointed, whose ox have I taken? |
6049 | O that saying of God to them of old,"Why criest thou for thine affliction? |
6049 | O thou that fearest the Lord, what is thy desire? |
6049 | O what an alteration will there be among the ungodly when they go out of this world? |
6049 | O what thunderings and lightnings, what earthquakes and tempests, will there be in every damned soul, at the opening of this book? |
6049 | O what will it profit thy soul to have pleasure in this life, and torments in hell? |
6049 | O''what shall be given unto thee,''thou''deceitful tongue?'' |
6049 | O, but I am but one, and a very sorry one, too; and what is one, especially such an one as I am? |
6049 | O, if he were here one quarter of an hour, to behold, to see, to feel, to taste and enjoy but the thousandth part of what we enjoy, what would he do? |
6049 | O, then we should have you cry out, I must have Christ; what shall I do for Christ? |
6049 | O, therefore, will not this aggravate thy torment? |
6049 | Objection.-But doth not Christ as Advocate plead for his elect, though not called as yet? |
6049 | Observe, I am commanded to believe, but what should I believe? |
6049 | Of God, do I say; if thou wouldst but break this league with this great enemy of thy soul? |
6049 | Of that which is sown, or of that which was never sown? |
6049 | Of what use are these expressions, if the soul of Christ suffered not, if it suffered not when separated from the body? |
6049 | On his arrival, he demanded,''Are all the prisoners safe?'' |
6049 | Once being at an honest woman''s house, I, after some pause, asked her how she did? |
6049 | One chanced mockingly, beholding the carriage of the men, to say unto them, What will ye buy? |
6049 | One reads, he prays, he catechises too; But doth he nothing else, what doth he do? |
6049 | One word also to you that are neglecters of Jesus Christ:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6049 | One would have thought that this had been a small request, a small courtesy-- ONE DROP OF WATER-- what is that? |
6049 | Or are we only out of that Egyptian darkness, that in baptism have got the start of our brethren? |
6049 | Or are you afraid lest the truth should invade your quarters?'' |
6049 | Or art thou ignorant of these things, and yet darest thou say, Our Father? |
6049 | Or art thou like the ostrich whom God hath deprived of wisdom, and has hardened her heart against her young? |
6049 | Or art thou not? |
6049 | Or art thou one a going backward thither? |
6049 | Or art thou one agoing backward thither? |
6049 | Or do they altogether make but one Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | Or do they still like and approve of you as well as ever? |
6049 | Or do you count all that yourselves have no hand in, done to your disparagement? |
6049 | Or do you look upon Jesus at that time to be but a shadow, or type of some what that was afterwards to be done within? |
6049 | Or dost thou count they were but painted fears Which from thine eyes did squeeze so many tears? |
6049 | Or dost thou sideling go, and would''st not be Suspected? |
6049 | Or dost thou think that God is at play with thee, and that he threateneth but in jest? |
6049 | Or dost thou wink, because thou would''st not see? |
6049 | Or dost thou wink, because thou would''st not see? |
6049 | Or has it the smell or savour of such a thing? |
6049 | Or have ye not read in the law, how that on the sabbath days the priests in the temple profaned the sabbath, and are blameless?'' |
6049 | Or how is it with thy soul? |
6049 | Or how shall a man be able to give to others a satisfactory account of his unfeigned subjection to the gospel, that yet abides in his impenitency? |
6049 | Or how sincerely righteous they were whom God justified as ungodly? |
6049 | Or how, if the next sight I see with mine eyes be the Lord in the clouds, with all his angels, raining floods of fire and brimstone upon the world? |
6049 | Or if he ask a fish, will he bestow A serpent? |
6049 | Or if he looks no further than to horses, what will he do at the swellings of Jordan( Jer 12:5)? |
6049 | Or if it came to them only?'' |
6049 | Or if it should, would it be a suitable medicine in the least to present to the eyes of a broken and wounded people, as the Jews will be at that day? |
6049 | Or if they had offered that offering, that was to be burnt as a sin- offering, otherwise than it was commanded? |
6049 | Or if they were, would they be afraid that God would not make them welcome? |
6049 | Or is he ever the more a fool, for flying from that which will drown thee in hell- fire, and for seeking eternal life? |
6049 | Or is his grace so far gone, and so near spent, that now he has not enough to pardon, and secure, and save one sinner more? |
6049 | Or is it a way into which I have twisted myself, as not being contented with my first lot, that by God and my parents I was cast into? |
6049 | Or is it muddy, and mixed with the doctrines of men? |
6049 | Or is it not the least of thy thoughts all the day? |
6049 | Or makes as if he would not reconcile To thee again? |
6049 | Or must they neglect the weightier matters, because they want mint, and anise, and cummin? |
6049 | Or of Heman, when he said he was free among them whom God remembered no more? |
6049 | Or shall it come to save us? |
6049 | Or that he should make such ado, By justice, and by grace; By prophets and apostles too, That men might see his face? |
6049 | Or that the promise he hath made, Also the threatenings great, Should in a moment end and fade? |
6049 | Or that there should be the strength of an ox in a wren? |
6049 | Or the epistle of James? |
6049 | Or the highly virtuous dame, Must I sue for mercy upon the same terms as the Magdalene? |
6049 | Or the will of Christ to the will of Satan? |
6049 | Or the will of righteousness to the will of sin? |
6049 | Or theirs that hear the beating of a drum, But not made fly for fear from house and home? |
6049 | Or they who do us scorn? |
6049 | Or those who do our houses waste? |
6049 | Or us, who this have borne? |
6049 | Or was his calling so gainful to him as always to keep his purse''s belly full, though he was himself a great spender? |
6049 | Or was it possible but that after a while these fig- leaves should have become rotten, and turned to dung? |
6049 | Or what careth he for the pinching frost, which burneth with the love of the Lord? |
6049 | Or what do you think of David, when he said he was cast off from God''s eyes? |
6049 | Or what falsehood doth it command thee to receive for truth? |
6049 | Or what if a man should act now as a son, rather than simply as a creature endued with a principle of reason? |
6049 | Or what man is there of you, if his son Shall ask him bread, will he give him a stone? |
6049 | Or what shadow now is left in it since its institution as to divine service is taken long since from it? |
6049 | Or what should be the object of my faith in the matter of my justification with God? |
6049 | Or what will they give in exchange for their souls? |
6049 | Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? |
6049 | Or whether such think that Christ Jesus was subject to be tainted by the badness of the place, had he been there? |
6049 | Or whether that day, as a sabbath, was afterwards by the apostles imposed upon the churches of the Gentiles? |
6049 | Or whether, when the scripture says, God is in hell, it is any disparagement to him? |
6049 | Or who can save alive, when the maker of the world is set against them? |
6049 | Or who shall condemn me-- just judges? |
6049 | Or why must the old sabbath be joined to this new ministration? |
6049 | Or"Shall any teach God knowledge?" |
6049 | Or, Can God repute him so, and yet be holy and just? |
6049 | Or, How could God in justice give it to a person, that by the law stood condemned, before they were quitted from that condemnation? |
6049 | Or, Is it possible that a man that has done as he has, should yet be found a saint, and so in a saved state? |
6049 | Or, are these such as may better be broken, than for want of light to forbear baptism with water? |
6049 | Or, are you become so high in your own phantasies, that none have, or are to have but private means of grace? |
6049 | Or, as another prophet has it,"Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
6049 | Or, as you have it in John, will you love your life till you lose it? |
6049 | Or, how can that man say, I would glorify God, who in his very heart refuseth to stand and fall by his mercy? |
6049 | Or, is this the way that thou takest to mortify sin? |
6049 | Or, must their graces be increased by none but private means? |
6049 | Or, must we now be afraid to say that Christ is better than water baptism? |
6049 | Or, ought none but them that are baptized to have the public means of grace? |
6049 | Or, whether every saint in some sort, hath not the keys of the kingdom of heaven, which are the Scriptures and their power? |
6049 | Otherwise,''Being planted, shall it prosper? |
6049 | Our author, perhaps, will say, I have not spoken to his question; which was,"Whether women, fearing God, may meet to pray together? |
6049 | Paul did not so much as once ask him, What is your end in this question? |
6049 | Perfect righteousness, what to do? |
6049 | Perfecting holiness, what is that? |
6049 | Perhaps the word''satisfaction''will hardly be found in the Bible; and where is it said in so many words,''God is dissatisfied with our sins?'' |
6049 | Perhaps thou wilt not let go now, what, as a hypocrite, thou hast got; but"what is the hope of the hypocrite, when God taketh away his soul?" |
6049 | Peter asks thee another question, to wit,"If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" |
6049 | Pilate''s question,"What is truth?" |
6049 | Ponder the path of thy feet with the greatest seriousness, thy life lies upon it; what thinkest thou? |
6049 | Poor besotted sinner, is this thy last shift? |
6049 | Poor child, thought I, what sorrow art thou like to have for thy portion in this world? |
6049 | Poor drunken sinner, what shall I say to thee? |
6049 | Poor sin- sick soul, do you consider your state more loathsome and dangerous than the leprosy? |
6049 | Poor wretch, quoth the Pharisee to the Publican, What comest thou for? |
6049 | Power to do what? |
6049 | Pray how did he break it? |
6049 | Pray how did she die? |
6049 | Pray in the custody of Giant Despair, in the midst of Doubting Castle, and when their own folly brought them there too? |
6049 | Pray of what disease did Mr. Badman die, for now I perceive we are come up to his death? |
6049 | Pray tell me concerning the first, how he made away with himself? |
6049 | Pray then, and watch, be thou no drowsy sleeper, Grudge, nor refuse, to be thy brother''s keeper, Seest thou thy brother''s graces at an ebb? |
6049 | Pray what were they? |
6049 | Pray, Sir, What may I call you? |
6049 | Pray, did you know him? |
6049 | Pray, how was he in his death? |
6049 | Pray, what count you good thoughts, and a life according to God''s commandments? |
6049 | Pray, what is he? |
6049 | Pray, what may I call your name, that I may tell it to my Lord within? |
6049 | Pray, what principles did he hold? |
6049 | Pray, what was it more that he said unto you? |
6049 | Pray, where did you find all these? |
6049 | Pray, who are your kindred there? |
6049 | Presently with envy they are enraged and cry,"Dost thou not know that every man hath a measure of the spirit given to him? |
6049 | Prithee let me know Thy state? |
6049 | Prithee tell me what moved thee to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Prithee tell me, What seest thou in him to allure thee to forsake all the world, to come to him? |
6049 | Prithee, what new knowledge hast thou got, that so worketh off thy mind from thy friends, and that tempteth thee to go, nobody knows where? |
6049 | Professors such, perhaps, there may be, and who upon earth can help it? |
6049 | Proof.--"Who hath ascended up into heaven, or descended? |
6049 | Put thyself now upon this serious inquiry, Am I indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Q. Hath he indeed made amends for sin? |
6049 | Quest.--But how( may some say) doth the devil make his delusions take place in the hearts of poor creatures? |
6049 | Quest.--But you will say, doth not the scripture make mention of a Christ within? |
6049 | Reader, can you be content with this? |
6049 | Reader, can you solve Mr. Bunyan''s riddle? |
6049 | Reader, have you ever felt thus''in downright earnest''for salvation? |
6049 | Reader, have you ever spoken harshly to, or persecuted, a child of God-- a poor penitent sinner? |
6049 | Reader, have you fled for refuge to the hope set before you in the gospel? |
6049 | Reader, have you had, at any time, equal anxiety for your soul''s health and salvation? |
6049 | Reader, how is your inclination? |
6049 | Reader, in the sight of god, let the heart- searching inquiry of the apostle''s be yours; Lord, is it I? |
6049 | Reader, is this your lot also? |
6049 | Reader, our anxious inquiry should be, Have we entered in by Christ the gate? |
6049 | Reader, what sayest thou to this? |
6049 | Reader, what sayst thou to this? |
6049 | Reader, would''st see what may you never feel, Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel? |
6049 | Reader, wouldst see what you may never feel, Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel? |
6049 | Reason also says the same, for how can Blacks beget white children, when both father and mother are black? |
6049 | Reason will say, Then who will profess Christ that hath such coarse entertainment at the beginning? |
6049 | Received you the Spirit, saith St. Paul, By hearing, faith, or works? |
6049 | Received, into what? |
6049 | Recorder was mad, and so not to be regarded: and for this he urged his fits, and said, If he be himself, why doth he not do thus always? |
6049 | Rejoicing in spirit for the hope of the life to come by Christ, who will that harm? |
6049 | Return again, my daughters, go your way, For I''m too old to marry: should I say I''ve hope? |
6049 | Riches and power, what is there more in the world? |
6049 | SECOND, How it appears that Christ hath power to save or cast out? |
6049 | SECONDLY, What death they must die? |
6049 | Said they anything more to discourage you? |
6049 | Saith not the gospel the very same? |
6049 | Saith the soul, Can not the devil give one such comfort I trow? |
6049 | Samson withstood his Delilah for a while, but she got the mastery of him at the last; why so? |
6049 | Satan often saith of us when we have sinned, as Abishai said of Shimei after he had cursed David, Shall not this man die for this? |
6049 | Satan stronger than the Almighty Redeemer? |
6049 | Saved I would be; and who is there that would not, were they in my condition? |
6049 | Say I these things as a man? |
6049 | Say I this of myself? |
6049 | Say they, if our iniquities be upon us, and we pine away in them, how can we then live? |
6049 | Say you so? |
6049 | Say you so? |
6049 | Says Paul,''They did not like to retain God in their knowledge''; and what follows? |
6049 | Says Satan, Dost thou not know that thou hast horribly sinned? |
6049 | Says Satan, dost thou not know that thou hast horribly sinned? |
6049 | Says Satan, dost thou not know, that thou art one of the vilest in all the pack of professors? |
6049 | Says Satan, doth not thy conscience tell thee that thou art and hast been more base than any of thy fellows can imagine thee to be? |
6049 | Scenes of accomplished bliss, which who can see, Though but in distant prospect, and not feel His soul refresh''d with foretaste of the joy? |
6049 | Second, Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Second, Because you know that though a man do run, yet if he do not overcome, or win, as well as run, what will he be the better for his running? |
6049 | Second, But what is it for Jesus to be an Advocate for these? |
6049 | Second, But you will say, is there a man made mention of here? |
6049 | Second, The second thing is, who are they that are carried away with this delusion, and why? |
6049 | Second, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners, to the Jerusalem sinners? |
6049 | Secondly, For that he perceived God was with them, though in that dark and dismal state; and why not, thought he, with me? |
6049 | Secondly, How safe they are in the arms of Jesus; would they be here again for a thousand worlds? |
6049 | Secondly, In the time of Elias, which time also was typical of this, what church was there to be seen in Israel? |
6049 | Secondly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed, and must she have an end? |
6049 | Secondly, by whom, and to what, he that is weak in the faith is to be received? |
6049 | See here, a man at the foot of the ladder, now ready in will and mind, to die for his profession; but how will he carry it now? |
6049 | See here, what should we talk any more about such a fellow? |
6049 | See now, did not I tell thee that thy fears were but the consequence of strong desires? |
6049 | Seest thou a professor that prayeth not? |
6049 | Seest thou here, how saints of old were wo nt to do? |
6049 | Seest thou not that many of late have been snatched away, on each side of thee( by that hand that hath been stretched out and is so still)? |
6049 | Sermon being done, up she gets, and away she goes, and withal inquired where this Jesus the preacher dined that day? |
6049 | Seth then was no better than we by nature, but came into the world in the blood of his mother''s filth:"What is man, that he should be clean? |
6049 | Seth, saith the Spirit, was set in the stead of Abel, there as forlorn, to defend religion: Must he not now be swallowed up? |
6049 | Seventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Seventhly, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6049 | Shall Christ come down from Heaven to earth to declare this to sinners; and shall sinners stop their ears against these good tidings? |
6049 | Shall Christ think nothing too dear for me? |
6049 | Shall Christ weep to see thy soul going on to destruction, and will though sport thyself in that way? |
6049 | Shall God display his glory before us under the character and title of a Creator, and shall we yet fear man? |
6049 | Shall God enter this complaint against thee? |
6049 | Shall God love me a sinner? |
6049 | Shall God love, shall he keep his faith to me? |
6049 | Shall God speak to man''s soul, and shall not man believe? |
6049 | Shall God the only wise, be arraigned at the bar of thy blind reason, and there be judged and condemned for his acts done in eternity? |
6049 | Shall I be a citizen of that city? |
6049 | Shall I be admitted into, or shut out from, that blessed kingdom? |
6049 | Shall I be proud, because I am sounding brass? |
6049 | Shall I buy the pleasures of this world at so dear a rate as to lose my soul for the obtaining of that? |
6049 | Shall I chide them? |
6049 | Shall I come to particulars with thee? |
6049 | Shall I content myself with a heaven that will last no longer than my lifetime? |
6049 | Shall I entertain thee against my sovereign Lord? |
6049 | Shall I flatter them? |
6049 | Shall I grieve Him with my foolish carriage? |
6049 | Shall I have my sins and lose my soul? |
6049 | Shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou wilt pardon my sins, or by believing Thou wilt not? |
6049 | Shall I intreat them to hold their tongues? |
6049 | Shall I need to mention particularly contests many years past, and presented to us in print? |
6049 | Shall I not be abandoned for this, and sent back from thence ashamed? |
6049 | Shall I now be ashamed of the cause, ways, people, or saints of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Shall I now love ever a lust or sin? |
6049 | Shall I now speak of the place that this saved body and soul shall dwell in? |
6049 | Shall I now yield my members as instruments of righteousness, seeing my end is everlasting life? |
6049 | Shall I save thee? |
6049 | Shall I slight His counsel by following of my own will? |
6049 | Shall I speak of the satiety and of the duration of all these? |
6049 | Shall I speak of their company? |
6049 | Shall I speak of their continuance in this condition? |
6049 | Shall I speak of their heavenly raiment? |
6049 | Shall I tell thee? |
6049 | Shall Jesus Christ be interceding in heaven? |
6049 | Shall another man pray for this, one that knew the goodness and benefit of it, and shall not I meditate upon it? |
6049 | Shall he look to God? |
6049 | Shall he look to himself? |
6049 | Shall he look to the commandment? |
6049 | Shall he not therefore seek for fruit, for fruit answerable to the means? |
6049 | Shall he stay from Christ till his heart is better? |
6049 | Shall he that keeps his promise sure In things both low and small, Yet break it like a man impure, In matters great''st of all? |
6049 | Shall he that speaks in righteousness give place, and he who has nothing but envy and deceit be admitted to stand his ground? |
6049 | Shall he trust to his duties? |
6049 | Shall he turn away, and not return?'' |
6049 | Shall it be said at the last day, that the wicked made more haste to hell than you to Heaven? |
6049 | Shall it be said at the last day, that wicked men made more haste to hell than you did make to heaven? |
6049 | Shall man believe what God says, and nothing at all regard it? |
6049 | Shall not Christ, then, prevail? |
6049 | Shall not I now be holy? |
6049 | Shall not I now study, strive, and lay out myself for Him that hath laid out Himself soul and body for me? |
6049 | Shall not then these mournful groans pierce thy flinty heart? |
6049 | Shall not this lay obligation upon me? |
6049 | Shall pride be found among redeemed slaves? |
6049 | Shall saints, then, like slaves, be afraid of their God, the Creator; of their own God, when he rendeth the heavens, and comes down? |
6049 | Shall that hinder the execution of Shall- come? |
6049 | Shall the beast stand glorying over them while they are dead, with his feet in their neck? |
6049 | Shall the dead arise and praise thee?'' |
6049 | Shall the devil''s kingdom be united, and shall Christ''s be divided? |
6049 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?'' |
6049 | Shall there any man be put to death this day in Israel, for do not I know, that I am king this day over Israel?" |
6049 | Shall they come? |
6049 | Shall they prosper that do such things? |
6049 | Shall this be the burden of the song of heaven? |
6049 | Shall this man lie down and despair? |
6049 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6049 | Shall we be ruled by the Giant? |
6049 | Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? |
6049 | Shall we deserve correction? |
6049 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6049 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6049 | Shall we forget them? |
6049 | Shall we go back again to my Lord, and confess our folly, and ask one? |
6049 | Shall we sin because we are forgiven? |
6049 | Shall we sin because we are not under the law, but under grace? |
6049 | Shall wood be taken thereof to do any work? |
6049 | Shall you with him live in pleasure as you do now? |
6049 | Shalt thou indeed abide the melting and washing of this day? |
6049 | She said she was afraid; I asked her, why? |
6049 | She, also, that is thine enemy shall see it, and shame shall cover her which saith unto thee, Where is the Lord thy God?" |
6049 | Short- sighted mortal,"shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"'' |
6049 | Should I now be ashamed of His ways and servants, how can I expect the blessing? |
6049 | Should I this night conceive a son? |
6049 | Should a man ask me how he should know that he loveth the children of God? |
6049 | Should one say to some, Art not thou the man that I once saw crying under a sermon, that I once, heard cry out, What must I do to be saved? |
6049 | Should one say to some-- Art not thou that man I saw crying out under a sermon,''What shall I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | Should she stay where she dwells, and retain this her mind, who could live quietly by her? |
6049 | Should we have been made a curse? |
6049 | Should we have undergone the pains of Hell? |
6049 | Should we make Mr. Good- deed our messenger when our petition cries for mercy? |
6049 | Should we pray for communion with God through Christ? |
6049 | Should you ask him that we mentioned but now, How long is it since you began to fear you should miss of this damsel you love so? |
6049 | Since, then, the children have Christ for their advocate, art thou a child? |
6049 | Sinner, art thou thirsty? |
6049 | Sinner, be advised; ask thy heart again, saying, Am I come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Sinner, canst thou read that Jesus Christ was made an offering for sin, and yet go in sin? |
6049 | Sinner, careless sinner, didst thou take notice of this first inference that I have drawn from my second doctrine? |
6049 | Sinner, coming sinner, art thou for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Sinner, hast thou deferred to fear the Lord? |
6049 | Sinner, hast thou obtained a broken heart? |
6049 | Sinner, if this wicked thought be in thy heart, tell me again, dost thou thus think in earnest? |
6049 | Sinner, sick sinner, what sayest thou to this? |
6049 | Sinner, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Sinner, what wilt thou take to make a mountain of sand that will reach as high as the sun is at noon? |
6049 | Sinner, where is now thy righteousness? |
6049 | Sinner, why shouldest thou pull vengeance down upon thee? |
6049 | Sinner, wouldst thou have mercy? |
6049 | Sinners, you have souls, can you behold a crucified Christ, and not bleed, and not mourn, and not fall in love with him? |
6049 | Sir, said I, if I may do good to one by my discourse, why may I not do good to two? |
6049 | Sir, said I, pray what do you mean by calling the people together? |
6049 | Sir, said the least, I was almost beat out of heart? |
6049 | Sir, what is the cause of this? |
6049 | Sir, what think you? |
6049 | Sir, which is my way to this honest man''s house? |
6049 | Sir, you seem greatly concerned at this, but what if I shall say more? |
6049 | Sixthly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6049 | Skill, how does it taste? |
6049 | Skill, saying, Sir, what will content you for your pains and care to, and of my child? |
6049 | Sluggard, art thou asleep still? |
6049 | Snuff- dishes, you may say, what are they? |
6049 | Snuffers, you may say, of what were they a type? |
6049 | So Christ:''Which of you convinceth me of sin?'' |
6049 | So Christiana asked Prudence what it was that made those curious notes? |
6049 | So David,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6049 | So He addressed Himself to Mercy, and said unto her, And what moved thee to come hither, sweet heart? |
6049 | So I asked her, she being a stranger to me, what she had to say to me? |
6049 | So I was, and a sweet dream it was; but are you sure I laughed? |
6049 | So again saith he in the next Psalm after, as afore he had complained of the oppression of the enemy,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6049 | So again:"I was left alone,"says he,"and saw this great vision"; and what follows? |
6049 | So again:''What iniquity have your fathers found in me, that they are gone far from me, and have walked after vanity, and are become vain?'' |
6049 | So also Bunyan-"Every height is a difficulty to him that is loaden; with a burden, how shall we attain the Heaven of heavens? |
6049 | So full is this of consolation and felicity that the apostle exclaims,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6049 | So he came directly to me, and said, Mercy, what aileth thee? |
6049 | So he further asked, if all the men in the town of Mansoul were in this confession as they? |
6049 | So it is here, there is a promise made indeed, but to whom? |
6049 | So that the question is not, Do I find that I am righteous? |
6049 | So that, is there righteousness in Christ? |
6049 | So the guide, Mr. Great- heart, awaked him, and the old gentleman, as he lift up his eyes, cried out, What''s the matter? |
6049 | So then, Doth the law call for righteousness? |
6049 | So then, when the body of Christ is in every sense completed in this life by the light of the sunshine of his holy gospel, what need of this sun? |
6049 | So they began and said, Neighbour, pray what is your meaning by this? |
6049 | So they called her, and said to her, Mercy, what is that thing thou wouldst have? |
6049 | So they came up one to another; and presently Stand- fast said to old Honest, Ho, father Honest, are you there? |
6049 | So when he was come into the chamber of state, Diabolus saluted him with''Welcome, my Lord, how went matters betwixt you to- day?'' |
6049 | So when he was got in, the man of the gate asked him who directed him thither? |
6049 | So when they were come to the gate, the guide knocked, and the Porter cried, Who is there? |
6049 | So, again, in another place, he saith,''Lord, how long wilt thou look on? |
6049 | So, again, speaking of the wicked, he saith,''Ye have said it is vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinance?'' |
6049 | So, did I say? |
6049 | So, of which of them hath He at any time said, This is, or shall be, made in or after Mine image, Mine own image? |
6049 | So, then, what is the axe, that it should boast itself against him that heweth therewith? |
6049 | So, then, wilt thou live by the law? |
6049 | Solomon says,''The word of a king is as the roaring of a lion''; and if so, what is the Word of God? |
6049 | Some make their sighs, their tears, their prayers, and their reformations, their advocates-"Hast thou tried these, and found them wanting?" |
6049 | Some may say, Will God see that which is not? |
6049 | Some of the things of God that are excellent, have not been approved by some of the saints: What then? |
6049 | Some, as I said, that revolt, are shot dead upon the place; and for them, who can help them? |
6049 | Sometimes I look upon myself, and say, Where am I now? |
6049 | Soon after we set out, my father came to my brother''s, and asked his men whom his daughter rode behind? |
6049 | Soul, consider, is it not miserable to lose heaven for twenty, thirty, or forty years''sinning against God? |
6049 | Soul, he suffered and did bear with the manners of Israel forty years in the wilderness; and hast thou tried him half so long? |
6049 | Specially that bitter outcry of his,''What shall I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | Still how common is the question, which one of the disciples put to his master,''Lord, are there few that be saved?'' |
6049 | Stop, my dear reader, have you cast away all useless encumbrances, and all easily besetting sins? |
6049 | Studies that yield far less profit than this, how close are they pursued, by some who have adapted themselves thereunto? |
6049 | Such as are self- evident or evident of themselves; to what? |
6049 | Suppose a child doth grievously transgress against and offend his father, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6049 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should be made to live for ever, but without the enjoyment of God, what good would his life do him? |
6049 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should go to heaven, that golden place, what good would this do him, if he was not possessed of the God of it? |
6049 | Suppose all, if all these churches were baptized, what then? |
6049 | Suppose he shall against thee shut the door, Knock thou the louder, and cry out the more; What if he makes thee there to stand a while? |
6049 | Suppose it should be urged, that this is a doctrine tending to looseness and lasciviousness; the answer is ready--"What shall we say then? |
6049 | Suppose so many cattle in such a pound, and one goes by whose they are not, doth he concern himself? |
6049 | Suppose such a slip as I told you of before should be in your garden, and there die, would you let it abide in your garden? |
6049 | Suppose that I be cheated myself with a brass half- crown, must I therefore cheat another therewith? |
6049 | Suppose they staid but one quarter of an hour there after their fall, before they were cast out, what sweetness found they there, but guilt? |
6049 | Surely it hath not entered into the heart of man to conceive what ear never heard, nor mortal eye ever saw? |
6049 | Take the THREATENINGS laid down in holy writ, and how are they disregarded? |
6049 | Take the tables for the hearts of the murderers, and the instruments for their sins, and what place more fit for such instruments to be laid upon? |
6049 | Tell me, I say, by this text, whether is here intended the sins of all that shall be saved? |
6049 | Tell me, dost thou not desire to desire? |
6049 | Tell me, now, you that desire to be under the law, can you fulfil all the commands of the law, and after answer all its demands? |
6049 | Tell me, therefore, which of them will love him most? |
6049 | Tell me, when did you see an old drunkard converted? |
6049 | Tenth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Than thought? |
6049 | Than wind? |
6049 | That I may know also, whether the day of grace be past with me or no? |
6049 | That also in the Romans is clear to this purpose,''Who is he that condemneth? |
6049 | That is comparable to the pleasures, profits, and glory of this world? |
6049 | That is true, but what evil is that that he will not do, that is left of God, as I believe Mr. Badman was? |
6049 | That it cleaves to the best, who knows not? |
6049 | That it is disgraceful to profession, who knows not? |
6049 | That of David is for this remarkable,"Who am I,[ said he] and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort? |
6049 | That old friend of publicans and sinners? |
6049 | That our duties are imperfect, follows upon what was discoursed before; for if our graces be imperfect, how can our duties but be so too? |
6049 | That tells thee the world is not, even then when it doth most appear to be; wilt thou set thine heart upon that which is not? |
6049 | That the soul, did I say? |
6049 | That they should lie and rot in their grave eternally? |
6049 | That they would put off the old man; what is that? |
6049 | That this must be so urged for their excuse: Hath God been more sparing in making out his mind in the one, rather than the other? |
6049 | That was extortion, was it not? |
6049 | That which we read is this;''Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?'' |
6049 | That, because these several things will convince of sin, therefore will they needs be the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | The Bible had been to him a sealed book until, in a state of mental agony, he cried, What must I do to be saved? |
6049 | The END of the law-- what is the end of the law but perfect and sinless obedience? |
6049 | The Godhead is indeed invisible; how then is Christ the image of it? |
6049 | The Lord spake unto Manasseh, and to his people, by the prophets, but would he hear? |
6049 | The Pharisees, for that they professed religion, but walked not answerable thereto, unto what doth Christ compare them but to serpents and vipers? |
6049 | The Prince asked further, saying, Could you have been content that your slavery should have continued under his tyranny as long as you had lived? |
6049 | The Ranters would profess that they were without sin: and how far short of his opinion are the Quakers? |
6049 | The Shepherds then answered, Did you not see a little below these mountains a stile that led into a meadow, on the left hand of this way? |
6049 | The answer to the inquiry,"What is man?" |
6049 | The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? |
6049 | The broken- hearted desireth God''s company; when wilt thou come unto me? |
6049 | The children, indeed, have the advantage of an advocate; but what is this to them that have none to plead their cause? |
6049 | The cost of the enterprise is vast indeed; the army is numerous as our thoughts, and who can number''the multitude of his thoughts?'' |
6049 | The creditors asked what he would give? |
6049 | The curse of God hangs over your heads; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | The day of death and judgment is at the door; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | The devil will tempt us, sin will assault us, men will persecute; but can they do it to everlasting? |
6049 | The dragon her assaults, fills her with jars, Yet rests she under her Beloved''s shade, But whence was she? |
6049 | The end, what is that? |
6049 | The first is to question whether any are said to die and rise, by the death and resurrection of Christ? |
6049 | The first observation, or truth, drawn from the words is cleared by the text,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | The forgiveness of sins: But what is meant by forgiveness? |
6049 | The full pitcher can hold no more; then why should it go to the fountain? |
6049 | The godly are called believers; and why believers, but because they are they that have given credit to the great things of the gospel of God? |
6049 | The grace of humility, when is it? |
6049 | The graces of the Spirit-- what like them, or where here are they to be found, save in the souls of men only? |
6049 | The great question is, not as to the means, but the fact-- Have I been born again? |
6049 | The guilt of blood who can bear? |
6049 | The hearing of this is enough to ravish one''s heart; but are these things to be enjoyed? |
6049 | The heart naturally is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; how then should there flow from such an one the fear of God? |
6049 | The inquiry is pursued a step farther,"Can those who differ with me be saved?" |
6049 | The inquiry was then, as, alas, it is too frequent now, Are there many that be saved? |
6049 | The instruments with which they slew the sacrifices, what were they but a bloody axe, bloody knives, bloody hooks, and bloody hands? |
6049 | The judge saith, What canst thou say for thyself that sentence of death should not be passed upon thee? |
6049 | The law is not of faith, why then should grace be by Christians expected by observation of the law? |
6049 | The law of Christ is,"Is any sick among you? |
6049 | The man also at the touching of the bones of Elisha? |
6049 | The man therefore, read it, and looking upon Evangelist very carefully, said, Whither must I fly? |
6049 | The man under the sixth head complaineth for want of temptations, but thou hast enough of them; art thou glad of them, tempted, coming sinner? |
6049 | The men then asked, What must we do in the holy place? |
6049 | The mercy, the pardoning preserving mercy, the mercy of the Lord is upon them, who is he then that can condemn them? |
6049 | The mind becomes entranced, and when sober reflection regains her command, we naturally inquire, Can all this have taken place in my heart? |
6049 | The name of God, what is that, but that by which he is distinguished and known from all others? |
6049 | The name of master is a name of fear--"And if I be a master, where is my fear? |
6049 | The principle, you will say, what do you mean by that? |
6049 | The promise is, that Babylon shall be destroyed: And do we hold our tongues? |
6049 | The question is not, Are they blind? |
6049 | The question is, Do not the scriptures make mention of a Christ within? |
6049 | The question naturally arises-- What is this''furnace of earth''in which the Lord''s words are purified? |
6049 | The question then is, whether the elect and reprobate receive a differing grace? |
6049 | The question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6049 | The questions was answered with that portion of Scripture,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6049 | The record, you will say, what is that? |
6049 | The riches, honours, and pleasures of this world, what mortal can withstand? |
6049 | The righteous; who is he but the man that loveth God, and his holy will, to do it? |
6049 | The saints of old, they being willing and resolved for heaven, what could stop them? |
6049 | The same saying in effect hath also John in the Revelation--"Who shall not fear thee, O Lord,"said he,"and glorify thy name?" |
6049 | The second part of the inquiry is, to what he that is weak in the faith is to be received? |
6049 | The second question is, How should we strive? |
6049 | The second thing is, How are these brought into this Everlasting Covenant of Grace? |
6049 | The second thing that I would inquire into is this: What it is to be''ready to be offered up''? |
6049 | The smith, what is he? |
6049 | The snare, say you, what is that? |
6049 | The study of those scriptures, in order that the solemn question might be safely resolved,''Can such a fallen sinner rise again?'' |
6049 | The subject I should have preached upon, even then when the constable came, was,''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6049 | The tail, says the Holy Ghost, draws them down; draws down even the stars of heaven; but whither doth he draw them? |
6049 | The text from which he intended to preach was''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6049 | The text says''the desire of the righteous shall be granted''; what then are the desires of the righteous? |
6049 | The thing formed may not say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
6049 | The united are all the faithful in one body; into whom? |
6049 | The valley of Achor; what is that? |
6049 | The vital question is, Has my heart been conquered; do I love Emmanuel? |
6049 | The waster, what is that? |
6049 | The way that he took, led him directly into this condition; for who can expect other things of one that follows such courses? |
6049 | The which, when he had done, he said, Christiana, knowest thou wherefore I am come? |
6049 | The whole have no need of the physician; then why should they go to him? |
6049 | The whole of this address is descriptive of what the author saw, felt, or heard--''What shall I say? |
6049 | The wicked; who is he but the man that loves not God, nor to do his will? |
6049 | Their covetousness declareth that they are weary of depending upon God; and doth not thy wanton actions declare that thou abhorrest chastity? |
6049 | Their minds and consciences are defiled; how then can sweet and good proceed from thence? |
6049 | Their minds were blinded, saith the text: Whose minds? |
6049 | Their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness; how then can there be found one word that should please God? |
6049 | Their poison-- what is that? |
6049 | Then Christian asked, What is the reason of the discontent of Passion? |
6049 | Then Christian called to Demas, saying, Is not the place dangerous? |
6049 | Then Christian said to him, Come away, man, why do you stay so behind? |
6049 | Then Demas called again, saying, But will you not come over and see? |
6049 | Then Faithful stepped forward again, and said to Talkative, Come, what cheer? |
6049 | Then I ask again, Hast thou committed thy cause to him? |
6049 | Then I ask again, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him?-I say, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him? |
6049 | Then I asked him further, how I must make my supplication to Him? |
6049 | Then I asked him which was his first coming? |
6049 | Then I asked how long time he would have me live with him? |
6049 | Then I said, But how, Lord, must I consider of Thee in my coming to Thee, that my faith may be placed aright upon Thee? |
6049 | Then I said, But, Lord, what is believing? |
6049 | Then Israel said, Why were you so unkind To say you had a brother left behind? |
6049 | Then Mr. Stand- fast blushed, and said, But why, did you see me? |
6049 | Then Naomi said, Shall I not, my daughter, Seek rest for thee, that thou do well hereafter? |
6049 | Then Said Christian to the man, What art thou? |
6049 | Then breaking out in the bitterness of my soul, I said''to myself,''with a grievous sigh, How can God comfort such a wretch as I? |
6049 | Then did he that came in for their relief call out to the ruffians, saying, What is that thing that you do? |
6049 | Then did that scripture seize upon my soul, He is of one mind, and who can turn him? |
6049 | Then did the Judge say to him, Hast thou any more to say? |
6049 | Then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a better, a brave golden finger? |
6049 | Then he asked them, saying, Where did you lie the last night? |
6049 | Then he inquired if they all were well, And said, When you were here I heard you tell Of an old man, your father, how does he? |
6049 | Then he said to his mother, What diet has Matthew of late fed upon? |
6049 | Then ran Innocent in( for that was her name) and said to those within, Can you think who is at the door? |
6049 | Then said Charity to Christian, Have you a family? |
6049 | Then said Christian to Hopeful his fellow, Is it true which this man hath said? |
6049 | Then said Christian to his fellow, If these men can not stand before the sentence of men, what will they do with the sentence of God? |
6049 | Then said Christian to the Interpreter, But is there no hope for such a man as this? |
6049 | Then said Christian to the porter, Sir, what house is this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, May we go in thither? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What is thy name? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What meaneth this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What meaneth this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means that? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, Why doth this man thus tremble? |
6049 | Then said Christian, Why doth this man thus tremble? |
6049 | Then said Christian, You make me afraid, but whither shall I fly to be safe? |
6049 | Then said Christiana, What is the meaning of this? |
6049 | Then said Christiana, Wherefore weepeth my Sister so? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist further, Art not thou the man that I found crying without the walls of the City of Destruction? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, How hath it fared with you, my friends, since the time of our last parting? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, If this be thy condition, why standest thou still? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, Why not willing to die, since this life is attended with so many evils? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, pointing with his finger over a very wide field, Do you see yonder wicket gate? |
6049 | Then said Gaius, Is this Christian''s wife? |
6049 | Then said Gaius, Whose wife is this aged matron? |
6049 | Then said He, Is there but one spider in all this spacious room? |
6049 | Then said Hopeful, Where are we now? |
6049 | Then said Joseph, Mother, what is it? |
6049 | Then said Matthew, May we eat apples, since they were such, by, and with which, the serpent beguiled our first mother? |
6049 | Then said Mercy to him that was their guide and conductor, What are those three men? |
6049 | Then said Mercy, How knew you this before you came from home? |
6049 | Then said Mercy, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Mnason their host, How far have ye come today? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Bunyan, Have you the original? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Bunyan,''Have you the original?'' |
6049 | Then said Mr. Desires- awake, why should not I do the best I can to save so famous a town as Mansoul from deserved destruction? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Feeble- mind to him, Man, How camest thou hither? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart to the little ones, Come, my pretty boys, how do you do? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, Good Gaius, what hast thou for supper? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, What art thou? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, What things? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Valiant- for- truth, Prithee, who is it? |
6049 | Then said Nathaniel to Jesus,''Whence knowest thou me? |
6049 | Then said he that attempted to back the lions, Will you slay me upon mine own ground? |
6049 | Then said he, Who will go with me? |
6049 | Then said he, Who, and what is he that is so hardy, as after this manner to molest the Giant Despair? |
6049 | Then said she, How canst thou pretend to love me, When thus thy doing towards me disprove thee? |
6049 | Then said the Interpreter, Is there no hope, but you must be kept in the iron cage of despair? |
6049 | Then said the Keeper of the gate, Who is there? |
6049 | Then said the Keeper of the gate, Who is there? |
6049 | Then said the Keeper, Whence come ye, and what is that you would have? |
6049 | Then said the Prince again, Are you the men that did suffer yourselves to be corrupted and defiled by that abominable one Diabolus? |
6049 | Then said the Prince, And for what are those ropes on your heads? |
6049 | Then said the Prince, And what punishment is it, think you, that you deserve at my hand for these and other your high and mighty sins? |
6049 | Then said the Prince,''And what is he that is become thy companion in this so weighty a matter?'' |
6049 | Then said the Shepherds one to another, Shall we show these Pilgrims some wonders? |
6049 | Then said the boys, Are we not yet at the end of this doleful place? |
6049 | Then said the damsel to them, With whom would you speak in this place? |
6049 | Then said the giant, Why are you here on my ground? |
6049 | Then said the guide, Why did you not cry out, that some might have come in for your succour? |
6049 | Then said the man to the Prince,''Oh let not my Lord be angry; and why inquirest thou after the name of such a dead dog as I am? |
6049 | Then said the man, Neighbours, wherefore are ye come? |
6049 | Then said the men of Judah, for what reason Are you come up against us at this season? |
6049 | Then said the old man, Thou lookest like an honest fellow; wilt thou be content to dwell with me for the wages that I shall give thee? |
6049 | Then said the other, Do you see yonder shining light? |
6049 | Then said their guide, Come, what cheer, Sirs? |
6049 | Then said they, Have you none? |
6049 | Then said they, We entreat thee let us know, For whose cause we this evil undergo, Whence comest thou? |
6049 | Then said they, What should this be? |
6049 | Then said they, What''s thy riddle, let us know? |
6049 | Then shalt thou say in thine heart, Who hath begotten me these, seeing I have lost my children, and am desolate, a captive and removing to and fro? |
6049 | Then she addressed herself to the eldest, whose name was Matthew; and she said to him, Come, Matthew, shall I also catechise you? |
6049 | Then she said, Come, Joseph( for his name was Joseph), will you let me catechise you? |
6049 | Then such a question as this,"Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?" |
6049 | Then the water stood in mine eyes, and I asked further, But, Lord, may such a great sinner as I am, be indeed accepted of Thee, and be saved by Thee? |
6049 | Then they asked her of her welfare, and if these young men were her husband''s sons? |
6049 | Then they asked the Shepherds what that should mean? |
6049 | Then they cried out to those that were sent, What news from the Prince? |
6049 | Then they stood trembling before him, and he said, Are you the men that heretofore were the servants of Shaddai? |
6049 | Then unto her, her mother- in- law did say, In what field hast thou been to glean to- day? |
6049 | Then were the men exceedingly afraid; And, wherefore hast thou done this thing? |
6049 | Then what doth this speak to the Lord''s own people? |
6049 | Then what mean they, who were to appearance once come out, but now are going thither again? |
6049 | Then what will become of all the profane, ignorant, scoffers, self- righteous, proud, bastard- professors in the world? |
6049 | Then what will become of all those that creep into the society of God''s people without a wedding garment on? |
6049 | Then what will become of all those that mock at the second coming of the Man Christ, as do the Ranters, Quakers, drunkards, and the like? |
6049 | Then will not you yourself confess, that he is deluded, that is persuaded to follow that light that can not reveal Christ unto him? |
6049 | Then would you have none pray but those that know they are the disciples of Christ? |
6049 | Then, I pray thee, let me inquire a little of thee, what provision thou hast made for thy soul? |
6049 | Then, O that I might have a little ease for my deceitful tongue? |
6049 | Then, as it seems, sometimes you got rid of your trouble? |
6049 | Then, directing his speech to Ignorance, he said, Come, how do you? |
6049 | Then, said I, a man, it seems, may report it for a truth? |
6049 | Then, why may not I doubt that I may be one of these? |
6049 | There are but three or four: and can not God miss them, and save me for all them? |
6049 | There are mansion- houses, beds of glory, and places to walk in among the angels; and who knows what they are? |
6049 | There are rewards for services, and labour of love showed to God''s name here; and who knows what they will be? |
6049 | There is but one law- giver, That''s able to destroy and to deliver; Who then art thou that dost condemn thy neighbour? |
6049 | There is death? |
6049 | There is heaven itself, the imperial heaven; does any body know what that is? |
6049 | There is hope, another grace of the Spirit bestowed upon us; and how often is that also, as to the excellency of working, made to flag? |
6049 | There is immortality and eternal life: and who knows what they are? |
6049 | There is in the text an intimation of a sense of torment''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | There is never a rebel in heaven against God, and if he should so deal on earth, must it not whirl thee down to hell? |
6049 | There is reverence, fear, and standing in awe of God''s Word and judgments, where are the excellent workings thereof to be found? |
6049 | There is the mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, and the innumerable company of angels; doth any body know what all they are? |
6049 | There will be badges of honour, harps to make merry with, and heavenly songs of triumph; doth any here know what they are? |
6049 | Thereat Mercy said, And why so envious, trow? |
6049 | Therefor, speak plainly; Dost thou believe that that man Christ Jesus is ascended from his people in his person? |
6049 | Therefore from that time that he heard that word,"Why persecutest thou me?" |
6049 | Therefore in this sense it may be said,''Where is the fury of the oppressor?'' |
6049 | Therefore is that in the Psalms read both ways, shall I look to the mountains? |
6049 | Therefore let him still humble himself before his God, because his hand is upon him, and say, What sin is this, for which this hand of God is upon me? |
6049 | Therefore the soul is it which is said to love God--''Saw ye him whom my soul loveth?'' |
6049 | Therefore to answer this, here we have a breadth, a spreading breadth;"I spread my skirt over thee": But how far? |
6049 | Therefore try a little, Do they slight God''s Christ, which is the Son of the Virgin? |
6049 | Therefore what need have they that I should work such a miracle, as to send one from the dead unto them? |
6049 | Therefore, I say, this gate was not measured; for what should a rule do here, where things are beyond all measure? |
6049 | Therefore, how can you bear the face to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Therefore, this would still stick with me, How can you tell that you are elected? |
6049 | Therefore, wherefore? |
6049 | These are also taken notice of in Job, and go there also by the name of wicked men:"Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden? |
6049 | These are my fears of him too; but who can hinder that which will be? |
6049 | These bloody sacrifices, what did they signify, what were they figures of, but of the bloody sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | These kill the heart; for who can bear up under the guilt of sin? |
6049 | They added also, We see it is well with you, but how must it go with the town of Mansoul? |
6049 | They are all gone out of the way; how then can they walk therein? |
6049 | They are fallen from grace, and what can help them? |
6049 | They are indeed reprobates who have not Christ within them; but now, how is thy folly manifest? |
6049 | They are the salt of the earth, shall not they be seasoning? |
6049 | They bless, they all bless; they thank, they all thank; and wilt thou hold thy tongue? |
6049 | They gather it indeed, and think to keep it too, but what says Solomon? |
6049 | They may, with confidence, say, Lord, Lord, have we not eaten and drank in Thy presence, and taught in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out devils? |
6049 | They said( it was when I was in my troubles), What shall we do with this woman? |
6049 | They shall come, say you, but how if they be blind, and see not the way? |
6049 | They shall, you say; but how if they will not; and, if so, then what can Shall- come do? |
6049 | They spake not aright, saying, what have I done? |
6049 | They:--Who? |
6049 | Think thus with thyself, What, shall I lose a long heaven for short pleasure? |
6049 | Think you that they upon whom the tower of Siloam fell, were sinners above others? |
6049 | Think, therefore, with thyself thus, What was it that at first did wound my heart? |
6049 | Thinkest thou not, who readest these lines, that all of these who had before committed their soul to God to keep were the fittest folk to die? |
6049 | Thinkest thou that thou shalt weather it out well enough at the day of judgment? |
6049 | Thinkest thou this to be right, that thou didst put the lie upon my Father, and madest him, to Mansoul, the greatest deluder in the world? |
6049 | Thinkest thou this to be right? |
6049 | Thinkest thou, reader, that the scripture hath two faces, and speaketh with two mouths? |
6049 | Third, Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Third, But wilt thou yet plead thy righteousness for mercy? |
6049 | Third, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered in the first place to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Thirdly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6049 | Thirdly, What was the dry bones that we read of in the 37th of Ezekiel, but the church of God, and also a figure of what we are treating of? |
6049 | This beginning was bad, but what shall I say? |
6049 | This brings us to the most important of all the subjects of self- examination-- am I one of the''righteous''? |
6049 | This dastardly heart of ours, when shall it be more subdued and trodden under foot of faith? |
6049 | This doctrine Christ teacheth when he saith,"Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not one of them is forgotten before God? |
6049 | This is but a falsehood and a slander, for the unregenerate know him not; how then can they believe on him? |
6049 | This is but reasonable; for if Christ stands up to plead for us, why should not we stand up to plead for him? |
6049 | This is manifest by the very name of the tree; it is called the tree of knowledge of good and evil; and have you that knowledge as yet? |
6049 | This is much; but is God connected with this? |
6049 | This is not a sign that you fear me, ye offer the blind for sacrifices, where is my fear? |
6049 | This is of absolute necessity; for how can or shall a man be willing to come to Christ that knows not what he is, what God has appointed him to do? |
6049 | This is plain, not only to sense, but by the natural scope of the words,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | This is the common language,''if our transgressions be upon us, and we pine away in them, How should we then live?'' |
6049 | This is the fear that made the three thousand cry out,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6049 | This is the reason of this inquiry, Did you come in at the gate? |
6049 | This is the time, then, for Christ to stand up to plead; for now there is room for such a question- Can David''s sin stand with grace? |
6049 | This is your hour, said He, and the power of darkness, when He cried out,''My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?'' |
6049 | This last has the body for his watch- house; the eyes and ears for his port- holes; the tongue therewith to cry, Who comes there? |
6049 | This man is minded to give more to be damned, than God requires he should give to be saved; is not this an extravagant one? |
6049 | This may be answered by the question-- Was Peter justified in leaving the prison, and going to the prayer- meeting at Mary''s house? |
6049 | This question, I briefly ask thee,"Had Christ a body of flesh before the world began?" |
6049 | This righteousness of God- man, this righteousness of Christ? |
6049 | This snare will bring thee back again to the pit, which is hell, and then how wilt thou do to be rid of thy fear? |
6049 | This text utterly excludes the law-- what law? |
6049 | This to reason is very dreadful; for it cuts the soul down to the ground;''for a wounded spirit who[ none] can bear?'' |
6049 | This was honest and plain; but what said Mr. Badman to her? |
6049 | This wicked world doth sentence us for our good deeds, but how then would they sentence us for our bad ones? |
6049 | This word created, is added, on purpose to show that the world is under the power of his hand; for who can destroy, but he that can create? |
6049 | This, I say, is a character above all angels; for, as the apostle said,''To which of the angels said He at anytime,''Thou art my Son?'' |
6049 | This; Which? |
6049 | Those of the children of Israel that went from Egypt, and entered the land of Canaan, how came they thither? |
6049 | Thou art in a strait, wilt thou fly before Moses, or with David fall into the hands of the Lord? |
6049 | Thou biddest them be merry and lightsome; but dost thou not know that"the heart of fools is in the house of mirth?" |
6049 | Thou booby, say''st thou nothing but Cuckoo? |
6049 | Thou didst so wonderfully pour out thy wrath upon him, to the making of him cry out,''My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
6049 | Thou hast already been unfaithful in thy service to Him; and how dost thou think to receive wages of Him? |
6049 | Thou hast been a cumber- ground[104] long already, and wilt thou continue so still? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou has sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou mayest also doubt18 thy thoughts of the damned thus: If these poor creatures were in the world again, would they sin as they did before? |
6049 | Thou mayest by thy fear be driven away from God, from his worship, people, and ways, but what will that avail? |
6049 | Thou professest thou believest in Christ: is he thy joy, and the life of thy soul? |
6049 | Thou professest to believe thou hast a share in another world: hast thou let got THIS, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him? |
6049 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him?'' |
6049 | Thou seemest angry, why dost on us frown? |
6049 | Thou simple bird, what makes thou here to play? |
6049 | Thou standest to thy righteousness, what dost thou mean? |
6049 | Thou subject are to cold o''nights, When darkness is thy covering; At days thy danger''s great by kites, How can''st thou then sit there and sing? |
6049 | Thou talkest like one upon whose head is the shell to this very day; for what should he pawn them, or to whom should he sell them? |
6049 | Thou talkest of leaving him, but then whither wilt thou go? |
6049 | Thou thinkest that thou art a Christian; thou shouldest be sorry else: Well, But when did God shew thee that thou wert no Christian? |
6049 | Thou thinkest to escape the pit; but what wilt thou do with the snare? |
6049 | Thou wilt say unto me, How should I know that I have done so? |
6049 | Though men that have a great design, do, and must make use of those that in reason are most likely to effect it, yet must the Lord do so too? |
6049 | Though such should climb up to heaven, from thence will God bring them down( Amos 9:2), Still I say, therefore, how shall we get in thither? |
6049 | Through what righteousness? |
6049 | Thus also thou may say when death assaulteth thee-- O death, where is thy sting? |
6049 | Thus did Saul by the light that made him see; by it he came to Christ, and cried,''Who art thou, Lord?'' |
6049 | Thus much have I thought good to speak in answer to this question, What iniquity should we depart from that religiously name the name of Christ? |
6049 | Thus to do is horrible; but mayest thou not judge amiss in this matter? |
6049 | Thus, is Christ formed in me, the only hope of glory? |
6049 | Thus, when the godly among the Jews made prayers that rebellious Israel might not be cast out of the vineyard, what saith the answer of God? |
6049 | Thy answer is nothing to the question, for I did not ask, whether the Spirit of Christ was in thee? |
6049 | Thy first question should be on whom must I believe? |
6049 | Thy people, what people? |
6049 | Thy sin has brought this army to thy walls, and shall it bring it in judgment to do execution into thy town? |
6049 | Time runs; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | Time was, indeed, he could hector, even hector it with God himself, saying,''What is the Almighty, that we should serve him?'' |
6049 | To be made an heir of God, of his grace, of his kingdom, and eternal glory, what is like it? |
6049 | To be saved from sin, from hell, from the wrath of God, from eternal damnation, what is like it? |
6049 | To be thrown o''er the pales, and there to lie, Or be pick''d up by th''next that passeth by? |
6049 | To instance no more, although I could instance many, are not they the words of our Lord? |
6049 | To instance somewhat, Faith in Christ: what harm can that do? |
6049 | To prosper and be in health, as their soul prospers-- what, to thrive and mend in outwards no faster? |
6049 | To see a sea of brimstone burn, Who would it not affright? |
6049 | To the Romans,''I beseech you therefore,''saith he,''by the mercies of God,( What mercies? |
6049 | To this end, I say, how was the Shunammite''s son raised from the dead? |
6049 | To what end should such be comprehended in this of exhortation of his? |
6049 | To what end, O my soul, art thou retired into this place? |
6049 | To what end? |
6049 | To what may such an one attain? |
6049 | To what purpose else is it revealed, made mention of, and commended to us? |
6049 | To which Bunyan replied;''Friend, dost thou speak this as from thy own knowledge, or did any other tell thee so? |
6049 | To whom could he go? |
6049 | To whom did he swear that they should not enter into his rest? |
6049 | To whom they said, Why hath my lord such thought? |
6049 | Touching his working with some, how invisible is it to these in whose souls it is yet begun? |
6049 | Touching the book of my remembrance, who can contradict it? |
6049 | True, he stopped the blow but for a time; but why did he stop it at all? |
6049 | True, the men were but mean in themselves; for what is Paul or what Apollos, or what was James or John? |
6049 | True, the others murmured at him; but what did the Lord Jesus answer them? |
6049 | True, the right of dominion is the Lord''s; but the sinner will not suffer it, but will be all himself; saying''Who is Lord over us?'' |
6049 | True, thou mayest fear as devils do, but what will that profit? |
6049 | Tush, said Obstinate, away with your book; will you go back with us, or no? |
6049 | USE FIFTH, Again, fifthly, Is it so? |
6049 | USE FIRST.--Is justifying righteousness to be found in the person of Christ only? |
6049 | USE SECOND.--Is it so? |
6049 | USE THIRD.--But, thirdly, is it so? |
6049 | Understand,[ O] ye brutish among the people: and ye fools, when will ye be wise? |
6049 | Understandest thou what thou readest? |
6049 | Upon the first day: what, or which first day of this, or that, of the third or fourth week of the month? |
6049 | Upon what terms may he have this life? |
6049 | Upon what terms? |
6049 | Upon whom must these reproaches fall? |
6049 | Us: What us? |
6049 | Use Second, Is it so? |
6049 | Use Second, Is there so great a heart for love, towards us, both in the Father and in the Son? |
6049 | V. What might be the reasons which prevailed with God to save us by grace, rather than by any other means? |
6049 | V.--WHAT MIGHT BE THE REASON MOVED GOD TO ORDAIN AND CHOOSE TO SAVE THOSE THAT HE SAVETH BY HIS GRACE, RATHER THAN BY ANY OTHER MEANS? |
6049 | WHAT SHALL I SAY? |
6049 | Was He not angry with me? |
6049 | Was death strong upon him? |
6049 | Was it God that was offended? |
6049 | Was it before or after thou hadst been a sinner? |
6049 | Was it better than God? |
6049 | Was it for that some special mercies laid obligations upon thee, or how? |
6049 | Was it good also that thou madest a prey of the innocency and simplicity of the now miserable town of Mansoul? |
6049 | Was it not because they had that richer and better thing,''the Lord Jesus Christ?'' |
6049 | Was it not free grace for Christ to give Peter a loving look after he had cursed, and swore, and denied Him? |
6049 | Was it not free grace that met Paul when he was agoing to Damascus to persecute, which converted him, and made him a vessel of mercy? |
6049 | Was it not free grace to save such as those were that are spoken of in the 16th of Ezekiel, which no eye pitied? |
6049 | Was it not grace, absolute grace, that God made promise to Adam after transgression? |
6049 | Was it not the art of the false apostles of old to say thus? |
6049 | Was it not, therefore, well worth the seeing? |
6049 | Was it the removing of thy habitation, the change of thy condition, the loss of relations, estate, or the like? |
6049 | Was it utter nakedness, nakedness in its perfection? |
6049 | Was it, think you, that you might show yourselves women, and that you might go out like a company of innocents to gaze on your mortal foes? |
6049 | Was not I in all places to behold, to see, and to observe thee in all thy ways? |
6049 | Was not every tittle of the law reasonable, both in the first and second table? |
6049 | Was not he a liar? |
6049 | Was not her father a poor Amorite? |
6049 | Was not here like to be a fine bargain, think you? |
6049 | Was not his mind elevated a thousand degrees beyond sense, carnal reasons, fleshly love, self- concerns, and the desires of embracing temporal things? |
6049 | Was not this a strange act, and a display of unthought- of grace? |
6049 | Was not this the way that the Lord was fain to take to make them close in with Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Was that a New Testament church, or no? |
6049 | Was that all that you saw at the house of the Interpreter? |
6049 | Was the Lord displeased against the rivers? |
6049 | Was the serpent then lifted up for them that were good and godly? |
6049 | Was the unjust steward a fool in providing for himself for hereafter? |
6049 | Was there ever a man in the world so capable of describing the miseries of Doubting Castle, or of the Slough of Despond, as poor John Bunyan? |
6049 | Was there no more, think you, but Noah, in his generation, that feared God? |
6049 | Was this only the temper of wicked men then? |
6049 | Was thy soul worth so much, and didst thou so little regard it? |
6049 | Was you awake now? |
6049 | Was your father and mother willing that you should become a pilgrim? |
6049 | Wast robb''d? |
6049 | Wast thou not innocent, perfectly innocent and righteous? |
6049 | Wast thou not told of hell- fire, those intolerable flames? |
6049 | Wast thou one of them, that didst sigh, and afflict thyself for the abominations of the times? |
6049 | We are by faith made good trees, and shall not we bring forth good fruit? |
6049 | We know God, and he is our God, our own God; of whom or of what should we be afraid? |
6049 | We look, said Paul, but whither? |
6049 | We may adopt the language of the poet, and say--''Sinful soul, what hast thou done? |
6049 | We may well say,"Who is like thee, O Lord, among the gods?" |
6049 | We need not lay the reins on its neck and say, What care we? |
6049 | We plead not for indulging,''But are there not with you, even with you, sins against the Lord your God?'' |
6049 | We read, in the book of Revelations, of the holy city, and that it had twelve gates, and at the gates twelve angels; but what did they do there? |
6049 | We received, by our thus being counted in him, that benefit which did precede his rising from the dead; and what was that but the forgiveness of sins? |
6049 | Well might Mr. Doe say,''What hath the devil or his agents got by putting our great gospel minister in prison?'' |
6049 | Well said, and how was it then? |
6049 | Well said, and what after that? |
6049 | Well then, did you not know, about 10 years ago, one Temporary in your parts, who was a forward man in religion then? |
6049 | Well then, do you so run? |
6049 | Well then, sinner, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Well, and how did you answer him? |
6049 | Well, and how did you apply this to yourself? |
6049 | Well, and what conclusion came the old man and you to, at last? |
6049 | Well, and what did he think and do then? |
6049 | Well, but brother, I pray thee tell us what was it that was the cause of thy being upon thy knees even now? |
6049 | Well, but did Mr. Badman and his master agree so well? |
6049 | Well, but how was he received by the lord of the vineyard? |
6049 | Well, but if this in truth be thus, how then comes it to pass that some receive it and live for ever? |
6049 | Well, but is there in truth such a thing as the obedience of faith? |
6049 | Well, but is there no way to come to the Father of mercies but by this man that was born of the virgin? |
6049 | Well, but is thy work required to the finishing of this righteousness? |
6049 | Well, but it seems he did live to come out of his time, but what did he then? |
6049 | Well, but let me ask you one word farther: Do you believe, that of very conscience they can not consent, as you, to that of water baptism? |
6049 | Well, but mark the answer of God,''Son of man, What is the vine- tree more than any tree, or than a branch which is among the trees of the forest? |
6049 | Well, but now we are upon it, pray show me the difference between swearing and cursing; for there is a difference, is there not? |
6049 | Well, but pray return again to Mr. Badman; how did he carry it to his wife, after he was married to her? |
6049 | Well, but what art thou now? |
6049 | Well, but what did he do when all was almost gone? |
6049 | Well, but what judgment hast thou passed upon it while thou livest in thy debaucheries? |
6049 | Well, but what makes you think he is gone to hell? |
6049 | Well, but what of all this? |
6049 | Well, but what says God? |
6049 | Well, but what will you say to this question? |
6049 | Well, but whither must they go? |
6049 | Well, if you will not, will you give me leave to do it? |
6049 | Well, now suppose that a man, by an immediate hand of God, is brought to a morsel of bread, what must he do now? |
6049 | Well, said I, shall I send to your master, while you abide out of sight, and make your peace with him before he sees you? |
6049 | Well, said Mr. Great- heart, will you have the Pilgrims up into their lodging? |
6049 | Well, said he, to conclude, but will you promise that you will not call the people together any more? |
6049 | Well, then, said Faithful, what is that one thing that we shall at this time found our discourse upon? |
6049 | Well, then, tell me, sinner, if Christ should now come to judge the world, canst thou abide the trial of the book of life? |
6049 | Well, what judgment now doth God, the righteous judge, pass upon the damsel for this? |
6049 | Well, what shall be done for this man? |
6049 | Well, when they had, as I said, thus saluted each other, Mr. Money- love said to Mr. By- ends, Who are they upon the road before us? |
6049 | Well, will things that are less satisfy thy soul? |
6049 | Well, you have told me what were Mr. Badman''s thoughts now, being sick, of his condition; pray tell me also what he then did when he was sick? |
6049 | Were a man to plead for a limb, or a member of his own, how would he plead? |
6049 | Were all the world gracious, if God were not gracious, what was man the better? |
6049 | Were ever the Pharisees so profane; to whom Christ said, Ye vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
6049 | Were ever the Pharisees so profane; to whom Christ said, ye vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell; doth not the ground groan under you? |
6049 | Were it granted that you kept the law, and that no man on earth could accuse you; were you therefore just before God? |
6049 | Were the thunder- claps of the law so terrible, and didst thou so slight them? |
6049 | Were there no enemies but in Jerusalem? |
6049 | Were there no good men but at Jerusalem? |
6049 | Were there no objects of pity among those that in the old world perished by the flood, or that in Sodom were burned with fire from heaven? |
6049 | Were there none but thieves there, or were the rest of that company out of his reach? |
6049 | Were they sinners above all men upon whom the tower in Siloam fell and slew them? |
6049 | Were they troubled at it? |
6049 | Were we by sin subject to death? |
6049 | Were we under the curse of the law by reason of sin? |
6049 | Were you dead, and are you made alive? |
6049 | What Christian must I be; of what sect must I be of? |
6049 | What a devil then is sin? |
6049 | What a dishonour to posterity was the death of Balaam, Agag, Ahithophel, Haman, Judas, Herod, with the rest of their companions? |
6049 | What a many private things have we now brought out to public view? |
6049 | What a pitiful thing it is to be left in such a case? |
6049 | What acts of self- denial, hast thou done for the name of the Lord Jesus, among the sons of men? |
6049 | What agreement then hath the temple of God with idols? |
6049 | What ails this fly thus desperately to enter A combat with the candle? |
6049 | What are all these but such as Badman, and such as the young man but now mentioned? |
6049 | What are good thoughts concerning God? |
6049 | What are our desires? |
6049 | What are professors more than other men? |
6049 | What are the desires of a righteous man? |
6049 | What are the gleanings to the whole crop? |
6049 | What are the honours and riches of this world, when compared to the glories of a crown of life? |
6049 | What are the pleasures and delights of thy soul now? |
6049 | What are the privileges of those that are actually brought into this free and glorious grace of the glorious God of Heaven and glory? |
6049 | What are the signs and tokens that thou bearest about thee, concerning how it will go with thy soul at last? |
6049 | What are the things you seek, since you leave all the world to find them? |
6049 | What are they? |
6049 | What argument can any man produce, Why we should be intemperate in the use Of any worldly good? |
6049 | What arguments would he use? |
6049 | What art thou fit for, O Mansoul, if mercy preventeth not, but to be hewn down, and cast into the fire and burned? |
6049 | What back will such a suit of apparel fit, that is set together just cross and thwart to what it should be? |
6049 | What be good thoughts respecting ourselves? |
6049 | What became of him that had, and would have, two stools to sit on? |
6049 | What better warrant canst thou have to come, than to be bid to come of God? |
6049 | What black, what ugly crawling thing art thou? |
6049 | What can a divided army do, or a disordered army, that have lost their banners, or, for fear or shame, thrown them away? |
6049 | What can a man do in this case? |
6049 | What can a man do to procure Christ, or procure faith, or love? |
6049 | What can a man say more, but that he stands in the rank of the biggest sinners? |
6049 | What can be added? |
6049 | What can be fitter spoken? |
6049 | What can be more express? |
6049 | What can be more plain than this beautiful text? |
6049 | What can be more plain? |
6049 | What can be more plain? |
6049 | What can be more plain? |
6049 | What can be more suitable to the most desponding spirit in any man? |
6049 | What can follow more clearly from this, but that amends were made by him for those souls for whose sins he suffered upon the tree? |
6049 | What can more fully declare the commonness of a thing? |
6049 | What can the body do as to these? |
6049 | What can the lady or mistress do to defend herself against thieves and sturdy villains, if there be none but she at home? |
6049 | What can we hold? |
6049 | What can we keep from flying From us? |
6049 | What canst thou have more from the sweet lips of the Son of God? |
6049 | What care I, saith he, though I be seven years in chilling your heart if I can do it at last? |
6049 | What care hast thou had of securing of thy soul, and that it might be delivered from the danger that by sin it is brought into? |
6049 | What care have they taken that thou mightest have wherewith to live and do well when they were dead and gone? |
6049 | What care they for God? |
6049 | What comeliness hast thou seen in his person? |
6049 | What comfort is here? |
6049 | What condition is this man in? |
6049 | What could the king of Babylon''s golden image have done, had it not been for the burning fiery furnace that stood within view of the worshippers? |
6049 | What could the temple do without its watchmen? |
6049 | What countryman art thou? |
6049 | What demand of thine have I not fully answered? |
6049 | What designs, desires, and reachings out are there? |
6049 | What did Constantine see in Christ, when he used to kiss the wounds of them that suffered for him? |
6049 | What did Daniel and the three children find in him, to make them run the hazards of the fiery furnace, and the den of lions, for his sake? |
6049 | What did baptism teach you? |
6049 | What did you do then? |
6049 | What did, or what doth, the Lord Jesus see in us to be at all this care, and pains, and cost to save us? |
6049 | What didst thou come away from, in thy coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What do men meddle with religion for? |
6049 | What do they do in the vineyard? |
6049 | What do they mean? |
6049 | What do they think of themselves? |
6049 | What do you count prayer? |
6049 | What do you do when you meet with such places therein that you do not understand? |
6049 | What do you find in the Word of God against such a practice as this of Mr. Badman''s is? |
6049 | What do you mean by need? |
6049 | What do you think of Paul? |
6049 | What do you think of the Bible? |
6049 | What do you think of the jailer? |
6049 | What do you think of the three thousand? |
6049 | What do you think that might be? |
6049 | What do you think the prophet desired, when he said,''O that thou wouldest rend the heavens and-- come down?'' |
6049 | What doctrine did it preach to you? |
6049 | What does he call them but hypocrites, whited walls, painted sepulchres, fools, and blind? |
6049 | What dost thou bear? |
6049 | What dost thou here, Christian? |
6049 | What dost thou mean by can not? |
6049 | What dost thou there? |
6049 | What dost thou think? |
6049 | What doth he there? |
6049 | What doth the law require? |
6049 | What doth this place signify? |
6049 | What doth this word strive import? |
6049 | What doth this word strive import? |
6049 | What else dost thou mean, when thou sayest,"God I thank thee, that I am not as other men are?" |
6049 | What else is the use of thy adding of laws to God''s laws, precepts to God''s precepts, and traditions to God''s appointments? |
6049 | What else means the complaints of masters and of fathers in this matter? |
6049 | What else means your hearkening to the tyrant, and your receiving him for your king? |
6049 | What evidence have you for heaven and glory, and an inheritance among them that are sanctified? |
6049 | What feeling or compassion can a stone be sensible of? |
6049 | What followeth? |
6049 | What follows now? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What folly can be greater than to labour for the meat that perisheth, and neglect the food of eternal life? |
6049 | What fool would sell his part in paradise, That has a soul, and that of such a price? |
6049 | What force, I say, is there in a faith that is begotten by truth, managed by truth, fed by truth, and preserved by the truth of God? |
6049 | What forewarning is here? |
6049 | What fruit, barren fig- tree, what degree of heart holiness? |
6049 | What good motions? |
6049 | What good will all my companions, fellow- jesters, jeerers, liars, drunkards, and all my wantons do me? |
6049 | What good will my profits do me? |
6049 | What greater argument to holiness than to be made the members of the body, of the flesh, and of the bones of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What greater argument to holiness than to have our soul, our body, our life, hid and secured with Christ in God? |
6049 | What greater contempt can be thrown upon the saints than for their brethren to cast them off, or to debar them church communion? |
6049 | What ground can a man have to believe that Christ is his Saviour, if he do not believe that He suffered for sin in his nature? |
6049 | What ground now is here for despair? |
6049 | What ground then to despair? |
6049 | What ground? |
6049 | What had Paul committed to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What had he to do in God''s house? |
6049 | What has God been doing for and to his church from the beginning of the world, but extending to and exercising loving- kindness and mercy for them? |
6049 | What has he done? |
6049 | What has he done? |
6049 | What hast THOU found in him, sinner? |
6049 | What hast thou done, man, for God in this world? |
6049 | What hast thou done, that thou art emboldened to venture, to stand and fall to the most perfect justice of God? |
6049 | What hast thou done? |
6049 | What hast thou done? |
6049 | What hast thou found in him, since thou camest to him? |
6049 | What hast thou left behind thee? |
6049 | What hast thou thought of thy soul? |
6049 | What hath this man done against thee, that is coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What hath this man done now, but lied in the dispraising of his bargain? |
6049 | What have I here? |
6049 | What have I lost more than present ease and quiet by my sins that I have committed? |
6049 | What have I to do with you, that accuse the coming sinners to me? |
6049 | What have they to look at? |
6049 | What have you met with, and how have you behaved yourselves? |
6049 | What higher affront or contempt can be offered to God, and what greater disdain can be shown against the gospel? |
6049 | What hinders the conversion of the Jews, but the divisions of Christians? |
6049 | What hinders? |
6049 | What hope therefore can I have? |
6049 | What hope, help, stay, or relief then is there left for the merit- monger? |
6049 | What if God will be silent to thee, is that ground of despair? |
6049 | What if I did? |
6049 | What if a man had all the parts, yea, all the arts of men and angels? |
6049 | What if a man have no grace? |
6049 | What if he had pinched a little, and gone to journey- work for a time, that he might have known what a penny was, by his earning of it? |
6049 | What if he were never so willing, if he were not of ability sufficient, what would his willingness do? |
6049 | What if it should be applied thus? |
6049 | What if she had acquainted some of her best, most knowing, and godly friends therewith? |
6049 | What if she had engaged a godly minister or two to have talked with Mr. Badman? |
6049 | What if we must go now to heaven, and what if he is thus come down to fetch us to himself? |
6049 | What ignorance is this? |
6049 | What infirmities? |
6049 | What instruction is here? |
6049 | What is Christ''s doctrine, Paul''s doctrine, scripture doctrine, but the truth couched under the words that are spoken? |
6049 | What is God''s design in saving, of poor men? |
6049 | What is God''s majesty to a sinful man, but a consuming fire? |
6049 | What is Heaven? |
6049 | What is Jerusalem that stood in Canaan, to that new Jerusalem that shall come down from heaven? |
6049 | What is Jordan? |
6049 | What is a house full of treasures, and all the delights of this world, if thou be empty of grace,''if thy soul be not filled with good?'' |
6049 | What is a pilgrim without knowledge? |
6049 | What is a remnant of people to the whole kingdom? |
6049 | What is a sheep, a bull, an ox, or calf, to Christ, or their blood to the blood of Christ? |
6049 | What is a woman''s breast to a horse? |
6049 | What is baptism? |
6049 | What is he that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What is he that is not coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What is head- knowledge without heart- experience? |
6049 | What is heaven without God? |
6049 | What is hell? |
6049 | What is here in chief asserted, but the doctrine only which water baptism preacheth? |
6049 | What is here omitted that might have been inserted, to make the promise more full and free? |
6049 | What is his calling? |
6049 | What is his name, and what is his son''s name, if thou canst tell?" |
6049 | What is his name? |
6049 | What is it that embitters church- communion, and makes it burdensome, but divisions? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it to be saved by grace? |
6049 | What is it to be saved? |
6049 | What is it to repent of sin? |
6049 | What is it, then? |
6049 | What is it? |
6049 | What is it? |
6049 | What is leaven, or a grain of mustard seed, to the bulky lump of a body of death? |
6049 | What is like it? |
6049 | What is man that God should so unweariedly attend upon him, and visit him every moment? |
6049 | What is man? |
6049 | What is meant by the drum of Diabolus, which so terrified Mansoul? |
6049 | What is meant by this word"law"? |
6049 | What is meant or to be understood by the granting of the desires of the righteous? |
6049 | What is one in ten? |
6049 | What is our remedy? |
6049 | What is sixteen cubits to him who would enter in here with all the world on his back? |
6049 | What is supposed by his being saved by the Trinity? |
6049 | What is supposed by this word''saved''? |
6049 | What is that? |
6049 | What is that? |
6049 | What is that? |
6049 | What is the Scripture? |
6049 | What is the best physician alive, or all the physicians in the world, put all together, to him that knows no sickness, that is sensible of no disease? |
6049 | What is the breadth, and length, and depth? |
6049 | What is the cause that sinners can play so delightfully with sin? |
6049 | What is the cause? |
6049 | What is the church of God redeemed by, from the curse of the law? |
6049 | What is the church? |
6049 | What is the fruit they here found? |
6049 | What is the meaning of your laughter? |
6049 | What is the promise without God''s grace, and what is that grace without a promise to bestow it on us? |
6049 | What is the vine, more than another tree? |
6049 | What is there in the Lord''s supper, in baptism, yea, in preaching the Word, and prayer, were they not the appointments of God? |
6049 | What is there? |
6049 | What is thine occupation? |
6049 | What is this faith that doth justify the sinner? |
6049 | What is this? |
6049 | What is your name? |
6049 | What it was for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6049 | What it was for this Jesus to be of the seed of David? |
6049 | What judgment hast thou made of the present state of thy soul? |
6049 | What judgment shall he make how God will deal with him, by beholding the lamblike death of his companion? |
6049 | What kind of a YOU am I? |
6049 | What kind of oaths would she have? |
6049 | What kind of secret wishes hast thou in thy soul when thou feelest the lusts of thy flesh to rage? |
6049 | What kind of thoughts hast thou of thyself, now thou seest these desires of thine that are good so briskly opposed by those that are bad? |
6049 | What laid the cornerstone of this throne, but grace? |
6049 | What less now can be mine than the heavenly kingdom and glory? |
6049 | What life is in Christ? |
6049 | What life is in Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What life is it that is thus the ground of his priesthood? |
6049 | What love to the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | What made he ready for? |
6049 | What makes grace so good to us as sin in its guilt and filth? |
6049 | What makes sin so horrible and damnable a thing in our eyes, as when we see there is nothing can save us from it but the infinite grace of God? |
6049 | What man or angel could have thought that the Jerusalem sinners had been yet on this side of an impossibility of enjoying life and mercy? |
6049 | What man would count himself beloved of his wife that knows she hath a bosom for another? |
6049 | What man? |
6049 | What mattereth it what a man gets, if by the getting thereof he loseth himself? |
6049 | What matters besides, above, or beyond the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ, and of our acceptance with God through him? |
6049 | What may one learn by hearing the cock crow? |
6049 | What may we learn from that? |
6049 | What may we understand by it? |
6049 | What mean those swarms of opinions that are in the world? |
6049 | What means dust thou use to mortify thy sins? |
6049 | What means else all those delays and put- offs, saying, Stay a little longer, I am loth to leave my sins while I am so young, and in health? |
6049 | What means else your rejecting of the laws of Shaddai, and your obeying of Diabolus? |
6049 | What means he here by Lebanon but the church under persecution, and the fruitful field? |
6049 | What meant he by turning Adam out of paradise, by drowning the old world, by burning up Sodom with fire and brimstone from heaven? |
6049 | What messenger of Satan buffeted Paul? |
6049 | What more abominable than sin? |
6049 | What more can be objected? |
6049 | What more certain? |
6049 | What more could have been said? |
6049 | What more insupportable than the dreadful wrath of an angry God? |
6049 | What more strong Than is a lion? |
6049 | What moved you at first to betake yourself to a pilgrim''s life? |
6049 | What must I say then? |
6049 | What must he do now? |
6049 | What must he do therefore? |
6049 | What must it be above? |
6049 | What must we understand by that? |
6049 | What nation, what people, what kind of sinners have not been subdued by the preaching of a crucified Christ? |
6049 | What need we be so backward to it? |
6049 | What need we go to the throne of grace for more? |
6049 | What need we pray for more? |
6049 | What needs that? |
6049 | What now are all other titles of grandeur and greatness, when compared with this one sentence? |
6049 | What now is wanting to the help of him that has committed his soul to God to keep it while he is suffering according to his will in the world? |
6049 | What now must be done with this fig- tree? |
6049 | What now must be done? |
6049 | What now? |
6049 | What now? |
6049 | What or where wilt thou find in the Bible, so many privileges so affectionately entailed to any grace, as to this of the fear of God? |
6049 | What or who is he that would not also have ease from the guilt of sin? |
6049 | What or who is he that would not go to heaven? |
6049 | What other evil effects attend this sin? |
6049 | What other matters? |
6049 | What other sign can you give me that Mr. Badman died without repentance? |
6049 | What other things follow upon the commission of this beastly sin? |
6049 | What place was that? |
6049 | What ponderous thoughts hast thou had of the greatness and of the immortality of thy soul? |
6049 | What power has he that is dead, as every natural man spiritually is, even dead in trespasses and sins? |
6049 | What power hath he, then, whereby to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What proof canst thou make of the truth of this story? |
6049 | What provision hast thou made for thy soul? |
6049 | What reason can I have to hope for an inheritance in eternal life? |
6049 | What reason hath he that is left in this case to quarrel against his Maker? |
6049 | What reason, then, have you to think yourself a pilgrim? |
6049 | What resemblance hath his crying, and groaning, and bleeding, and dying, wrought in thee? |
6049 | What said God unto him? |
6049 | What said that gentleman to you? |
6049 | What saith he? |
6049 | What saith the King of him? |
6049 | What say you to John of Leyden? |
6049 | What say you to Mr. Badman now? |
6049 | What say you to breaking of bread, which the devil, by abusing, made an engine in the hand of Papists, to burn, starve, hang and draw thousands? |
6049 | What say you to that?" |
6049 | What say you to the church all along the Revelation quite through the reign of Antichrist? |
6049 | What say you to the church in the wilderness? |
6049 | What say you to,''This is my body?'' |
6049 | What say you, O you wounded sinners? |
6049 | What say you, do you believe the resurrection of the body after it is laid in the grave? |
6049 | What say''st thou, wilt not yet unto him come? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, backslider? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou now? |
6049 | What sayest thou to this, poor sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou, child of God? |
6049 | What sayest thou, man? |
6049 | What sayest thou, poor heart, to this? |
6049 | What sayest thou, poor soul? |
6049 | What sayest thou, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou, soul? |
6049 | What sayest thou, wilt thou turn? |
6049 | What sayest thou? |
6049 | What sayest thou? |
6049 | What says Christ? |
6049 | What says Job? |
6049 | What sayst thou, O wicked man? |
6049 | What scripture can be plainer spoken than this? |
6049 | What scripture have you to prove, that Christ is, or was crucified within you, dead within you, risen within you, and ascended within you? |
6049 | What scripture have you to prove, that Christ is, or was crucified within you, dead within you, risen within you, ascended within you? |
6049 | What shall I do unto thee? |
6049 | What shall I do unto thee? |
6049 | What shall I do, when I at such a door For Pilgrims ask, and they shall rage the more? |
6049 | What shall I do? |
6049 | What shall I do? |
6049 | What shall I say besides what hath already been said? |
6049 | What shall I say of David? |
6049 | What shall I say of them who had trials,''not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say to thee? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall he do now? |
6049 | What shall his companion say to this? |
6049 | What shall profit a man that has lost his soul? |
6049 | What shall the fly do now? |
6049 | What shall we do to be rid of him? |
6049 | What shall we do unto thee, then they said, That so the raging of the sea be stay''d? |
6049 | What shall we do? |
6049 | What shall we say of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat? |
6049 | What shall we say then? |
6049 | What shall we say then? |
6049 | What shall we say to these things? |
6049 | What shall we then say to these things? |
6049 | What shall, what shall not, a man, if he had it, if it would answer his design, give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | What should I do then? |
6049 | What should be the reason of that? |
6049 | What should we learn by seeing the flame of our fire go upwards? |
6049 | What sin is it that a child of God is not liable to commit, excepting that which is the sin unpardonable? |
6049 | What society, but to be abandoned of all? |
6049 | What solace can he that is without God, though he were in heaven, have with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the prophets and angels? |
6049 | What spirit possesseth thee, and holds thee back from a sincere closure with thy Saviour? |
6049 | What stay, but a continual fall of heart and mind? |
6049 | What stronger argument to holiness than this:''If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous?'' |
6049 | What stronger than a free forgiveness of sins? |
6049 | What than this bubble? |
6049 | What then becomes of the purity and dignity of human nature, so vainly boasted of? |
6049 | What then can accrue to our enemy? |
6049 | What then doth he get thereby, that getteth by dishonest means? |
6049 | What then if the church made the first assault? |
6049 | What then is the acceptable form, and what the appointed medium consecrated for our access to God, by which prayer is sanctified and accepted? |
6049 | What then shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | What then shall we do, will you say? |
6049 | What then shall we say, when we see a first practice turned into holy custom? |
6049 | What then should be the meaning? |
6049 | What then should be the reason? |
6049 | What then, Is he a righteous man because he hath done him no hurt? |
6049 | What then, Is it faith and works together that doth justify? |
6049 | What then, said I, are any of your children ill? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What they are in themselves, or what they have done and been? |
6049 | What thing so deserving as to turn us out of the way to see it? |
6049 | What things are they? |
6049 | What things so pleasant( that is, if a man hath any delight in things that are wonderful)? |
6049 | What things were they? |
6049 | What things? |
6049 | What things? |
6049 | What think you now of Mr. Badman? |
6049 | What think you now of going on pilgrimage? |
6049 | What think you of Mr. Badman now? |
6049 | What think you of him who, when he tempted the wench to uncleanness, said to her, If thou wilt venture thy body, I''ll venture my soul? |
6049 | What think you of the first man, by whose sins there are millions now in hell? |
6049 | What think you? |
6049 | What this Jesus is? |
6049 | What this Jesus is? |
6049 | What this street is? |
6049 | What though you do not preach? |
6049 | What thoughts, words, or actions can be clean, sufficiently to answer a perfect law that flows from this original? |
6049 | What time is that? |
6049 | What time is this that Jesus speaks of? |
6049 | What time, you may ask, was required? |
6049 | What twig, or straw, or twined thread is left to be a stay for his soul? |
6049 | What unreasonable thing doth the gospel bid thee credit? |
6049 | What visible living church was now in the land, I mean, either with reference to a godly spirit for it, or the form and constitution of it? |
6049 | What was he? |
6049 | What was he? |
6049 | What was it for Jesus to be of David''s seed? |
6049 | What was it for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6049 | What was it for Jesus to be raised thus up of God to Israel? |
6049 | What was it then, dear heart, that hath prevailed with thee to do as thou hast done? |
6049 | What was said of eating, or the contrary, may as to this be said of water baptism: neither if I be baptized, am I the better? |
6049 | What was that baptism but his death? |
6049 | What was that? |
6049 | What was that? |
6049 | What was the matter that you did laugh in your sleep tonight? |
6049 | What was the matter? |
6049 | What was the providence that God made use of as a means, either more remote or more near, to bring thee to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What was the reason why they did put him to death, but this, He did say that he was the Christ the Son of God? |
6049 | What was this king of Assyria but a type of the beast made mention of in the New Testament? |
6049 | What wast thou once? |
6049 | What will all say, or what will they conclude, even upon the very first hearing of this story? |
6049 | What will become of me, think you?'' |
6049 | What will become of you, if you die in this condition? |
6049 | What will become of you? |
6049 | What will he get of us by the bargain but a small pittance of thanks and love? |
6049 | What will it then avail them that they have gained much? |
6049 | What will men say if you shrink and winch, and take your sufferings unquietly, but that if you yourselves were uppermost, you would persecute also? |
6049 | What will not love bear with? |
6049 | What will they say then? |
6049 | What will thy gallant, generous mind do here? |
6049 | What will you do, when God shall come to reckon for these things? |
6049 | What wilt thou do at this day, and the day of thy trial and judgment? |
6049 | What wilt thou do when thou shalt be damned in hell, because thou couldst not find in thine heart to ask for heaven? |
6049 | What wilt thou do, poor sinner? |
6049 | What wilt thou do-- wilt thou after enlargement suffer thy privileges to be invaded and taken away? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou have me to do? |
6049 | What wisdom, I say, what holiness, what grace and life will be found in all their words and actions? |
6049 | What wonderful love doth there appear by this in the heart of our Lord Jesus, in suffering such things for our poor bodies and souls? |
6049 | What words wilt thou use to move him to compassion? |
6049 | What work did he make by the abuse of the ordinance of water baptism? |
6049 | What workman thence will take a beam or pin, To make ought which may be delighted in? |
6049 | What worth or value then can there be in any of their doings? |
6049 | What would have become of thy trade as a brazier? |
6049 | What would he leave undone? |
6049 | What would he not give? |
6049 | What would he not part with at that day, the day in which he will see himself damned, if he had it, in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | What would he suffer? |
6049 | What would man have more? |
6049 | What would she say? |
6049 | What would they have us do? |
6049 | What would you have a man do that is in his creditor''s debt, and can neither pay him what he owes him, nor go on in a trade any longer? |
6049 | What would you have me do? |
6049 | What would you have me to do? |
6049 | What would you say? |
6049 | What would you think? |
6049 | What wouldest thou have thought of a system by which all would have been taught to tag their laces and mend their own pots and kettles? |
6049 | What wouldst thou have? |
6049 | What zeal? |
6049 | What''s lighter than the mind? |
6049 | What, I say, should be the reason, but that death assaulted him with his sting? |
6049 | What, Lord, any him? |
6049 | What, a Christian, and live as does the world? |
6049 | What, again; is there no breaking of the league that is betwixt sin and thy soul? |
6049 | What, and come to Christ as a sinner? |
6049 | What, because believers are members one of another, must they therefore be also one in another? |
6049 | What, do you think that I am a spirit? |
6049 | What, do you think that every heavy- heeled professor will have heaven? |
6049 | What, has the voice of danger lost the art To raise the spirit of neglected care? |
6049 | What, hast thou run thy race, art going down? |
6049 | What, is baffling and befooling the enemies of God''s church nothing? |
6049 | What, is preservation nothing? |
6049 | What, my true servant, quoth he, my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | What, not so much as a respect to the matter or end? |
6049 | What, or who is the righteous man? |
6049 | What, resolved to be a self- murderer, a soul murderer? |
6049 | What, said I, is your husband amiss, or do you go back in the world? |
6049 | What, said Obstinate, and leave our friends and our comforts behind us? |
6049 | What, saith the merit- monger, will you look for life by the obedience of another man? |
6049 | What, seek''for the living among the dead? |
6049 | What, then, is the Word against the Word? |
6049 | What, then, must it rely upon or trust in? |
6049 | What, then, should the sinner, if he could come there, do at this bar to plead? |
6049 | What, thought I, must it be no sin but this? |
6049 | What, to lose all these brave things that my eyes behold, for that which I never saw with my eyes? |
6049 | What, to lose my pride, my covetousness, my vain company, sports, and pleasures, and the rest? |
6049 | What, to run back again, back again to sin, to the world, to the devil, back again to the lusts of the flesh? |
6049 | What, were they so lowly? |
6049 | What, what shall I say? |
6049 | What, will you go, saith the devil, without your sins, pleasures, and profits? |
6049 | What, will your husband leave preaching? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What[ evil] hath he done?" |
6049 | When Christ said,"Do you know all these things?" |
6049 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6049 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6049 | When God roars( as ofttimes the coming soul hears him roar), what man that is coming can do otherwise than tremble? |
6049 | When God speaks, when God works, who can let it? |
6049 | When Israel came out of Egypt, they were led of God into the wilderness; but why? |
6049 | When Israel went into Canaan, God did command them not so much as to ask, How those nations served their gods? |
6049 | When Philip, under a mistake, thought of seeing God some other way, than in and by this Lord Jesus Christ; What is the answer? |
6049 | When a man hath got a profession, and is crowded into the church and house of God, the question is not now, Hath he life, hath he right principles? |
6049 | When a man thinks he has only to prepare for an assault by footmen, how shall he contend with horses? |
6049 | When didst thou see that: And in the light of the Spirit of Christ, see that thou wert under the wrath of God because of original sin? |
6049 | When do our thoughts of ourselves agree with the Word of God? |
6049 | When he was come into the house he sent for me out of my chamber; who, when I was come unto him, he said, Neighbour Bunyan, how do you do? |
6049 | When he was taken this last time, he was preaching on these words, viz.,"Dost thou believe on the Son of God?" |
6049 | When heart and strength fail; when the body is writhing in agony, or lying an insensible lump of mortality; is that the time to make peace with God? |
6049 | When justice itself is pleased with a man, and speaks on his side, instead of speaking against him, we may well cry out, Who shall condemn? |
6049 | When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? |
6049 | When shall Christ ride Lord, and King, and Advocate, upon the faith of his people, as he should? |
6049 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
6049 | When shall Jesus Christ our Lord be honoured by us as he ought? |
6049 | When summ''d, what comes it to more than the halter? |
6049 | When the apostle had taken such a view of himself as to put himself into a maze, with an outcry also,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6049 | When the day that he must go hence was come, many accompanied him to the river- side, into which as he went, he said,''Death, where is thy sting?'' |
6049 | When the good shepherd went to look for his sheep that was lost in the wilderness, and had found it: did it go one step homewards upon its own legs? |
6049 | When the jailer said,"Sirs, What must I do to be saved?" |
6049 | When the jailor cried out,''Sirs, what must I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | When the people lusted for flesh, Moses said,''Shall the flocks and the herds be slain for them to suffice them? |
6049 | When they came at the gate, Christiana asked the Porter if any of late went by? |
6049 | When they were also set down, the Shepherds said to those of the weaker sort, What is it that you would have? |
6049 | When this was read, the clerk of the sessions said unto me, What say you to this? |
6049 | When thou art called to an account for thy neglects of so great salvation, what canst thou answer? |
6049 | When thou shalt see less sinners than thou art, bound up by angels in bundles, to burn them, where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6049 | When thy life is done, thy heaven is also done? |
6049 | When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hands, to tread my courts? |
6049 | When? |
6049 | Whence came the invisible power that struck Paul from his horse? |
6049 | Whence came this strange idea-- not limited to the poor negro, but felt by thousands who have watched over departing saints? |
6049 | Whence came those sudden suggestions, those gloomy fears, those heavenly rays of joy? |
6049 | Whence come you? |
6049 | Where Antichrist dwelt? |
6049 | Where are the tables of stone and this law as therein contained? |
6049 | Where are the victors of the world, With all their men of might? |
6049 | Where are they found? |
6049 | Where do we find the churches to gather together thereon? |
6049 | Where doth Christ Jesus require such a qualification of those that are coming to him for life? |
6049 | Where doth it lay its head, but in their laps? |
6049 | Where has He called them His love, His dove, His fair one? |
6049 | Where have the clouds their water? |
6049 | Where is Paul that would not eat meat while the world standeth, lest he made his brother offend? |
6049 | Where is he that is coming[ but has not come], to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Where is he that is thus under pangs of love for the grace bestowed upon him by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Where is he that is''clothed with humility,''and that does what he is commanded''with all humility of mind''? |
6049 | Where is he that seeks and groans for salvation? |
6049 | Where is he? |
6049 | Where is it to be found? |
6049 | Where is now any room for the righteousness of men? |
6049 | Where is our Pharisee then, with all his works of righteousness, and with his boasts of being better than his neighbours? |
6049 | Where is our Pharisee then, with his brags of not being as other men are? |
6049 | Where is repentance, reformation, and amendment of life amongst us? |
6049 | Where is that jot or tittle of the law that is able to object against my doings for want of satisfaction?" |
6049 | Where is that? |
6049 | Where is the man that is zealous of moral holiness? |
6049 | Where is the man that pursues with all his might what but now he seemed to ask for with all his heart? |
6049 | Where is the man that so pleaseth God, and consequently, that in equity and reason should be beloved of God like me? |
6049 | Where is the man that walketh with his cross upon his shoulder? |
6049 | Where is the man that will forbear some lawful things, for fear of hurting the weak thereby? |
6049 | Where is thy fruit, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Where is thy heart? |
6049 | Where is thy long- suffering? |
6049 | Where is thy self- abhorrence, thy blushing before God, for the sin that is yet behind? |
6049 | Where is thy self- denial and contentment? |
6049 | Where is thy tenderness of the name of God and his ways? |
6049 | Where is thy watching, thy fasting, thy praying against the remainders of corruption? |
6049 | Where now is the man that feareth the Lord? |
6049 | Where now is the sound and healthful complexion of soul? |
6049 | Where shall we begin? |
6049 | Where shall we begin? |
6049 | Where was the righteous forsaken? |
6049 | Where will you be found in another world? |
6049 | Where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6049 | Where''s he that thaws our ice, drives cold away? |
6049 | Where''s he whose goodly face doth warm and heal, And show us what the darksome nights conceal? |
6049 | Where( say some) is the spirit and life of communion? |
6049 | Where, also, is thy sweet, meek, and gentle spirit? |
6049 | Where, barren fig- tree, is the fruit of these people''s repentance? |
6049 | Where, now, is room for man''s righteousness, either in the whole, or as to any part thereof? |
6049 | Where? |
6049 | Wherefore a self- righteous man is but a painted Satan, or a devil in fine clothes; but thinks he so of himself? |
6049 | Wherefore art thou come to torment me, and to cast me out of my possession? |
6049 | Wherefore dost Thou keep so cruel a dog in Thy yard, at the sight of which, such women and children as we, are ready to fly from Thy gate for fear? |
6049 | Wherefore has God put this sword, WE HAVE AN ADVOCATE, into thy hand, but to fight thy way through the world? |
6049 | Wherefore has he given us grace? |
6049 | Wherefore has he sometimes visited us? |
6049 | Wherefore hast thou anything of the truth of Christ in thy heart? |
6049 | Wherefore have I commanded a watch, and that you should double your guards at the gates? |
6049 | Wherefore have I endeavoured to make you as hard as iron, and your hearts as a piece of the nether millstone? |
6049 | Wherefore in answer to this conceit it is, that the Lord asketh, saying,"Is my hand shortened at all that it can not redeem?" |
6049 | Wherefore is it said, Begin at Jerusalem, if the Jerusalem sinner is not to have the benefit of it? |
6049 | Wherefore is it that thou Hast done this thing, to bring this evil now, Upon us, let us know it? |
6049 | Wherefore puttest thou thy hand in thy bosom, as being afraid to touch the hem of the garment of the Lord? |
6049 | Wherefore saith he thus? |
6049 | Wherefore say thus to thy soul, thou that art like to suffer for righteousness, How is it with the most inward parts of my soul? |
6049 | Wherefore then served the cross? |
6049 | Wherefore then should we complain? |
6049 | Wherefore thou that hast a broken heart take courage, God bids thee take courage; say therefore to thy soul,''Why are thou cast down, O my soul?'' |
6049 | Wherefore, I ask again, hast thou been with him? |
6049 | Wherefore, at present, lay the thoughts of thy election by, and ask thyself these questions: Do I see my lost condition? |
6049 | Wherefore, dost thou think, art thou told of all this, but to encourage thee to come to the throne of grace? |
6049 | Wherefore, he falls to crying out, What shall I do? |
6049 | Wherefore, the same prophet, speaking of the destruction of the same Sheshach, saith,''How is Sheshach taken? |
6049 | Wherefore, wouldst thou be a praying man, a man that would pray and prevail? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherein is he to be accounted of? |
6049 | Whereto the man of God made this reply, Why askest thou, since''tis a mystery? |
6049 | Whether Mordecai and the good men then did not pray and fast as well as she? |
6049 | Whether any under Eternal Reprobation have just cause to quarrel with God for not electing of them? |
6049 | Whether goes the child, when it catcheth harm, but to its father, to its mother? |
6049 | Whether in the nature, or in the degree, or in the management thereof? |
6049 | Whether is there a difference in the light? |
6049 | Whether the seventh day sabbath did not fall, as such, with the rest of the Jewish rites and ceremonies? |
6049 | Whether the seventh day sabbath is of, or made known to, man by the law and light of nature? |
6049 | Whether to be reprobated be the same with being appointed before- hand unto eternal condemnation? |
6049 | Which is the greatest sinner; he who invents scandal, or he who encourages the inventor to retail it? |
6049 | Which of the twelve ever thought that Judas would have proved a devil? |
6049 | Which of them therefore was it that died? |
6049 | Which of these two covenants art thou under, soul? |
6049 | Which of you can By taking thought add to his height one span? |
6049 | Which wouldest thou have prevail? |
6049 | While I was on this sudden thus overtaken with surprise, Wife, said I, is there ever such a scripture, I must go to Jesus? |
6049 | While Jacob was afraid of Esau, how heavily did he drive even towards the promised land? |
6049 | While one saith, I am of Paul, and another I am of Apollos, are ye not carnal? |
6049 | Whither are you going? |
6049 | Whither art wand''ring? |
6049 | Whither canst thou go? |
6049 | Whither did his desires bring him? |
6049 | Whither did they carry him? |
6049 | Whither is he like to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Whither is he to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Whither may he arrive, and yet be an undone man, under this covenant? |
6049 | Whither shall I go when I die? |
6049 | Whither will thy zeal, thy pride, and thy folly carry thee? |
6049 | Whither will you go? |
6049 | Whither wilt thou go? |
6049 | Whither wilt thou go? |
6049 | Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? |
6049 | Who are brought in?] |
6049 | Who are so lawless, so little advanced in civilization, as the poor Irish, Spaniards, or Italians? |
6049 | Who are they that are saved by grace? |
6049 | Who are they that must be saved? |
6049 | Who are you? |
6049 | Who art thou? |
6049 | Who believes as he desires to believe? |
6049 | Who bid the boar come there? |
6049 | Who bid you go this way to be rid of thy burden? |
6049 | Who but Jesus Christ would have undertaken such a task as the salvation of the sinner is, if Jesus Christ had passed us by? |
6049 | Who but an idiot or a maniac would attempt to reduce the mental powers of all men to uniformity? |
6049 | Who can A wounded spirit bear? |
6049 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6049 | Who can charge the Waldenses, Albigenses, or Lollards with that spirit of Antichrist? |
6049 | Who can contradict it? |
6049 | Who can eat fire, drink fire, and lie down in the midst of flames of fire? |
6049 | Who can know The miseries that these poor people felt While they did underneath those burnings melt? |
6049 | Who can know it? |
6049 | Who can make them see that Christ has made blind? |
6049 | Who can reach them, touch them, destroy them, but the Creator? |
6049 | Who can stand before Great- heart? |
6049 | Who can stand before his indignation? |
6049 | Who can tell how many heart- pleasing thoughts Christ had of us before the world began? |
6049 | Who can tell what kind of delight the Father had in the Son before the world began? |
6049 | Who could have hoped that Israel should have returned again from the land, from the hand, and from under the tyranny of the king of Babylon? |
6049 | Who could have thought that anyone could so far have been blinded by the power of lust? |
6049 | Who could have thought that sin would have opposed that which is just, but especially mercy and grace, had we not seen it with our eyes? |
6049 | Who could have thought that the three children could have lived in a fiery furnace? |
6049 | Who could have thought that this path should have led us out of the way? |
6049 | Who dares charge the Quakers with a persecuting spirit? |
6049 | Who dares limit the Almighty? |
6049 | Who did Christ bring it into the world for, for the righteous or for sinners? |
6049 | Who dost expose it, yet claw those that crave it? |
6049 | Who ever was mad enough to ask Moses to intercede for him, and surely he is as able as Mary or any other saint? |
6049 | Who hath babbling? |
6049 | Who hath bound the waters in a garment? |
6049 | Who hath contentions? |
6049 | Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord,''or who hath been his counsellor?'' |
6049 | Who hath gathered the wind in his fists? |
6049 | Who hath redness of eyes? |
6049 | Who hath sorrow? |
6049 | Who hath wounds without cause? |
6049 | Who is He? |
6049 | Who is THE BLESSED? |
6049 | Who is able to make war with him?'' |
6049 | Who is able to separate us from the love of Jesus Christ our Lord? |
6049 | Who is he also that purifies his heart, but he that looketh for the second coming of Christ from heaven to judge the world? |
6049 | Who is he that condemneth me? |
6049 | Who is he that condemneth? |
6049 | Who is he that condemneth?'' |
6049 | Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
6049 | Who is he? |
6049 | Who is it that would not have the benefit of grace, of a throne of grace? |
6049 | Who is mine adversary? |
6049 | Who knows if God will yet be pleas''d to spare, And turn away the evil that we fear? |
6049 | Who knows the power of his anger? |
6049 | Who knows what will become of the ark of God? |
6049 | Who knows, but that God that made the world may cause that Giant Despair may die? |
6049 | Who must we now believe, the Apostle or you? |
6049 | Who prays not, is not like to play the man? |
6049 | Who put''a new song''into the mouth of David? |
6049 | Who said it? |
6049 | Who shall declare his way to his face? |
6049 | Who shall do so? |
6049 | Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6049 | Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?'' |
6049 | Who so bold as blind Bayard? |
6049 | Who so ready to fly to the physician as those who feel their case to be desperate? |
6049 | Who so vilified as the righteous? |
6049 | Who they are that are actually brought into His free and unchangeable Covenant of Grace, and how they are brought in? |
6049 | Who thought yesterday, would one say, that this day would have been such a day to us? |
6049 | Who told thee so? |
6049 | Who told thee so? |
6049 | Who told thee that thy heart and life agree together? |
6049 | Who understands them unto perfection? |
6049 | Who was it that scared Job with dreams, and terrified him with visions? |
6049 | Who watches, should know who and who''s together: Know we not friends from foes, how know we whether Of them to fight, or which to entertain? |
6049 | Who were his members? |
6049 | Who will grieve for thy sorrow, that didst not count mercy worth asking for? |
6049 | Who will say unto him, What doest thou?'' |
6049 | Who will stand up for me against the workers of iniquity?" |
6049 | Who would knowingly go over a pearl, and yet not count it worth stooping for? |
6049 | Who would not be here? |
6049 | Who would not fear thee, said Jeremiah, O king of nations, for to thee doth it appertain? |
6049 | Who would not hope to enjoy life eternal, that has an inheritance in the God of Israel? |
6049 | Who, I say, that was so faint- hearted as I, that would not have knocked with all their might? |
6049 | Who, now seeing all this is so effectually done, shall lay anything, the least thing? |
6049 | Who, that sees a house on fire, will not give the alarm to them that dwell therein? |
6049 | Who, that sees the devils as roaring lions, continually devouring souls, will not make an out- cry? |
6049 | Who, then, shall condemn when Christ has died, and doth also make intercession? |
6049 | Who? |
6049 | Who? |
6049 | Whose hungry belly hast thou fed? |
6049 | Whose naked body hast thou clothed? |
6049 | Whose prayers were used, or who was the mouth? |
6049 | Whose son is he? |
6049 | Why I trow he was no highwayman, was he? |
6049 | Why am I reckoned with the Ranters? |
6049 | Why are they for going with their bull''s foretops,[63] with their naked shoulders, and paps hanging out like a cow''s bag? |
6049 | Why art thou so tart, my brother? |
6049 | Why at his trial? |
6049 | Why before them? |
6049 | Why betook not I myself to the holy Word of God? |
6049 | Why blameless? |
6049 | Why came you not in at the gate, which standeth at the beginning of the way? |
6049 | Why comest thou then so slowly? |
6049 | Why cumbereth it the ground? |
6049 | Why did Adam hide himself, but because, as he said, he was naked? |
6049 | Why did I judge of his ability to save me by the voice of my shallow reason, and the voice of a guilty conscience? |
6049 | Why did I not humbly cast my soul at his blessed footstool for mercy? |
6049 | Why did he not do execution? |
6049 | Why did he rise again from the dead, with that very body? |
6049 | Why did he say he would receive the coming sinner? |
6049 | Why did not Little- faith pluck up a greater heart? |
6049 | Why did not he cut it down? |
6049 | Why did not he fetch out the axe? |
6049 | Why did they not stay, that we might have had their good company? |
6049 | Why did you only cavil at words? |
6049 | Why do I haunt and frequent places and ordinances appointed for worship? |
6049 | Why do I hear? |
6049 | Why do I pray? |
6049 | Why do I read? |
6049 | Why do not I also, as well as they, shun persecution for the cross of Christ? |
6049 | Why do some of the springs rise out of the tops of high hills? |
6049 | Why do the springs come from the sea to us, through the earth? |
6049 | Why do they believe in Christ? |
6049 | Why do they call themselves by the name of the Lord Jesus, if they have not the grace of God, if they have not the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | Why do they empty themselves upon the earth? |
6049 | Why do they go by fives, nines, and seventeens? |
6049 | Why do you doubt of it? |
6049 | Why do you look on them as if you would eat them up? |
6049 | Why do you mock us, to bid us go on in our sins? |
6049 | Why does physic, if it does good, purge, and cause that we vomit? |
6049 | Why dost thou listen to her enchantments? |
6049 | Why dost thou make him the object of thy scorn? |
6049 | Why dost thou put him off? |
6049 | Why dost thou sin and provoke the eyes of his glory? |
6049 | Why dost thou stop thine ear? |
6049 | Why doth the fire fasten upon the candlewick? |
6049 | Why doth the pelican pierce her own breast with her bill? |
6049 | Why for them? |
6049 | Why friend? |
6049 | Why have I not made shipwreck of faith? |
6049 | Why have we not a catalogue of some holy men that were so in their own eyes, and in the judgment of the world? |
6049 | Why he saith not streets, but street, as of one? |
6049 | Why in his name, if he be not accepted of God? |
6049 | Why is Christ bid to gird his sword upon his thigh? |
6049 | Why is covetousness called idolatry? |
6049 | Why is it a free and unchangeable grace? |
6049 | Why is it then, that thou livest when they are dead, and that thou hast a promise of pardon when they had not? |
6049 | Why is man made the head of the woman in worship, in the worship now under debate, in that worship that is to be performed in assemblies? |
6049 | Why is man''s heart compared to fallow ground, God''s Word to a plough, and his ministers to ploughmen? |
6049 | Why is the conversion of the soul compared to the grafting of a tree, if that be done without cutting? |
6049 | Why is the love of this world so forbidden? |
6049 | Why is the rainbow caused by the sun? |
6049 | Why is the wick and tallow, and all, spent to maintain the light of the candle? |
6049 | Why may not I expect the same when anguish and guilt is upon me?'' |
6049 | Why not another? |
6049 | Why not familiar with sinners, provided we hate their spots and blemishes, and seek that they may be healed of them? |
6049 | Why not fellowly with our carnal neighbours? |
6049 | Why not go to the poor man''s house, and give him a penny, and a Scripture to think upon? |
6049 | Why not live before him? |
6049 | Why salvation? |
6049 | Why shall thy deceived heart turn thee aside, that thou canst not deliver thy soul,''nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6049 | Why should God beseech us to reconcile to him, but that we might hope in him? |
6049 | Why should I be thought to be against a fire in the chimney, because I say it must not be in the thatch of the house? |
6049 | Why should Satan molest those whose ways he knows will bring them to him? |
6049 | Why should anything have my heart but God, but Christ? |
6049 | Why should not devils and damned souls despair? |
6049 | Why should not others arise as extensively to bless the world as Bunyan did? |
6049 | Why should the righteous partake of the same plagues with the wicked? |
6049 | Why should the righteous partake of the same plagues with the wicked? |
6049 | Why should the saints look for any good from thee? |
6049 | Why should we strive? |
6049 | Why should you be holden in ignorance and blindness? |
6049 | Why should you not be enlarged in knowledge and understanding? |
6049 | Why sittest thou still? |
6049 | Why so, I pray you? |
6049 | Why so, saith the apostle, ought the wife to carry it towards her husband? |
6049 | Why so, seeing circumcision is not one of the ten words[ commandments]? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why the gates should look in this manner every way, both east, west, north, and south? |
6049 | Why then did not these days live? |
6049 | Why then do you despise my rank, my state, and quality in the world? |
6049 | Why then dost thou not break loose from her hold? |
6049 | Why then is the gospel offered them? |
6049 | Why then should there be any to share with him in his executing of the second part thereof? |
6049 | Why then should we think that our innocent lives will exempt us from sufferings, or that troubles shall do us such harm? |
6049 | Why then were you baptized? |
6049 | Why there should be three, just three, on every side of this city? |
6049 | Why this street is called by the term of pure gold? |
6049 | Why was it? |
6049 | Why was their name, for all that, blotted out, and this day only kept alive in the churches? |
6049 | Why wilt thou not come to Jesus Christ, since thou art a Jerusalem sinner? |
6049 | Why wouldest thou go to Heaven? |
6049 | Why wouldst thou go to heaven? |
6049 | Why"doth a living man complain, a man for the punishment of his sins?" |
6049 | Why, Christian, what is thy experience? |
6049 | Why, I am to believe in Christ, I am to have faith in his blood? |
6049 | Why, I trow[110] you did not consent to her desires? |
6049 | Why, Sir, did you not answer these things? |
6049 | Why, are you weary of my relating of things? |
6049 | Why, art thou weary of this discourse? |
6049 | Why, did he take this counsel? |
6049 | Why, did you ever hear any man say so? |
6049 | Why, did you hear him tell his dream? |
6049 | Why, did you not serve your own son so? |
6049 | Why, he asked me whither I was going? |
6049 | Why, he might, if he would, might he not? |
6049 | Why, he that saith, They shall come, shall he not make it good? |
6049 | Why, he would say, I have yet with my father in store for my brethren, wherefore then seekest thou to stop his hand? |
6049 | Why, how dost thou think in this matter? |
6049 | Why, is not worshipping of God, well- doing? |
6049 | Why, is this Christian''s wife? |
6049 | Why, it will be said unto them, Friends, how came you hither? |
6049 | Why, man, do you think we shall not be received? |
6049 | Why, man, doth the fear of God make a man idle and slothful? |
6049 | Why, my brother? |
6049 | Why, prithee, what dost thou with them? |
6049 | Why, so it is here; art thou inquiring the way to heaven? |
6049 | Why, soul? |
6049 | Why, then, is it said God beholdeth every one that is proud, and abases him? |
6049 | Why, then, should we conceit that the Son will forgive these that come not to the Father by him? |
6049 | Why, then, should you not judge of those that differ from you herein, as you judged of yourselves when you were as they now are? |
6049 | Why, then, wilt thou set thy heart upon that which is not? |
6049 | Why, thou must have a safe- conduct to heaven? |
6049 | Why, truly thus-- Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly, and with very cold devotion? |
6049 | Why, was there more of them than one? |
6049 | Why, what did he say to you? |
6049 | Why, what did you think? |
6049 | Why, what difference is there between crying out against, and abhorring of sin? |
6049 | Why, what had Jonathan done? |
6049 | Why, what is it? |
6049 | Why, what is the matter? |
6049 | Why, what is thine end in coming to Christ? |
6049 | Why, what other sins was he addicted to, I mean while he was but a child? |
6049 | Why, what was it that brought your sins to mind again? |
6049 | Why, what wilt thou make of God? |
6049 | Why, what wouldest thou ask for, sinner? |
6049 | Why, when the Lord comes; what will he do? |
6049 | Why, where is he then? |
6049 | Why, where is it to be found?" |
6049 | Why, who are thou? |
6049 | Why, with the Lord there is great mercy for thee? |
6049 | Why, would you have us do nothing? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Wicked men talk of heaven, and say they hope and desire to go to heaven, even while they continue wicked men; but, I say, what would they do there? |
6049 | Will He esteem thy riches? |
6049 | Will He within Open to sorry me, though I have been An undeserving rebel? |
6049 | Will a less thing than heaven, than glory and eternal life, answer thy desires? |
6049 | Will a man give a penny to fill his belly with hay; or can you persuade the turtle- dove to live upon carrion like the crow? |
6049 | Will any say we can not believe that God hath received any but such as are baptized[ in water]? |
6049 | Will he always call upon God? |
6049 | Will he esteem thy riches? |
6049 | Will he hold him when Shall- come puts forth itself, will he then let12 him, for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Will he leave him to recover himself by the strength of his now languishing graces? |
6049 | Will he let him alone in his apostasy? |
6049 | Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6049 | Will he show wonders to such a dead dog as I am? |
6049 | Will he suffer them To break his law, and sin, and not condemn Them for so doing? |
6049 | Will he take this advantage to destroy the sinner? |
6049 | Will he urge that he will plead against us? |
6049 | Will his God humour him, and answer his desires? |
6049 | Will it not amaze them to be unexpectedly excluded from life and salvation? |
6049 | Will it not be a dishonour to thee to see the very boys and girls in the country to have more wit than thyself? |
6049 | Will it not be amazing to some of the damned themselves, to see some come to hell that then they shall see come thither? |
6049 | Will it not be glorious for thee to be in glory with them, while others are in unutterable torments? |
6049 | Will it not be glorious to enjoy those things that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath entered into the heart of man to conceive? |
6049 | Will it not be glorious to enter then with the angels and saints into that glorious kingdom? |
6049 | Will it, think you, be always thus with you? |
6049 | Will my profession, or the faith I think I have, carry me through all the trials of God''s tribunal? |
6049 | Will my sins do me good then? |
6049 | Will not a humble posture best become us when we have humbling providences in prospect? |
6049 | Will not the thoughts that we have one Father quiet us, and the thoughts that we are brethren unite us? |
6049 | Will not this persuade thine heart, nor make thee bethink thyself? |
6049 | Will she venture To clash at light? |
6049 | Will temporal things make thy soul to live? |
6049 | Will the blood- hounds let him escape? |
6049 | Will the sheep couple with a dog, the partridge with a crow, or the pheasant with an owl? |
6049 | Will the wrath of God be a pleasant dish to thy taste? |
6049 | Will these be excuses for them, as the case now standeth with them? |
6049 | Will these help to turn the hand of God from inflicting his fierce anger upon me? |
6049 | Will they be able to help me when I come to fetch my last breath? |
6049 | Will they do me any good when Christ comes? |
6049 | Will they fortify themselves? |
6049 | Will they help to ease the pains of hell? |
6049 | Will they make an end in a day? |
6049 | Will they not also be amazed one at another, while they remember how in their lifetime they counted themselves fellow- heirs of life? |
6049 | Will they not rather imitate Korah, Dathan, and Abiram''s friends, even rail at me for condemning him, as they did at Moses for doing execution? |
6049 | Will they not rather put him upon all tricks, evasions, irreligious consequences and conclusions, such as will serve to cherish sin? |
6049 | Will they revive the stones out of the heaps of the rubbish which are bunt?'' |
6049 | Will they sacrifice? |
6049 | Will those, who have us hither cast? |
6049 | Will ye render me a recompence? |
6049 | Will you leave your friends and companions behind you? |
6049 | Will you not go in, and stay till morning? |
6049 | Will you not hear the errand of Christ, although He telleth you tidings of peace and salvation? |
6049 | Will you now desert your old friend, or do you think of standing by me?'' |
6049 | Will you rebel against the king? |
6049 | Will you take up the cross, come after Me, and so preserve your souls from perishing? |
6049 | Will you trust to the blood that was shed upon the cross, that run down to the ground, and perished in the dust? |
6049 | Wilt neither tidings from heaven or hell awake thee? |
6049 | Wilt not thou serve him with joyfulness in the enjoyment of all good things, even him by whom thou art to be made blessed for ever? |
6049 | Wilt thou answer this question now, or wilt thou take time to do it? |
6049 | Wilt thou be like that simple one named in the seventh of Proverbs, that will be drawn to the slaughter by the cord of a silly lust? |
6049 | Wilt thou be like the bird that hasteth to the snare of the fowler? |
6049 | Wilt thou be like the silly fly, that is not quiet unless she be either entangled in the spider''s web, or burned in the candle? |
6049 | Wilt thou be so sottish and unwise, as to venture thy soul upon a little uncertain time? |
6049 | Wilt thou break a leaf driven to and fro? |
6049 | Wilt thou by thus doing endeavour to keep them wrapt up still in the dust of the earth, there to dwell with the worm and corruption? |
6049 | Wilt thou continue to contemn and reproach the living God? |
6049 | Wilt thou hearken unto me if I give thee counsel? |
6049 | Wilt thou not cry? |
6049 | Wilt thou not hear yet, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Wilt thou not then be afraid of the power? |
6049 | Wilt thou not yet awake? |
6049 | Wilt thou provoke him to do it? |
6049 | Wilt thou provoke still? |
6049 | Wilt thou run? |
6049 | Wilt thou say still,''Yet a little sleep, a little slumber,''and''a little folding of the hands to sleep?'' |
6049 | Wilt thou stand by thy doings? |
6049 | Wilt thou stop thine ears, and shut thy eyes? |
6049 | Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee, I am god? |
6049 | Wilt thou yet turn thyself in thy sloth, as the door is turned upon the hinges? |
6049 | Wilt thou, then, lose this Christ, this food, this pleasure, this heaven, this happiness, for a thing of nought? |
6049 | With how many oaths, declarations, attestations, and proclamations, is it avouched, confirmed, and established? |
6049 | With promises, did I say? |
6049 | With respect to thy desires, what are they? |
6049 | With that, one of them said, Who is your God? |
6049 | Without a watch, resist a foe who can? |
6049 | Witness they that live in hell; if it be proper to say they live in hell? |
6049 | Women may, yea ought to pray; what then? |
6049 | Would God else have given him the heaven to dispose of to us that believe, and would he else have told us so? |
6049 | Would I share in this salvation by faith in him? |
6049 | Would a heathen god refuse to answer such prayers in which the supplicants were not agreed; and shall we think the true God will answer them? |
6049 | Would either of you stay till he is grown? |
6049 | Would he be afraid of friends, or shrink at the most fearful threatenings that the greatest tyrants could invent to give him? |
6049 | Would he favour sin? |
6049 | Would he love this world below? |
6049 | Would he not sometimes talk of his wife when she was dead? |
6049 | Would it not be counted an high affront, for a base inferior fellow, to call himself the head of the queen? |
6049 | Would it not have been so to any of us, had we been used as he, to be robbed, and wounded too, and that in a strange place, as he was? |
6049 | Would not By- ends, Facing- both- ways, and Save- all, have jumped to the same conclusion? |
6049 | Would not Heaven be better to me than my sins? |
6049 | Would not His dying only of a natural death have served the turn? |
6049 | Would not this make Satan fall from heaven like lightning? |
6049 | Would she not say, You mock me? |
6049 | Would such an one, thinkest thou, run again into the same course of life as before, and venture the damnation that for sin he had already been in? |
6049 | Would the people learn to be wanton? |
6049 | Would they be here again for a thousand worlds? |
6049 | Would they learn to be drunkards? |
6049 | Would they learn to be drunkards? |
6049 | Would they not, I say, have concluded that he was a righteous man? |
6049 | Would you act thus by God''s holy commandments? |
6049 | Would you be saved by keeping the law? |
6049 | Would you be willing to be damned for slothfulness? |
6049 | Would you choose one and reject another? |
6049 | Would you have us make Christ such a drudge as to do all, while we sit idling still? |
6049 | Would you have us run into temptation, to try if they be sound or rotten? |
6049 | Would you make my Lord''s people to transgress? |
6049 | Would you not say, I did not think of covenants, or study the nature of them? |
6049 | Would you serve your prince so? |
6049 | Would you so long without an husband[3] live? |
6049 | Would you stand just before God thereby? |
6049 | Would you think that such an one did all this while retain the shape, form, or similitude of a man? |
6049 | Wouldest thou be content that I should judge thee, because thou canst not for my light give thanks with me? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this fear of God? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of godly fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou have MERCY for thy righteousness, or JUSTICE for thy righteousness? |
6049 | Wouldest thou know whether Christ is thine Advocate or no? |
6049 | Wouldest thou sit upon their place of ease? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be glad to be kept out of heaven with a back well clothed, and a belly well filled with the dainties of this world? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be glad to have all thy good things in thy lifetime, to have thy heaven to last no longer than while thou dost live in this world? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be saved from guilt and filth too? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be saved with a thorough salvation? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be saved? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be that within thou dost appear, Or seem to be in outward exercise Before the most devout, and godly wise? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be the servant of thy Saviour? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be very upright and sincere? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be willing to be deprived of eternal happiness and felicity? |
6049 | Wouldst thou fare deliciously every day, and have thy soul delight itself in fatness? |
6049 | Wouldst thou have the kingdom of God come indeed, and also his will to be done in earth as it is in heaven? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how God could still love his creatures, and do his justice no wrong? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how God''s heart stood affected toward man before the world began? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how far a man may go on in a profession of the gospel, and yet fall away? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how hard it is to go to heaven? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know man''s inclination so soon as he is born? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know somewhat concerning that? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what is the wages of sin? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what that Christ that died for sinners is doing in that place whither he is gone? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what thou art, and what is in thine heart? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what, or who they are that shall go to heaven? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know where God did place man after he had made him? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether God looked upon Adam''s eating[ the fruit of] the forbidden tree to be sin or no? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether God''s love did still abide towards his creatures for anything they could do to make him amends? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine Advocate, whether he has taken in hand to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine advocate? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether a man by nature be a friend to God, or an enemy? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether a man by nature may know something of the invisible things of God? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he did eat or drink with his disciples after he rose out of the grave? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he did in that body bear all our sins, and where? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he did rise again after he was crucified, with the very same body? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he made them of something or nothing? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he put forth any labour in making them, as we do in making things? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether it be the desire of the heart of man by nature, to follow God in his own way or no? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether it were the devil who beguiled them, or whether it was a natural serpent, such as do haunt the desolate places? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man be defiled in every part of him by the sin he hath committed? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man once fallen from God by transgression, can recover himself by all he can do? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man was cursed for his sin? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man''s obedience will obtain that Christ should die for them, or save them? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether natural man can abstain from the outward act of sin against the law, merely by a principle of nature? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether righteousness, justification, and sanctification do come through the virtue of Christ''s blood? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether sin were sufficient to draw God''s love from his creatures? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether that man did live there all his time or not? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether that sin be imputed to us? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether the curse did fall on man, or on the whole creation with him? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether they that live and die in their sins shall go to heaven or not? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether this Saviour had a body of flesh and bones before the world was, or took it from the Virgin Mary? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whither those do go that die unconverted to the faith of Christ? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know, sinner, what thou art? |
6049 | Wouldst thou then know this throne of grace, where God sits to hear prayers and give grace? |
6049 | Wouldst thou wade? |
6049 | Wouldst thou willingly hold out, stand to the last, and be more than a conqueror? |
6049 | Wouldst thou, then, know the greatest things of God? |
6049 | Wouldst thou, with all thy heart, be saved by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy?'' |
6049 | Ye are the salt o''th''earth; but wherewith must The earth be season''d when the savour''s lost? |
6049 | Ye do not furnish them with what they need, Wat boots it? |
6049 | Ye stand upon your sword, ye work abomination, and ye defile every one his neighbour''s wife: and shall ye possess the land?" |
6049 | Yea more, why are the elders of the churches called watchmen, overseers, guides, teachers, rulers, and the like? |
6049 | Yea whether it doth not tend to make them unruly and headstrong? |
6049 | Yea, I say again, if judgment must begin at them, will it not make thee think, What shall become of me? |
6049 | Yea, and if he ask me, Why I came home no sooner? |
6049 | Yea, and it has its followers ready at its heels continually to blow its applause abroad, saying,''Who will show us any[ other] good?'' |
6049 | Yea, and why is death suffered to slay the body? |
6049 | Yea, are they not hurtful in the day of grace? |
6049 | Yea, art thou thus when no eye doth thee see But that which is invisible? |
6049 | Yea, canst thou appeal to the Lord Jesus, who knoweth perfectly the very inmost thought of thy heart, that this is true? |
6049 | Yea, canst thou say, My soul, my soul waiteth upon God, my soul thirsteth for Him, my soul followeth hard after him? |
6049 | Yea, did we not even kill ourselves with our earnest intreaties of thee to consider of thine estate, and by Christ to escape this dreadful day? |
6049 | Yea, did we not tell thee that God, out of his love to sinners, sent Christ to die for them, that they might, by coming to him, be saved? |
6049 | Yea, do we not grow worse and worse? |
6049 | Yea, dost thou not vehemently desire to desire to depart and to be with Christ? |
6049 | Yea, hath the truth itself bestowed it upon us, and shall those to whom it is given, even given by Scripture of truth, be yet deprived thereof? |
6049 | Yea, how can you now, though he is at a distance, endure to think of such a mighty one? |
6049 | Yea, how did those ravenous creatures, the ravens, bring the prophet bread and flesh twice a day, but by immediate instinct from heaven? |
6049 | Yea, if any that see her should say, Why do you so? |
6049 | Yea, if the works of a sanctified man are blameworthy, how shall the works of a bad man set him clear in the eyes of Divine justice? |
6049 | Yea, is it not meet that to every one they should confess what sorry ones they are? |
6049 | Yea, is it not reason that in all things we should study his exaltation here, since he in all things contrives our honour and glory in heaven? |
6049 | Yea, open thy heart, and take this man, not into judgment, but into mercy with thee? |
6049 | Yea, or for their neglect of it either? |
6049 | Yea, or nay?" |
6049 | Yea, our faith is faulty, and also imperfect; how then should remission be extended to us for the sake of that? |
6049 | Yea, shall my Jesus die To reconcile me to my God? |
6049 | Yea, suppose the child should now, through ignorance, cry, and say, This man is now no more my father; is he, therefore, now no more his father? |
6049 | Yea, the passover being to be eaten on the even of his sufferings, with what desires did he desire to eat it with his disciples? |
6049 | Yea, was he not now in the combat? |
6049 | Yea, was it better than the tree of life? |
6049 | Yea, what a word of worth, and goodness, and blessedness, is it to him that lies continually upon the wrath of a guilty conscience? |
6049 | Yea, what conformity unto him, to his sorrows and sufferings? |
6049 | Yea, what do you think John desired, when he cried out to Christ to come quickly? |
6049 | Yea, what means this your taking up of arms against, and the shutting of your gates upon us, the faithful servants of your King? |
6049 | Yea, what shall we say of such that are the inventors and promoters of wickedness, as of oaths, beastly talk, or the like? |
6049 | Yea, what should they do among that company that are saved alone by grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Yea, what wilt thou then do, if death and hell shall come to visit thee, and thou in thy sins, and under the curse of the law? |
6049 | Yea, what works of that man doth God impute to him that he yet justifies as ungodly? |
6049 | Yea, wherefore hath God also given it out that there is none other name given to men under heaven whereby we must be saved? |
6049 | Yea, why did not the Pharisee, if he was a heathen, lay that to his charge while he stood before God? |
6049 | Yea, why do you taunt those ministers that persuade us to renounce our own righteousness, and those also that follow their doctrine? |
6049 | Yea, why is he commanded to let it be so, if the people would bow and fall kindly under him, and heartily implore his grace without it? |
6049 | Yea, wrap thy head with clouds and hide thy face, As threatening to withdraw from us thy grace? |
6049 | Yea,"how oft is the candle of the wicked put out?" |
6049 | Yes; for I think if I were deceived before, if I were comforted by a spirit of delusion before, why may it not be so again? |
6049 | Yes; the Lord Jesus denied himself for thee; what sayest thou to that? |
6049 | Yes;''What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | Yet the question is, Are they absolutely or conditionally promised? |
6049 | Yet, hast thou fallen? |
6049 | You add,''Is it a person''s light that giveth being to a precept?'' |
6049 | You ask again,''Suppose men plead want of light in other commands?'' |
6049 | You ask me next,''How long is it since I was a Baptist?'' |
6049 | You ask,''Can not you give yourself a reason, that their moving, travelling state made them incapable, and that God was merciful? |
6049 | You ask,''Was circumcision dispensed with for want of light, it being plainly commanded?'' |
6049 | You came in at the gate, did you not? |
6049 | You may ask me what that is? |
6049 | You may ask me, What is it to come boldly? |
6049 | You may ask me, what those things are? |
6049 | You may ask, How should I know those shepherds? |
6049 | You read they come weeping and mourning, and with tears; they knock and they cry for mercy; but what did tears avail? |
6049 | You say he was proud; but will you show me now some symptoms of one that is proud? |
6049 | You say true; but did you meet nobody else in that valley? |
6049 | You say well, for what fellowship hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6049 | You speak mystically, do you not? |
6049 | You talk of rubs; what rubs have you met withal? |
6049 | You tell me also, that some of the sober Independents have shewed dislike to my writing on this subject: What then? |
6049 | You that live in adultery, know not ye The friendship of the world is enmity With God? |
6049 | You will say, Are these graves spoken of here, the graves that are made in the earth? |
6049 | You will say, How should I know that? |
6049 | You will say, what is that? |
6049 | Your souls are worth a thousand worlds; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | Your twelfth argument is,''Why should professors have more light in breaking of bread, than baptism? |
6049 | [ 108] What is meant by the Hill Difficulty? |
6049 | [ 112] Examine, which do you like better, self- soothing or soul- searching doctrine? |
6049 | [ 12]"Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him, saith the Lord? |
6049 | [ 130] Reader, can you feed upon Christ by faith? |
6049 | [ 134] But did I laugh? |
6049 | [ 138] Can we wonder that the pilgrims longed to spend some time with such lovely companions? |
6049 | [ 140] Now the King, at the sight of the petition, was glad; but how much more think you, when it was seconded by his Son? |
6049 | [ 148] When he had left her, Prudence said, Did I not tell thee, that Mr. Brisk would soon forsake thee? |
6049 | [ 14] But I beheld in my dream, that a man came to him, whose name was Help, and asked him what he did there? |
6049 | [ 15] But now, when did the day of grace end with this man? |
6049 | [ 15] Was this love of God extended to him because of his personal virtues? |
6049 | [ 162] Is not this too much the case with professors of this day? |
6049 | [ 163] Can a man enter upon the work of the ministry from a better school than this? |
6049 | [ 163] What is this something that By- ends knew more than all the world? |
6049 | [ 167] Pretended friends come with such expostulations as these: Why, dear Sir, will you give such offence? |
6049 | [ 17] But is he now quit? |
6049 | [ 17] Can it be imagined that when the wicked are in this distress, but that they will desire to be saved? |
6049 | [ 192] Look, said Christian, did not I tell you so? |
6049 | [ 192]What must the pure and holy Jesus have suffered when He tasted death in all its bitterness? |
6049 | [ 194] So on they went, and Joseph said, Can not we see to the end of this Valley as yet? |
6049 | [ 1] Was Christ slothful in the work of your redemption? |
6049 | [ 217] Mr. Wingate asked Bunyan why he did not follow his calling and go to church? |
6049 | [ 21] What do all their acts declare, but this, that they either know not God, or fear not what he can do unto them? |
6049 | [ 21]If it be asked, Why take your unregenerate children, and invite the ungodly, to the place of worship? |
6049 | [ 228] Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | [ 231] Then said Hopeful to the Shepherds, I perceive that these had on them, even every one, a show of pilgrimage, as we have now; had they not? |
6049 | [ 238] Now, is it not very common to hear professors talk at this rate? |
6049 | [ 242] Then they asked Mr. Feeble- mind how he fell into his hands? |
6049 | [ 248] What was this good thing? |
6049 | [ 24] Seest thou the poor? |
6049 | [ 254] Who can stand in the evil day of temptation, when beset with Faint- heart, Mistrust, and Guilt, backed by the power of their master, Satan? |
6049 | [ 257] Then said Mr. Contrite to them, Pray how fareth it with you in your pilgrimage? |
6049 | [ 25] The trial we have before God is of otherguise importance,[26] it concerns our eternal happiness or misery; and yet dare we affront him? |
6049 | [ 267] Also, are we not now to walk by faith? |
6049 | [ 268] What can not Great- heart do? |
6049 | [ 276] Then said the Pilgrims, What means this? |
6049 | [ 27] Well, but whither do they go, that are thus gone out of the temple or church of God? |
6049 | [ 284] Then said Christian to Hopeful( but softly), Did I not tell you he cared not for our company? |
6049 | [ 288] How, then, dost thou say, I believe in Christ? |
6049 | [ 296] Then they said- Well, Ignorance, wilt thou yet foolish be, To slight good counsel, ten times given thee? |
6049 | [ 2] And why is MY rank so mean, that the most gracious and godly among you, may not duly and soberly consider of what I have said? |
6049 | [ 2] He asked the constable what we did, where we were met together, and what we had with us? |
6049 | [ 2]( Psa 8:3,4) Now in the creation of the world we may consider several things; as, What was the order of God in this work? |
6049 | [ 309] My soul, what''s lighter than a feather? |
6049 | [ 311] Who are these ministering spirits, that the author calls"men"? |
6049 | [ 312] Is she not rightly named Bubble? |
6049 | [ 312] What are these two difficulties? |
6049 | [ 31] And how many times are they that fear God said to be delivered both by God and his holy angels? |
6049 | [ 338]''Why was the brazen laver made of the women''s looking- glasses? |
6049 | [ 33] What is this to me, O law, that thou accusest me, and sayest that I have committed many sins? |
6049 | [ 35]This should prompt every professing Christian to self- examination-- Am I of the raven class, or that of the dove? |
6049 | [ 38] But is our present need all the need that we are like to have, and the present work all the work that we have to do in the world? |
6049 | [ 39] Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | [ 39] Will it be comfort to thee to see the Saviour turn Judge? |
6049 | [ 3]"What shall I do?" |
6049 | [ 44] Sir, is it not time for me to go on my way now? |
6049 | [ 45]"In the midst of these heavenly instructions, why in such haste to go?" |
6049 | [ 47] Then said the Interpreter to Christian, Hast thou considered all these things? |
6049 | [ 59] What is this garden but the world? |
6049 | [ 5] The genuine disciple"who thinketh no evil"will say, Can this be so now? |
6049 | [ 5] Where is the man, except he be a willful perverter of Divine truth, who can charge the doctrines of grace with licentiousness? |
6049 | [ 60] What are these ill- favoured ones? |
6049 | [ 62] But why go back again? |
6049 | [ 6] I looked then, and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,"Where fore dost thou cry?" |
6049 | [ 6] Would you be ready to die in peace? |
6049 | [ 77] What say you, O my Mansoul? |
6049 | [ 78] But shall we be flattered out of our lives? |
6049 | [ 89]''Thou hast given credit to the truth''; what is this but faith-- the faith of the operation of God? |
6049 | [ 8] Barren fig- tree, can it be imagined that those that paint themselves did ever repent of their pride? |
6049 | [ 8] Before they took him his intent was to preach on these words,''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6049 | [ 8] If thou now say, Which is the way? |
6049 | [ 99] Is there righteousness in Christ? |
6049 | [ But, pray, what talk have the people about him? |
6049 | [ Does it stun them?] |
6049 | [ How should we strive?] |
6049 | [ I reply] If thou hadst said, I worship her Son, thou hadst said truly( I hope) But is not thy spite more against her son, than her? |
6049 | [ WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6049 | [ WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6049 | [ Why should we strive?] |
6049 | [ that is, to bring Christ down from above:] or, Who shall descend into the deep? |
6049 | a promise that declares, yea, that engageth Christ Jesus to open his heart to receive the coming sinner? |
6049 | a promise that looks at the first moving of the heart after Jesus Christ? |
6049 | afraid to go to Joseph''s house? |
6049 | all who? |
6049 | always at it? |
6049 | and again, He beholds the proud afar off? |
6049 | and again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son? |
6049 | and again,"O death, where is thy sting? |
6049 | and also how God doth make a man righteous with it? |
6049 | and are not men the more noble part in all the churches of Christ? |
6049 | and are notions and whimsies of such credit with thee that thou must leave the foundation to follow them? |
6049 | and are these Christian''s children? |
6049 | and are you stronger than He? |
6049 | and art thou for ever resolved so to do? |
6049 | and be The words of God in truth thy prop and stay? |
6049 | and behold the height of the stars, how high they are?" |
6049 | and by seeing the beams and sweet influences of the sun strike downwards? |
6049 | and canst thou find in thy heart to labour to lay more sins upon His back? |
6049 | and comes as it were to the borders of doubt, saying,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6049 | and darkness and tempests? |
6049 | and did no more of them but you come out to escape the danger? |
6049 | and do not the members receive their whole light, guidance, and wisdom from it? |
6049 | and do you question the resurrection of the body? |
6049 | and dost thou mingle thy tears with thy drink? |
6049 | and dost thou sigh and mourn in secret? |
6049 | and doth God testify that thy desire is true, not feigned? |
6049 | and doth your life and conversation testify the same? |
6049 | and falsify their words for thee? |
6049 | and fears as he desires to fear God''s name? |
6049 | and for what are they hanged there? |
6049 | and from whence would the flaming flame ascend highest, and make the most roaring noise? |
6049 | and going on pilgrimage too? |
6049 | and hast not thou been led by a lying spirit also, in wresting of my words as thou hast done? |
6049 | and have you consented to stand by their opinion? |
6049 | and he that is called to glory and virtue, shall not he add to his faith virtue? |
6049 | and he which is born of a woman, that he should be righteous?" |
6049 | and how could Abel be yet pleasing in his sight, for the sake of his own righteousness, when it is plain that Abel had not yet done good works? |
6049 | and how far go you this way? |
6049 | and how if all our faith, and Christ, and Scriptures, should be but a think- so too? |
6049 | and how shall he be convinced of eternal judgment, if you persuade him, that when he is dead, he shall not at all rise? |
6049 | and how they hold back good from us? |
6049 | and how we may be more holy and more humble towards God, and more charitable and more serviceable to one another? |
6049 | and how? |
6049 | and if I be a Master, where is my fear? |
6049 | and if they think they shall know and do these, why not know others, and rejoice in their welfare also? |
6049 | and if to two, why not to four, and so to eight? |
6049 | and in Thy name have cast out devils?" |
6049 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6049 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6049 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6049 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6049 | and is God''s love and care of the salvation of the souls of sinners infinitely greater than is their own care for their own souls? |
6049 | and is all that thou hast to be ventured for his name in this world? |
6049 | and is also the life of Jesus''made manifest in thy mortal body?'' |
6049 | and is goodness seen in thy seeking the life or the damage of thy enemy? |
6049 | and is he more precious to thee than the whole world? |
6049 | and is not that a good life that is according to God''s commandments? |
6049 | and is not the light of God sufficient in itself, to lead to God all that follow it, yea, or nay?" |
6049 | and is not this thus much, are not all they reprobates( say you) but they in whim Christ is within? |
6049 | and is there knowledge in the Most High?'' |
6049 | and is there not like reason for it? |
6049 | and loves as he desires to love? |
6049 | and may I lodge here tonight? |
6049 | and of choosing what you judge is right, whether they conclude with you or no? |
6049 | and says another, Would you have us make ourselves ridiculous? |
6049 | and shall I Not love a saint? |
6049 | and shall I count anything too dear for Him? |
6049 | and shall I hate his child, nor hear his wants that call For my little assisting of him? |
6049 | and shall none be angry at it? |
6049 | and shall not I exercise my mind about it? |
6049 | and should a man full of talk be justified? |
6049 | and so, consequently, say unto God,"Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways; or, What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6049 | and that Christ hath marked and recorded for such an one? |
6049 | and that also against which the spirit lusteth? |
6049 | and that eternal life with God''s favour, is better than a temporal life in God''s displeasure? |
6049 | and that made the jailer cry out, and that with great trembling of soul,"Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" |
6049 | and that, AFTER the angel had fled through the midst of heaven, preaching the gospel to those that dwell on the earth? |
6049 | and the company of God, Christ, saints, and angels, be better than the company of Cain, Judas, Balaam, with the devils in the furnace of fire? |
6049 | and therefore that it ought to be departed from, who knows not? |
6049 | and thou, O God, which didst not go out with our armies?" |
6049 | and to be had upon no lower rates than thy immortal soul? |
6049 | and to say now, Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner? |
6049 | and to what did they make him stoop? |
6049 | and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?" |
6049 | and unquiet and troublesome, discontented, and seeking to be revenged of thy persecutors; where is, or what kind of grace hast thou got? |
6049 | and until you could by faith own it as done for you, and counted yours by reputation, yea, or no? |
6049 | and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols?'' |
6049 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
6049 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
6049 | and what course should I take to be delivered from this sad and troublesome condition? |
6049 | and what fruits in all their labour? |
6049 | and what hath Emmanuel said? |
6049 | and what he would have? |
6049 | and what is the criterion of Christian charity, except it be''zeal for the salvation of others in his heart?'' |
6049 | and what is the reason of that, but a persuasion that there is no help for him in God? |
6049 | and what is your business here? |
6049 | and what must they do that have none?" |
6049 | and what profit should we have if we pray unto him?'' |
6049 | and what still wilt thou further do, if mercy, and blood and grace doth not prevent thee? |
6049 | and what would you have? |
6049 | and when did I do the other? |
6049 | and when it is committed? |
6049 | and when so like to be weary, as when almost at their journey''s end? |
6049 | and when thou mockest, shall no man make thee an answer[ unashamed?]'' |
6049 | and whence he came? |
6049 | and where is the place of my rest? |
6049 | and where will they be safe in such days? |
6049 | and where, when He speaketh of them, doth He express a communion that they have with Him by the similitude of conjugal love? |
6049 | and whether the holy Scriptures were not rather a fable, and cunning story, than the holy and pure Word of God? |
6049 | and while they thus call themselves, they should be the veriest rogues for all evil, sin, and villainy imaginable, who could help it? |
6049 | and whither are you bound? |
6049 | and who hath brought up these? |
6049 | and who shall repay him what he hath done? |
6049 | and why I did not content myself with following my calling? |
6049 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6049 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6049 | and why did he dispraise it, but of a covetous mind to wrong and beguile the seller? |
6049 | and why did he so long for it, but of desire to do us good? |
6049 | and why dost Thou pass such a sad sentence of condemnation upon us? |
6049 | and why is thy countenance fallen?" |
6049 | and why may we not go to Christ in the name of the Father, as well as to the Father in the name of Christ? |
6049 | and why must he make his arrows sharp, and all, that the heart may with this sword and these arrows be shot, wounded, and made to bleed? |
6049 | and will he judge a man just that is a sinner? |
6049 | and will he not be as good to us as to them that have gone before us? |
6049 | and with what body do they come?" |
6049 | and yet all this is included in this word saved, and in the answer to that question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6049 | and yet doth it yield no good unto us? |
6049 | and, I say, as I said before, in whom is it, light, like so to shine, as in the souls of great sinners? |
6049 | and, Will it go well with the town of Mansoul? |
6049 | and, that some time ago I heard speak well of the holy word of God? |
6049 | and,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6049 | and,''What wouldst thou have me do?'' |
6049 | any him that cometh to thee? |
6049 | are not even ye that have been converted by us? |
6049 | are not the poor saints now in this city? |
6049 | are not the things that are eternal best? |
6049 | are not they concerned in these instructions? |
6049 | are not thy kindred as hardened as thou wast? |
6049 | are these the effects of a purblind spirit? |
6049 | are these the tokens of a blessed man? |
6049 | are they all Esau''s indeed? |
6049 | are they forgotten? |
6049 | are they not rather the fruits of an eagle- eyed confidence? |
6049 | are they thrown over the bar? |
6049 | are they weaned from that milk, and drawn from the breasts? |
6049 | are we better than they? |
6049 | are we better than they? |
6049 | are we better than they?" |
6049 | are we stronger than He?'' |
6049 | are ye made to be taken and destroyed? |
6049 | are you not ashamed of your doings? |
6049 | are you not ashamed of your doings? |
6049 | are you that countryman, then? |
6049 | arise: why standest thou still? |
6049 | art thou become like unto us?'' |
6049 | art thou one of them that hast cast off fear? |
6049 | art thou resolved to sleep the sleep of death? |
6049 | art thou weary? |
6049 | art thou willing? |
6049 | be persuaded to pause a moment, and ask yourself the question- What is my case? |
6049 | because Christ is our pattern, is he not our passover? |
6049 | because they would adorn the gospel? |
6049 | because they would beautify religion, and make sinners to fall in love with their own salvation? |
6049 | behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens can not contain thee; how much less this house that I have built?'' |
6049 | besides there is hell itself, the place itself, the fire itself, the nature of the torments, and the durableness of them, who can understand? |
6049 | but can it turn all things into grace? |
6049 | but doth thy life and conversation declare thee to be such an one? |
6049 | but how much is there of it?'' |
6049 | but how shall I come by them? |
6049 | but may it not be as strongly supposed that the presence and blessing of the Lord Jesus, with his ministers, is laid upon the same ground also? |
6049 | but what was that gospel you preached? |
6049 | but where are thy fruits, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | but why did you not shew me my evil in thus calling it, when opposed to the substance, and the thing signified? |
6049 | but why didst thou not confess what thou hadst done then? |
6049 | but why offended at this? |
6049 | but, Hath he fruit? |
6049 | but, Were you doers, or talkers only? |
6049 | can he judge through the dark cloud?" |
6049 | can it make all things work together for good? |
6049 | can not you be satisfied without you have peace with God? |
6049 | can not you help me? |
6049 | can the floods drown it? |
6049 | can these be possessed with this grace of fear? |
6049 | can we suppose he will now admit of the wit and contrivance of men in those things that are, in comparison to them, the heavenly things themselves? |
6049 | canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?'' |
6049 | canst thou give no better counsel touching those whom God hath wounded, than to send them to the ordinances of hell for help? |
6049 | canst thou imagine that such a gnat, a flea, a pismire as thou art, can take and possess the heavens, and mantle thyself up in the eternal glories? |
6049 | canst thou judge no better? |
6049 | canst thou think that God hath given thee this that thou mightest thereby make a prey of thy neighbour? |
6049 | cast a world behind thy back for the welfare of a soul? |
6049 | consent and nothing else? |
6049 | count convictions for sin, mournings for sin, and repentance for sin, melancholy? |
6049 | deeper than hell; what canst thou know? |
6049 | did he die before he was born again? |
6049 | did he die in unbelief? |
6049 | did he light upon you? |
6049 | did he not behave himself valiantly? |
6049 | did they now choose him to be their king? |
6049 | did they say, did they do nothing while they sat before the throne? |
6049 | did you see how I turned again to those vanities from which some time before I fell? |
6049 | did your neighbours talk so? |
6049 | do they not tend to surfeit the heart, and to alienate a man and his mind from the things that are better? |
6049 | do they use to show such kind of favours to traitors? |
6049 | do ye judge uprightly, O ye sons of men?'' |
6049 | do you design the glory of God, in the salvation of your soul? |
6049 | do you not understand that God is resolved to have the mastery one way or another? |
6049 | do you think she will go? |
6049 | dost the wanton play, Or doth thy testy humour tend its way? |
6049 | dost thou know what thou art? |
6049 | dost thou not know that thou by so doing deferrest the coming of thy dearest Lord? |
6049 | dost thou say that that which thou callest the light of Christ, is the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | dost thou think that God, Christ, Prophets, and Scriptures, will all lie for thee? |
6049 | dost thou think to run fast enough with the world, thy sins and lusts in thy heart? |
6049 | doth his coming to Jesus Christ offend thee? |
6049 | doth his forsaking of his sins and pleasures offend thee? |
6049 | doth his pursuing of his own salvation offend thee? |
6049 | doth not this man deserve to be ranked among the extravagant ones? |
6049 | doth she give up her faith and hope, and return to that fear that begot the first bondage? |
6049 | doth this yield thee inward pleasedness of mind, and a kind of secret sweetness, or bow? |
6049 | fear God and a liar, and one that cries for mercies to spend them upon thy lusts? |
6049 | fear God and be proud, and covetous, a wine- bibber, and a riotous eater of flesh? |
6049 | fear God without a change of heart and life? |
6049 | fear God, and in a state of nature? |
6049 | flow they not, think you, from faith of the finest sort, and are they not bred in the bosom of a truly mortified soul? |
6049 | for a man must know before he does, else how should he divert[13] himself to do? |
6049 | for it is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? |
6049 | for legal grounds, though not expressed? |
6049 | for providing friends to receive him to harbour when others should turn him out of their doors? |
6049 | for to do things, but not in God''s fear, to what will it amount? |
6049 | for to him I would deliver my message?'' |
6049 | had he faith and holiness? |
6049 | has God bestowed a contrite spirit upon thee? |
6049 | has not this river pleasant streams? |
6049 | hast thou cried out? |
6049 | hast thou cried? |
6049 | hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not? |
6049 | hath it ears? |
6049 | hath it eyes? |
6049 | have I been unfaithful to Him? |
6049 | have they not in them power to loose the bands of nature, and to harden the soul against sorrow? |
6049 | having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh?'' |
6049 | he that chastiseth the heathen, shall not he correct? |
6049 | he that formed the eye, shall he not see? |
6049 | he that teacheth man knowledge, shall not he know?" |
6049 | how came the prophet by this sight? |
6049 | how can he see? |
6049 | how can that be, since they are hurtful? |
6049 | how canst thou deal so unkindly with such a sweet Lord Jesus? |
6049 | how could he bear the face to do it? |
6049 | how crossly he thinks? |
6049 | how doth he behave himself in his presence? |
6049 | how few be there in the world whose heart and mouth in prayer shall go together? |
6049 | how he found that which some of his children sought and missed? |
6049 | how hot will that make wrath? |
6049 | how long has it lasted? |
6049 | how many lashes with God''s iron whip dost thou deserve? |
6049 | how much of his Spirit, and the grace of his Word? |
6049 | how poorly will these be able to plead the virtues of the law to which they have cleaved, when God shall answer them,''Whom dost thou pass in beauty? |
6049 | how readest thou? |
6049 | how shall I come at Christ? |
6049 | how shall I pass through this dark entry into another world? |
6049 | how she flies and sings,[20] But could she do so if she had not wings? |
6049 | how then can we be offended at things by which we reap so much good, and at things that God makes so profitable for us? |
6049 | how then should I hold up my face to Joab thy brother?" |
6049 | how they grieve the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | how they spoil our prayers? |
6049 | how they tempt Christ to be ashamed of us? |
6049 | how they weaken faith? |
6049 | how they weaken our graces? |
6049 | how will they die and languish in their souls? |
6049 | how will they faint? |
6049 | how would Thy heart and pulse beat after heav''nly things, After the upper and the nether springs? |
6049 | if it were not for these three or four words, now how might I be comforted? |
6049 | if, at any time, any of them are mentioned, how seemingly coldly doth the record of scripture present them to us? |
6049 | in each part What flames appear? |
6049 | in sinking into the bottom of the sea with company? |
6049 | in storms? |
6049 | in the body of his flesh,[ that then must be first: to what?] |
6049 | in the fifth verse, in one Lord Jesus Christ: by what? |
6049 | in this so good a soil? |
6049 | into what particular church was Lydia baptized by Paul, or those first converts at Philippi? |
6049 | is all right with my soul? |
6049 | is he a pleasant child? |
6049 | is he''formed in me the hope of glory?'' |
6049 | is it in the holiness that is there, or in the freedom that is there from hell? |
6049 | is it little in thine eyes that our King doth offer thee mercy, and that, after so many provocations? |
6049 | is justifying, saving faith, nothing more than a belief of the truth? |
6049 | is man such a fool as to believe things, and yet not look after them? |
6049 | is not this excellent water? |
6049 | is old Good- deed yet alive in Mansoul? |
6049 | is she not a tall, comely dame, something of a swarthy complexion? |
6049 | is sitting alone, pensive under God''s hand, reading the Scriptures, and hearing of sermons,& c., the way to be undone? |
6049 | is the celestial glory of so small esteem with him, that he counteth it not worth running the hazards of a few difficulties to obtain it? |
6049 | is the soul so precious a thing? |
6049 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | is there not life and mettle in them? |
6049 | is thy heart still so stubborn as not to say yet,"Let us fear the Lord?" |
6049 | it is the gift of the Father--"how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him( Luke 11:13)? |
6049 | it was for sufferings; and why made he ready for them but because he saw they wrought out for him a''far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory?'' |
6049 | joyful, and glad, and merry at heart at the thoughts of the richness of the booty? |
6049 | know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you,--and ye are not your own?" |
6049 | may not, therefore, the spirit of bondage be sent again to put me in fear, as at first? |
6049 | more fools still? |
6049 | must all men that have not so large acquaintance of their duty herein be excommunicated? |
6049 | must he save them all? |
6049 | must now the devil make thee wise? |
6049 | must these for this be cast out of the church? |
6049 | must we seek for justification by the works of the law, because the law convinceth? |
6049 | must ye utterly perish in your own corruptions? |
6049 | must you mind this world to the damning of your souls? |
6049 | nay, may they not both fall short? |
6049 | neighbour Christian, where are you now? |
6049 | neither hit last year nor this? |
6049 | neither if I be not, am I the worse? |
6049 | no Mount Zion? |
6049 | none for his loving Son that has showed his love, and died for thee? |
6049 | not fear in the day of evil? |
6049 | not in bed?]. |
6049 | not when the iniquity of thy heels compasseth thee about? |
6049 | now what shall we do? |
6049 | of a wicked man dying in despair? |
6049 | of works? |
6049 | of works? |
6049 | or a way for the lightning of thunder to cause it to rain on the earth, where no man is: on the wilderness wherein there is no man?'' |
6049 | or art thou none of those that should look after the salvation of their soul? |
6049 | or art thou through the ignorance that is in thee as[ one] unacquainted with these things? |
6049 | or can any give truer signs of false prophets than Isaiah and Micah give, yea or nay?" |
6049 | or can repentance be where the fruits of repentance are not? |
6049 | or can that be called a justifying faith, that has not for its fruit good works? |
6049 | or can there be no salvation? |
6049 | or can we be without such holy appointments of God? |
6049 | or did he die with ease, quietly? |
6049 | or do the scriptures only help you to seeming imports, and me- hap- soes[17] for your practice? |
6049 | or dost think thou mayest lose thy soul, and save thyself? |
6049 | or dost thou but dream thereof? |
6049 | or dost thou think that thou shalt escape the judgment? |
6049 | or doth grace teach you to plead for the flesh, or the making provision for the lusts thereof? |
6049 | or doth your King countenance you in ways that are so bad? |
6049 | or has the day of grace been suffered to pass by never to return? |
6049 | or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6049 | or he which is born of a woman, that he should be righteous?'' |
6049 | or how doth the ignorance discover itself? |
6049 | or how is that? |
6049 | or how shall man be righteous before God? |
6049 | or how would she frame an answer? |
6049 | or how? |
6049 | or if Christ is the throne of grace and mercy- seat, how doth he appear before God as sitting there, to sprinkle that now with his blood? |
6049 | or if it so may be said; yet whether thou art one of them? |
6049 | or in going to hell, in burning in hell, and in enduring the everlasting pains of hell, with company? |
6049 | or is it because the devil and wicked men, the inventors of these vain toys, have outwitted the law of God? |
6049 | or is it muddy, and mixed with the doctrines of men? |
6049 | or is my flesh of brass?'' |
6049 | or is not the church by these words at all directed how to carry it to those that were not yet in fellowship? |
6049 | or must the effectualness of Christ''s merits, as touching our perseverance, be helped on by the doings of man? |
6049 | or must this silver palace be of that nature either? |
6049 | or naked, and clothed thee not? |
6049 | or naked, and clothed thee? |
6049 | or no forgiveness of sins--"If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?" |
6049 | or of restoring what he had oft taken away? |
6049 | or shall all the fish of the sea be gathered together for them to suffice them?'' |
6049 | or shall the cold flowing waters that come from another place be forsaken?'' |
6049 | or shall the saw magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
6049 | or shall we be base in life because God by grace hath secured us from wrath to come? |
6049 | or shall we not much matter what manner of lives we live, because we are set free from the law of sin and death? |
6049 | or standeth your religion in word or in tongue, and not in deed and truth? |
6049 | or that dare say, What you see and hear to be in me, do,''and the God of peace shall be with you?'' |
6049 | or that he may, in a short time, have another of his fits before us, and may lose the use of his limbs? |
6049 | or that he was to be buried in Joseph''s sepulchre? |
6049 | or that he will speak for them to God for whom he will not plead against the devil? |
6049 | or that if they had known him and his life, yet to see him die so quietly, would they not have concluded that he had made his peace with God? |
6049 | or that our Lord should have risen again from the dead? |
6049 | or that those that pursue this world did ever repent of their covetousness? |
6049 | or that those that walk with wanton eyes did ever repent of their fleshly lusts? |
6049 | or that thou shouldest receive it at the hand of God, when the day shall come that every man shall have praise of him for their doings? |
6049 | or that when the gate of mercy is shut up in wrath, he will at thy pleasure, and to the reversing of his own counsel, open it again to thee? |
6049 | or that your prayers come from the braying, panting, and longing of your hearts? |
6049 | or that, at some time or other, he may forget to lock us in? |
6049 | or the Gospel, which is the word of faith preached by us? |
6049 | or the devil endure that Christ Jesus should be honoured both by faith and a heavenly conversation, and let that soul alone at quiet? |
6049 | or the gospel declared by us? |
6049 | or the saw, that it should magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
6049 | or the tabernacle made with corruptible things, to the body of Christ, or heaven itself? |
6049 | or thirsty, and gave thee drink? |
6049 | or those either who are so far off from sense of, and shame for, sin, that it is the only thing they hug and embrace? |
6049 | or to say, all this is mine, but have nothing to show for it? |
6049 | or to see this great appearance of this great God, and the Lord Jesus Christ? |
6049 | or was not this man like to be a gainer by so doing? |
6049 | or what advantage can he get by his thus vexing and troubling the children of the Most High? |
6049 | or what is a remnant of wheat to the whole harvest? |
6049 | or what is he? |
6049 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6049 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6049 | or what profit have we if we keep his ways?" |
6049 | or what profit shall I have if I keep his commandments? |
6049 | or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue? |
6049 | or what wilt resolve with thyself? |
6049 | or when wast thou sick, or in prison, and we did not minister unto thee? |
6049 | or who are they that by this exhortation are called upon to come? |
6049 | or who can forego them? |
6049 | or who can help himself thereby? |
6049 | or who did Christ come into the world to save, but the chief of sinners? |
6049 | or who has reverence for them? |
6049 | or who hath given understanding to the heart?" |
6049 | or whom have I defrauded? |
6049 | or whose ass have I taken? |
6049 | or will all our exquisite happiness centre in the glory of God? |
6049 | or will men take a pin of it to hang any vessel thereon?'' |
6049 | or will that penny that supplied my want the other day, I say, will the same penny also, without a supply, supply my wants today? |
6049 | or will that seasonable shower which fell last year, be, without supplies, a seasonable help to the grain and grass that is growing now? |
6049 | or will the law slay both him and us, and that for the same transgression? |
6049 | or will you hate your life, and save it? |
6049 | or will you not mind your callings at all? |
6049 | or will you shun the cross to save your lives, and so run the danger of eternal damnation? |
6049 | or wilt thou be desperate, and venture all? |
6049 | or wouldst thou know if thou hast? |
6049 | or''him,''by believing thou neither wilt nor canst? |
6049 | or, Can the merits of the Lord Jesus reach, according to the law of heaven, a man in this condition? |
6049 | or, as he was in the flesh? |
6049 | or, because we should in these things follow his steps, died he not for our sins? |
6049 | or, by acts and works of the flesh? |
6049 | or, do you by thus and thus doing submit to the laws of your king? |
6049 | or, in other words,''am I born again?'' |
6049 | or, in the humble hope that your course is accomplished, are you patiently waiting the heavenly messenger? |
6049 | or, that I would come to God in the best of my performances? |
6049 | or, what is a handful out of the rest of the world? |
6049 | or, what need you trouble us with these nice distinctions? |
6049 | ought not I also to set this day apart to sing the songs of my redemption in? |
6049 | poor dust and ashes, that he should crowd it up, and go jostlingly in the presence of the great God? |
6049 | poor man, what wilt thou do when these three things beset thee? |
6049 | pull no longer; why shouldest thou be thine own executioner? |
6049 | room, I say, for man''s righteousness, as to his acceptance and justification? |
6049 | said Faithful to his brother, Who comes yonder? |
6049 | said Mr. Feeble- mind, is he slain? |
6049 | said old Honest, what should I think? |
6049 | said she,''and what the son of my womb? |
6049 | said she; will she not take warning by her husband''s afflictions? |
6049 | said the Porter, was he your husband? |
6049 | saith God; what a fig- tree is this, that hath stood this year in my vineyard, and brought me forth no fruit? |
6049 | saith Satan; why, that will I. Ay, saith he, but who can do it, and prevail? |
6049 | saith he,''Is thine eye evil, because I am good?'' |
6049 | saith not the scriptures the same? |
6049 | saith the Lord; shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this?" |
6049 | saith the Lord; will ye not tremble at my presence?" |
6049 | saith the backslider that is returned, did you see how I left my God? |
6049 | saith the child, pray do not hurt me: I then have replied, Canst thou do nothing with this finger? |
6049 | sayest thou; but is this the way to go to God in prayer? |
6049 | says the honourable man, must I take mercy upon no higher consideration than the thief on the cross? |
6049 | see''s not how thou hast trod Under thy foot, the very Son of God? |
6049 | seek the living among the dead? |
6049 | seest thou the fatherless? |
6049 | seest thou thy foe in distress? |
6049 | set more by thy soul than by all the world? |
6049 | shall Christ become a drudge for you; and will you be drudges for the devil? |
6049 | shall I destroy thee? |
6049 | shall I fall upon thee and grind thee to powder, or make thee a monument of the richest grace? |
6049 | shall I threaten them? |
6049 | shall I unfaithful be? |
6049 | shall it not utterly wither, when the east- wind toucheth it? |
6049 | shall not the worthiness of the Son of God be sufficient to save from the sin of man? |
6049 | shall that knowledge of him, I say, be counted such, as only causes the soul to behold, but moveth it not to good works? |
6049 | shall the desire of the righteous be granted? |
6049 | shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6049 | shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?'' |
6049 | shall we sin that grace may abound? |
6049 | should thy lies make men hold their peace? |
6049 | should we pray for faith, for justification by grace, and a truly sanctified heart? |
6049 | sin, what art thou? |
6049 | so truly doth thy voice cause heaven to echo again upon thy head, Cut him down; why doth he cumber the ground? |
6049 | so was he: are we tempted to commit idolatry, and to worship the devil? |
6049 | so was he: are we tempted to murder ourselves? |
6049 | so was he: are we tempted with the bewitching vanities of this world? |
6049 | such a length in the arm of the Lord, that he can reach those that are gone away, as far as they could? |
6049 | such highly- favoured Christians in Doubting Castle? |
6049 | such privileges as these? |
6049 | teach men to put God and his Word out of their minds, by running to merry company, by running to the world, by gossiping? |
6049 | tempted to destroy thyself? |
6049 | than He that shook hands with the Father in making of the covenant? |
6049 | that Daniel could have been safe among the lions? |
6049 | that I heard speak well of the holy Word of God? |
6049 | that Jonah could have come home to his country, when he was in the whale''s belly? |
6049 | that he was to be crowned with thorns? |
6049 | that he was to be crucified between two thieves, and to be pierced till blood and water came out of his side? |
6049 | that he was to be scourged of the soldiers? |
6049 | that is, he is so;''is he a pleasant child?'' |
6049 | that remember thy triumphant victory? |
6049 | that the damned shall never be burned out in hell? |
6049 | that thou mightest thereby go beyond and beguile thy neighbour? |
6049 | that word came suddenly upon me,"What shall we then say to these things? |
6049 | the desires of the flesh, or the lusts of the spirit, whose side art thou of? |
6049 | the disciples] said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone?'' |
6049 | the people were surprised, and cried, What, is this Naomi? |
6049 | the query in page 13. runs thus,"Will that faith which is without works justify?" |
6049 | then how should I come? |
6049 | then let old Good- deed save you from your distresses? |
6049 | then they may be coming to him, for aught you know; and why will ye be worse than the brute, to speak evil of the things you know not? |
6049 | there is yet a question, Whether it may be well with thy soul at last? |
6049 | they think that she will be run down with a push, or, as they said,''What do these feeble Jews? |
6049 | this question I ask thee, did or doth Christ obtain salvation for any, without that body which he took of the Virgin? |
6049 | thou thinkest to escape the fear; but what wilt thou do with the pit? |
6049 | thy God has bidden thee''open thy mouth wide''; he has bid thee open it wide, and promised, saying,''And I will fill it''; and wilt thou not desire? |
6049 | to be in my case, who that so was could but have done so? |
6049 | to believe great things, and yet not to concern himself with them? |
6049 | to contemn him when he is on the throne, when he is on the throne of his glory? |
6049 | to hear this trump of God? |
6049 | to see him that wept and died for the sin of the world now ease his mind on Christ- abhorring sinners by rendering to them the just judgment of God? |
6049 | to the salvation of the soul? |
6049 | to truck+ with the devil?'' |
6049 | to what value will an imputative righteousness amount?'' |
6049 | was he I say, within his disciples, or without them, when he said,"I am the light of the world?" |
6049 | was he a lover and a worshipper of God by Christ according to his word? |
6049 | was he found among thieves? |
6049 | was made the curse of God for me? |
6049 | was not his mind elevated a thousand degrees beyond sense, carnal reason, fleshly love, and the desires of embracing temporal things? |
6049 | was thine anger against the rivers? |
6049 | was thy wrath against the sea, that thou didst ride upon thine horses and thy chariots of salvation?" |
6049 | were they silent? |
6049 | what a fool has sin made of thee? |
6049 | what a privilege is this, but who believes it? |
6049 | what agreement? |
6049 | what aileth the man thus to express himself? |
6049 | what an ass art thou become to sin? |
6049 | what are you doing? |
6049 | what better melody can be heard? |
6049 | what better words can come from man? |
6049 | what can be more full? |
6049 | what care they for his Word? |
6049 | what comfort in their greatness? |
6049 | what communion can there be in such marriages? |
6049 | what concord? |
6049 | what does a righteous man desire? |
6049 | what does not the world owe to thee and to the great Being who could produce such as thee? |
6049 | what feats not perform? |
6049 | what is a promise to a carnal man? |
6049 | what is deliverance from hell without the enjoyment of God? |
6049 | what is ease without the peace and enjoyment of God? |
6049 | what is faith to possession? |
6049 | what is he adoing now? |
6049 | what is he advantaged by his rich adventure? |
6049 | what is her pedigree? |
6049 | what is like being saved? |
6049 | what is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
6049 | what is the reason that some are carried about as clouds, with a tempest? |
6049 | what is there wrapped up in this Christ, this secret of God? |
6049 | what is this but to count him less wise than thyself? |
6049 | what is this to the loss about which we have been speaking all this while? |
6049 | what is this to the purpose( See Col 1:26- 30)? |
6049 | what is thy country, and of what people art thou?" |
6049 | what less than a river could quench the thirst of more than six hundred thousand men, besides women and children? |
6049 | what mean men''s waverings, men''s changing, and interchanging truth for error, and one error for another? |
6049 | what meaneth the heat of this great anger?'' |
6049 | what need we stand to prove the sun is light, the fire hot, the water wet? |
6049 | what sayest thou? |
6049 | what says James in the third chapter of his epistle? |
6049 | what shall I do unto thee? |
6049 | what victories not gain? |
6049 | what was it that he spake? |
6049 | what will become of you if you die in this condition? |
6049 | what will that do? |
6049 | what''s the matter? |
6049 | what, must we With you lift up our voice? |
6049 | what, none at all? |
6049 | what, resolved to murder thine own soul? |
6049 | when God shall bind one over for his sin, to eternal judgment, who then can release him? |
6049 | when he is in the Spirit, and sees in the Spirit, do you think his tongue can tell? |
6049 | when saw we thee a stranger, and took thee not in? |
6049 | when thou should''st hope, dost thou despond? |
6049 | when we believed, or before? |
6049 | when? |
6049 | whence shall I seek comforters for thee?'' |
6049 | whence should my help come?" |
6049 | where are they that feed the hungry and clothe the naked, and send portions to them, for whom nothing is prepared? |
6049 | where are you commanded to do it? |
6049 | where are you? |
6049 | where are you? |
6049 | where is it, if it is not here? |
6049 | where is the man, if he want God''s Spirit, that will care for the flourishing state of religion? |
6049 | where is the scripture that saith that this Lord of the sabbath commanded his church, from that time, to do any part of church service thereon? |
6049 | where is thy joy under the cross? |
6049 | where is thy peace when thine anger has put thee upon being unquiet? |
6049 | where is thy sting? |
6049 | where is thy victory? |
6049 | where shall I see myself anon, after a few times more have passed over me? |
6049 | where will they leave their glory? |
6049 | where? |
6049 | wherefore have they the word, their closet, and the grace of meditation, but to build up themselves withal? |
6049 | wherefore? |
6049 | wherein art thou bettered by the profession, than the wicked? |
6049 | wherein has he offended? |
6049 | whether only unto mutual affection, as some affirm, as if he were in church fellowship before, that were weak in the faith? |
6049 | which has most advantage to live in godly largeness of heart, and is most at liberty in his mind? |
6049 | which is all one as if he had said, Why dost thou commit murder? |
6049 | which is strongest, thinkest thou, God or thee? |
6049 | which of these have also most in readiness to resist the wiles of the devil, and to subdue the power and prevalency of corruptions? |
6049 | which of these two have the greatest advantage to believe, and the greatest engagements laid upon him to love the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | which the law as a Covenant of Works calleth for; and canst thou, being carnal, do that? |
6049 | whither can you flee from the punishment of sin, but to the Saviour''s bosom? |
6049 | whither shall I go when I die, if sweet Christ has not pity for my soul?'' |
6049 | whither will they fly then? |
6049 | whither wilt thou fly for help? |
6049 | who among the sons of the mighty can be likened unto the Lord?'' |
6049 | who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" |
6049 | who are they that are thus unspeakably blessed? |
6049 | who believes this talk? |
6049 | who can abide in the fierceness of his anger? |
6049 | who can act reason that hath not reason? |
6049 | who can deliver me? |
6049 | who compelled Thee to swear? |
6049 | who could blame them, since their dead friends were come to life again? |
6049 | who do you think saw themselves in the best condition? |
6049 | who do you think was in the best condition? |
6049 | who has a thimbleful thereof? |
6049 | who is able to conceive the inexpressible, inconceivable joys that are there? |
6049 | who is there that is weaned from the world, and from their sins and pleasures, to fly from the wrath to come? |
6049 | who knows that is yet alive, what the torments of hell are? |
6049 | who knows the power of God''s wrath? |
6049 | who knows what it is? |
6049 | who knows what it is? |
6049 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
6049 | who smells the stink of sin? |
6049 | who so bold with God, and who so bold with men as he? |
6049 | who speaks to their aged parents with that due regard to that relation, to their age, to their worn- out condition, as becomes them? |
6049 | who then that hath the faith of him can do otherwise but desire to be with him? |
6049 | who thinks of this? |
6049 | who would not be a subject to it? |
6049 | who would not be in the rich man''s state? |
6049 | who would not be in this condition? |
6049 | who would not be in this glory? |
6049 | who would not but worship before it? |
6049 | who would slight convictions that are on their souls, which( if not slighted) tend so much for their good? |
6049 | whom have I oppressed?'' |
6049 | why am I damned? |
6049 | why could not you make the same work with the other scriptures, as you did with these? |
6049 | why did not I give glory to the redeeming blood of Jesus? |
6049 | why do you think they consider that? |
6049 | why else do men so soon grow weary? |
6049 | why in his name if his undertakings for us are not well- pleasing to God? |
6049 | why shouldest thou pull vengeance down from heaven upon thee? |
6049 | why then do the fallen angels tremble there? |
6049 | why then should he judge me, for that I can not give thanks with him for his? |
6049 | why was it not sufficient to say''he rose again,''or, he rose again the third day? |
6049 | why, what shall they see? |
6049 | why? |
6049 | why? |
6049 | wife and children, and all? |
6049 | will he be able to stand to his refusal? |
6049 | will he pursue his desperate denial? |
6049 | will it avail? |
6049 | will this content thee, the Lord will fulfil thy desires? |
6049 | will you not believe your own eyes? |
6049 | wilt thou comfort thyself with this? |
6049 | wilt thou go to hell for sin, or to life by grace? |
6049 | wilt thou not desire? |
6049 | wilt thou not yet set open thy gate to receive us, the deputies of thy King, and those that would rejoice to see thee live? |
6049 | wilt thou still be unwilling to hasten righteousness? |
6049 | wilt thou turn, or shall I smite? |
6049 | wilt thou yet loiter in the work of thy day? |
6049 | works that are done by virtue of great grace, and the abundance of the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | would promote righteousness, because I love to see godliness show itself in others, and because I would feel more of the power of it in myself? |
6049 | would they neglect salvation as they did before? |
6049 | would they not call thee a thousand fools? |
6049 | would they not have a more comfortable house and home for their souls?'' |
6049 | would you have men to receive it with such consciences? |
6049 | would you have us trust to what Christ, in His own person, has done without us? |
6049 | would you not readily give him by SCORES? |
6049 | wouldst thou be saved? |
6049 | wouldst thou swim? |
6049 | yea, and to do it more and more? |
6049 | yea, couldest thou be willing even now to partake of the means that would help thee to that means, that can cure thee of this disease? |
6049 | yea, it is impossible else that he should ever cry out with all his heart,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6049 | yea, what can make that man happy that, for his not coming to Jesus Christ for life, must be damned in hell? |
6049 | yea, what like to be taught in the way that thou shalt choose? |
6049 | yea, what means else thy commending of thyself because of that, and so thy implicit prayer, that thou for that mightest find acceptance with God? |
6049 | yea, why should not man despair of getting to heaven by his own abilities? |
6049 | you may say, what judgments? |