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 |
---|---|
4030 | What is that? |
4030 | Does it not tell a story that all of us hope may be one day true; when war shall belong only to history, and when peace shall possess the earth? |
4030 | Is it not a strange and moving contrast? |
55920 | Before I followed his example I went to take a peep at the dance, and asked the host what all this rout was about? |
55920 | N''est ce pas naître à une plus mauvaise vie? |
55920 | Who could he be? |
55920 | Who was there in Ischl whose character at all answered to this description? |
41588 | How often we have heard the question,"What shall I give?" |
41588 | How will it all end? |
41588 | Of what make? |
41588 | What flag is she flying? |
41588 | What would the interior look like? |
41588 | Where does she hail from? |
41588 | Where her probable destination? |
46251 | Now, what news on the Rialto? |
46251 | A wider space and ornamented grave? |
46251 | And in a brief enumeration of the buildings to be seen by the visitor, how can the unhappy writer avoid the charge of baldness and inefficiency? |
46251 | And where shall we find Julia and Lucetta, and Valentine, and smile at the pleasantries of Launce, with his dog, Crab, on a leash? |
46251 | But history''s purchas''d page to call them great? |
46251 | Do Romeo, Mercutio, and Benvolio no longer roam these twisted ancient streets? |
46251 | For what counted all this bloodshed? |
46251 | How shall the visitor know where to turn for those objects that appeal to him, amid such a wealth of treasures? |
46251 | How shall we separate myth and simple tradition from the veracious chronicles of the Roman people? |
46251 | Is there any other city that grips us in every sense like Venice? |
46251 | Shall we not see, leaning from one of the old balconies, the lovely Juliet? |
46251 | What can be said of the sunsets, the almost garish colouring of sea and sky, and the witchery of reflection upon tower and roof? |
46251 | What want these outlaws conquerors should have? |
46251 | What were the causes of the downfall of their proud city, and the decadence of the great race that invaded all quarters of Europe? |
46251 | Would he not have chosen to die in the Venice that he loved with such intense fervour? |
29463 | Conclude you go toe Frankfort? |
29463 | Conclude you go toe Frankfort? |
29463 | What names do your friends go by? |
29463 | What place do you hail from? |
29463 | Where are you going? |
29463 | You''re Mr. Brown, I reckon? |
29463 | --"What''s the matter now?" |
29463 | And shall I sup where Juliet at the masque Saw her loved Montague?" |
29463 | And those the distant turrets of Verona? |
29463 | If you should forget the number of your key and room(_ as BROWN did on returning late from the theatre_), what are you to do? |
29463 | Is this the Mincius? |
29463 | Jones asks Robinson, whether he"Sees before him the gladiator die?" |
29463 | Jones to Brown--"What do you say?" |
29463 | One such hour is worth-- let me see-- how many years of one''s life? |
29463 | Robinson, who is much given to quotation, is, at the very moment, languidly reciting the lines:--"Am I in Italy? |
29463 | Robinson, with warmth, and some distance behind,--"What is the use of going on at that rate?" |
29463 | The theatre was lighted(?) |
29463 | What are they to do now? |
29463 | What can he want? |
29463 | Who knows? |
29463 | _ Reflection made by BROWN._--Why do people when repeating poetry always look unhappy? |
40746 | A little ragged urchin of about ten years old rather annoyed me, by jumping up and grinning repeatedly in my face:"Allez, allez, que faites vous là?" |
40746 | Can we then( with any pretence to candour and justice) affect to wonder at the deep- felt disgust and dislike of the French towards us? |
40746 | Combien durerâ t''elle? |
40746 | Did this nation come into the world under the influence of a dancing star? |
40746 | Elle me donnera un sous, n''est ce pas?" |
40746 | He then asked, with some appearance of reproach,"Why the English kept him so barbarously immured in a dreadful prison?" |
40746 | How shall I describe the wonderful manner in which we climbed these frightful eschelles? |
40746 | How was it possible to thread these mazes without thinking of_ Henri quatre_, and his famous hunting adventure in the miller''s hut? |
40746 | How would John Bull have writhed and raged with shame and grief, if the scene had been exhibited_ vice versa_ in our own country? |
40746 | I asked if the latter was the_ cadette_ of the family? |
40746 | I felt( and what Englishwoman ought not to feel?) |
40746 | The host( seeing that we were English) asked if we would not choose our_ pain_ to be_ grillé_? |
40746 | The master of the house, who seemed to think all this very fine, wanted to know if_ Madame_ would not join in the merry dance? |
40746 | We asked him, amongst other questions,"what was the chief manufacture of the place?" |
40746 | Wherefore is it that the imagination feels a charm and a repose so delightful amid scenes of this nature? |
40746 | Why should I attempt to describe Paris? |
40746 | dost think that because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?" |
56076 | ''And why do they delay?'' |
56076 | A dignitary of the Church,( Don?) |
56076 | After inquiring after his great friend Elfi Bey[? |
56076 | Did it give us a preference in obtaining public situations, or were we paid? |
56076 | He was very fond of sport-- were we? |
56076 | How could we defend ourselves? |
56076 | How long will it please God to afflict these wretched people with such monstrous tyranny? |
56076 | I ca n''t tell you how often I have been asked''When will the English come and deliver us from the Turks, who eat out our souls?'' |
56076 | I presented my visitor with one of those new phosphoric contrivances[? |
56076 | In the first place he was ill; in the next place, Would it not be better to go to Andritzena? |
56076 | My wound[? |
56076 | Sometimes the shepherds on precipices above us would call out,''What men are ye?'' |
56076 | The boys crowded round, and said Englishmen were fine fellows, but why had we no arms? |
56076 | They are done in the old French crinkum- crankum[? |
56076 | Upon this what did the idlers do? |
56076 | What do you think of Cockarella to rhyme with Canella? |
56076 | What was the age of the Labyrinth? |
56076 | Why did not he stay at home? |
56076 | Would I give him some notes and a sketch? |
56076 | the age of the world? |
56076 | the name of the king who made it? |
13403 | Are there many instances of people having been bit by mad animals? |
13403 | How much is paid per day for ploughing with two oxen? 13403 Is the state of a bachelor aggravated and rendered less desirable? |
13403 | What is the value of whales of different sizes? |
13403 | Which food has been experienced to be most portable and most nourishing for keeping a distressed ship''s crew from starving? |
13403 | [ 82] Sidney foresees the difficulty his brother may have:How shall I get excellent men to take paines to speake with me? |
13403 | ( 1876?) |
13403 | 1595(?). |
13403 | 1605(?). |
13403 | 1690?] |
13403 | A few random examples of this list are:"Which are the favourite herbs of the sheep of this country?" |
13403 | A. Paris( n.d.)( 1552?). |
13403 | After what manner the subjects in both countries shewe their obedience to their prince, or oppose themselves against him? |
13403 | Alas, good Sir, what can a man learne in thirty yeeres?" |
13403 | By what means?" |
13403 | Devereux, Robert, Earl of Essex( or Bacon?). |
13403 | Footnote 202:_ Quo Vadis?_ A Just Censure of Travel as it is undertaken by the Gentlemen of our Nation, London, 1617. |
13403 | Hall mutters to his servants,"Jesus can you not knocke the boyes head and the wall together, sith he runnes a- bragging thus?" |
13403 | Imprinted at London for Edward A(? |
13403 | What Englishman could not know a Frenchman by this ridiculous picture?... |
13403 | What is the greatest vice in both nacions? |
13403 | What should this good man doe? |
13403 | With two horses?" |
13403 | [ London? |
13403 | _ Quo Vadis? |
37889 | Do you see that dirty fellow yonder? |
37889 | What do you want with him? |
37889 | *****"If thou regret''st thy youth,_ why live?_ The land of honourable death Is here: up to the field, and give Away thy breath! |
37889 | A man came out as owner of a vessel and cargo, and also master:_ quere_, could he be admitted? |
37889 | After all, is not our reverence misplaced, or, rather does not our respect for deeds hallowed by time render us comparatively unjust? |
37889 | But what do I say? |
37889 | But where were they who once occupied them? |
37889 | Can this beautiful city, rich with the choicest gifts of Heaven, be pre- eminently the abode of pestilence and death? |
37889 | Did ever a man talk with a king who was not pleased with him? |
37889 | Did they expect to give him a name by mingling him with the ashes of the immortal dead? |
37889 | Did they expect to steal immortality like fire from the flint? |
37889 | He begged my pardon, but doubtfully_ suggested_,"You are not black?" |
37889 | If he takes it so coolly, thought I, what is it to me? |
37889 | Indeed, how could it be otherwise? |
37889 | Shall I or shall I not"make an operation"in Athens? |
37889 | There was nothing there to defend; their miserable lives were not worth taking; why were these weapons there? |
37889 | We touched our hats to him, and he returned the civility; and what could he do more without inviting us to dinner? |
37889 | What had he to do there? |
37889 | Where were they who should now be coming out to rejoice in the return of a friend and to welcome a stranger? |
37889 | Who can shake off the feeling that binds him to his native land? |
37889 | where a man carries about with him the seeds of disease to all whom he holds dear? |
45983 | Can I tell it? |
45983 | In the water? |
45983 | Oh, dear, what is the matter? |
45983 | Oh, no,said Mr. Winter;"do you see that small boat rowing towards us?" |
45983 | Where is the clock? |
45983 | Where? |
45983 | After dinner Mr. Ford said,"How would you like to go to the wax- works by the underground railway? |
45983 | After passing three stations, Mr. Winter said,"This air is stifling, do you not think we are nearly there?" |
45983 | After resting a little while Mr. Winter said,"Who wants to go with me and take a drive around the city?" |
45983 | Alice said,"No, have you?" |
45983 | Alice said,"Now, mamma, will you not add to our pleasures by repeating Longfellow''s beautiful poem on Nuremberg before we go to bed?" |
45983 | Alice said,"O papa, how could anybody spoil that pretty story by running trains through the rock? |
45983 | Are you going away? |
45983 | Are you sick? |
45983 | As soon as the man had passed by Alice said,--"What is that?" |
45983 | As they approached the cathedral Alice said,"Why, papa, where is the clock? |
45983 | Mr. Winter said,"Alice, what do you know about this?" |
45983 | One day in the early spring, Alice Winter came home from school, and, after the usual question at the door,"Is mamma at home?" |
45983 | Soon the young girl whom she had seen the day before came up to her and said,"Have you ever crossed before?" |
45983 | That evening Nellie said,"Dear Mrs. Winter, how can I ever thank you and your husband for this trip? |
45983 | What is it?" |
45983 | What is the matter? |
45983 | What is yours and where are you going?" |
45983 | What made you come home so early?" |
45983 | When Lore appeared the old count said,"Where is my son?" |
45983 | When they reached it, it was not theirs, and Mr. Ford called out to the guard,"How many more stations before we reach Baker Street?" |
45983 | Where did you get on the train?" |
45983 | Will he drop into that? |
45983 | what is the matter?" |
37947 | Can you speak Latin? |
37947 | Do you play? |
37947 | Do you sing? |
37947 | Shall I not take mine ease in mine own inn? |
37947 | What do you do? 37947 At one time, finding it impossible to express himself, he said,Parlatis Latinum?" |
37947 | But what are the Russian dead to me? |
37947 | Having overreached the mark, and been guilty of being detected, he was brought before the proper tribunal; and when asked,"Why did you take a bribe?" |
37947 | I again answered"No;"and he asked me, with great simplicity,"Cosa fatte? |
37947 | I answered"No;"and he continued,"Suonate?" |
37947 | It meant that it was needless to add an epitaph, for no man would ask, Who was Kosciusko? |
37947 | It might be asked, What have these men to fight for? |
37947 | Niente?" |
37947 | Nothing?" |
37947 | Shortly after he returned, and again walking round, stopped and addressed me,"Spreechen sie Deutsch?" |
37947 | There is an ancient saying,"Who can resist the gods and Novogorod the Great?" |
37947 | What have I done now? |
37947 | What should I write? |
37947 | What was he? |
37947 | Where was his firstborn child and only son? |
37947 | Will the reader believe me? |
37947 | that chill the sources of enjoyment, and congeal the very fountains of life?" |
37947 | the presumptive heir of his throne and empire? |
37947 | where did he live, and is his race extinct? |
36110 | Ah,he says,"do you frequent the races at Sheepshead Bay?" |
36110 | Are you a New Yorker? |
36110 | Are you a tramp? |
36110 | Combien? 36110 Have you seen any icebergs?" |
36110 | Met any wrecks? |
36110 | Sir,I say,"you are in my way, will you please move out?" |
36110 | What is your port? |
36110 | What,I exclaim,"no sweets for the sweet girls of Holland?" |
36110 | Will you kindly give me your name? |
36110 | Will you please step aside and allow me to pass? |
36110 | ( How are you? |
36110 | Am I not an American? |
36110 | And what has become of the stranger who relied on my judgment a few moments ago? |
36110 | Are there still lingering''pale gliding ghosts, with fingers dropping gore''?" |
36110 | Combien?" |
36110 | Did he think I was a tender lamb? |
36110 | Do they hope to be inspired by the magic spell of the master''s touch still lingering among the keys? |
36110 | How can I describe the scene that is before me? |
36110 | How can I make them understand? |
36110 | I say to myself:"God made the country, and man made the town, but who on earth has manufactured these monstrous counterpanes, and for what purpose?" |
36110 | I say,"do the lurking spirits of the slain thus make themselves known to the living? |
36110 | One of these is said to have been owned by Christopher Columbus(?). |
36110 | The following are some of the questions asked:"To what line do you belong?" |
36110 | The six weary men all look up in the direction of my finger: they smile, and think it is a good joke, and look at me as though saying:"What next?" |
36110 | Then why not recommend it to your friends? |
36110 | Vice, crime, want, suffering meet our eyes on every side: and the old hopeless cry: Why must these things be? |
36110 | We are always greeted with a pleasant"Goeden morgen,"or"Goeden avond,"or it may be:"Hoe staat het leven?" |
36110 | We rise early this morning, and partake of a good German breakfast; and of what do you suppose a good German breakfast consists? |
36110 | Were you not there last summer?" |
36110 | What better method could be employed in the absence of newspapers? |
36110 | What can be more beautiful than this scene? |
36110 | What has become of my luck? |
36110 | What tongue could tell, or pen impart The riches of its hidden lore?" |
36110 | Where can one find a grander, more solemn atmosphere than within these walls where the spirits and the hands of men have worked for ages? |
11013 | And what has been the success of the plan? |
11013 | Are they good people, these Indians? |
11013 | Are you not afraid of Tanner? |
11013 | Are you not lawyers? |
11013 | Did it have any effect on the election? |
11013 | Did the government know of it? |
11013 | Do they follow any regular industry? |
11013 | Do they never drink too much whisky? |
11013 | Etes- vous Canadien? |
11013 | Had he received any provocation? |
11013 | Have you heard the very reverend Mr.----, in---- chapel? |
11013 | How do the democrats take it? |
11013 | How do you know that it was a copper- head that bit him? |
11013 | Is there nobody else,we asked,"who will take us down the falls?" |
11013 | Some of these are Africans? |
11013 | Was it done openly? |
11013 | Was the place as considerable sixty years ago as it now is? |
11013 | What do you pay them? |
11013 | What is the matter with the passport? |
11013 | What say you,he called out to his companion who stood in the door looking into the street,"shall we let them pass? |
11013 | Where are you going? |
11013 | Where did you get all the stones with which you have made these substantial fences? |
11013 | Why is that? 11013 Will it rain all day?" |
11013 | Will they stop the mill for the new tariff? |
11013 | Will you go up to town, sir? |
11013 | You do not go to La Pointe? |
11013 | --are you a Canadian? |
11013 | But who amongst its mountains Of cold and ice would stay, When he can buy paraira In Michigan-_i- a_?" |
11013 | Clair?" |
11013 | Do mankind gain any thing by these improvements, as they are called, in the art of war? |
11013 | It has been said that the French have become a graver nation than formerly; if so, what must have been their gayety a hundred years ago? |
11013 | Scott? |
11013 | Shall we never see an example of the like munificence in New York? |
11013 | What will they talk twenty years hence? |
11013 | When he was asked whether the castle was not the one spoken of by Scott, in his Peveril of the Peak, he replied,"Scott? |
11013 | why are they all drunk to- day?" |
55759 | All ready, sir,said he,"shall I drive you to the Palace or the Museum?" |
55759 | How did you put that piece of ice inside without breaking the bottle? |
55759 | If in the month of dark December, Leander, who was nightly wo nt( What maid will not the tale remember?) 55759 It was water, sir, and it froze inside,"said she,"will you have something to eat?" |
55759 | Oscar, what nation does that puny looking, red- skinned man belong to? |
55759 | That''s a fact, Captain, is that his pillar? |
55759 | Well is that any reason you should make my bill like a snipes? |
55759 | What tall, fine looking, yellow skinned man is that, Oscar, with that tall lady standing looking on? |
55759 | when are you going to leave and what directions will you take from here? |
55759 | Dorr?" |
55759 | Have we as learned a man as Moses, and if yes, who can prove it? |
55759 | He invited us into his parlor where he asked us many disguised questions, such as;"how do you like Naples?" |
55759 | How did he come to do what no man can do now? |
55759 | I asked her if it was good? |
55759 | I asked what subject? |
55759 | I said,"You mean to say this is the temple of Bacchus, the god of wine and drunkards, do you?" |
55759 | I saw one machine to put a man in, and gradually break his bones; at the crush of each bone, he would be asked"if he would confess the crime?" |
55759 | I then asked him if he was aware that the golden candlestick out of the temple of Solomon lay at the bottom of that muddy stream? |
55759 | Luxor, Carnack, the Memnonian and the Pyramids make us exclaim,"What monuments of pride can surpass these? |
55759 | Oh, when will we be the"Freest government in the world?" |
55759 | Reader, can a man dream with his eyes open? |
55759 | Sam Slick asked a country beaux"why it was that such a fine looking gentleman as himself was not married where so many pretty ladies were?" |
55759 | She stepped up to me and said,"Are they ready, sir?" |
55759 | The Irishman said,"how did it feel my marn?" |
55759 | The old man asked me how I liked it? |
55759 | The women are still pretty, and what is like a Grecian nose? |
55759 | Well, Mr. Captain, what are you looking after in the distance with as much anxiety as the passengers, have you not been here before? |
55759 | Well, who were the Egyptians? |
55759 | Were such men authors? |
55759 | _ A friend?_ Yes, a friend! |
55759 | or can a man see with them shut? |
55759 | said she,"what you call_ cela_?" |
55759 | valet de place?" |
26030 | A wider space, an ornamented grave? |
26030 | But History''s purchas''d page to call them great? |
26030 | Can they? |
26030 | Have you a bath- room? |
26030 | Have you a covered garage for automobiles? |
26030 | Have you a dark room for photographers? |
26030 | Have you a sign denoting adherence or alliance to the A. C. F.? |
26030 | Have you a sign denoting adherence or alliance to the A. G. A.? |
26030 | Have you a sign denoting adherence or alliance to the T. C F.? |
26030 | Have you a telephone and what is its number? |
26030 | Have you an arrangement with the Touring Club de France allowing members a discount of ten per cent.? |
26030 | Have you modernized hygienic bedrooms? |
26030 | Have you water- closets with modern plumbing? |
26030 | Hotels? |
26030 | How could it be otherwise in such a food- producing centre? |
26030 | How many English hotel- keepers have imitated him? |
26030 | How many automobiles can you care for? |
26030 | How many know Calais as they really ought? |
26030 | Is wine included in your regular charges? |
26030 | What are the chief curiosities and sights in your town? |
26030 | What interesting excursions in the neighbourhood? |
26030 | What is the price of an average room, with service and lights? |
26030 | What is the price per day which the automobilist_ en tour_ may count on spending with you? |
26030 | What is your telegraphic address? |
26030 | What mode of travel can combine all these joys unless it be ballooning-- of which the writer confesses he knows nothing? |
26030 | What more does the touring automobilist want? |
26030 | What want these outlaws conquerors should have? |
26030 | Why do so many English automobilists tour abroad, Mr. British Hotel- keeper and Mr. Police Sergeant? |
26030 | Why the London_ Times_ no one knew: why not the New Orleans_ Picayune_ and be done with it? |
26030 | Why? |
5688 | Are you going through Spain to Paris? |
5688 | Do you?--no, but do you think it will, though? 5688 How is-- what did I understand you to say?" |
5688 | Not anywhere whatsoever?--not any place on earth but this? |
5688 | O Solitude, where are the charms which sages have seen in thy face? |
5688 | What do you find to put in it, Jack? |
5688 | What''s a swindle? |
5688 | Who is that smooth- faced, animated outrage yonder in the fine clothes? |
5688 | Who is that spider- legged gorilla yonder with the sanctimonious countenance? |
5688 | Yes, but what did he say? |
5688 | But that would n''t do, would it? |
5688 | He was restive under these victories and often asked:"What did that pirate say?" |
5688 | However, had not we the seductive program still, with its Paris, its Constantinople, Smyrna, Jerusalem, Jericho, and"our friends the Bermudians?" |
5688 | I do n''t do you any harm, do I? |
5688 | I said to a deck- sweep-- but in a low voice:"Who is that overgrown pirate with the whiskers and the discordant voice?" |
5688 | Is n''t it an oriental picture? |
5688 | Maybe the Poet Lariat ai n''t satisfied with them deductions?" |
5688 | Not g---- well, then, where in the nation are you going to?" |
5688 | Now, do n''t you know, there ai n''t a watch in the ship that''s making better time than she is, but what does it signify? |
5688 | Oh, I do n''t think a journal''s any use-- do you? |
5688 | She said:"Bless you, why did n''t you speak English before? |
5688 | Tangier is clear out of the world, and what is the use of visiting when people have nothing on earth to talk about? |
5688 | The doctor said:"Avez- vous du vin?" |
5688 | The governor would say,''Hello, here-- didn''t see anything in France? |
5688 | They do n''t have none of them things in our parts, do they? |
5688 | They''re only a bother, ai n''t they?" |
5688 | This morning at breakfast he pointed out of the window and said:"Do you see that there hill out there on that African coast? |
5688 | What did we care? |
5688 | What should you say, Jack?" |
5688 | What should you think?" |
5688 | What was there lacking about that program to make it perfectly irresistible? |
5688 | Who could read the program of the excursion without longing to make one of the party? |
5688 | Why ca n''t a man put his intellect onto things that''s some value? |
10638 | Well could you not have punished those offenders according to due process of law? |
10638 | What bird is that? |
10638 | What paper do you represent? |
10638 | When will the next train leave for Versailles, and where can we procure our tickets? |
10638 | A fee of twelve cents entitled me to an ascent of its lofty spire, which can be made to the height of 304(?) |
10638 | A most magnificent bridge crosses these, which is several( three?) |
10638 | A question to dairy men: Do thunder and lightning affect fresh milk? |
10638 | An oratory( chapel?) |
10638 | As soon is we reached the first station, I ran to a conductor and, holding up my ticket, cried out,"Broox- el?" |
10638 | Attendants at the doors provided us with slippers, for no one is allowed to tread the fine carpet( or matting?) |
10638 | Can we conceive that Rubens painted the"Dead Jesus"without sobs and tears? |
10638 | Did Pythagoras not also have twelve spheres to make his sphere- music? |
10638 | Did heaven ever smile upon a more blessed city than Paris? |
10638 | Do these identifications not prove conclusively that anatomy was better understood when these bones were classified than it is even now? |
10638 | It is a remarkable coincidence(? |
10638 | It is probably as near as sculpture can reach it, but who would suppose that a white stone could do justice to the beauty of a pure child of nature? |
10638 | Its graceful tower is 506(?) |
10638 | Near Bingen is the Mouse Tower, so called because the cruel Archbishop Hatto, of Mayence? |
10638 | Need I say that the fathers of this generation are served about the same way by their sons? |
10638 | Straws''boor''), thence along that avenue(?) |
10638 | The English seem to_ cultivate_ the most flowers, while the French and the Italians, and( lately?) |
10638 | The hall will hold about 1,500 adults and his congregation(?) |
10638 | The portal of the same cathedral which contains the famous organ is also adorned(?) |
10638 | This inner court or garden, 700 feet long and 300 feet wide, containing nearly five acres of land, is planted with lime( linden?) |
10638 | What profitable example can we take from those semi- barbarians? |
10638 | What was it, that, in the Reformation, made blood such a sweet manure for souls?" |
10638 | When we parted, she skipped away and proudly showed the card which she had received from an"American,"to one of her schoolmates(?). |
10638 | Why do tourists speak so much about the pyramids, after returning from Egypt? |
10638 | Will we reach the Tiber soon? |
10638 | would you come so far to see antiquity, and then count your steps how near you would approach her?" |
5692 | And when he knew that it was Jesus that spoke to him he trembled, and was astonished, and said,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
5692 | Who is this? 5692 And do I not include Church every time I abuse the pilgrims-- and would I be likely to speak ill- naturedly of him? 5692 Are not his brothers named so and so, and his sisters so and so, and is not his mother the person they call Mary? 5692 But when did ever self- righteousness know the sentiment of pity? 5692 But why should not the truth be spoken of this region? 5692 Do you want to run away, you ferocious beast, and break your neck? |
5692 | Has it ever needed to hide its face? |
5692 | He says:"Are not Abana and Pharpar rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? |
5692 | I said-- who speaks of money at a time like this? |
5692 | Is it the province of Mr. Grimes to improve upon the work? |
5692 | Is the truth harmful? |
5692 | May I not wash in them and be clean?" |
5692 | The display was exactly according to the guide- book, and were we not traveling by the guide- book? |
5692 | Tired? |
5692 | We have not sailed, but three swims are equal to a sail, are they not? |
5692 | What Joseph that ever lived would have thrown away such a chance to"show off?" |
5692 | What do you want to harm him for? |
5692 | What has he done?" |
5692 | What is this?" |
5692 | What next? |
5692 | What were a few long hours added to the hardships of some over- taxed brutes when weighed against the peril of those human souls? |
5692 | What wonder that the sordid lights of work- day prudence should pale before the glory of a hope like theirs in the full splendor of its fruition? |
5692 | Why shall we not say a good word for the princely Bedouin? |
5692 | Why were we ever told to bring navy revolvers with us if we had to be protected at last by this infamous star- spangled scum of the desert? |
5692 | Would you send us out among these desperate hordes, with no salvation in our utmost need but this old turret?" |
5692 | will you? |
5691 | It ai n''t mentioned in the Bible!--this place ain''t-- well now, what place is this, since you know so much about it? |
5691 | What do I want to see this place for? 5691 *********And they took him and brought him unto Areopagus, saying, May we know what this new doctrine whereof thou speakest is? |
5691 | And moreover, how about three oyster beds, one above another, and thick strata of good honest earth between? |
5691 | And the citizen answered and said, Whence come ye that ye know not that great Laertius reigns in Ephesus? |
5691 | And they said, with great excitement, while their hearts beat high, and the color in their faces came and went, Where is my father? |
5691 | And yet what are these things to the wonders that lie buried here under the ground? |
5691 | And, besides, is it not the inborn nature of Street Commissioners to avoid their duty whenever they get a chance? |
5691 | Are you never going to learn any sense?" |
5691 | But was not that a singular scene for a city of a million inhabitants? |
5691 | But what object could they have had in view?--what did they want up there? |
5691 | But what would a volcano leave of an American city, if it once rained its cinders on it? |
5691 | Did the goose- merchant get excited? |
5691 | How could he stand against the three- legged woman, and the man with his eye in his cheek? |
5691 | How is that for a recommendation? |
5691 | How long have ye dwelt here, and whither are they gone that dwelt here before ye? |
5691 | How would he blush in presence of the man with fingers on his elbow? |
5691 | I could believe in one restaurant, on those terms; but then how about the three? |
5691 | Now how did those masses of oyster- shells get there? |
5691 | One of the boys said:"Hello, doctor, what are you doing up here at this time of night?--What do you want to see this place for?" |
5691 | Presently they spake unto a citizen and said, Who is King in Ephesus? |
5691 | The Seven said, How, you know them not? |
5691 | The commandant said the punishment would be"heavy;"when asked"how heavy?" |
5691 | The hill might have been the bottom of the sea, once, and been lifted up, with its oyster- beds, by an earthquake-- but, then, how about the crockery? |
5691 | They looked one at the other, greatly perplexed, and presently asked again, Where, then, is the good King Maximilianus? |
5691 | Well, twenty little centuries flutter away, and what is left of these things? |
5691 | What am I to do with my feet? |
5691 | What am I to do with my hands? |
5691 | What could any oyster want to climb a hill for? |
5691 | What have I arrived at now? |
5691 | What in the world am I to do with myself? |
5691 | What may be left of General Grant''s great name forty centuries hence? |
5691 | What would the prophecy- savans say? |
5691 | Where are Dionysius and Serapion, and Pericles, and Decius? |
5691 | Where is my mother? |
5691 | Where would he hide himself when the dwarf with seven fingers on each hand, no upper lip, and his under- jaw gone, came down in his majesty? |
5691 | Wherefore, why should we worry? |
5693 | Ferguson, how many more million miles have we got to creep under this awful sun before we camp? |
5693 | Fifteen, is it? 5693 How far is it to the Lloyds''Agency?" |
5693 | How far is it to the lower bridge? |
5693 | Shall we ever lunch? |
5693 | What are you going to do with that pile of books? |
5693 | Where are you going with that lamp? |
5693 | Why what in the nation does----why I never heard of such a thing? 5693 Acknowledged that you were afraid, and backed shamefully out? 5693 And the King said, What aileth thee? 5693 And why should it be otherwise? 5693 But what were their troubles to us? 5693 But when lived there a holy priest who could not set so simple a trouble as this at rest? 5693 But with the horses at the door and every body aware of what they were there for, what would you have done? 5693 Can the curse of the Deity beautify a land? 5693 I sighed and said:This is charming; and now do n''t you think you could get me something to read?" |
5693 | If he had got a Bedouin, what would he have done with him--shot him? |
5693 | If it were a man, why did he not now drop me? |
5693 | In Constantinople you ask,"How far is it to the Consulate?" |
5693 | Is any man insane enough to imagine that this picnic of patriarchs sang, made love, danced, laughed, told anecdotes, dealt in ungodly levity? |
5693 | Now did it take a hundred years of patient toil to carve the Sphynx? |
5693 | The question intruded itself:"Which bore the blessed Saviour, and which the thieves?" |
5693 | They will say it when they get home, fast enough, but why should they not? |
5693 | We asked"Why?" |
5693 | What did he say he wants with those books?" |
5693 | What on earth can he want with that lamp?" |
5693 | What was grammar to a desperado like that? |
5693 | Why try to think at all? |
5693 | Would he have quartered him--flayed him? |
5693 | Would he have stabbed him? |
5693 | Written by whom? |
5693 | horror what would he have done? |
5689 | Do you wis zo haut can be? |
5689 | How is this? |
5689 | Now,he said,"observe my face-- what does it express?" |
5689 | What did you come here for? 5689 What''s this?" |
5689 | A bowing, aproned Frenchman skipped forward and said:"Que voulez les messieurs?" |
5689 | Alexis du Caulaincourt?" |
5689 | But at the same time the thought will intrude itself upon me, How can they see what is not visible? |
5689 | But is n''t this relic matter a little overdone? |
5689 | But who says a word in behalf of poor Mr. Laura? |
5689 | But who shall tell how many ages it seemed to this prisoner? |
5689 | But why? |
5689 | Can it be possible that the painters make John the Baptist a Spaniard in Madrid and an Irishman in Dublin? |
5689 | Can those other uninspired visitors do it, or do they only happily imagine they do? |
5689 | Does the Emperor Napoleon live here now, Ferguson?" |
5689 | Est- ce que vous pensez I will steal it? |
5689 | Good, is n''t it? |
5689 | How charmingly situated!--Venerable, venerable pile--""Pairdon, Doctor, zis is not ze Louvre-- it is--""What is it?" |
5689 | How do you suppose he liked the state of things that has given the world so much pleasure? |
5689 | How else are these marvels of symmetry, cleanliness, and order attained? |
5689 | How is that, for a specimen? |
5689 | I do not know what"Que voulez les messieurs?" |
5689 | I heard the doctor say impressively:"Dan, how often have we told you that these foreigners can not understand English? |
5689 | Is that a grisette?" |
5689 | It meant, do you wish to go up there? |
5689 | Monsieur le Landlord-- Sir: Pourquoi do n''t you mettez some savon in your bed- chambers? |
5689 | Name him over again; what had we better call him? |
5689 | Singular, is n''t it? |
5689 | Was ever such a contrast set up before a multitude till then? |
5689 | What does this express?" |
5689 | What next? |
5689 | What next? |
5689 | What, more? |
5689 | Who bedews him with tears? |
5689 | Who glorifies him? |
5689 | Who prates of the tame achievements of Aladdin and the Magii of Arabia? |
5689 | Who speaks of the wonders of romance? |
5689 | Who talks of the marvels of fiction? |
5689 | Who writes poetry about him? |
5689 | Why will people be so stupid as to suppose themselves the only foreigners among a crowd of ten thousand persons? |
5689 | Why will you not depend upon us? |
5689 | Why will you not tell us what you want, and let us ask for it in the language of the country? |
5689 | Yet who really knows the story of Abelard and Heloise? |
39179 | And do you think these are the people who write to me? 39179 Did you pay your bills?" |
39179 | How did you know he was not an Englishman? |
39179 | Questa? |
39179 | Then what is the reason? |
39179 | What are you saying of me, Charles? |
39179 | What did you give for it? |
39179 | _ Aspetta?_was her only answer, as she sunk back and fainted. |
39179 | --three questions that are essential to all just criticism; the questions put by English Reviewers are substantially''What party does he belong to? |
39179 | A coarse fellow came up at the hustings, and said to him,"I should like to know on what ground you stand here, sir?" |
39179 | And how did you know it?" |
39179 | And yet, of what, that should make a spot of earth sink to perdition, has it not been the theatre? |
39179 | But Hagar-- who can describe the world of meaning in her face? |
39179 | But how account for the continual production by ordinary parents of this brute race of_ cretins_? |
39179 | But where was"the tomb of the Capulets?" |
39179 | Did you ever see anything more Titianesque? |
39179 | Do you know the D''Israeli''s in America?" |
39179 | Do you know the_ real_ prices of books? |
39179 | Has Basil Hall any hesitation in describing a dinner party in the United States, and recording the conversation at table? |
39179 | He loitered on, and in about half an hour after, he turned to Dr. H. and said,"who was that you said wanted to see me?" |
39179 | How far has he accomplished it? |
39179 | How far is that object worthy of approbation?'' |
39179 | How is it that these diminutive cantons preserve so completely their nationality? |
39179 | How shall I begin to give you an idea of the Fornarina? |
39179 | I thought of his touching song,"How many summers, love, Hast thou been mine?" |
39179 | Instead of inquiring''What is the author''s object? |
39179 | Is Galt much liked?" |
39179 | Is he a Whig, Tory, Radical, or is he an American?'' |
39179 | Is not that odd? |
39179 | Lady Blessington, do you know grammar? |
39179 | Shall I, Lady Blessington?" |
39179 | Shall I, Smith? |
39179 | Talking of Grattan, is it not wonderful that, with all the agitation in Ireland, we have had no such men since his time? |
39179 | This looks like a revolution, does it not? |
39179 | Venite per me?_"At a corner of the harbor, some three quarters of a mile from San Marc, lies an island once occupied by a convent. |
39179 | Was it not enough alone, if she had been far less ill, to imbitter the very fountains of life, and kill her with mere fright and horror? |
39179 | We shall see what will come of it? |
39179 | We went, of course; as who would not? |
39179 | What can I tell you of the St. John in the desert, that can afford you a glimpse, even, of Raphael''s inspired creations? |
39179 | What was she? |
39179 | What was the strongest motive of that great man in this most affecting and disputed action of his life? |
39179 | What would any book of travels be, leaving out everybody the author saw, and all he heard? |
39179 | What would their books be without this class of subjects? |
39179 | What would they say to this in America? |
39179 | Where shall we dine? |
39179 | Who has not smiled over the humorous description of Mrs. Battle? |
39179 | Who that has read Elia would not give more to see him than all the other authors of his time put together? |
39179 | Who would read capabilities like these, in these heavenly and child- like features? |
39179 | Whom do you see that looks distinguished? |
39179 | Willis?" |
39179 | _ why_ was she_ pauvre Marie_? |
39179 | and who wrote her epitaph? |
39179 | may I take a glass of wine with you, sir?" |
39179 | or a description of her loveliest Maid of Honor, by one who had stood opposite her in a dance, and wrote it before he slept? |
39179 | said Hazlitt,"is n''t she fine!--isn''t she magnificent? |
11535 | And thus your free arms would ye give So tamely to a tyrant''s band, And with the hearts of vassals live In this, your chainless land? 11535 Is it possible, Herr Landlord,"asked our new companion,"that there is no bed here for us? |
11535 | When each conception was a heavenly guest-- a ray of immortality-- and stood star- like, around, until they gathered to a god? |
11535 | Why do n''t he take the railroad? |
11535 | Why should I speak to them? |
11535 | You are not then an Austrian? |
11535 | 29._--One day''s walk through Rome-- how shall I describe it? |
11535 | And what if I feel a new inspiration on beholding the scene? |
11535 | But who can build up_ an image of the Alp_? |
11535 | Every body in the house, in the street, over the whole city, shouted,_"Prosst Neu Jahr? |
11535 | He stared at me without comprehending;--"_your_ vessels?" |
11535 | How can I convey an idea of the scene? |
11535 | How make you comprehend its immortal beauty? |
11535 | How many fiery spirits, all glowing with hope for the yet unclouded future, or brooding over a darkened and desolate past in the agony of despair? |
11535 | How many who bear the impress of godlike virtue, or hide beneath a goodly countenance a heart black with crime? |
11535 | I knew it at once-- and those three Corinthian columns that stood near us-- what could they be but the remains of the temple of Jupiter Stator? |
11535 | Now what shall I say of it? |
11535 | One of the clerks came up, scowling at us, and asked in a rough tone,"What do you want here?" |
11535 | Say, can that heart of marble be at rest, Since spirit warms the stone? |
11535 | Say, would ye rather bend the knee Than for its freedom die? |
11535 | Shall Faith and Freedom vainly call, And Gmunden''s warrior- herdsmen fall On the red field in vain? |
11535 | Stopping for dinner at the large village of Wabern, a boy at the inn asked me if I was going to America? |
11535 | That was all-- but what more was needed? |
11535 | The Capitol, the Forum, St. Peter''s, the Coliseum-- what few hours''ramble ever took in places so hallowed by poetry, history and art? |
11535 | The German students have a witty trick with this echo: they call out,"Who is the Burgomaster of Oberwesel?" |
11535 | The Traun his brow is bent in pride-- He brooks no craven on his side-- Would ye be fettered then? |
11535 | The old priest, not wishing to trust himself to it, sent his younger brother up, and we shouted after him:--"What kind of a view have you?" |
11535 | These halls are worthy to hold such treasures, and what more could be said of them? |
11535 | To what shall I liken its glorious perfection of form, or the fire that imbues the cold marble with the soul of a god? |
11535 | We had then to wait at least four days; people are suspicious and mistrustful in cities, and if no relief should come, what was to be done? |
11535 | What could excel in beauty the_ Madonna della Sedia_ of Raphael? |
11535 | What country possesses more advantages to foster the growth of such an art, than ours? |
11535 | What is there in Europe-- nay, in the world,--equal to this? |
11535 | What joy can send The spirit thrilling onward with the wind, In untamed exultation, like the thought That fills the Homeward Bound? |
11535 | What knows he too of the thousands who pass him by? |
11535 | What son of the servile earth may dare Such signs of a regal power to wear, While chained to her darkened sod? |
11535 | What would the politicians who made such an outcry about the new papering of the President''s House, say to such a palace as this? |
11535 | When I am with any of my common fellow- laborers, what do I gain from them? |
11535 | Who knows not the name and fame and sufferings of the glorious bard? |
11535 | Why is it that Art has a voice frequently more powerful than Nature? |
11535 | Why should such magnificent creations of art be denied the new world? |
11535 | Will not those limbs, of so divine a mould, Move, when her thought is o''er-- When she has yielded to the tempter''s hold And Eden blooms no more? |
11535 | Would it not be better for some scores of our rich merchants to lay out their money on statues and pictures, instead of balls and spendthrift sons? |
11535 | said I;"is that the carriage you promised?" |
40238 | By the middle channel? |
40238 | Shall have you pottyto? |
40238 | What sort of pleasure, Monsieur, can you possibly hope to find in_ this_ place? |
40238 | --_Milton._ Does not a thought or two on such great things make other common things look small? |
40238 | After one or two locks this sort of travelling became so insufferable that I suddenly determined to change my plans entirely-- for is not one free? |
40238 | After ten miles an intelligent man said,"Distance from Paris? |
40238 | And so the question remained,"What is_ behind_ that wave?" |
40238 | Another Englishman at home asked me in all seriousness about the canoe voyage,"Was it not a great waste of time?" |
40238 | Are you going off to rest, and to recruit delicate health, or with vigour to enjoy a summer of active exertion? |
40238 | Bathing? |
40238 | But can it be an hotel? |
40238 | Can it be wise? |
40238 | Does he know the charms of a Nile boat, or a Trinity Eight, or a sail in the Ægean, or a mule in Spain? |
40238 | Emerging from trees we were right in the middle of the town, but where were the houses? |
40238 | Fishing? |
40238 | Has he swung upon a camel, or glided in a sleigh, or trundled in a Rantoone?" |
40238 | Here began a novel kind of astonishment among the people; for when, on my arrival, they asked,"Where have you come from?" |
40238 | I had not seen the boys, and so the women went away distracted, and left me sorrowful-- who would not be so at a woman''s tears, a mother''s too? |
40238 | I saw one raft in course of preparation, though there were not many boats, for as the men there said,"How could we get boats_ up_ that stream?" |
40238 | If birds''faces can give any expression of their opinions, it is certain that one of these herons was saying then to the others"Did you ever?" |
40238 | In Switzerland there was no objection raised, for was not I an English traveller? |
40238 | In fact, after he had laughed at the culprit''s caricatures, how could he gravely sentence him to penalties? |
40238 | Is it called the"News of the Wold,"or the"Gros Kembs Thunderer"? |
40238 | Is it quiet? |
40238 | Is it right? |
40238 | Is this to be a vacation of refreshment, or an idle lounge and killing of time? |
40238 | It may be asked, how such a low bridge fares in flood times? |
40238 | Kingston? |
40238 | Mortals must have some form of adoration, but there is the question, How much? |
40238 | Next, would it be just possible to float the boat past the rock while I might hold the painter from above? |
40238 | One after another the people came in to look at the queer stranger who was clad so oddly, and had come-- aye,_ how_ had he come? |
40238 | One comfort is the man made out my meaning, for did he not answer,"Ya vol?" |
40238 | One said, for example,"Do n''t you think it would have been more commodious to have had an attendant with you to look after your luggage and things?" |
40238 | Query.--Does this youthful carriage of the knapsack adapt boys for military service, and does it account for the high shoulders of many Germans? |
40238 | So what sort of dress did he wear? |
40238 | Surely this is an alarming proportion; and what should we say if Manchester had to report 100 men and women in one year who put themselves to death? |
40238 | The following notes are on miscellaneous points:--(_ a_) We are sometimes asked about such a canoe voyage as this,"Is it not very dangerous?" |
40238 | The man asked,"Is it a farce?" |
40238 | Then they looked right, left, before, behind, and upwards in all directions, except, of course, into the river, for why should they look_ there_? |
40238 | They said they had nothing to eat but kirchwasser, bread, and eggs, and how many eggs would I like? |
40238 | Three are probably safe, but which of these three is the shortest, deepest, and most practicable? |
40238 | Was it wrong to say this? |
40238 | We drew nearer to him, and"luffed up,"hailing him with,"What''s the matter?" |
40238 | Where can it be going, and whose is it? |
40238 | Who would think that Comorn, in Hungary, is stronger than Constantine? |
40238 | Will it be pleasant? |
40238 | a boat, up here in the hills? |
40238 | cloth, 5_s._"_ Who does not welcome Mr. W. H. G. Kingston? |
40238 | had they no windows, no lamps, not even a candle? |
40238 | or"Any room inside?" |
40238 | or"Got your life insured, Gov''nor?" |
38127 | A cream? 38127 Are they marble?" |
38127 | But what does the_ demonio_ get, Père Michel, for the trouble of revealing it to us? |
38127 | Can a baby a bey be? |
38127 | Charing Cross Hotel? 38127 Do n''t you want a little crayon to darken the hair?" |
38127 | How much will you give? |
38127 | How much? |
38127 | How much? |
38127 | How much? |
38127 | How much? |
38127 | Is the queen regretted? |
38127 | Story? 38127 That is Venice,"said the captain; and I replied with sincere surprise,"Is it possible?" |
38127 | The satisfaction of making men superstitious? |
38127 | What did you do with it? |
38127 | What does he play at-- cards or dice? |
38127 | What went ye out into the wilderness for to see? 38127 What will you do thereafter?" |
38127 | What, no candle? |
38127 | Who is this that blows so sharp a summons? |
38127 | Why did you not tell me so? |
38127 | Will you give four times the value of a thing, or five, or only twice? |
38127 | Will you go up to Tiberio? |
38127 | A man clothed in soft raiment? |
38127 | A prophet? |
38127 | A_ buona mano_? |
38127 | And of Père Isaak did I not know the polished, uncommunicative side which covered his intimate convictions, whatever they may have been? |
38127 | But give us absolutism, and take away education, even in rich and roomy America, and what shall we have? |
38127 | But the artist? |
38127 | But what is this commotion?" |
38127 | But what went ye out for to see? |
38127 | Did I not possess Father Michel''s views concerning the_ demonio_, as well as his version of the Book of Job? |
38127 | Do you know how much a donkey ride means in Sorrento? |
38127 | For Padre Giacomo had answered our invasion by a friendly call; and did we not now know him to be a most genial and hospitable person? |
38127 | Had we not, moreover, made ourselves familiar with his religion, on our late voyage, by frequent converse with two priests of his profession? |
38127 | Herbert Spencer? |
38127 | How many, among the multitudes who heard him, can we suppose to have been anxious about the moral lessons intended by his illustrious fables? |
38127 | Joachim? |
38127 | Mr. Carlyle? |
38127 | Our thoughts recurred forcibly to a dialogue long familiar in our own country:--"Wat''s dat darkening up de hole?" |
38127 | Presented at court? |
38127 | Shall boastful Secesh and blustering Yankee, or the sordid, shining shoddy fool stand for the American? |
38127 | The Armenian ladies, too,--had they not made me free of the guild? |
38127 | This we concede as quite possible; but does this go to show, O father, that the saint_ had_ any such power? |
38127 | What Paradise would console him for the burning of one of his_ chefs- d''oeuvre_? |
38127 | What good seed from your abundant harvest has ripened in my stony corner of New England? |
38127 | What have I kept of you? |
38127 | What is there in the world so helpless as a disarmed criminal? |
38127 | What more natural than that they should muffle new- born Greece in their own antiquated fashions? |
38127 | When shall we meet again? |
38127 | When, O, when does the bee make his honey? |
38127 | Who ever does? |
38127 | Why is this? |
38127 | Why only in the tufa? |
38127 | Would he receive his whole congregation, or a meeting of the clergy, or a company more mixed and fashionable? |
38127 | _ Facile descensus Averni._ Yes; but the_ ascensus_? |
38127 | _ Non c''e male, Père Michel._ And what, thought I, is the chief advantage of being pope, cardinal, arch- priest, confessor? |
38127 | a hair- wash?" |
38127 | a pomade? |
38127 | secondly, What do my countrymen who consent to pass their lives here gain? |
38127 | what do they give up? |
5690 | Ah,--Ferguson-- what did I understand you to say the gentleman''s name was? |
5690 | Ah-- did he write it himself; or-- or how? |
5690 | Ah-- is-- is he dead? |
5690 | Ah-- which is the bust and which is the pedestal? |
5690 | And now? |
5690 | As how? |
5690 | But what did they do with the wicked brother? |
5690 | How many departed monks were required to upholster these six parlors? |
5690 | It took a long time to get enough? |
5690 | Leave him there? |
5690 | Measles, likely? |
5690 | NE- VER? |
5690 | Parents living? |
5690 | Small- pox, think? |
5690 | The good Lord Luigi? |
5690 | What did he die of? |
5690 | Who were these people? |
5690 | Again:"Michael Angelo?" |
5690 | Ah, where is that lucky youth to- day, and where the little hand that wrote those dainty lines? |
5690 | And for what crime? |
5690 | And what was it and why did they choose it, particularly? |
5690 | And what wonder, when there are twelve hundred pictures by Palma the Younger in Venice and fifteen hundred by Tintoretto? |
5690 | And who painted these things? |
5690 | Beautiful? |
5690 | Born here?" |
5690 | But his heart said, Peace, is not thy brother watching over thy household? |
5690 | But what was this Venice to compare with the Venice of midnight? |
5690 | Christopher Colombo--pleasant name-- is-- is he dead?" |
5690 | Curse your indolent worthlessness, why do n''t you rob your church?" |
5690 | Do they think we are communing with a reserve force of rascals at the bottom? |
5690 | Frenchman, I presume?" |
5690 | He asked how much we supposed this Jupiter was worth? |
5690 | I asked the good- natured monk who accompanied us, who did this? |
5690 | I said at last:"Who is this Renaissance? |
5690 | If some of the others were set apart, might not they be beautiful? |
5690 | If this were set in the midst of the tempest of pictures one finds in the vast galleries of the Roman palaces, would I think it so handsome? |
5690 | Is it not possible that the reason I find such charms in this picture is because it is out of the crazy chaos of the galleries? |
5690 | Is it not so? |
5690 | Is the estate going to seed? |
5690 | Is, ah-- is he dead?" |
5690 | Is-- is this the first time this gentleman was ever on a bust?" |
5690 | It is impossible to travel through Italy without speaking of pictures, and can I see them through others''eyes? |
5690 | Later, cast them from the battlements-- or-- how many priests have ye on hand?" |
5690 | Marble?--plaster?--wood?--paper? |
5690 | Nearly seven hundred years ago, that castle was the property of the noble Count Luigi Gennaro Guido Alphonso di Genova----""What was his other name?" |
5690 | The doctor asks:"Michael Angelo?" |
5690 | The doctor put up his eye- glass-- procured for such occasions:"Ah-- what did you say this gentleman''s name was?" |
5690 | They assembled by hundreds, and even thousands, in the great Theatre of San Carlo, to do-- what? |
5690 | They buy, they sell, they manufacture, and since they pay no taxes, who can hope to compete with them? |
5690 | They were trying to keep from asking,"Is-- is he dead?" |
5690 | We look at it indifferently and the doctor asks:"By Michael Angelo?" |
5690 | Well, what did he do?" |
5690 | What can ye do? |
5690 | What is it that confers the noblest delight? |
5690 | What is that which swells a man''s breast with pride above that which any other experience can bring to him? |
5690 | What is there for me to feel, to learn, to hear, to know, that shall thrill me before it pass to others? |
5690 | What is there for me to touch that others have not touched? |
5690 | What is there in Rome for me to see that others have not seen before me? |
5690 | What would one naturally wish to see first in Venice? |
5690 | Where did he come from? |
5690 | Who gave him permission to cram the Republic with his execrable daubs?" |
5690 | You can not tell any of these parties apart, I suppose?" |
5690 | am I a dog that I am to be assailed with polysyllabled blasphemy like to this? |
5690 | and"Why do n''t you pad them shanks?" |
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?" |
39384 | Qui? |
39384 | Why? |
39384 | And now I might as well stop, for why attempt to describe what is, in fact, indescribable? |
39384 | But till I have the words, you would not wish me to be idle-- even if it were possible for me to be so? |
39384 | But to speak seriously, your child is scarcely six months old yet, and you can think of anything but Sebastian? |
39384 | But what does it matter? |
39384 | But why should Clauren be effaced from the literature of the day? |
39384 | Dear Rebecca, I went yesterday to the Chambre des Députés, and I must now tell you about it; but what do you care about the Chambre des Députés? |
39384 | Did you ever hear a G horn take the high G without a squeak? |
39384 | Do you mean to play something during the intervals to these people? |
39384 | Do you not think that this might develop into a new style of Cantata? |
39384 | Does not this notion please you? |
39384 | Fortunately you already know this valley, so there is no occasion for me to describe it to you; indeed, how could I possibly have done so? |
39384 | Has Zelter expressed this wish to you, or do you only imagine that he entertains it? |
39384 | Have you hitherto composed nothing on a greater scale; some wild symphony, or opera, or something of the kind? |
39384 | Have you read them? |
39384 | Having seen the pictures in the Louvre in the morning, I went to Baillot''s; so what chance is there of living in retirement? |
39384 | He certainly does not live in the Reichmann Hotel, nor next door; so where does he live? |
39384 | He supposed that I must have seen St. Peter''s? |
39384 | How can I describe the scene? |
39384 | How can I even try to describe it to you? |
39384 | How can a traveller with any experience possibly accept of a brother, who is also an ensign, in the place of a charming mother and sister? |
39384 | I also tried to sketch the Mönch; but what can you hope to do with a small pencil? |
39384 | I always fancy that the right man has not yet appeared; but what can I do to find him out? |
39384 | I declare to heaven that I am become quite tolerant, and listen to bad music with edification; but what can I do? |
39384 | I really can not compose a tolerable song here, for who is there to sing it to me? |
39384 | If a person be incapable of feeling true greatness, I should like to know how he intends to make_ me_ feel it? |
39384 | In a dark little hole on the ground floor, overlooking a small damp garden, where my feet are like ice, how can I possibly write music? |
39384 | In the forenoon? |
39384 | Is it prejudicial to any one that he should remain where he is? |
39384 | Is this new, arrogant, overbearing spirit, this perverse cynicism, as odious to you as it is to me? |
39384 | Of course you do n''t care for all this; but what of that? |
39384 | Perhaps very early in the morning? |
39384 | She certainly, as she acknowledges, learned much from Fodor; but why should not another German in turn learn the same from Sonntag? |
39384 | So when am I to compose? |
39384 | So you have had an_ émeute_ in Berlin? |
39384 | Tell me, Fanny, do you know Auber''s"Parisienne?" |
39384 | The word"Pater"with a little flourish, the"meum"with a little shake, the"ut quid me"--can this be called sacred music? |
39384 | Then[ Music: De- us me-- us, ut quid me de- re- li-- qui- sti? |
39384 | There is certainly no false expression in it, because there is_ none_ of any kind; but does not this very fact prove the desecration of the words? |
39384 | They urged another young man to join them, and when he said that he did not know how to sing, his friend rejoined,"Qu''est- ce que ça fait? |
39384 | This struck me as very remarkable, for in England they would have spoken exactly in the same way of Italy; but_ quo me rapis_? |
39384 | Unluckily the man replied,"I am General Ertmann: what is your pleasure?" |
39384 | What can be more grand or superb? |
39384 | What did it all mean? |
39384 | What is it that shines through the leaves, and glitters like gold? |
39384 | What the deuce made you think of setting your G horns so high? |
39384 | When I went at an early hour to take leave of Goethe, I found him seated beside a large portfolio, and he said,"So you are actually going away? |
39384 | When do you mean to send me something new to cheer me? |
39384 | Who can at such a moment think either of writing or music? |
39384 | Who can wonder that I find it impossible to return to my misty Scotch mood? |
39384 | Who can write or think with any degree of warmth? |
39384 | Who knows, however, whether we may not come here together in future years, and then think of this day, as we now do of former ones? |
39384 | Who would not have been confused by all this? |
39384 | Why pursue the subject? |
39384 | Why should I even attempt to portray it? |
39384 | Why then make them sound like a mere formula? |
39384 | _ Apropos_, shall I be lithographed full length? |
39384 | _ I._ Are you sure they came from Ischl? |
39384 | _ Per Bacco!_ if you had the inclination, you certainly have sufficient genius to compose, and if you have no desire to do so, why grumble so much? |
39384 | and do you read what is really good with less interest? |
39384 | and that, too, an_ émeute_ of tailors''apprentices? |
39384 | can you not procure the words of some songs, and send them to me? |
39384 | cried I; what name?--Don''t know.--Pereira? |
10939 | If we are successful,said they,"it can only be by means of the Allied Armies, and who knows what conditions they may impose on France? |
10939 | --"Worin liegt das Sonderbare, dass man reist um ein schönes Land zu sehen? |
10939 | At the line: Est il d''autre parti que celui de nos rois? |
10939 | But what can be expected from an army whose leader encourages them in all their excesses? |
10939 | Can not this war be avoided? |
10939 | Chi mi darà la voce e le parole Convenienti a si nobil soggetto? |
10939 | Er hatte doch zu essen und trinken so viel er wolte_( Why did he leave Elba? |
10939 | Have they forgotten the merciless barbarities inflicted by the Russians in the same war on the inhabitants of the Prussian territory? |
10939 | He then said to him:_ Du möchtestwissen wo dein Vater ist? |
10939 | How shall I describe the Simplon and the impressions that magnificent piece of work, the_ chaussée_ across it, made on my mind? |
10939 | I replied:_ Weil ich ein Engländer bin.--Sie ein Engländer? |
10939 | If you ask whose estate is that? |
10939 | In return for this what has Spain gained? |
10939 | In the meantime he has disbanded his troops, as he calls them; but will his troops obey him, now that he is a captive? |
10939 | Is not all this a confirmation of Doctor Gall''s theory on craniology? |
10939 | Is such conduct worthy of Republicans? |
10939 | Now tell me of any other residence which can equal this? |
10939 | Of the Picture Gallery too what can I say that can possibly give you an idea of its variety and extent? |
10939 | The Prussians reproach the Belgians with being in the French interest; how can they expect it to be otherwise? |
10939 | The_ Via Sacra_ recalled to me Horace meeting the_ bavard_ who addresses him:_ Quid agis, dulcissime rerum_? |
10939 | Were the times of Omar returned? |
10939 | What Neapolitan heart can resist such an appeal? |
10939 | What excuse can be offered for this? |
10939 | What is there strange in travelling to see a fine country?" |
10939 | What was the King to do? |
10939 | What would our vice- hunters say to this? |
10939 | Where has there ever reigned a better and more enlightened and more just and humane prince than Theodoric? |
10939 | Who the devil could invent such an ungraceful dress for a female? |
10939 | Why are the gondolas hung with black? |
10939 | Why is not the sanguinary English criminal code with death in every line-- why is it not reformed, I say? |
10939 | Why is such a valuable piece of sculpture not preserved in the Museum? |
10939 | Why so, will be asked? |
10939 | Why was he to be punished more than any other member of the Confederation of the Rhine? |
10939 | Would Prussia, Austria, or Hanover have been so scrupulous? |
10939 | [ 108] Has no royalist or ministerial poet been found to do hommage to her_ manes_? |
10939 | [ 123] Because I am an Englishman-- You are an Englishman? |
10939 | [ 124] Where is my father? |
10939 | [ 125]"You wish to know where your father is? |
10939 | [ 20]"What business have you? |
10939 | [ 26] In English:"Where is the country of the Germans? |
10939 | [ 52] Who will vouchsafe me voice that shall ascend As high as I would raise my noble theme? |
10939 | _ Quis gurges aut quae flumina lugubris Ignara belli? |
10939 | and the grossly unjust pillage and confiscation of property which took place at St Eustatius by the commanders of a_ religious and gracious King_? |
10939 | and when neither Russia nor Prussia were likely to give him the least assistance? |
10939 | qu''importe? |
10939 | sempre chiese? |
10939 | their employing the Indian tribes, those merciless savages of the forest, to scalp, etc., which called forth the indignation of a Chatham? |
10939 | their ripping up and burning men, women, and children? |
10939 | what a mighty magician is the ballet master Vigano, and as for the prima ballerina, Pallerini, what praises can equal her merit? |
10939 | whose castle is that? |
10939 | whose villa is that? |
10939 | will they not rather chuse another leader? |
13367 | And by what are yours? |
13367 | And to what shore,said I,"do you mean to sail?" |
13367 | And what is that? |
13367 | By what is he controlled? |
13367 | In what way,said I,"does it guarantee good work?" |
13367 | Of what voyage? |
13367 | Then tell me,I said,"whence do you believe these moments come? |
13367 | What cruise, then, are you about to take? |
13367 | What town? |
13367 | ***** Was I not right in saying that everywhere in the world one can look in and in and never find an end to one''s delight? |
13367 | ***** Was I not right in saying when I wrote about Ely that the corner of a corner of England is infinite, and can never be exhausted? |
13367 | And did old Richardson? |
13367 | And he said to me,"Mowing?" |
13367 | And what, thought I, is paid yearly in this town for such a roof as that? |
13367 | And why had the boat such a sprit? |
13367 | And will you give me half your onion?" |
13367 | And yet... what is that in me which makes me regret the Griffin, the real Griffin at which they would not let me stay? |
13367 | And you, since you reject my guess at what may be reserved for us, tell me, what is the End which we shall attain?" |
13367 | Are there such men? |
13367 | But as for all those functions which we but half fulfil in life, surely elsewhere they can not be fulfilled at all? |
13367 | But she drew little water? |
13367 | But which of you who talk so loudly about the island race and the command of the sea have had such a day? |
13367 | But who lives above his shop since Richardson died? |
13367 | Did she leak? |
13367 | Do you ferret him? |
13367 | Do you hunt him with dogs? |
13367 | Do you stalk him? |
13367 | For whoever yet that was alive reached an end and could say he was satisfied? |
13367 | Have you money to pay? |
13367 | He said: Could I not see that the man was cleaning the bridge? |
13367 | He:"Yet these things would not be, but for the mind which receives them; and how can we make sure what channels are necessary for the mind? |
13367 | How long will his agony crush men with its despair?" |
13367 | How many deities have we not summoned up to inhabit groves and lakes-- special deities who are never seen, but yet have never died? |
13367 | How many men, I should like to know, have discovered before thirty what treasures they may work in her air? |
13367 | I said: When would that be? |
13367 | I will do what the poets and the prophets have always done, and satisfy myself with vision, and( who knows?) |
13367 | If there were no such thirst, why should you and I debate such things, or come here to The Lion either of us, to taste antiquity? |
13367 | In what way did we begin to form this difficult place, which is neither earth nor water, and in which we might have despaired? |
13367 | In what were we to put to sea? |
13367 | Into what place have we come?" |
13367 | Is there such an influence? |
13367 | MYSELF(_ angrily pointing to an enormous field with a little new house in the middle_): Who owns that? |
13367 | MYSELF(_ as though full of interest_): Then you set your drills to sow deep about here? |
13367 | MYSELF:"Well, then, what is the End?" |
13367 | MYSELF:(_ cheerfully_): A sort of loam? |
13367 | Now, a man who recognises this truth will ask,"Where could I find a model of the past of that Europe? |
13367 | One of them said to me,"Knight, can your grace sing?" |
13367 | So I asked him:"Are you from Ireland, or from Brittany, or from the Islands?" |
13367 | So I drifted in the slow ebb past the South Goodwin, and I thought:"What is all this drifting and doing nothing? |
13367 | St. Wilfrid then in some contempt said again:"Why do you not make nets?" |
13367 | St. Wilfrid, shrugging his shoulders, said:"Why do they not eat fish?" |
13367 | The Griffin painted green: the real rooms, the real fire... the material beer? |
13367 | The other said:"How long will the death of this crucified god linger? |
13367 | The words were these:-- MYSELF: This land wanted draining, did n''t it? |
13367 | Their names? |
13367 | Their names? |
13367 | Then I said to him:"What day is this?" |
13367 | Then I said to him:"What river are we upon, and what valley is this?" |
13367 | Then I said to my companion,"There are, I know, two mouths to this harbour, a northern and a southern; which shall we take?" |
13367 | Then I said,"You sing and so advertise your trade?" |
13367 | Then he asked, with evident anxiety:"Is there no inn about here where a man like me will be taken in?" |
13367 | Then one of the two, who had long guessed by my dress and face from what country I came, said to me:"And you, how is it in your country?" |
13367 | Then, as being next the gate, I again called out: When might we pass? |
13367 | Then: MYSELF: Who owns the land about here? |
13367 | They cross it now and then, and they forget it; but who, unless he be a son or a lover, has really known that plain? |
13367 | They gave themselves a hundred names!__"Well, well,"you say to me then,"no matter about the names: what are names? |
13367 | They have been written of enough to- day, but who has seen them from close by or understood that brilliant interlude of power? |
13367 | Through this entanglement you are told to creep as best you can, and if you can not( who could?) |
13367 | Was a boat about to pass? |
13367 | Were these two men not much of an age? |
13367 | Were they not indeed a people?... |
13367 | Where else, thought I, in England could you say that nine years would make no change? |
13367 | Where is Labbé?" |
13367 | Which way? |
13367 | Why was it open thus? |
13367 | Why? |
13367 | Will you take some of my money?" |
13367 | Yet who has not desired so to reach an end and to be satisfied? |
13367 | _ Quid dicam?_ A Sprit of Erebus. |
13367 | and may not the mind stretch on? |
16445 | Are you a Florentine, pray friend, said I? |
16445 | What do they do to make you hate them so? |
16445 | You have lived some years in England, friend, said I, do you like it? |
16445 | _ Io penso maestà che non è cattivo suddito del principi,_replied the master,"_ quantunque farà gran nemico di giove._""How so?" |
16445 | _ Who says the modern Romans are degenerated? 16445 --Mais non, madame, pas parfaitement bien[L]"--"You have travelled much in Italy, do you like that better?" |
16445 | Are the modern inhabitants still more refined than_ they_ in their researches after pleasure? |
16445 | At the Colonna palace what have I remarked? |
16445 | But are we sure after all it was upon the_ banks_ these trees, not now existing, were ever to be found? |
16445 | But if it_ was_ painted by St. Luke, said I, what then? |
16445 | But who can bear to lay their laurels by? |
16445 | But why so? |
16445 | FOOTNOTES:[ Footnote O: How goes the profession?] |
16445 | FOOTNOTES:[ Footnote X: If it were not a dear little pretty commonwealth-- this?] |
16445 | For when a Florentine asked me, how I came to cry so? |
16445 | For who would risque the making impromptu poems at Paris? |
16445 | He asked me, if I did not find_ Padua la dotta_ a very stinking nasty town? |
16445 | Here is no appearance of spring yet, though so late in the year; what must it be in England? |
16445 | I enquired why they gave him no companion? |
16445 | I stumbled on his strange apartment by mere chance, and asked him why he had chosen it? |
16445 | I thought she might be somebody''s kept mistress, and asked him whose? |
16445 | It is so long since I have seen the word, that even the letters of it rejoice my heart; but how the panther came to be its emblem, who can tell? |
16445 | Of Trajan and Antonine''s Pillars what can one say? |
16445 | Or in London, at the hazard of being_ taken off, and held up for a laughing- stock at every print- seller''s window_? |
16445 | Peter, said I, to my own man, as we came out,_ chi è quella dama? |
16445 | Shall we fancy there is Gothic and Grecian to be found even among the animals? |
16445 | Tell me then, pray good girl, and tell me quickly, what did you expect to see? |
16445 | The ladies indeed appear to study but_ one_ science; And where the lesson taught Is but to please, can pleasure seem a fault? |
16445 | To the busy Englishman they might well apply these verses of his own Milton in the Masque of Comus: What have we with day to do? |
16445 | We are not_ people of fashion_ though you know, nor at all rich; so how should we set fashions for our betters? |
16445 | When I first looked on the Rialto, with what immediate images did it supply me? |
16445 | When the Duchess of Montespan asked the famous Louison D''Arquien, by way of insult, as she pressed too near her,"_ Comment alloit le metier_[O]?" |
16445 | Who knows thy favour''d haunts to name? |
16445 | Why Guido should never draw another picture like that, or at all in the same style, who can tell? |
16445 | Why did it put me in mind of Hogarth''s strolling actresses dressing in a barn? |
16445 | Will Naples, the original seat of Ulysses''s seducers, shew us any thing stronger than this? |
16445 | [ Footnote: What''s the matter, my lady?] |
16445 | _ Qu''est ce donc, madame_? |
16445 | _ pour s''attirer persiflage_ in every_ Coterie comme il faut_[Footnote: To draw upon one''s self the ridicule of every polite assembly.]? |
16445 | and are the present race of ladies capable of increasing, beyond that of their ancestors, the keenness of any corporeal sense? |
16445 | and when will they begin to change? |
16445 | cries he, what''s here to do? |
16445 | do you think_ he_, or the still more excellent person it was done for, would approve of your worshipping any thing but God? |
16445 | how shall I consent to quit this lovely city? |
16445 | might yield as much as an ordinary cow? |
16445 | or is not that_ too_ fanciful? |
16445 | or should it serve as a reason for making disgraceful comparisons between Ariosto and Virgil, whom he scorned to imitate? |
16445 | said I, are not you much surprised?--"It is a fine sight, to be sure,"replied she coldly,"but,"--but what? |
16445 | who is that lady? |
21499 | But in the event of the complete ruin of the rest of Germany, would it not be to the advantage of Bavaria to accept the idea of a separate State? |
21499 | But what does it matter whether Europe lives if her young daughter Hungary survives her? |
21499 | But why not a Disraeli? |
21499 | Do you not think Holy Russia will reassert herself? 21499 Do you think European civilization will fall?" |
21499 | Do you think that what is left of Austria ought to be divided up between her neighbours? |
21499 | Every one came in to win, but nearly every one is losing-- isn''t it like life? |
21499 | Has Austria a national spirit? 21499 How much do you expect to get for this?" |
21499 | How? |
21499 | I suppose by the great secret you mean the love of God? 21499 Is that not similar?" |
21499 | On foot? |
21499 | Poland? 21499 Russia?" |
21499 | So what do you say? |
21499 | So you are all Bolsheviks here? |
21499 | We often receive letters from our people in Roumania, Czecho- Slovakia and Jugo- Slavia, saying''Why do you not come over and protect us?'' |
21499 | Well, Count? |
21499 | What do you think of the Patriarch of Moscow? 21499 What do you think? |
21499 | What, no tips now? |
21499 | Which of these rivers is the Danube? |
21499 | Who is that? |
21499 | Whom have you hope in now? |
21499 | Why do you not take the step yourself? |
21499 | Why is that? |
21499 | Why''s that? |
21499 | Would you like to have tea? |
21499 | You are going back to your hospital camp-- how will you go? |
21499 | You do compulsory communal labour in the fields every year, do you not? |
21499 | You want a room very badly, do n''t you? |
21499 | ( Quo Vadis Europa?) |
21499 | And have there not been many babies born whose nationality has remained long in doubt, pending plebiscites and decisions of the Supreme Council? |
21499 | And if she embraces Croats and Slovenes why not Bulgars, too? |
21499 | And then will he not come back and receive the greatest honour? |
21499 | And what shall we say of the other clay sparrows? |
21499 | And, in any case, who cares? |
21499 | Are we then through with everything? |
21499 | Ask anyone, Did we want the last war? |
21499 | At last a hotel was found and located, and when the cabman had brought my things from the station and one asked timidly:"How much?" |
21499 | But do rectors of theological academies have faith? |
21499 | But if a new Germany, what will it be like and wherein will it excel? |
21499 | But if we can shake hands with Bolsheviks why not with Germans? |
21499 | But the after- thought was, when he went away-- What did he come for? |
21499 | But these wars, what is the use of them: does anyone ever gain anything by them?" |
21499 | But, having registered the whole Polish population, what then? |
21499 | Can it be that Paris has become first- class and London has ceased to be first- class? |
21499 | Davidson would query when he saw him, and smile cheeringly;"anything fresh?" |
21499 | Do they look like flying? |
21499 | Do we ever get anything out of wars? |
21499 | Does not Switzerland exist by herself, and do very well, without half the natural advantages of the new Austria?" |
21499 | Does the heart respond to its name?" |
21499 | EUROPE-- WHITHER BOUND? |
21499 | England is a democracy, but what is the virtue of a democracy which languishes in ignorance? |
21499 | FROM PARIS EUROPE-- WHITHER BOUND? |
21499 | How can we be mutually serviceable to one another? |
21499 | How can we help one another to do more business? |
21499 | How can youth understand those who are old? |
21499 | How then about Poland with 4000 marks to the pound-- an Allied country with a close understanding with France? |
21499 | I have all my travelling expenses in my pocket-- what if I get infected and put all on to a number? |
21499 | If there is no progress why have a mission to civilize? |
21499 | Is England going to develop a new caste system which the commonalty will have to fight? |
21499 | Is it not a characteristic paradox of life that babies should keep coming into a world that can not find room for the parents? |
21499 | Is the blood of all of us a little distempered? |
21499 | It may be asked, had he lost his faith, too? |
21499 | It might be asked what interest has France to support Poland-- is it sentiment? |
21499 | On the other hand, is not France financing Hungary-- the eternal potential enemy of Jugo- Slavia?" |
21499 | Perhaps they are paid for it? |
21499 | Roumania?" |
21499 | Says a lady,"Well, padre, can you tell us the great secret?" |
21499 | Shall he expire And unavenged? |
21499 | Should we present as brave a front?" |
21499 | Such is modern travel in Europe, and I felt rather amused when the question was put to me,"Are you travelling for pleasure or on business?" |
21499 | The question is, can Greece cut herself to fit-- ought she to? |
21499 | Under such circumstances is it surprising that there is stagnation of peoples in Europe? |
21499 | Was it not perhaps to flatter Serbia into undertaking a part in some new war, perhaps against the German, perhaps against the Soviets? |
21499 | What does it matter about the public? |
21499 | What does it matter now? |
21499 | What is the matter? |
21499 | What then, is the game in Europe? |
21499 | What would happen if suddenly the familiar face of Wilhelm the Second confronted that gathering of Germans? |
21499 | What''s human wisdom by the side of Chance? |
21499 | When will she be disenchanted again? |
21499 | When you come? |
21499 | Who has? |
21499 | Who was Nietzsche? |
21499 | Why do you go on fighting?'' |
21499 | Why not try human action? |
21499 | Why not, then, try love? |
21499 | Why should she? |
21499 | Why? |
21499 | Would he show the Kaiser? |
21499 | You come off a ship? |
21499 | You know the famous lines of Solovyof:''O Russia, what sort of an East will you be, the East of Xerxes or the East of Christ?''" |
47644 | ''Ye''ll be tryin''anither kirk the morn?'' 47644 I suppose you repeated the remark you made at luncheon, that the ladies you had seen in Princes Street were excessively plain?" |
47644 | Is that Christianity? |
47644 | Sound your own soul,was his reply;"are you prepared to be chased into exile with your children, and to see your husband hunted to the death? |
47644 | Then,continues the Inquisitive Person,"Peter was married?" |
47644 | What did he say to that? |
47644 | What note? |
47644 | What, then,some one may ask,"do the good people in that church think of all the immoralities and frauds that it has condoned and fostered?" |
47644 | You naturally inveighed against the Scotch climate? |
47644 | ''Wha did he hear the Sawbath that''s bye? |
47644 | ''Worships the sun?'' |
47644 | *****[ Sidenote: Do American Roman Catholics Believe in the Relics?] |
47644 | And do you know who it was that won the day for William on the banks of the Boyne? |
47644 | And has not his action, like Dean Sprat''s, defeated itself? |
47644 | And while we are discussing these matters,''he went on,''how is your American dyspepsia these days-- have you decided what is the cause of it?''" |
47644 | But are not their seniors equally indifferent about having Bibles in the regular service? |
47644 | But can it maintain itself against the priests? |
47644 | But what of all this? |
47644 | C.?'' |
47644 | Div ye ken the new asseestant? |
47644 | Do we owe the Huguenots anything? |
47644 | Does this mean that he jilted the girl, or that she discarded him for losing her ring? |
47644 | Dr. A.? |
47644 | F.? |
47644 | Giles? |
47644 | Has this improvement come about because the church is really growing better? |
47644 | Hear ye him?" |
47644 | How can a man without Greek master the New Testament in the original? |
47644 | I. P.:"Do the Popes still marry?" |
47644 | IS THE SCOTTISH CHARACTER DEGENERATING? |
47644 | IS THE SCOTTISH CHARACTER DEGENERATING? |
47644 | If so, for what purpose? |
47644 | In like manner the London newsboys say,"Pipers, sir?" |
47644 | Is it not clear that no man can be a thoroughly furnished minister who has not studied Greek? |
47644 | Mr. D.? |
47644 | Reluctant, did I say? |
47644 | She returned from the dinner, at which she had met him, all out of sorts:"How did you get on with your delightful minister?" |
47644 | Some years ago a child was asked,"Who is the Prime Minister of England?" |
47644 | The brotherhood of man-- how else shall it ever be fully and permanently brought about, except through men''s knowledge of the Fatherhood of God? |
47644 | The first speaker was somewhat taken aback, but recovered himself sufficiently to say,"Well, my lord, can you tell me the way to heaven?" |
47644 | The fleeing apostle exclaimed in amazement,"_ Domine, quo vadis?_"( Lord, whither goest thou? |
47644 | The fleeing apostle exclaimed in amazement,"_ Domine, quo vadis?_"( Lord, whither goest thou? |
47644 | Was there ever such turf in the whole world? |
47644 | Was''n''t that unendurable? |
47644 | We have not purchased any yet-- but who can tell? |
47644 | Were they placed here by the Druids? |
47644 | What is it that has given this venerable Presbyterian city this proud position, next to London? |
47644 | When we inquired at Oxford for a Presbyterian church, the maid- servant said,"That is Protestant, is n''t it?" |
47644 | Where could be found people so eager to listen to the preaching of the gospel, and to have their children taught its lessons? |
47644 | Where in the whole world could be found so promising a mission field-- one ready to yield such rich returns? |
47644 | Why should there be such a plague spot in the heart of Edinburgh? |
47644 | Why should there not be at least as good a supply of Bibles in a church as of hymn- books? |
47644 | Why should there not be street scavengers like those who keep even the small towns in France and Germany quite free from that kind of litter? |
47644 | Why? |
47644 | Will it endure? |
47644 | Will this unification continue? |
47644 | [ Sidenote: Are Virginia Episcopalians Becoming Less Liberal?] |
47644 | inquired Salemina...."He was quite the handsomest man in the room; who is he?" |
47644 | institutions? |
47644 | yet?'' |
2024 | And what did you do then? |
2024 | And what do you think of the performance_ as_ a performance? |
2024 | And what shall I say after I have said all that? |
2024 | Any Hebrew or Chinese? |
2024 | Are you in bed? |
2024 | But what is the use of saying anything about it at all? |
2024 | Ca n''t we have our mugs open if we like? |
2024 | Come,he says, kindly, trying to lead me on,"what did you think about it?" |
2024 | Do you believe it can be done, then? |
2024 | Do you believe them-- the persons that you say tell you these tales? |
2024 | Does it_ get_ anywhere? |
2024 | Does the whole distance in two and a quarter hours? 2024 Gets to Heidelberg at 4?" |
2024 | Have you got an order, then? |
2024 | How am I going to sleep in that? |
2024 | How do you feel now? |
2024 | How is your mother? |
2024 | How will this do us? 2024 If that''s all these foreigners can manage in their own country, what right have they to come over here, as they do, and grumble about our weather?" |
2024 | Is not Friday rather an unlucky day to start on? |
2024 | Leige-- see the citadel? 2024 My dear fellow,"he rejoined,"do you think I should suggest paying if it were possible to get in by any other means? |
2024 | Please can you tell me,we would say,"the nearest way to the door of the third- class refreshment room?" |
2024 | Savoury? |
2024 | Sure? |
2024 | Well, then where are the clothes? |
2024 | What could have induced these old fellows,I said to B.,"to choose such very uninteresting subjects? |
2024 | What do you mean,''we sit with our mugs open''? |
2024 | What has that to do with you? |
2024 | What should I want to do that for? |
2024 | What''s the good of it to us, then? |
2024 | Why? |
2024 | Yes, but so has the gentleman whose seat you have taken got to get there,I remonstrated;"what about him? |
2024 | Yes,I say, looking over his shoulder;"but do n''t you see the 4 is in thick type? |
2024 | You did n''t throw it out of the window with your sandwiches, did you? |
2024 | ( Is it retribution?) |
2024 | ( The first thing that we ask of men is their faith:"What do you believe?" |
2024 | After all, what does it matter what I say? |
2024 | And whereabouts is this extraordinary theatre? |
2024 | Are you used to long railway journeys?" |
2024 | Berlin, Paris, Brussels, Copenhagen? |
2024 | Besides, if anyone has landed, where is he? |
2024 | But what do I want to say? |
2024 | Cologne, Antwerp, Calais? |
2024 | Could we not have bigger basins and more water and more extensive towels? |
2024 | Describe the funeral? |
2024 | Do n''t you see it''s printed in thick type? |
2024 | Do you see any objection to the play from a religious point of view?" |
2024 | Do you think I''m a fool?" |
2024 | Eliminating, by a strong effort, all traces of nervousness from his voice, he calls out in a tone of wonderful coolness:"Yes, what is it?" |
2024 | Frankfort for Strasburg? |
2024 | Have you any objection to my being English?" |
2024 | Have you him to see where? |
2024 | He said( in Scandinavian, of course):"You speak Norwegian?" |
2024 | He says:"Where''s the bed?" |
2024 | He smokes for a while in silence, and then, taking the pipe from his lips, he says:"Does it matter very much what you say about it?" |
2024 | Here?" |
2024 | Him to see-- anybody-- where?" |
2024 | How on earth were we ever to find each other again? |
2024 | I said:"My friend-- big, great, tall, large-- is he where? |
2024 | I said:"Who''s put me over here? |
2024 | I wonder why it goes round by Brussels, though? |
2024 | Is he where? |
2024 | Is she taking advantage of his being a lonely stranger, far from home and friends, to mock him? |
2024 | Leaves Darmstadt for Heidelberg 5.20, gets to--""That does n''t allow us much time for changing, does it?" |
2024 | Now, tell me, what part of Europe are you going to?" |
2024 | Nuremberg? |
2024 | Of what advantage will it be to us then that we smoked these cigars to- day?" |
2024 | PREFACE Said a friend of mine to me some months ago:"Well now, why do n''t you write a_ sensible_ book? |
2024 | Query, is n''t there a song about this? |
2024 | She said would we call again in about a fortnight''s time, when the family would be at home? |
2024 | We have just finished a light repast of-- what do you think? |
2024 | Well then, where does the 1.45 go to? |
2024 | Well, if it is the bed, then what is it doing out here, on the top of everything else? |
2024 | Well, where does it stop? |
2024 | What can I say that has not been said, and said much better, already? |
2024 | What can I say that the reader does not know, or that, not knowing, he cares to know? |
2024 | What can be expected from such a train? |
2024 | What do you think we are going to do-- camp out?" |
2024 | What does it matter what any of us says about anything? |
2024 | What does it want?" |
2024 | What earthly enjoyment was there in travelling-- being jolted about in stuffy trains, and overcharged at uncomfortable hotels? |
2024 | What had become of him? |
2024 | What is the German for savoury?" |
2024 | What is the use of people giving you advice if you do n''t take it?" |
2024 | When do you start?" |
2024 | Who did he expect was going to buy it? |
2024 | Why did n''t you call out before?" |
2024 | Why should I be a slave and work?" |
2024 | Will you come?" |
2024 | Wurtzburg? |
2024 | You do n''t know any Sanscrit or Chaldean, do you?" |
2024 | and helped the tale along by such ejaculations as,"No, did he though?" |
2024 | answers the station- master, surprised,"where did it come from?" |
2024 | he retorted quite sharply,"what rubbish next? |
2024 | on top?" |
2024 | or,"Was that on the Monday or the Tuesday, then?" |
2024 | the bed, is it? |
2024 | what''s this?" |
41233 | ''Ave you hordered breakfast, sir? |
41233 | Any letters for me? |
41233 | Are you going to bring my breakfast? |
41233 | Are you the Mr.----, mentioned here? |
41233 | Bill, sir, or letter of credit? |
41233 | But Dublin-- are you going to describe Dublin? |
41233 | But some win? |
41233 | But where is Lombard Street? |
41233 | But where is the Lion''s Mouth? |
41233 | But where,asked I, looking about on every side,"where is his monument?" |
41233 | But will signore go down and see the others? |
41233 | Can we have some ale and crackers? |
41233 | Captain, is n''t there a private state- room? 41233 Dost thou lie so low? |
41233 | For what price does monsieur expect to obtain such beautiful articles? |
41233 | Hale, sir? 41233 Hallo, Binks!--is that you? |
41233 | How long will it take to make it? |
41233 | How much money do you want? |
41233 | How much? |
41233 | Is it not possible? |
41233 | Is this the Messrs. Barings''counting- house? |
41233 | No; I mean any letters from home-- from America-- to my address? |
41233 | O, I am to get the money at 80 Lombard Street-- am I? |
41233 | Shoulders back there, four; do you call that pulling? 41233 Signore Inglese"( exhibiting his wares),"you buy him? |
41233 | Sir? |
41233 | Sir? |
41233 | Stay, passenger; who goest thou by so fast? 41233 There is n''t a nook in the ship(? |
41233 | Vat you give me for him? |
41233 | Was there no other accommodation than the deck,with its suggestive pile of wash- bowls? |
41233 | Waterloo to- morrow, sir? |
41233 | What will you please to horder, sir? |
41233 | When would monsieur''s party be ready? |
41233 | Will monsieur ride now? |
41233 | Wines extra? |
41233 | Would you like to visit Waterloo to- morrow, sir? 41233 _ Binkwychiple?_""I want to go to the Bank,"said I. |
41233 | And the great lace establishments there? |
41233 | And who is England''s king but great York''s heir?" |
41233 | Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils Shrunk to this little measure?" |
41233 | As he appears at the window of the first- class carriage, he politely touches his hat:--"All are for London in this compartment? |
41233 | Bread and cheese, sir?" |
41233 | But if the roof was so beautiful, what must be the appearance of the interior of this great temple? |
41233 | But were we to be disappointed in the sunset? |
41233 | But what is in other shops? |
41233 | But whither shall we go? |
41233 | Can it be that here I stand And gaze, as thou, upon the self- same things? |
41233 | Can it be there is sleighing here, and this is a party returning home? |
41233 | Cöln is not a great change from Cologne, but who would recognize München for Munich, or Wien for Vienna? |
41233 | Did we buy lace in Brussels? |
41233 | How are you? |
41233 | How long had they been there? |
41233 | How long would a hotel in America be patronized that made its guest wait one half that time for four times as elaborate a repast? |
41233 | How many"old men"will believe the last line of this pandering lie to the ruddy- headed queen? |
41233 | How much does it cost to go to Europe? |
41233 | Is it to be wondered at that so many people quote Byron at this place? |
41233 | Is the game made? |
41233 | Is the king dead? |
41233 | Is the sword unswayed? |
41233 | Look alive here, will you?" |
41233 | Must it not be nice to stand knee- deep in Cashmere shawls?" |
41233 | Now, which way to turn? |
41233 | That''s gone; but what is this distant tinkle? |
41233 | The old churchyard of Grayfriars contains many curious monuments, and here, on an old sun- dial, I found this inscription:--"I mark time; dost thou? |
41233 | The prices above given being about the average at the leading theatres, what does the reader expect he will have to pay for the opera? |
41233 | There is a home park to Windsor Castle; and how large, think you, American reader, is this home park for British royalty? |
41233 | This is the solid, old- fashioned comfort(?) |
41233 | To be sure the pane of glass was little larger than a sheet of foolscap; but we must pay what the proprietor charged; and was he not a Jew? |
41233 | What heir of York is there alive but we? |
41233 | Where is it one goes first on arrival in London? |
41233 | Where to go next? |
41233 | Which was the pillar the younger brother was chained to? |
41233 | Who ever heard of a man''s picking his teeth after eating ice- cream? |
41233 | Why should not the names of foreign cities be spelled and pronounced, in English, as near like their real designation as possible? |
41233 | can it be that there are any worse than these?" |
41233 | said I to the guide,"is this the very lamp?" |
41233 | the empire unpossessed? |
41233 | these ladies, gentle creatures, with faultless costume, ravishing boots, dainty toilets, and the very butterflies of fashion? |
26952 | ''Well, a day is before me now; Yet what,''thought she,''can I do, if I try? 26952 All ready?" |
26952 | And English? |
26952 | And can you go down into any depth of water? |
26952 | And did you never have any hair- breadth escapes, or thrilling adventures? |
26952 | And when the rocks are blown, what do you do with the pieces that come off? |
26952 | And where is my daughter''s brave protector and deliverer? |
26952 | And where were they when he wrote? |
26952 | Are they? |
26952 | But how can you fire them under the water? |
26952 | But may not Eric take her? |
26952 | But suppose there should be another war,said Eric;"what would their defence be?" |
26952 | But tell me,cried Eric, eagerly,"how does he breathe? |
26952 | But the question is, my boy,_ Can_ I trust you? |
26952 | But, papa, ca n''t you take us away? 26952 By ourselves? |
26952 | Could you not find any of them? |
26952 | Do you know me? |
26952 | Do you speak French? |
26952 | Do you? |
26952 | Eric Hyde? |
26952 | Eric, my boy,he added,"have you no word for papa?" |
26952 | For example, what do you say to two gentlemen? |
26952 | German? |
26952 | How do they light the streets, papa? |
26952 | How is Johnny? 26952 How?" |
26952 | Is it a mile? |
26952 | Is it quite correct English? |
26952 | Is it yours? |
26952 | Is n''t Mrs. Hyde coming? |
26952 | Is that your horse? |
26952 | Is the little girl hurt? |
26952 | It is n''t anything like as nice as our street cars-- is it? |
26952 | It was singular-- wasn''t it? |
26952 | Mamma, if our streets were like these, would n''t you fret for our precious necks every time we looked out of a window? 26952 Nettie, did you mean the train was in a knot?" |
26952 | O, then she hears the lark in the skies, And thinks,''What is it to God he says?'' 26952 Of course,"said Nettie;"but if we stay here all day, talking about ghosts, what will become of our pets and toys?" |
26952 | The little monkey? 26952 The_ minister_?" |
26952 | Then little Cristelle sat up and smiled, And said,''Who put these flowers in my hand?'' 26952 There is a valve inside: what is that for?" |
26952 | Uncle John, are you a tester? |
26952 | Uncle John, how_ could_ it have got there? 26952 Uncle John, if you have n''t seen the doctor or Johnny, how_ did_ you find me?" |
26952 | Uncle John,said Eric, the next morning,"do you think of going through Strasbourg, when we leave for Munich?" |
26952 | Well, how have you been, excepting the mumps? |
26952 | Well, what is all this nonsense? |
26952 | Were you ever in great danger? |
26952 | What are they? |
26952 | What did he mean? |
26952 | What did the doctor say, Eric? |
26952 | What is it that I can do for you, sir? |
26952 | What is it, my dear? |
26952 | What is your name? |
26952 | What keeps the powder dry? |
26952 | When you blow up the rocks, do you place the charges under them? |
26952 | Where are we going, mamma? |
26952 | Where did you find the ring, Johnny? |
26952 | Where is your sacque? |
26952 | Who would have thought it, when little Cristelle Pondered on what the preacher had told? 26952 Who would have thought of seeing you here?" |
26952 | Who''s forgotten anything? |
26952 | Why did you fear the king, little maid? |
26952 | Why do they have more than one pump? |
26952 | Why? |
26952 | Will you please to inquire about it, and see that it reaches the owner? |
26952 | Yes,answered Johnny;"is n''t he a good one?" |
26952 | _ Is_ he a good one? |
26952 | 365 Vyverberg House._"Who in the world,"thought Eric,"is Emil Lacelle? |
26952 | ARE YOU INTERESTED IN BUGS? |
26952 | And now she watches the pathway, As yestereve she had done; But what does she see so strange and black Against the rising sun? |
26952 | Are two defenceless American boys, your guests, to be openly insulted in your presence without protection?" |
26952 | But presently Eric, turning to speak to him, exclaimed,--"Where in the world is Johnny?" |
26952 | But there was just a chance that the doctor might be delayed at Paris; and if it should so happen, what would Eric do? |
26952 | But where_ can_ my other boot be?" |
26952 | But would you not rather stay and prove satisfactorily to all that you did not? |
26952 | But, then-- how could it be so? |
26952 | Can you be ready in two hours?" |
26952 | Do n''t you see, Nettie?" |
26952 | Do n''t you think so?" |
26952 | Do n''t you, Eric?" |
26952 | Do the dikes ever give way?" |
26952 | Do you know who wrote it?" |
26952 | Eric turned indignantly to the landlord,--"What is the meaning of all this? |
26952 | Eric was completely puzzled, and could only say,"Sir?" |
26952 | Her real name was Frolic; but who ever heard children call a pet by its real name? |
26952 | How could the ring and money have happened in their room, and for what purposes? |
26952 | How in the world did the things get into this room?" |
26952 | Is not that an innocent face? |
26952 | Might it not have been just possible that they did find the ring upon the floor, and did not know of the money''s concealment? |
26952 | Now, therefore, if I tell to you that which I want written, would you be so very kind, if you please, as to write for me, it?" |
26952 | O, what shall we do? |
26952 | PARLEZ VOUS FRANCAIS? |
26952 | Should he run home and alarm the villagers? |
26952 | Uncle John, what could he have meant?" |
26952 | Was n''t_ that_ enough to confuse the best bred child in the world? |
26952 | We often blast rocks under the water--""How can you?" |
26952 | What could he do to prevent such terrible ruin-- he, only a little boy? |
26952 | What do they do in dark nights?" |
26952 | When Eric returned to Gravenhaag, whom should he see but his uncle, Mr. Van Rasseulger? |
26952 | Where have I heard that name, Eric?" |
26952 | Will you come with me? |
26952 | Will you do me the honor to amuse yourself here until I return?" |
26952 | Wo n''t she be surprised to see me walk into the parlor, and to hear the whole story from me?" |
26952 | _ Outside_ their windows?" |
26952 | a bon chat, bon rat!_"[2]"What have cats and rats to do with it?" |
26952 | and the ring, too?" |
26952 | and what did he send this to me for?" |
26952 | asked Nettie,"and how far?" |
26952 | cried poor Mrs. Hyde, in agony,"O, is she hurt, sir?" |
26952 | exclaimed Eric;"on the floor of_ this_ room?" |
26952 | exclaimed Johnny;"what for?" |
26952 | exclaimed the Frenchman,"to_ one_ you would say''sir;''but to two, would you say''sirs''?" |
26952 | thought Mr. Van Rasseulger,"can he see through the millstone?" |
26952 | what protects him in the water? |
26952 | where is it?" |
26952 | where is my-- my gold?--my gold? |
38869 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
38869 | Had she a father? 38869 After that, who will ever believe a beggar''s compliment again? 38869 Among so many rival claimants who shall decide? 38869 And can such a seething mass of humanity be reached by any Christian influences? 38869 And is not that the great object, and the great subject, of all our preaching? 38869 And now what do we see? 38869 And now, what of it all? 38869 And the Palace of the Doges-- is it not a history of centuries written in stone? 38869 Are they not the best witnesses for our Almighty Creator,Forever singing as they shine The hand that made us is Divine?" |
38869 | But four years have passed, and what do we see? |
38869 | But how can any popular movement be inaugurated under an absolute rule? |
38869 | But how was I to reach one of these holy shrines? |
38869 | But if it seems almost presumption to attempt to paint our Saviour, what shall we say to the introduction of the Supreme Being upon the canvas? |
38869 | But if this set them off into such ecstasies, what shall be said of their first sight of a ruin? |
38869 | But is not this vice of gambling very wide- spread? |
38869 | But is there any help for it? |
38869 | But is there no other alternative? |
38869 | But the war brought great expenses, and having rich allies, what so natural as to borrow a few of their superfluous millions? |
38869 | But what could check one''s spirits let loose in such a scene? |
38869 | But what effect had such a service-- or a hundred such-- on the poor population of London? |
38869 | But what would he have said at seeing, only four winters ago, the Emperor of Germany and his army encamped here and beleaguering the capital? |
38869 | But why should the people of Christian England wonder at these things, or at any act of violence and blood done by such hands? |
38869 | CHAPTER V. TWO SIDES OF LONDON.--IS MODERN CIVILIZATION A FAILURE? |
38869 | Can anything be done to relieve this gigantic human misery? |
38869 | Can it be that a city so vast, so populous, so rich, has a canker at its root? |
38869 | Can such things continue, and such a power be allowed to hold the fairest portion of the earth''s surface, for all time to come? |
38869 | Could any means be found more effectual for belittling the impression of one of the great churches of the Middle Ages? |
38869 | Did I regret that I had been to see this glittering form of temptation and sin? |
38869 | Did ever so bright a day end in so black a night? |
38869 | Does it furnish an example to imitate, or a warning to avoid? |
38869 | Does it not exist in more forms than one, and in more countries than the little State of Monaco? |
38869 | England holds Malta and Gibraltar, and France holds Algeria: can not both hold Constantinople? |
38869 | For this what has it to show? |
38869 | Had she a sister? |
38869 | His opinion was asked if, in a condition of things so extreme as that which now existed, the sovereign might be lawfully deposed? |
38869 | I have written of the startling contrasts of London; what shall I say of those of Paris? |
38869 | If sneering infidels ask, What good religion does? |
38869 | If they must have something in the way of refreshment( although I do not see the need of anything;"have they not their houses to eat and drink in? |
38869 | Is it mere imagination, an enthusiastic dream, that anticipates what we desire should come to pass? |
38869 | Is it not so in life? |
38869 | Is it not time for Americans, who boast so much of their independence, to show a little of it here? |
38869 | Is it possible to reach this vast and degraded population with any Christian influences, or are they in a state of hopeless degradation? |
38869 | Is it that God intends to destroy it, that He has suffered such a man to come to the throne for such a time as this? |
38869 | Is it that he is brooding over some secret trouble, or feels coming over him the shadow of approaching ruin? |
38869 | Is not a Country Fair the same thing all over the world? |
38869 | Is there any hope of anything better? |
38869 | Is there not a great deal of gambling in Wall street? |
38869 | Is there not political wisdom enough in all Europe to make another settlement, and power enough to enforce their will? |
38869 | Is there not some way of getting the good without the evil, of having this open- air life without any evil accompaniments? |
38869 | It does one good to see an old man so merry and light- hearted, but does not such gayety seem a little forced or out of place? |
38869 | May it not be that on such a radiant pathway from the skies we sometimes see the angels of God ascending and descending? |
38869 | Moody and Sankey in London 32 CHAPTER V. Two Sides of London.--Is Modern Civilization a Failure? |
38869 | Now may we not learn something from the habits of a foreign people, as to how to provide cheap and innocent recreations for our own? |
38869 | One might ask such a reader"Understandest thou what thou readest?" |
38869 | Or is the case desperate, beyond all hope or remedy? |
38869 | Or one dearer still than all other?" |
38869 | See you that little brook by the roadside, which any barefooted boy would wade across, and an athletic leaper would almost clear at a single bound? |
38869 | Some may ask, How did the sight affect me? |
38869 | THE SULTAN IS DEPOSED AND COMMITS SUICIDE.--THE WAR IN SERVIA.--MASSACRES IN BULGARIA.--HOW WILL IT ALL END? |
38869 | That brow, heavy with care, that eye so tender? |
38869 | That it is all nonsense-- folly, born of fanaticism and superstition? |
38869 | The King asked what they should send? |
38869 | The Sultan is Deposed, and Commits Suicide.--The War in Servia.--Massacres in Bulgaria.--How will it all End? |
38869 | The curtain falls on a year of horrors; on what scenes shall the new year rise? |
38869 | The only question is, What_ can_ be done? |
38869 | They attempt to portray the Divine Man; but who can paint that blessed countenance, so full of love and sorrow? |
38869 | This would solve the Eastern Question_ in part_, but only in part, for_ after_ he is gone what power is to take his place? |
38869 | Though an absolute monarch, he can not have everything according to his will; he can not live forever, and what is to come after him? |
38869 | Was ever anything more ridiculous? |
38869 | Was it my own mental depression that hung like a cloud over the waters; or was it something in the aspect of nature itself? |
38869 | Was there ever a greater contrast than between the two countries? |
38869 | Was there ever a more mournful sight under the sun? |
38869 | Was there ever such a queer old place? |
38869 | Was there ever such an expression of perfect repose? |
38869 | Was there ever such an overthrow? |
38869 | Was this a gloomy future to predict for a sovereign at the height of power and glory? |
38869 | What can be expected of human beings, crowded in such miserable habitations, living in filth and squalor, and often pinched with hunger? |
38869 | What cared he for the sufferings of his soldiers or people? |
38869 | What feminine delicacy could stand the foul and loathsome contact of such brutal degradation? |
38869 | What is the influence of this kind of life-- is it good or bad? |
38869 | What is the use of carrying a highway up into the clouds? |
38869 | What is this but the human soul groping after God, if haply it may find him? |
38869 | What is to be the future of the Sultan, who can tell? |
38869 | What lesson does it teach to us Americans? |
38869 | What manly courage would not give way, sapped by the deadly poison of such an air? |
38869 | What shall he do with them? |
38869 | What shall we say to this? |
38869 | What then shall be done with the Grand Turk? |
38869 | What will come after it? |
38869 | What will the end be? |
38869 | Who could but feel that God was near at such an hour, in such a blending of the earth and sky? |
38869 | Who knows what hard battle of life they had to fight-- what struggles wrung that manly breast, or what sorrow broke that woman''s heart? |
38869 | Who that looks up at that midnight sky can ever again doubt His care and love, as he reads these unchanging memorials of an unchanging God? |
38869 | Who was she? |
38869 | Who wonders that so many rush to the gin- shop to snatch a moment of excitement or forgetfulness? |
38869 | Why build such a Jacob''s ladder into heaven itself, since after all this is not the way to get to heaven? |
38869 | Why may not Constantinople be placed under the protection of all nations for the common benefit of all? |
38869 | Will things go on from bad to worse, to end at last in some grand social or political convulsion-- some cataclysm like the French Revolution? |
38869 | Would it not be better if they could have some simple recreation which the whole family could enjoy together? |
38869 | Yet what does Italy want of a great navy? |
38869 | [ What would poor old Peter have said, if he had met his successor coming along in such mighty pomp?] |
38869 | and whether peace will continue, or there will be a general war? |
38869 | had she a brother? |
38869 | had she a mother? |
38869 | or a great army? |
42009 | ''T ai n''t much like''49, is it? |
42009 | An''do ye mind Barry, too? |
42009 | And could you believe that after a man is dead he should be seen again as if he were alive? |
42009 | And did ye not come on account o''Burns? |
42009 | Are they not good? |
42009 | But why should n''t men carry creels? |
42009 | Can not you tell it to me, Katrina? |
42009 | Danish? |
42009 | Did you ever know Chief Joseph? |
42009 | Did you ever see anyting like dem dere? 42009 Did you ever see hand like mine?" |
42009 | Do you not call this grand? |
42009 | Do you not think it would be better with these? |
42009 | Eh, eh? |
42009 | Eh-- ye''ll not be calling at the hoos? |
42009 | Father,replied the muleteer,"what remedy can I know? |
42009 | Goddesses? |
42009 | Have you it here? |
42009 | Have you lived here long? |
42009 | Have you written for rooms? 42009 Here, you Rob,"shouted the auctioneer,"what do you add to this fine lot o''herrin''?" |
42009 | How did you find them? |
42009 | How much does it cost? |
42009 | How very much they seem to have made of the devil in the olden time, ma''am, do they not? |
42009 | I like Titians; they''re so delicate, do n''t you know? |
42009 | Is dat true? |
42009 | Is it allowed to go in? |
42009 | Is it not wonderful, ma''am, the pride there is in this poor world? |
42009 | Many Injuns? |
42009 | Oh, is she the lady of the house, and she barefoot? |
42009 | Oh, what is to do with Bob? |
42009 | Shall I go and ask? |
42009 | So these houses belong to the Duke of Westminster, do they? |
42009 | So what think you it was, in that garden, that both them did see the same thing at one time? 42009 The woman that Christ punished,"I said,"and turned her into the Gertrude bird; do you not know the old story?" |
42009 | Tucked all the way up to the belt? |
42009 | Well, who''s that man that''s painted such dreadful things,--all mixed up, do n''t you know? 42009 Were there many Indians here in those days?" |
42009 | Were you here in''49? |
42009 | Were you not sorry to have the old house pulled down? |
42009 | What can it mean? |
42009 | What did you bring it for if it were not for sale? |
42009 | What is she saying? |
42009 | What is that? 42009 What is that?" |
42009 | What is the matter? |
42009 | What is to do with you? |
42009 | What made you think of that? |
42009 | What you say ven it is like as if you cry, but you do not cry? |
42009 | What''s offered for this lot o''fine herrings? 42009 What, not know----?" |
42009 | Where are all the people? 42009 Where could I get spectacles?" |
42009 | Where is my money? |
42009 | Where is my money? |
42009 | Who knows? |
42009 | Why did you not write it in English? |
42009 | Why not, Katrina? |
42009 | Why not? |
42009 | Why, whose melon is it? |
42009 | Will there be carriages at the wharf? |
42009 | Will there be much more of the service? |
42009 | Will ye be drivin''over to Tarbolton in the morning? |
42009 | Will you make something on them at that price? |
42009 | Would the gentleman kindly make them in the drawing a little farther down his legs? 42009 Yellow?" |
42009 | You do n''t mean Rembrandt, do you? 42009 You not like dem berries? |
42009 | You not like dem berries? |
42009 | A story, indeed? |
42009 | A tree is the only living thing which can keep the secret of its own age, is it not? |
42009 | Ai n''t dat better as dem berries? |
42009 | And does he listen when, in lands he never saw, great poets sing of him in words simple and melodious as his own? |
42009 | And they''d to leave all that finery behind them, did n''t they, ma''am?" |
42009 | And why should it not have told on them? |
42009 | Are dey not wort more dan in gardens? |
42009 | Are tese what you like?" |
42009 | As one pest- stricken, flee the haunts of men, And be despised and shunned by all the world? |
42009 | At this crisis my companion, who had kept in the background, stepped forward with,--"You do n''t know me, Elspie, do ye?" |
42009 | But if he do n''t do, some other mans would; so tere it is, do n''t you see? |
42009 | Calling one of the muleteers to him, he said,--"Son, do you not know some remedy for this sore on my leg?" |
42009 | Can not you find some way to right this great wrong done to a quiet and industrious people? |
42009 | Could I send ye the name o''''t, mem? |
42009 | Could any good English be so good as this? |
42009 | Could anything be imagined droller, more unnecessary? |
42009 | Did ever you hear of King Ring? |
42009 | Do you hear me or not?" |
42009 | Do you promise?" |
42009 | Do you promise?" |
42009 | Does he care? |
42009 | Does he know it? |
42009 | Francis?" |
42009 | He wrote to one of the judges an imploring letter, saying,"Can you not do something to save these poor Indians from being driven out?" |
42009 | How can it be they praise Gerda''s white cheeks, and the new- come snow in the north light beam? |
42009 | How long must I drag on this life of shame, And bear these tortures in my outcast breast? |
42009 | How should I know she was not an enemy? |
42009 | Is it a clearing, or only a bit of varied wooding of a contrasting color to the rest? |
42009 | Is there a peasant in all Norway that does not know it, I wonder? |
42009 | Is there any other country in the world where a man would take that sort and amount of trouble for a chance traveller, of whom he knew nothing? |
42009 | Keep you dat in America? |
42009 | Mebbe ye''ve bin out t''''is''all? |
42009 | My Ingeborg--"Vat''s a big field called when it is all over ripe?" |
42009 | Now, how do you think the Danish Government( for this is a national property) arranges for the exhibition of this collection? |
42009 | One day she came lugging a big twisted door- mat with,"You see dat? |
42009 | Quite out of patience, I cried,"But why do n''t you tell me the price of it? |
42009 | See dem?" |
42009 | Seeing that I left a large piece on my plate, she finally said,"Do you tink it would be shame if I take dat home? |
42009 | She had several times refused her consent to his going into the business,"but dis time,"she said,"he had it before I knowed anyting, do n''t you see? |
42009 | Standing before me, with a curious and hesitating look on her face, she said,"Is dis vat you like?" |
42009 | Summers century- long? |
42009 | Taking up the bit of American currency, she held it out toward us, saying inquiringly,"Hextinct now, mem, I believe?" |
42009 | The Indian was preparing poisoned arrows: fixing one on the string and aiming at the door, he called out, angrily,"Who is there?" |
42009 | The climax of her purchases was a fine washboard, which she brought in in her arms, and exclaimed, laughing,"What you tink the porter say to me? |
42009 | Then, relenting, seeing the look of distress on Sanna''s face, I added,"Could we not take him with us?" |
42009 | There growed out in snow- white vool the shining shields of--"Ai n''t there a word you say spinned?" |
42009 | To the stringent reproofs of the horrified friars they made answer:"Have you not done the same in Mexico? |
42009 | Was there no legend, no tradition, with it? |
42009 | We can sleep at Gudvangen; but a whole day? |
42009 | What cared the sharp American for that sentimental clause,"without injury to the Indians"? |
42009 | What could a family do, in the way of work, with"one hoe"? |
42009 | What could he have been thinking of, to hand it back to King Louis like a worthless bauble of which he had grown tired? |
42009 | What else beside milk? |
42009 | What eyry is it that has cleared for itself this loop- hole in the solid mountain- forest? |
42009 | What girl would n''t like to take that? |
42009 | What was to do then? |
42009 | Where are you going? |
42009 | Where did you get it?" |
42009 | Where had they gone? |
42009 | Who shall fathom or sound these bonds which create themselves so quickly with one, so slowly with another? |
42009 | Who would not be a sheep? |
42009 | Why do we not see any one moving about the houses?" |
42009 | Why should he? |
42009 | Why should not the German face have been slowly moulded by these prenatal influences? |
42009 | Why, then, should those happy Spanish soldiers work? |
42009 | With no more curiosity than was embodied in"Who knows?" |
42009 | Would I not go up to the sæter? |
42009 | You do not mean spittoon, surely?" |
42009 | You shall find everything there, as I tell you; will you listen?" |
42009 | You want no interpreter to carry on your trade: the words"old silver"and"how much?" |
42009 | he replied;"give you relics? |
42009 | said I,"where_ is_ Wilhelm?" |
45700 | A-- can you tell me if there is a resident British Minister here? |
45700 | Avez- vous quelquechose à déclarer, madame? |
45700 | Did he tip her? |
45700 | Does anybody ever come to your city now? 45700 Has thy brother bought a boot- jack?" |
45700 | I say, daddy, did you call that man''garçon''? |
45700 | I wonder,says A.,"how they got''em all together and started them jumping?" |
45700 | Is n''t it funny, Archibald, to see so many foreigners about? 45700 Perhaps, after all she_ does_ expect, eh? |
45700 | The_ what?_says my companion. |
45700 | What was that you were telling us about Caracalla just now? |
45700 | Where''s your wife? |
45700 | Why demoralise them, why instil the love of money into their innocent minds? |
45700 | _ Alleroose_ is it? 45700 ''Ave you forgotten all about the black swan? 45700 (_ Noticing disapproval in visitor''s face._)Ah, madame n''en veut pas? |
45700 | (_ Sighs._)[_ Pause._]_ She._"Do you speak English, sir?" |
45700 | *** TO INTENDING TOURISTS.--"Where shall we go?" |
45700 | --_Daily Papers._] MEIN HERR, will you do us the honour to descend from the railway- carriage? |
45700 | --_Standard._] WHAT? |
45700 | A friendly stranger cries,"Is this yours?" |
45700 | And how fares mister your husband, this fine weather?" |
45700 | And these three hundred yards of lace of various makes and ages? |
45700 | Any artists, for instance?" |
45700 | Are ye an Irishman?" |
45700 | Awfully jolly, is n''t it? |
45700 | Awfully stupid things-- squares, eh? |
45700 | But I am giving you a great deal of trouble? |
45700 | But where are the old buildings? |
45700 | But why waste_ pesetas?_ So refrain. |
45700 | But wot''s Lynton roads to the Halps, or the Torrs to that blessed Young Frow? |
45700 | But-- well, and how did you like Italy?" |
45700 | By the way, wonder what became of the"coach"who went out with me? |
45700 | Call that Shakspeare? |
45700 | Comprenny voo? |
45700 | Dayjernay, se voo play?" |
45700 | Did n''t that strike_ you_, Shirtliff?" |
45700 | Hotel Moderno, non è vero?_"And he led the way to the outside, where the Englishman perceived a wide, asphalted street. |
45700 | How about the Baptistery? |
45700 | How about the churches? |
45700 | How can I scan with rapt enthusiasm These Alpine heights, when balanced_ à la_ Blondin, While you survey with bird''s- eye view each chasm? |
45700 | I climb it? |
45700 | I hope I make myself clearly understood? |
45700 | I seem to owe you these, and yet Will money do? |
45700 | I understand the French? |
45700 | Is fine, fine,_ è bella, bella, una via maravigliosa"!_"You do n''t mean to say there is n''t a canal left? |
45700 | Is it asking too great a favour to beg you to lend me the keys of your boxes? |
45700 | Is n''t there anything old? |
45700 | Just come up to the''Curse Hall,''will you?"] |
45700 | Kel ay le nomme du set plass?"] |
45700 | No, mein herr, it is utterly impossible? |
45700 | O''er here in St. Maló The thing''s quite_ comme il faut;_ Why not in higher latitude? |
45700 | Oh, the blue sky and the_ tables d''hôte!_ What more glorious than the ruins of Rome? |
45700 | Or is it, simply, you prefer to go Incognito? |
45700 | Perchance you have a motive, deep, ulterior, In donning head- gear borrowed from banditti? |
45700 | Rather jolly, eh? |
45700 | Sandy, what did he say?" |
45700 | She shall go now, sir, to visit the bridge?" |
45700 | Si nous leaverong the hotel at six o''clock et ung demy, shall nous catcherong le train all right? |
45700 | Switzerland? |
45700 | Tell me where I can get a first dish of_ Tête de veau?__ Smith.__ Tête de veau?_ Let''s see, that''s"calf''s head,"is n''t it? |
45700 | Tell me where I can get a first dish of_ Tête de veau?__ Smith.__ Tête de veau?_ Let''s see, that''s"calf''s head,"is n''t it? |
45700 | Tell me where I can get a first dish of_ Tête de veau?__ Smith.__ Tête de veau?_ Let''s see, that''s"calf''s head,"is n''t it? |
45700 | Tennyson, and that sort of thing, do n''t you know? |
45700 | Though you boast such works of art, Where is that unclouded sky? |
45700 | Vat vil you''av, sare?" |
45700 | Voo parly Français, do n''t you? |
45700 | Wants me to take him round, and as he hears I am studying German, will I interpret for him? |
45700 | What did you suppose it was-- Dundee marmalade? |
45700 | What do_ we_ think? |
45700 | What else is there? |
45700 | What is she trying to make us understand? |
45700 | What is there to see in Barcelona? |
45700 | What is there to see in your city now? |
45700 | What is there to see?" |
45700 | What lovely views you get there, do you not?" |
45700 | What more precious than the pictures of Florence? |
45700 | What more restful than the gondolas of Venice? |
45700 | What price this?" |
45700 | What then must be the difficulty when the question to be answered is where to spend the Easter holidays? |
45700 | What was it? |
45700 | What''d our missuses say? |
45700 | What''s that mean, Tripper,"Pas de Calais"? |
45700 | What''s the meaning of"avis"on those placards? |
45700 | What_ more_ do they want? |
45700 | Where are the gondolas then?" |
45700 | Where are the pictures? |
45700 | Where is Santa Maria Novella? |
45700 | Where to go? |
45700 | Which is the oldest building now standing in Florence? |
45700 | Who says Italy? |
45700 | Why do n''t they learn English? |
45700 | Why do n''t you stay at home?_(_ Official explanation._) Merely questions asked to stimulate pleasant conversation. |
45700 | Why? |
45700 | Would half a gulden---- What?" |
45700 | You do n''t mean to say Giotto''s Tower has gone? |
45700 | You understand French, eh? |
45700 | You were thinking, perhaps, that greater liberty might be given to the framers of the initial contract? |
45700 | You wish to show an intellect superior,( And hide a profile which is not too pretty? |
45700 | You''re not engaged? |
45700 | [ Illustration: AN INNOCENT OFFENDER What is all this about? |
45700 | [ Illustration: CONSEQUENCES OF THE TOWER OF BABEL SCENE--_A table d''hôte abroad.__ He._"Parlez- vous Français, mademoiselle?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: FRENCH AS SHE IS SPOKE"You like Ostende, Monsieur Simpkin?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: L''AXONG D''ALBIONG"Oh-- er-- pardong, Mossoo-- may kelly le shmang kilfoker j''ally poor ally Allycol Militair?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: ON THE RIVIERA_ She._"I wonder what makes the Mediterranean look so blue?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: SUCCESSFUL SANITATION_ Anxious Tourist._"Since your town has been newly drained, I suppose there is less fever here?" |
45700 | [ Illustration:"ASTONISHING THE NATIVES"_ First Alpine Tourist._"I say, Will, are you asleep?" |
45700 | [ Illustration:_ He._"You climed ze Matterhorn? |
45700 | [ OE]ufs à la_ coque_, sare?" |
45700 | [_ Tableau!_][ Illustration:''ARRY IN''OLLAND_''Arry._"I say, Bill, ai n''t he a rum lookin''cove?"] |
45700 | _ After the Holidays_(_ a Retrospect_) What can be worse than packing? |
45700 | _ Angelina._ Yes, is n''t he a perfect love? |
45700 | _ Are you English?_(_ Official interpretation._) The highest praise imaginable. |
45700 | _ Custom- House Officer._"Now, then, got anything contraband about ye?" |
45700 | _ Garçon._"Bien, m''sieu''--Vould you like to see zee_ Times?_"_ London Gent._"Hang the feller! |
45700 | _ He._"Habla usted Español, señorita?" |
45700 | _ He._"Parlate Italiano, signorina?" |
45700 | _ He._"Sprechen Sie Deutsch, Fraülein?" |
45700 | _ Hotel Moderno, gondola._""_ Che cosa, signore?_"asked the porter, apparently confused,"_ gon--, gondo--, non capisco. |
45700 | _ Jambon d''Yorck._ What''s that mean, Mr. T.? |
45700 | _ Kitty._"And are you very wicked now, aunt?"] |
45700 | _ Official._"Christian nom?" |
45700 | _ Official._"Profession?" |
45700 | _ Pittori, scultori, perche?_ But there are voyagers some time. |
45700 | _ Second Tourist._"Asleep? |
45700 | _ Swiss Landlord respondeth_-- Am not I, am not I, say, a merry Swiss boy, When I hie from the mountain away? |
45700 | _ Tourist._ How about statues? |
45700 | _ Tourist._ What? |
45700 | _ Why do you come here? |
45700 | was it not a fine change to cry''Vive l''Empereur''for nearly a whole week, instead of''Vive la République''?" |
45700 | Êtes- vous la diligence? |
32289 | Ah? |
32289 | Any tobacco? |
32289 | Are you afraid? |
32289 | Are-- are you the captain of this ship? |
32289 | But do you not fear that the murderers will come back some night by this same winding way, and smother them? |
32289 | But do you not mind? |
32289 | But how, and where? |
32289 | But she has been this way before? |
32289 | But the carpets? |
32289 | But,I interposed,"suppose we leave here, and ca n''t get in anywhere else?" |
32289 | Do you know X.? |
32289 | Do you not know-- can you not see-- O, do you not feel? |
32289 | Do you speak English? |
32289 | Do you think he understood you? |
32289 | Do_ you_ believe this? |
32289 | Does madame travel far? |
32289 | Has the physician of the shoemaker the canary of the carpenter? |
32289 | Is any one killed? |
32289 | Is it true that the domestic relations of the royal family are so unhappy? |
32289 | Is there anything peculiar, anything unusual in our personal appearance? |
32289 | Is this Miss H.''s? |
32289 | Is-- is this Miss H.''s? |
32289 | It''s dreadful-- is it not? |
32289 | Know Mr. X.? 32289 Let me see; the hotel is close by the station?" |
32289 | Madame is not afraid? |
32289 | May we take one leaf-- only one? |
32289 | O, yes; had not our whole lives been straightened out after their maxims? |
32289 | Pleasant? |
32289 | The Cattle Man? |
32289 | Then this_ is_ the school where she was for so long a time? |
32289 | To be sure; what have we come for? |
32289 | Well, and what of it? |
32289 | Well, where do you suppose he will take us? |
32289 | What did he say? |
32289 | What do you suppose they''re going to do with that calf? |
32289 | What is it? |
32289 | What is the price? |
32289 | What''s this? 32289 What_ can_ be the matter_ now_?" |
32289 | Whose can this be? |
32289 | Why, suppose we take it? |
32289 | Will it be a rough night? |
32289 | Yes? |
32289 | You know the pilgrim fathers? |
32289 | _ Do_ any one look for your baggage? |
32289 | _ Parlez- vous Français, monsieur?_I began again, when we had bowed and"_ bon- jour_"-ed for some time. |
32289 | _ Parlez- vous Français?_His reply to this was as singular as unprecedented. |
32289 | --"Are you the captain of this ship?" |
32289 | --"Are you the captain of this ship?" |
32289 | --"Can women travel through Europe alone?" |
32289 | --"Can women travel through Europe alone?" |
32289 | --Antwerp.--A visit to the cathedral.--A drive about the city.--An excursion to Ghent.--The funeral services in the cathedral.--"Poisoned? |
32289 | --Antwerp.--A visit to the cathedral.--A drive about the city.--An excursion to Ghent.--The funeral services in the cathedral.--"Poisoned? |
32289 | --Gymnastic feats of the little steamer.--O, what were officers to us?--"Who ever invented earrings?" |
32289 | --_Boston Commonwealth._ ARE YOU INTERESTED IN BUGS? |
32289 | A Bible was substituted, chained into its place; but the old inscription, cut deep in the stone, still remains, beginning"Who leyde thys book here?" |
32289 | A reed shaken by the wind?" |
32289 | Accident? |
32289 | All the while the lawyers were glaring upon him as though he was perjuring himself with every word-- as who would not be, under the circumstances? |
32289 | As for the tapestry, pray do n''t confound it with the worsted dogs and Rebekahs- at- the- Well with which we sometimes adorn(?) |
32289 | But his only reply was the same smile, and the"Yes?" |
32289 | Can it be that he was explaining the principles of hydraulics? |
32289 | Come up? |
32289 | D''ye feel_ good_ this morning?" |
32289 | D''ye hear the dinner bell?" |
32289 | Do you care for its measurement? |
32289 | Do you imagine them to be picturesque? |
32289 | Do you know it? |
32289 | Do you know why the grass is greener here than elsewhere? |
32289 | Even then he made, involuntarily, more bows than any ritualist, and the scripture,"What went ye out for to see? |
32289 | First, in regard to the question often asked,"Can women travel alone through Europe?" |
32289 | Had we crossed the Styx? |
32289 | He accosted us one day, sidling up to our door, with,"How d''ye do to- day?" |
32289 | How can I tell of the long, happy hours, when more than strength, when perfect exhilaration, came to us; when existence alone was a delight? |
32289 | How can I tell you anything about it? |
32289 | How can we believe in the equality of the sexes? |
32289 | How could we explain? |
32289 | How could we have done it? |
32289 | How''s yer mar?" |
32289 | I looked every moment for his lips to open, and--"Wherefore air we gathered here, my friends?" |
32289 | In the high gallery before us, in complacent comfort, sat three fat, drowsy old women(?) |
32289 | Is it goat''s milk?" |
32289 | Is it not wonderful? |
32289 | Is it the dust which blinds our eyes? |
32289 | Is not Charlotte Brontë''s boarding- school here? |
32289 | It lacked fifteen minutes of the hour when the train would start, and our baggage was-- where? |
32289 | Know Mr. Y.? |
32289 | Might not some one of the fair dwellings gleaming out from the shrubbery prove the house we sought? |
32289 | No two men meet upon the street without,''Have you heard about the bridge?''" |
32289 | O, shades of departed story- tellers, is it thus ye are to be judged? |
32289 | Of an autobiographical character? |
32289 | Or can it be that the noble lords are more keenly sensitive to the distracting influence of bright eyes than other men? |
32289 | Over it leaned a hundred people, at least, gazing down upon what? |
32289 | PARLEZ VOUS FRANCAIS? |
32289 | Should we add to the U. S. against our names,"As well as could be expected"? |
32289 | The fair form, the sweeping hair of Attila, and the dark lover with despair in his face? |
32289 | The question is, Did-- Jillson-- go-- to-- the-- pump?" |
32289 | The sheep were separated from the goats by the officer at the foot of the plank, who asked each one descending,"First or second cabin?" |
32289 | The wedding party.--The canals.--New Haven.--Around the tea- table.--Separating the sheep from the goats.--"Will it be a rough passage?" |
32289 | The wedding party.--The canals.--New Haven.--Around the tea- table.--Separating the sheep from the goats.--"Will it be a rough passage?" |
32289 | Up the harbor of Liverpool.--We all emerge as butterflies.--The Mersey tender.--Lot''s wife.--"Any tobacco?" |
32289 | Up the harbor of Liverpool.--We all emerge as butterflies.--The Mersey tender.--Lot''s wife.--"Any tobacco?" |
32289 | Was it spoons? |
32289 | Was it unbounded admiration? |
32289 | Was that painfully deep magenta hue nature or art? |
32289 | We read some of the inscriptions upon the monuments, that one, so often quoted, of Sir Christopher Wren, among them--"Do you seek his monument? |
32289 | Were they of light or darkness? |
32289 | Were they to be of a sacred or profane nature? |
32289 | Were they to refer to the dear land we had just left? |
32289 | What can we do?" |
32289 | What do you suppose it was all about? |
32289 | What is it they seem to see beyond the bend? |
32289 | What is it they watch and wait for, gun in hand? |
32289 | What must it be when the summer sun and the last visitor have left it? |
32289 | What officers? |
32289 | What part of an ox, now, d''ye think that was taken from?" |
32289 | What was the matter with him? |
32289 | Which was the one I sought? |
32289 | Who can it be, we said, that is nameless here among the brave? |
32289 | Why, then, do we pause? |
32289 | Widowhood and want in the old world; what was waiting her in the new? |
32289 | Would n''t you like to see it?" |
32289 | Would we shake the drops from our garments, close our umbrellas, and go with him? |
32289 | X.?" |
32289 | Yes; we could be taken in(?) |
32289 | You remember the story of the princes smothered in the Tower by command of their cruel uncle? |
32289 | _ He._"Have you been out for a walk this morning?" |
32289 | _ Table- d''hôte_ over, one evening,"Where shall we go? |
32289 | and"Would n''t that be fine?" |
32289 | and"_ Is_ the school really here?" |
32289 | exclaimed Axelle, suddenly,"was not the scene of_ Villette_ laid in Brussels? |
32289 | we ejaculated,"who ever invented earrings? |
32289 | we responded,"what kind of a sun can it be to rise at such an hour?" |
32289 | who''s_ Johnson_?" |
32289 | why the foliage upon the scattered walnut and chestnut trees is thicker, darker, than upon those on other mountain- sides? |
32289 | why the sun bestows its kisses more warmly? |
13945 | And what is New Place? |
13945 | Annoyance, ma''am? 13945 Any thing contraband here, Mr. Snooks? |
13945 | But do they really turn out the contents of the trunks, and take away people''s daguerreotypes, and burn their books? |
13945 | But do you really believe he never saw it? |
13945 | But how do they shut their eyes to the various cruelties of the system,--the separation of families-- the domestic slave trade? |
13945 | But,said I,"you think the affairs of the working classes much improved of late years?" |
13945 | How many non- slaveholders elsewhere are thus interested in the products of slaves? 13945 Is there a hame in all Scotland for the cleanly but sick servant maid to go till, until health be restored? |
13945 | Is there a school in all Scotland for training ladies in the higher branches of learning? 13945 Is there one school in all Scotland where the helpless, homeless poor are fed and clothed at the public expense? |
13945 | Mr. Sturge is to be there waiting for us, but he does not know us, and we do n''t know him; what is to be done? |
13945 | O,says a bystander,"do n''t you know that''The quality of mercy is not strained''?" |
13945 | Pray tell me,said I to a gentlemanly man, who had crossed four or five times,"is there really so much annoyance at the custom house?" |
13945 | Pray tell, what for? |
13945 | Rooms,said Mr. S.;"why, what are there to have?" |
13945 | They do n''t search our pockets, do they? |
13945 | Thomas the Rhymer? |
13945 | Time- honored,said I;"it looks as fresh as if it had been built yesterday: you do not mean to say that is the real old castle?" |
13945 | Was he any thing remarkable? 13945 What ballad?" |
13945 | What bird is that? |
13945 | What can they be? |
13945 | What does make this river so muddy? |
13945 | What rooms will you have, gentlemen? |
13945 | When does the moon rise? |
13945 | Why, do n''t you remember, in the Lay of the Last Minstrel, the song of Albert Graeme, which has something about Carlisle''s wall in every verse? 13945 A little perverse imp in my heart suggested the questions,If a modern artist had painted these, what would be thought of them? |
13945 | And then I consider, How does he say it? |
13945 | And what kind of slavery is it? |
13945 | And who durst smile when Warwick bent his brow? |
13945 | Any cigars, tobacco,& c.?" |
13945 | Are they bound down to their garrets and cellars for sixteen hours a day? |
13945 | Are they not our bone and our flesh? |
13945 | Are we never to send another missionary, or make another appeal for foreign lands, till we have abolished slavery at home? |
13945 | Are we to listen to the craven and miserable talk about''doing more harm than good''? |
13945 | As I saw the way to the cathedral blocked up by a throng of people, who had come out to see me, I could not help saying,"What went ye out for to see? |
13945 | But are our ragged children condemned to the street? |
13945 | But did not these sacrifices bring with them, even in their bitterness, a joy the world knoweth not? |
13945 | But do you doubt the fact? |
13945 | But does the law compel them to work sixteen hours a day? |
13945 | But here in Scotland, need we tell the children of the Covenant, that the Lord on high is mightier than all human power? |
13945 | But still, what is the aspect which the great American nation now presents to the Christian world? |
13945 | By an enactment of the legislature? |
13945 | Can the slave do that? |
13945 | Do n''t you know Glasgow is celebrated for its iron works?" |
13945 | Do our adversaries, say no? |
13945 | Do they not know, say what they will, that the truth is not fully stated? |
13945 | Do they tell us of our ragged children? |
13945 | Do we not send remonstrances to Tuscany, about the Madiai, when women are imprisoned in Virginia for teaching slaves to read? |
13945 | Do you know that this little daisy is the_ gowan_ of Scotch poetry? |
13945 | Do you want to know how announcing is done? |
13945 | Does not every traveller know what a luxury it is to shut one''s eyes sometimes? |
13945 | For all these kindnesses, what could I give in return? |
13945 | Granted; but is not a serious, respectful_ form_ of religion better than nothing? |
13945 | Has the history of antiquity been written in vain? |
13945 | He had been asked, what right had Great Britain to interfere? |
13945 | How can they be witnesses, if they can not see and be cognizant? |
13945 | How could they be otherwise? |
13945 | How did it cease? |
13945 | How do you suppose such a religious feeling has been preserved in the book to which the address refers? |
13945 | How had they come into that state? |
13945 | How is it possible that it should be the reverse? |
13945 | How would it have been with the primitive church if this doctrine had prevailed? |
13945 | I ask, are they immortal beings? |
13945 | I heard it: when did I hear it? |
13945 | I refer especially to the pulpit; for, if the church and the ministry are silent, who is to speak for the dumb and the oppressed? |
13945 | I said;"what, where Burns lived?" |
13945 | If I did not know it was Raphael, what should I think?" |
13945 | If our Hawthorne could conjure up such a thing as the Seven Gables in one of our prosaic country towns, what would he have done if he had lived here? |
13945 | If the criticism be made that every thing is given_ couleur de rose_, the answer is, Why not? |
13945 | Is all this hypocritical, insincere, and impertinent in us? |
13945 | Is it like the servitude under the Mosaic law, which is brought forward to defend it? |
13945 | Is it not fair to conclude that all the mechanical assistants of painting are improved with the advance of society, as much as of all arts? |
13945 | Is it not worthy the attention of genuine philanthropists to inquire whether cotton can not be profitably cultivated by free labor?" |
13945 | Is it reserved for us, in that"undiscovered country"which he spoke of, ever to meet the great souls whose breath has kindled our souls? |
13945 | Is it to stand still? |
13945 | Is n''t it delightful?" |
13945 | Is not nature ever springing, ever new? |
13945 | It is simply this-- the overwhelming power of the slave system; and whence comes that overwhelming power? |
13945 | It is true that people with immense wealth can live in such regions in cleanliness and elegance; but how must it be with the poor? |
13945 | Lord Carlisle very soon came in, and with him-- who do you think? |
13945 | May not the magical tints, which are said to be a secret with the old masters, be the effect of time in part? |
13945 | May they not go where they like, and ask better wages and better work? |
13945 | Must I confess the truth? |
13945 | My first question, then, when I look at the work of an artist, is, What sort of a mind has this man? |
13945 | Nobody means to defend our defects; does any man attempt to defend them? |
13945 | Now, is he to buy a man and seven children, for whom he has no use, for the sake of having a cook? |
13945 | Now, then, what is our duty? |
13945 | One says,"Do you remember the scene on the sea shore, with which it opens, describing the rising of the tide?" |
13945 | Pretty successful that, was it not, for a first essay? |
13945 | She told me that I should there have positive and perfect quiet; and what could attract me more than that? |
13945 | Surely, without the revelation of God in Jesus, who could believe in the divine goodness? |
13945 | The conscience of the cotton growers was talked of; but had the cotton consumer no conscience? |
13945 | The grave the last sleep? |
13945 | The haughty, cruel, selfish Elizabeth, and all the great men of her court, are still living and acting somewhere; but where? |
13945 | The question then arose, was he justified in using that amount of coercion? |
13945 | There are_ real_ Christians there who do this-- are there not?" |
13945 | Was it not in the tower of the Bass, that overhangeth the wide, wild sea? |
13945 | Was it not pleasant, when I had a heart so warm for this old country? |
13945 | Was it their hardness, their cruelty, their hastiness to take offence, their fondness for blood and murder? |
13945 | Was it true that all this affectionate interest was merited? |
13945 | Well, is it worth while to go to his tower? |
13945 | Well, why should we obey the law of the land in South Carolina on this subject, and disobey the law of the land in Italy? |
13945 | Were not these noble ladies and excellent women, titled and untitled, among the very first to seek to redress them?" |
13945 | What do they do that for?" |
13945 | What force does all this give to the passage in his diary in which he records his estimate of life!--"What is this world? |
13945 | What gave power to the masses in the French revolution, but that the army, pervaded by new ideas, refused any longer to keep the people down?" |
13945 | What gives slavery its great strength in the United States? |
13945 | What had caused the change? |
13945 | What has been the effect of this expansion of slave territory? |
13945 | What has he to say? |
13945 | What shall meaner mortals do, when law itself, in all her majesty, wig, gown, and all, goes by the board? |
13945 | What then is there for the women of Scotland? |
13945 | What''s that?" |
13945 | What, then, do we admire? |
13945 | When her father, who lay on his death bed at that time in Falkland, was told of her birth, he answered,"Is it so? |
13945 | Whence does it arise? |
13945 | Where are all those great souls that have created such an atmosphere of light about Edinburgh? |
13945 | Who is it that always speaks first? |
13945 | Who knows not Melville''s beechy grove, And Roslin''s rocky glen, Dalkeith, which all the virtues love, And classic Hawthornden? |
13945 | Who would come to any other conclusion, except from the pages of the Bible? |
13945 | Who would not long to enjoy a freer communion, and rejoice in a prospect of days spent in unreserved fellowship with its grand and noble nature? |
13945 | Why can they not work together, so far as they are agreed, and let those points on which they disagree be waived for the time? |
13945 | Why do n''t they wash it?" |
13945 | Why does a writer want to break up so laudable a poetic design in the guides? |
13945 | Why is it a sin? |
13945 | Why is it that we admire ragged children on canvas so much more than the same in nature? |
13945 | Why should we send missionaries across the ocean?'' |
13945 | Why, I wish to know, should none but_ old_ masters be thought any thing of? |
13945 | Why, sir, how can it be otherwise? |
13945 | Why, what is pomp, rule, reign, but earth and dust? |
13945 | a reed shaken with the wind?" |
13945 | and if so, where and how? |
13945 | and that?" |
13945 | and their character, whatever it is, is it any thing more than our own, a little exaggerated, perhaps? |
13945 | and whether the privilege of shooting was not confined to the actual proprietor? |
13945 | are they exhaled like the breath of flowers? |
13945 | are they spent like the lightning? |
13945 | or are they still living, still active? |
13945 | or may not modern artists have their secrets, as well, for future ages to study and admire? |
13945 | said I,"the lord mayor of London, that I used to read about in Whittington and his Cat?" |
13945 | said I;"what''s that?" |
13945 | said I;"what, the Carlisle of Scott''s ballad?" |
13945 | will they take our_ dresses_?" |
13945 | you say;"the house where Shakspeare lived?" |
16327 | ''Is that your explanation?'' 16327 And does he not spell and write well? |
16327 | Can you blame us, independent Germans? 16327 Can you suppose Rome will triumph,"you say,"without money, and against so potent a league of foes?" |
16327 | Do the people here,said I,"value Mr. Wordsworth most because he is a celebrated writer?" |
16327 | Do you know,said she,"that the Minister Rossi has been killed?" |
16327 | Do you sing together, or go to evening schools? |
16327 | Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that? 16327 Killed?" |
16327 | Lord,he said,"whither goest thou?" |
16327 | My bird,he cries,"my destined brother friend, O whither fleets to- day thy wayward flight? |
16327 | Que voulez vous, Madame? |
16327 | The Roman people can not be hostile to the French? |
16327 | The parts of the territory occupied by your troops are in fact protected; but if only for the present, to what are they reduced? 16327 Then why do they not feel for us?" |
16327 | To whom,said I,"are you to be married?" |
16327 | Virginia,said she;"and how is the Signora named?" |
16327 | Well, my son, how much will you_ pay_ to the Church for absolution? |
16327 | What, sir,said I,"is it your institution alone that remains in a state of barbarism?" |
16327 | Why do n''t you go on the Mount and see? |
16327 | Why, was it not pleasant? |
16327 | ''Where is the skin?'' |
16327 | ):--"As said the great Prince Fernando, What_ can_ a man do, More than he can do?" |
16327 | A wicked man, surely; but is that the way to punish even the wicked?" |
16327 | After so drear a storm how can ye shine? |
16327 | All once was theirs,--earth, ocean, forest, sky,-- How can they joy in what now meets the eye? |
16327 | All things seem to announce that some important change is inevitable here, but what? |
16327 | And has the present head of that Church quite failed to understand their monition? |
16327 | And how, O Night, bring''st thou the sphere of sleep? |
16327 | And my country, what does she? |
16327 | And what foreigner? |
16327 | Are there not sweet flowers of affection in life, glorious moments, great thoughts? |
16327 | Beside, allowing the possibility of some clear glimpses into a higher state of being, what do we want of it now? |
16327 | But Rome, precious inheritance of mankind,--will they run the risk of marring her shrined treasures? |
16327 | But dare I further say that political ambition is not as darkly sullied as in other countries? |
16327 | But how are our faculties sharpened to do it? |
16327 | But what else to do? |
16327 | But, where there is so great a counterpoise, can not these be given up once for all? |
16327 | Can I say our social laws are generally better, or show a nobler insight into the wants of man and woman? |
16327 | Can all this be forgotten? |
16327 | Can anything be more sadly expressive of times out of joint than the fact that Mrs. Trollope is a resident in Italy? |
16327 | Can it interest you? |
16327 | Can kind emotions in their proud hearts glow, As through these realms, now decked by Art, they go? |
16327 | Can the soldiers of France wish to massacre a brother people whom they came to protect, because they do not wish to surrender to them their capital? |
16327 | Can you really have attained such wisdom? |
16327 | Dare I say that men of most influence in political life are those who represent most virtue, or even intellectual power? |
16327 | Do you not believe it would act as after the struggle with Napoleon? |
16327 | Do you not want to see her Italian face? |
16327 | Do you owe no tithe to Heaven for the privileges it has showered on you, for whose achievement so many here suffer and perish daily? |
16327 | GOVERNOR EVERETT RECEIVING THE INDIAN CHIEFS, NOVEMBER, 1837. Who says that Poesy is on the wane, And that the Muses tune their lyres in vain? |
16327 | Had it been in vain, what then? |
16327 | Hast thou forgotten that I here attend, From the full noon until this sad twilight? |
16327 | He careless stopped and eyed the maid;"Why weepest thou?" |
16327 | He said:"Romans, do you wish to go; do you wish to go with all your hearts? |
16327 | How can the brain, the nerves, ever support it? |
16327 | How dare I speak of these things here? |
16327 | How, O Day, Wakest thou so full of beauty? |
16327 | I hope her birds and the white peacocks of the Vatican gardens are in safety;--but who cares for gentle, harmless creatures now? |
16327 | I love them,--dandies and all? |
16327 | I said:"That force is only physical; do not you think a sentiment can sustain them?" |
16327 | If any find leisure to work for men to- day, think you not they have enough to do to care for the victims here?" |
16327 | If it had been planned to exasperate the people to blood, what more could have been done? |
16327 | In a few days all began to say:"Well, who would have thought it? |
16327 | Is it easy to find names in that career of which I can speak with enthusiasm? |
16327 | Is it not they who make the money? |
16327 | Is it thus ye would be served in your turn? |
16327 | It was late at night, and I was nearly asleep, when, roused by the sound of bubbling waters, I started up and asked,"Is that the Adda?" |
16327 | May not I have an office, too, in my hospitality and ready sympathy? |
16327 | Must I not confess to a boundless lust of gain in my country? |
16327 | Must they not think, so strange and sad their lot, That they by the Great Spirit are forgot? |
16327 | Neither they nor any one asked,"Who did this? |
16327 | O poor Holy Father!--Tito, Tito,"( out of the window to her husband,)"what_ is_ the matter?" |
16327 | O smiling world of many- hued delights, How canst thou''round our sad hearts still entwine The accustomed wreaths of pleasure? |
16327 | Of every object that meets you on the way, ask of yourself:''Is this just or unjust, true or false, law of man or law of God?'' |
16327 | Pray, was never a battle won against material odds? |
16327 | Query, did the lilied fragrance which, in the miraculous times, accompanied visions of saints and angels, proceed from water or garden lilies? |
16327 | Shall he, shall any Pope, ever again walk peacefully in these gardens? |
16327 | Should the Austrians come up, what will they do? |
16327 | Some of the lowest people have asked me,"Is it not true that your country had a war to become free?" |
16327 | Speaking of the republic, you say,"Do you not wish Italy had a great man?" |
16327 | Submit? |
16327 | That life through shade and light had formed thy mind To feel, imagine, reason, and endure,-- To soar for truth, to labor for mankind? |
16327 | That_ home!_ where is it? |
16327 | The account given by Franzini, when challenged in the Chamber of Deputies at Turin, might be summed up thus:"Why, gentlemen, what would you have? |
16327 | The church, the school, the railroad, and the mart,-- Can these a pleasure to their minds impart? |
16327 | The ploughman who does not look beyond its boundaries and does not raise his eyes from the ground? |
16327 | The question that inevitably rose on seeing him was,"Is he such a one?" |
16327 | The welcome sighed for, in thine hours of grief, When pride had fled and hope in thee had died? |
16327 | Then why should the American landscape painter come to Italy? |
16327 | They did this, it is said, without orders; but who could, at the time, suppose that? |
16327 | This last expression of just thought the Poles ought to initiate, for what other nation has had such truly heroic women? |
16327 | Twilight deep, How diest thou so tranquilly away? |
16327 | Was the cestus buried with her, that no sense of its pre- eminent value lingered, as far as I could perceive, in the thoughts of any except myself? |
16327 | Was this thy greeting longed for, Margaret, In the high, noontide of thy lofty pride? |
16327 | Were the Austrians driven out of Milan because the Milanese had that advantage? |
16327 | What are the petty triumphs_ Art_ has given, To eyes familiar with the naked heaven? |
16327 | What are the quarrels of selfishness in princes, or their notes, before a syllable of the eternal Evangelists of God? |
16327 | What are we to think of a great nation, whose leading men are such barefaced liars? |
16327 | What had they to be grateful for? |
16327 | What must the English public be, if it wishes to pay two thousand pounds a year to get Italy Trollopified? |
16327 | What people? |
16327 | What shall I write of Rome in these sad but glorious days? |
16327 | What signifies that, if there is"order"in the front? |
16327 | What war? |
16327 | When will this country have such a man? |
16327 | Where is he gone?" |
16327 | Where is the Arcadia that dares invite all genius to her arms, and change her golden wheat for their green laurels and immortal flowers? |
16327 | Where is the genuine democracy to which the rights of all men are holy? |
16327 | Who can ever be alone for a moment in Italy? |
16327 | Who can, that has a standard of excellence in the mind, and a delicate conscience in the use of words? |
16327 | Who knows how much of old legendary lore, of modern wonder, they have already planted amid the Wisconsin forests? |
16327 | Who knows what I may have to tell another week? |
16327 | Who sees the meaning of the flower uprooted in the ploughed field? |
16327 | Why must they be so dearly paid for? |
16327 | Why will people look only on one side? |
16327 | Why? |
16327 | Why? |
16327 | Will America look as coldly on the insult to herself, as she has on the struggle of this injured people? |
16327 | Will it be found in the present? |
16327 | Will she basely forfeit every pledge and every duty, to say nothing of her true interest? |
16327 | Will they oppose them in defence of Rome, with which they are at war? |
16327 | Will they shamelessly fraternize with the French, after pretending and proclaiming that they came here as a check upon their aggressions? |
16327 | Will you fight in a cause which you must feel to be absurd and wicked? |
16327 | Will you?" |
16327 | With plenty of fish, and game, and wheat, can they not dispense with a baker to bring"muffins hot"every morning to the door for their breakfast? |
16327 | Would they dare do it? |
16327 | Yet how long, O Lord, shall the few trample on the many? |
16327 | Yet why should we wonder at such, when we have Commentaries on Shakespeare, and Harmonies of the Gospels? |
16327 | _ Chi è?_"Who is it?" |
16327 | _ Chi è?_"Who is it?" |
16327 | _ J._ From water Venus was born, what more would you have? |
16327 | _ J._ Have you paid for your passage? |
16327 | _ Self- Poise._ All this may be very true, but what is the use of all this straining? |
16327 | and if it is for the future, have we no other way to protect our territory than by giving it up entirely to you? |
16327 | c''est la regle,"--"What would you have, Madam? |
16327 | does no greater success await thee? |
16327 | he replied, and, as he spoke, his little dog began to bark at me,--"Que voulez vous, Madame? |
16327 | no distant mountains? |
16327 | no valleys? |
16327 | pray, pray, ask Tito what is the matter?" |
16327 | said he very quickly;''what have you done with it?'' |
16327 | so blind? |
16327 | where the child- like wisdom learning all through life more and more of the will of God? |
16327 | why, secretly the heart blasphemed, did the sun omit to kill her too, when all the glorious race which wore her crown fell beneath his ray? |
16327 | wilt thou not be more true? |
16327 | woman''s heart of love, send yet a ray of pure light on this troubled deep? |
8995 | And was he equally prompt? |
8995 | And who is this woman that she has got along with her? |
8995 | Any chance?--about Katy, do you mean? 8995 Are n''t you glad that you are coming to make us a visit? |
8995 | Are these the only dolls you have? |
8995 | Are you going? |
8995 | But do n''t you like Longwood? |
8995 | But where have_ you_ been all this time? |
8995 | But, Katy, who is that person? 8995 But, Ned, surely you are not leaving me so soon? |
8995 | But, dear Polly, what difference does it make? 8995 Can I do anything for you?" |
8995 | Celle- là ? |
8995 | Could you? 8995 Dangerous? |
8995 | Did I do right? |
8995 | Did n''t you say that Polly wanted us to come in? |
8995 | Did you ever see any one so lovely in your life, Polly dear? 8995 Do n''t you see that they all do? |
8995 | Do not English children take any interest in the tombs of the Abbey? |
8995 | Do you care for this sort of thing? |
8995 | Do you realize that, Polly dear? 8995 Do you really think she liked me?" |
8995 | Does the tower really lean? |
8995 | Four- wheeler or hansom, ma''am? |
8995 | Have the Pages left Nice yet? |
8995 | Have you? |
8995 | How did she come to think of such a thing? 8995 How is Polly going to celebrate her Christmas? |
8995 | How long do you mean to be away? |
8995 | I wonder what that can be? |
8995 | In Katy? 8995 Is it Irish you''d be afther having me talk, when it''s me own langwidge, and sorrow a bit of another do I know?" |
8995 | Is n''t it dangerous? |
8995 | Is n''t it rather damp out there, Ned? |
8995 | Is n''t she exquisite? |
8995 | Is she going to have any fresh hair? |
8995 | Is somebody hurt? |
8995 | Katy, do you hear that? |
8995 | Katy,she began,"should you be_ awfully_ disappointed, should you consider me a perfect wretch, if I went home now instead of in the autumn?" |
8995 | Madame,said Katy,--and there was a flash in her eyes before which the landlady rather shrank,--"what is all this? |
8995 | Miss Katy,interrupted Amy,"_ do_ you like Europe? |
8995 | No, indeed, I am glad,said Katy;"we shall all be seeing it for the first time, too, shall we not? |
8995 | Not say anything? 8995 Note? |
8995 | Now, just look at her, and tell me if ever you saw anything so enchanting in the whole course of your life before? 8995 Oh, dear, why do people ever go to sea, unless they must?" |
8995 | Oh, does n''t she look dear and natural? 8995 Oh, is it raining?" |
8995 | Oh, will she? 8995 Oh, will you?" |
8995 | Out of sorts? 8995 Really? |
8995 | Shall I sleep with you? |
8995 | The Pension Suisse, eh? 8995 Then you wo n''t be able to come to me again? |
8995 | To the ship? 8995 Were you such a very bad child?" |
8995 | What are they, then? 8995 What do you suppose can have brought Katy Carr to Europe?" |
8995 | What do you think would be best? 8995 What does_ Cenacola_ mean?" |
8995 | What has become of Lilly Page? |
8995 | What is the matter? |
8995 | What man is it, Miss? |
8995 | What shall we have for breakfast,asked Mrs. Ashe,--"our first meal in England? |
8995 | What sort of thing do you mean? |
8995 | When did you leave home, and how were they all when you came away? |
8995 | Which, Katy? |
8995 | Who was Beatrice Cenci? |
8995 | Why did they call you Little Frisk? |
8995 | Why do n''t you feel worse about it? 8995 Why do n''t you make out a list of old buildings which are connected with famous people in history, and visit them in turn? |
8995 | Why not? 8995 Why, Cousin Olivia, is it you?" |
8995 | Why, Ned, do you know those people? |
8995 | Why, what is the matter? |
8995 | Why, yes; but it seems too good to leave, does n''t it? 8995 Will you tell me a story every morning?" |
8995 | Would she come to me, do you think, Rose? |
8995 | You got my note then? |
8995 | ''Do n''t they feel one minute, and does n''t it feel awfully?'' |
8995 | ''Do people die right away?'' |
8995 | Already she felt her horizon growing, her convictions changing; and who should say what lay beyond? |
8995 | Amy,--why where is Amy?" |
8995 | And have you heard about Bella? |
8995 | And pray why should I be, Polly dear?" |
8995 | And that reminds me, do you suppose one can get any Christmas greens here?" |
8995 | And they never did promise you to go on any particular time, did they?" |
8995 | Another moment, the door opened, and Katy dashed in, calling out,"Papa!--Elsie, Clover, where''s papa?" |
8995 | Art? |
8995 | As she put the parcel in her pocket, her brother said,--"If you have done your shopping now, Polly, ca n''t you come out for a last row?" |
8995 | Ashe?" |
8995 | But what made you behave so, Amy, and cry and scold poor mamma when she was sick? |
8995 | By whom built? |
8995 | Can I ever be thankful enough?" |
8995 | Can you ever forgive me?" |
8995 | Can you imagine it?" |
8995 | Did you do much when you were in Paris, Katy?" |
8995 | Did you write me a note?" |
8995 | Do any of you know?" |
8995 | Do n''t forget.--Now, is n''t he just as nice as I told you he was?" |
8995 | Do n''t you hear me? |
8995 | Do n''t you think so yourself?" |
8995 | Do n''t you think so?" |
8995 | Do n''t you think that would be the best way, mamma?" |
8995 | Do n''t you wish you were dead? |
8995 | Do you mean to say that is the way my conduct appears to her, Polly?" |
8995 | Do you suppose that people live there?" |
8995 | Do you suppose they will let us go on board of them?" |
8995 | Do you think you can afford it? |
8995 | Does n''t she smell like heaven?" |
8995 | God is beyond, holding the sunrise in his right hand, holding the sun of our earthly hopes as well,--will it dawn in sorrow or in joy? |
8995 | Have I any chance, do you think?" |
8995 | Have you decided?" |
8995 | He would miss her, she well knew, and might not the charge of the house be too much for Clover? |
8995 | Her voice was rather rigid as she inquired,--"And what brings you here?--to this house, I mean?" |
8995 | High Art? |
8995 | How did it happen?" |
8995 | How much longer are you to stay, Miss Carr?" |
8995 | How? |
8995 | I call him Florio,--don''t you think that is a pretty name? |
8995 | I ought n''t to,--I could n''t; she ca n''t make me, can she, Katy?" |
8995 | I wonder if there is anything in Europe good enough to buy with it?" |
8995 | I''m not half good enough for her; but the question is,--and you have n''t answered it yet, Polly,--what''s my chance?" |
8995 | If he were good, you would n''t mind his being big, would you?" |
8995 | In Dorry''s room?" |
8995 | Is n''t she beautiful? |
8995 | Is n''t she big? |
8995 | Is n''t she good? |
8995 | Is that right?" |
8995 | It did n''t seem much of a match for Mr. Redding''s daughter to make, did it? |
8995 | It ended with this short"poem,"over which Katy laughed till Mrs. Ashe called feebly across the entry to ask what_ was_ the matter? |
8995 | It makes going to Venice seem quite a different thing, does n''t it, Katy?" |
8995 | Let us talk about this friend of yours; have I any chance at all, do you think, Polly?" |
8995 | Life was so short, how could she take a whole year out of it to spend away from the people she loved best? |
8995 | Little Rose will be wiser than that; wo n''t you, my angel? |
8995 | Look, Miss Clover,"lifting the other doll from the table where she had laid it;"has n''t she got_ sweet_ eyes? |
8995 | Mamma, why do n''t you speak to me? |
8995 | May I go out on it? |
8995 | More than one?" |
8995 | Oh, Clover, what sort of a dress do you think I shall have when I grow up and go to parties and things? |
8995 | Oh, what does she say?" |
8995 | Quince marmalade? |
8995 | Shall you mind very much? |
8995 | She ought to have ice on her head, and how can she when her bang is so thick? |
8995 | Surely you will stay and dine with us?" |
8995 | That will be funny, wo n''t it? |
8995 | Then why did n''t you come to me?" |
8995 | Then, the moment he was gone,"Now, Katy, is n''t he nice?" |
8995 | To her scholars, do you mean? |
8995 | Was a feeding- cup wanted? |
8995 | Was ice needed? |
8995 | We have been very happy here, have n''t we?" |
8995 | We sailed from Boston on the 14th of October; and before that I spent two days with Rose Red,--you remember her? |
8995 | We sha n''t really see him, shall we?" |
8995 | Well, Katy, what did you do?" |
8995 | Well?" |
8995 | What did you buy?" |
8995 | What does it mean?" |
8995 | What has become of Miss Jane, by the way? |
8995 | What has brought you so far from Tunket,--Burnet, I mean? |
8995 | What shall I do without you?" |
8995 | What shall I do, Katy? |
8995 | What was all Europe in comparison with what she was leaving? |
8995 | When built? |
8995 | Where is dear Polly? |
8995 | Where will you put Amy to sleep, Katy?" |
8995 | Which ones?" |
8995 | Who are you with?" |
8995 | Who was she?" |
8995 | Why are n''t you sorrier, Katy?" |
8995 | Why do you come to trouble madame while her child is so ill?" |
8995 | Why do you speak to her?" |
8995 | Why had she said she would go? |
8995 | Why not?" |
8995 | Why, what''s the matter?" |
8995 | Wo n''t it be awfully interesting when you and I go out to choose it?" |
8995 | Would n''t that be fine?" |
8995 | You can take the time, ca n''t you, Katy?" |
8995 | You have been fixing up ever since you came, have n''t you? |
8995 | You know that Mrs. Ashe''s little nephew is here for a visit, do n''t you?" |
8995 | You wo n''t mind, will you, Katy?" |
8995 | You wo n''t? |
8995 | You would n''t think so now, would you? |
8995 | cried Katy, in amazement;"why, how can that be?" |
8995 | cried the outraged Amy;"do you suppose for one moment that my child could hurt your dirty old dolly? |
8995 | do you hear me? |
8995 | is that what Katy is going to do next?" |
8995 | questioned Amy,--"far over, I mean, so that we can see it?" |
8995 | what did Dickens mean by making such a fuss about them, I wonder? |
8995 | what happened then?" |
8995 | what is the word for trunk- key?" |
8995 | what''s the matter?" |
8995 | who was this Prince who seemed to belong to the story and to grow more important to it every day? |
12184 | ''What''s the matter with Bryce?'' |
12184 | And all this display, this dinner, this added expense? |
12184 | And are there no American robbers? |
12184 | And both are equally typical, I suppose? |
12184 | And have they separated you and me, dear? 12184 And how long will that take? |
12184 | And that''s in Upper Brooke Street? |
12184 | And the end of it all? 12184 And the officers?" |
12184 | And thou, Brutus? |
12184 | And where''s your sister, the Honourable Eleanor? |
12184 | Are the hotels good? |
12184 | Are we going to have a house- boat? |
12184 | Are you going to Italy? |
12184 | Are you going to row to- morrow? |
12184 | But are there not societies for and against suffrage? 12184 But ca n''t you see the advantages of all those extra letters on your note- paper when you write home?" |
12184 | But it has done you good, has n''t it? 12184 But was there no shooting, no bribery, no excitement?" |
12184 | But what of these men? 12184 But where do I come in, Jimmie?" |
12184 | But why, why is it? |
12184 | But would your best element of women exercise the privilege? |
12184 | But--said Mrs. Jimmie, still blushing,"by this plan they wo n''t let us be together, will they?" |
12184 | Considerations? |
12184 | Could you manage it? 12184 Did I ever hear of Ischl?" |
12184 | Did n''t you hear Sir George? |
12184 | Did they ask any questions about us? |
12184 | Did you enjoy yourself, dear? |
12184 | Did you ever in all your life? |
12184 | Did you know the lady in her Majesty''s suite who wrote''The Martyrdom of an Empress?'' |
12184 | Did you see me go down? |
12184 | Do many Russians visit America? |
12184 | Do n''t what? |
12184 | Do n''t you ever have this in America? |
12184 | Do they go dressed as you are now? |
12184 | Do you know how popular you are in America? |
12184 | Do you not find your own countrymen more individual than those of any other nation? |
12184 | Do you think the negroes ought not to have been given the franchise? |
12184 | Does n''t it go with my costume, Jimmie? |
12184 | Enjoy it? 12184 Ever hear of Ischl, Bee?" |
12184 | Go with us? |
12184 | Had n''t we better give it up? |
12184 | Have n''t you read''Bryce''s Commonwealth?'' |
12184 | Have they--"Have they what? |
12184 | Have you decided on a hotel there? |
12184 | Have you indeed? 12184 He was insane, was he not?" |
12184 | How do you know she had one? |
12184 | How long has this been opened? |
12184 | How many staterooms are there, Jimmie? 12184 How much you give for him? |
12184 | How will they know? |
12184 | How_ could_ you? 12184 If you will read the whole thing when written by foreign authors, why do you not encourage your own?" |
12184 | Is n''t he considered the greatest living man of letters in America? |
12184 | Is that all? |
12184 | Is that the reason for many of your artists and authors living abroad? |
12184 | Is that true of Russia? |
12184 | Is there a book on American government by an American that I never heard of? |
12184 | Is there much bribery? |
12184 | It could n''t have been the wheat? |
12184 | Leo, may I go with them to Italy in the spring? 12184 Never did what?" |
12184 | No water,I cried,"then wo n''t you ever have a crew?" |
12184 | No,I said,"what is it? |
12184 | Not want to sell? 12184 Now, about your men of letters?" |
12184 | On_ leave_? |
12184 | Our great names? |
12184 | Ready for what? |
12184 | Saw what I said? |
12184 | Saw? |
12184 | Scrape what off, Jimmie? |
12184 | The descent into what? |
12184 | Then the taste is there, is it? |
12184 | Then this_ is n''t_ a flirtation? |
12184 | Tired of lakes? 12184 To dinner?" |
12184 | Wake''em up, ca n''t you? 12184 Well, did you enjoy it?" |
12184 | Well, do n''t we send crews over here to row? |
12184 | Well, what have you got to say about it? |
12184 | What are those H''s for, Jimmie? |
12184 | What are you going to wear? |
12184 | What do you suppose they are all_ waiting_ for? |
12184 | What do you think of him? |
12184 | What do you think, Jimmie? |
12184 | What have you been buying, Jimmie? |
12184 | What have you three been up to? |
12184 | What in the world are you doing here? |
12184 | What is it like? |
12184 | What is there selfish about me, I should like to know? 12184 What shall we do?" |
12184 | What you give, lady? |
12184 | What you got, Jimmie? |
12184 | What''s out in the hall? 12184 What''s that got to do with it?" |
12184 | What''s that? |
12184 | What''s the matter, Jimmie? |
12184 | What''s your college? |
12184 | When do we get off, Jimmie? |
12184 | Where did you find it? |
12184 | Where have they put me, Jimmie? |
12184 | Where would I be if I had taken to heart the criticisms of the degenerates on''Degeneration?'' 12184 Where would you get your coal?" |
12184 | Where''s your wife? |
12184 | Who''s your friend? |
12184 | Whom do you consider the greatest living author? |
12184 | Why did n''t you tell her? |
12184 | Why do they do that? |
12184 | Why do we stop except to break the journey? |
12184 | Why not? |
12184 | Would n''t take off his hat to the flag? 12184 Would you enfranchise the women?" |
12184 | Would you take it away from them, if you could? |
12184 | You are_ sure_, dear, that you do n''t mind lodging with Judas Iscariot? |
12184 | You were speaking to me the other day about better rooms? 12184 _ Fresh_ beer?" |
12184 | _ Please_ don''t--"Do n''t what? |
12184 | All over Europe our watchword with the Russians, Turks, Egyptians, Arabs, French, Germans, and Italians was always"Do you speak English?" |
12184 | All, did I say? |
12184 | An Academy?" |
12184 | And if they are unfavourable I think,''What difference does it make? |
12184 | And who tells that clock when leap year comes, and when the moon changes, and when it''s going to rain, and when hoop- skirts will be worn again? |
12184 | And you? |
12184 | Are n''t most of them really-- well,_ trying,_ to say the least? |
12184 | Are there any queer little places--""Any concert- gardens?" |
12184 | Besides that, I could n''t get back to town before ten o''clock to- night if I started now, and where would I get my dinner? |
12184 | But do you think we could persuade the other ladies to give it up? |
12184 | But tell me,"he added,"have you no authors who write universally?" |
12184 | CHAPTER II PARIS"Now,"said Jimmie as our train was pulling into Paris,"we are all decided, are we not, that we shall stay in Paris only two days?" |
12184 | Ca n''t you put us up for the night?" |
12184 | Can any woman who has shopped only in America bring forward a similar statement? |
12184 | Can we invite people to stay with us over night?" |
12184 | Confess now, do n''t you feel a little better?" |
12184 | Could there be a worse possible combination for my purpose? |
12184 | Did I mention before that I thought you were thin?" |
12184 | Do n''t you understand how nobody can do anything or be anybody without royal approval? |
12184 | Do n''t you?" |
12184 | Do you presume to express your opinion on taste when you are wearing a green satin necktie with a pink shirt? |
12184 | Do you take the criticisms of your books so deeply to heart as you take a criticism of your countrymen? |
12184 | Do you think I would carry that back home?" |
12184 | Does n''t it match?" |
12184 | Finally Bee leaned across and whispered:"Do n''t look, but is n''t that Madame Carreño?" |
12184 | Finally, exasperated by his continued silence, Bee said, severely:"Jimmie, have you anything up your sleeve? |
12184 | From Mr. White? |
12184 | Have n''t you seen enough here to- day, to say nothing of the attentions we had from women in Ischl, to know what all this counts for?" |
12184 | Have you heard how the ex- Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tom Reed, defines an honest man in politics? |
12184 | Have you noticed it?" |
12184 | He forgot his awe and said:"What''s the matter with Bryce?" |
12184 | His book on"What is Art?" |
12184 | How are you going to deal with anarchy and the Indian and negro questions? |
12184 | How came_ you_ to find your way to this inaccessible spot?" |
12184 | How could we be when we''ve only seen one this week?" |
12184 | How then can we expect Europeans to manage them?" |
12184 | I said, impatiently,"What now?" |
12184 | Imagine asking London cabbies the question,"Do you speak English?" |
12184 | Is your country as much interested in Russia as we are in you?" |
12184 | It limits you, does it not?" |
12184 | It was enough to leave a mark, eh, mademoiselle?" |
12184 | Jimmie?" |
12184 | Me? |
12184 | My own tones were so conversational when I said,"Will you please show me your black satin ribbon?" |
12184 | Now, what do you think of yourself?" |
12184 | Or are you just pretending?" |
12184 | Perhaps we were cheated now and then-- in fact, in our secret hearts we are guiltily sure of it, but what difference does that make? |
12184 | Perhaps you would feel more comfortable if I lodged with Judas?" |
12184 | Remember?" |
12184 | Shall I come down and hold the boat still while you get out? |
12184 | Shall I ever forget it? |
12184 | Shall danger, or sickness, or poverty, or disaster ever blot from my mind that scene? |
12184 | Suddenly a voice in English at my elbow said:"Pardon me, madame, but were not you at the Grand Hotel at Rome last winter?" |
12184 | That night-- shall I ever forget it? |
12184 | The countess clasped her hands and said:"How I envy you, but does n''t it cost you a great deal of money?" |
12184 | Therefore Jimmie came and sat down by me one morning and said:"Ever hear of Ischl?" |
12184 | To us it sounded deliciously funny to hear this self- styled African call us"Leddies,"and say"Halways"and say"''Aven''t yer, now?" |
12184 | Well, what is it?" |
12184 | What are the great names among you now?" |
12184 | What are you going to do with your problems? |
12184 | What cathedral can bring such a look of rapture to a woman''s face as New Bond Street or what scenery such ecstasy as the Rue de la Paix? |
12184 | What do you think? |
12184 | What must a wife think of such a husband''s views of marriage when she is the mother of thirteen of his children? |
12184 | What must you think of the Russians?" |
12184 | What one do you think would be best?" |
12184 | What were we going to wear? |
12184 | What''s there, Jimmie? |
12184 | When they come back from the manoeuvres?" |
12184 | When we got into the carriage I said:"Well?" |
12184 | Where do you go next?" |
12184 | Where have they lodged you?" |
12184 | Where will it land us?" |
12184 | Who would n''t?" |
12184 | Why do your women combine against it?" |
12184 | Why has no one ever written such an one about the United States?" |
12184 | Why is that? |
12184 | Will it please you to look at some on the second floor, which have never been occupied since they were done over? |
12184 | Will the excellent ladies be pleased to receive them? |
12184 | Would you consent to turn aside to see the Königsee, another small lake which belongs more to the natives than to the tourists?" |
12184 | Would you like to go?" |
12184 | Would you like to wear your lace gown? |
12184 | You have n''t known my sister very long, have you? |
12184 | You offered me your room, did n''t you?" |
12184 | _ are_ they?" |
12184 | and put_ her_ with Mary Magdalene?" |
12184 | and she replies,"It_ is_ pretty, is n''t it, modom?" |
12184 | and then more wheedlingly,"You give me forty francs?" |
12184 | and"Do n''t you get very tired standing up all day?" |
12184 | and"Does n''t that draught there on your back annoy you?" |
12184 | and"I hope the baby is better?" |
12184 | cried Jimmie in a rage at once, and:"What''s that?" |
12184 | that, while I did not say it, my voice implied such questions as"How are your father and mother?" |
12184 | you are an American, and by Americans do we not live?" |
6931 | 0, for mercy''s sake, why do you stop here? |
6931 | A packer? |
6931 | Am I not one of the people? 6931 Am I not one of you?" |
6931 | And are these buildings successful in a pecuniary point of view? |
6931 | And do n''t you admire them? |
6931 | And do n''t you want to go to America? |
6931 | And how did you like him? |
6931 | And what is to be done here, then? |
6931 | And what''s Playford Hall? |
6931 | And where,said I,"are these young mechanics taught to read and write?" |
6931 | And why did you go to see it? |
6931 | Are the race often as good looking? |
6931 | At what hotel do they stop? |
6931 | But what could they do with their chimney- hood? |
6931 | But, at any rate, let us go to Wittenberg,said I;"get a guide, a carriage, can not you?" |
6931 | Can one find any thing there to eat? |
6931 | Canst thou understand the balancing of the clouds? 6931 Dear me,"said I, with apprehension,"what is the matter with it?" |
6931 | Do ministers ever hold slaves? |
6931 | Do the avalanches ever bring rocks with them? |
6931 | Do they pay their own way? |
6931 | Do you think so? 6931 Does monsieur''s wish to go to the station house?" |
6931 | English? |
6931 | H., is there no other professor we want to see? |
6931 | H.,said C.,"did the Germans use to smoke in Luther''s day?" |
6931 | Have you considered how cold it is up there? |
6931 | Here,they replied,"to- day? |
6931 | Indeed,said C., examining it with great interest;"where are the rest of them?" |
6931 | Is Luther''s Bible here? |
6931 | Is this all? |
6931 | Is this lake always frozen? |
6931 | Messieurs,said I,"will you be so good as to inform me if the emperor is to be here to- day?" |
6931 | Monsieur has friends residing in Dresden? |
6931 | No directory? 6931 O, is that the Arveiron?" |
6931 | Paris? |
6931 | The rest? |
6931 | Those girths-- won''t they break? |
6931 | Up there? |
6931 | Well, H.,said I,"have you drank deep enough this time?" |
6931 | Well, I see it,said I;"it is good-- it is perfect-- it can not be bettered; but what then? |
6931 | What cascade? 6931 What is it?" |
6931 | What is that for? |
6931 | What is that? |
6931 | What is this? |
6931 | What is this? |
6931 | What make you from Wittenberg? |
6931 | What makes them go there? |
6931 | What''s that? |
6931 | What, you too? |
6931 | Where''s his mother? |
6931 | Why do people build houses in the way of them? |
6931 | Why not? |
6931 | Why not? |
6931 | Why, where did you come from? 6931 Will monsieur allow me to give their description to the police?" |
6931 | Wo n''t you? |
6931 | Yes; I think there were six of them; where are they? |
6931 | _ Et Genève?_"Geneva is free also! |
6931 | _ Monsieur veut aller à Pan''s, n''est ce pas?_"Going to Paris, are you not, sir? |
6931 | _ Monsieur veut aller à Pan''s, n''est ce pas?_"Going to Paris, are you not, sir? |
6931 | _ Oui._"Is monsieur''s baggage registered? |
6931 | _ Qu''y a- t- il?_said I, standing up by the driver--"What''s the matter?" |
6931 | _ Qu''y a- t- il?_said I, standing up by the driver--"What''s the matter?" |
6931 | _ Wo ist mein-- basket?_he cried, giving them English; they shook their heads still harder. |
6931 | _ Wo ist mein-- pannier?_exclaimed he, giving them the French synonyme. |
6931 | ( 0, ho, thought I; that is your directory, is it? |
6931 | Above all, has not our climate, with its alternate extremes of heat and cold, a tendency to induce habits Of in- door indolence? |
6931 | Ah, culpable sirens, if the pangs ye have inflicted were reckoned up unto you,--the heart aches and side aches,--how could ye repose o''nights? |
6931 | Am I not competent to judge because I am not an artist? |
6931 | And Young makes his high- born dame inquire,"Shall pleasures of a short duration chain A_ lady''s_ soul in everlasting pain?" |
6931 | And are painters any greater artists than God? |
6931 | And in that infant face there seemed a foreshadowing of the spirit which said,"Now is my soul troubled; and what shall I say? |
6931 | And now, what am I to do? |
6931 | And what did I see there? |
6931 | And when I asked him,"Who supports you in your labors?" |
6931 | And why has not a man a right to dramatize in marble as well as on canvas, if he can produce a powerful and effective result by so doing? |
6931 | Are not God''s works the great models, and is not sympathy of spirit with the Master necessary to the understanding of the models? |
6931 | Are not all these vines rooted in the lava and ashes of the volcano side? |
6931 | Are they not the pride and glory of our country? |
6931 | Art thou the first man that ever was born? |
6931 | But after all, what is it? |
6931 | But did not He who made the appetite for food make also that for beauty? |
6931 | But how can they be Christians?" |
6931 | But how do I know Murillo has no earnestness in the religious idea of this piece? |
6931 | But the mountains-- how shall I give you the least idea of them? |
6931 | But who shall describe the social charms of our dinner? |
6931 | By a strange perversity, people seem to think that the Author of nature can not or will not inspire art; but"He that formed the eye, shall he not see? |
6931 | By a very natural impulse, I exclaimed,"What does become of the little children there? |
6931 | C.?" |
6931 | Can not a bonnet cover your head, without the ribbon and the flowers, say they? |
6931 | Could I have expected dear old England to make me so much one of the family as to treat my humble fortunes in this same public manner? |
6931 | Could we feel in this parting that we were leaving those whom we had known for so brief a space? |
6931 | Did the priestly miscreants of the middle ages ever represent among the torments of purgatory the deck of a channel steamer? |
6931 | Did the worship of Egypt ever sink lower in horrible and loathsome idolatry? |
6931 | Did you ever hear a bore complained of when they did not say that he was the best fellow in the world? |
6931 | Do I, then, like it? |
6931 | Does he not assume, in the most graceful way, the language of inspiration and holy rapture? |
6931 | Does he suppose me so lost to all due sense of humility as to take out of his hands a cause which he is pleading so well? |
6931 | Does it affect me? |
6931 | Father, save me from this hour? |
6931 | Get down and look at them? |
6931 | Goethe''s house was a very grand one for the times, was it not? |
6931 | Had it two shores? |
6931 | Had some prodigious monster swallowed me, and, like another Jonah, had I"gone down beneath the bottoms of the mountains"? |
6931 | Had we not seen the people walking about in them, and enjoying themselves? |
6931 | Have not our close- heated stove rooms something to do with it? |
6931 | Have not the immense amount of hot biscuits, hot corn cakes, and other compounds got up with the acrid poison of saleratus, something to do with it? |
6931 | Here, perhaps, said I to myself, I shall answer, fully, the question that has long wrought within my soul, What is art? |
6931 | How can I describe it? |
6931 | How can we ever be sure on this point, when we admire what has prestige and sanction, not to admire which is an argument against ourselves? |
6931 | How could any one, who had a soul to understand that most noble creation of Raphael, turn, the next moment, to admire this? |
6931 | How do I know but she has fallen into a_ crevasse_? |
6931 | How do I know but that a cliff, one of those ice castles, those leaning turrets, those frosty spearmen, have toppled over upon her? |
6931 | How do I know, when reading Pope''s Messiah, that_ he_ was not in earnest-- that he was only most exquisitely reproducing what others had thought? |
6931 | How wonderful these old Greeks I What set them out on such a course, I wonder-- anymore, for instance, than the Sandwich Islanders? |
6931 | I asked him to what extent the element of scepticism, with regard to religious truth, had pervaded the mind of England? |
6931 | I could not but observe with regret the evident fragility of Lady Byron''s health; yet why should I regret it? |
6931 | I had met Macaulay before, but as you have not, you will of course ask a lady''s first question,"How does he look?" |
6931 | I said to the coachman,"Why do they not cry,''_ Vive l''Empereur_''?" |
6931 | I said,"How are you doing now, in that part of the country? |
6931 | I thought to myself,"Now, would it be possible to give to one that had not seen it an idea of how this looks?" |
6931 | In the exterior of both this and Strasbourg I was disappointed; but in the interior, who could be? |
6931 | In what mood of mind were they conceived by the great Artist? |
6931 | Is it not so? |
6931 | Is it possible? |
6931 | Is it the captive, to whom the ray of heaven''s own glory comes through the crevice of his dungeon walls? |
6931 | Is it the conservative power of sea fogs and coal smoke-- the same cause that keeps the turf green, and makes the holly and ivy flourish? |
6931 | Is it the exiled spirit, yearning for its own? |
6931 | Is there a train?" |
6931 | Is there not a high poetic merit in the mere conception of these two scenes, thus presented? |
6931 | Is this the way you make the tour of Switzerland?" |
6931 | It reminds one of such expressions as these in Job:--"Have the gates of death been open to thee, or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of death?" |
6931 | Laplace, Geoffroy St. Hilaire, Cuvier, Des Cartes, Malebranche, Arago-- what were they? |
6931 | Must she send missionaries abroad to preach despotism? |
6931 | Of what practical value to most students is geometry? |
6931 | Only, what could they do with themselves?" |
6931 | Or wast thou made before the hills?" |
6931 | Or with speeches that can do no good? |
6931 | Other women can play gracefully the head of the establishment; but who, like them, could be head, hand, and foot, all at once? |
6931 | Our guide steps forth, unlocks the gate? |
6931 | Said I,"Are people imitating these lodging houses very rapidly?" |
6931 | Said I,--"C., do you think that can be the cathedral spire?" |
6931 | Seeing by our looks that something was amiss, he repeated the question more emphatically in German:"Can I smoke? |
6931 | Shall we destroy our most glorious possession in the first hour of its passing into our hands?" |
6931 | Should he reason with unprofitable talk? |
6931 | Sir, it has been said to me, more than once,''Where will you stop?'' |
6931 | Sooner or later it must end in revolution; and then what? |
6931 | Take them all up, and carry them with you? |
6931 | Tell us, Muses and Graces, what can it be? |
6931 | The eye is not like the hand, nor the ear like the foot; yet who condemns any of them for the difference? |
6931 | The first is mutilated; but if_ disarmed_ she conquers all hearts, what would she achieve in full panoply? |
6931 | The generous Henri IV., the noble Sully, and Bayard the knight_ sans peur et sans reproche_, were these half tiger and half monkey? |
6931 | The statue is really majestic; but was Goethe so much, really think you? |
6931 | Then how shall we contrive to find our friends?" |
6931 | There was a conflict of emotion in that mother''s face, and shadowed mysteriously in the child''s, of which I queried,"Was it fear? |
6931 | There was not a hat taken off, not a single shout, not a"_ Vive l''Empereur_? |
6931 | These palaces-- did not the king keep them for the people? |
6931 | These splendid works of art, are they not ours? |
6931 | They say that somebody came and told Thiers,''Do you know the people are rummaging the archbishop''s palace?'' |
6931 | Was not that a chime? |
6931 | Was that the picture? |
6931 | Well, you will ask, why are you going on in this argumentative style? |
6931 | Were John Calvin and Fénélon half tiger and half monkey? |
6931 | What am I, and what is my father''s house, that such distinction should come upon me? |
6931 | What can be more brilliant than the rainbow, yet what more perfectly free from earthly grossness? |
6931 | What can be the reason? |
6931 | What can you do with them?--you want to do something, but what? |
6931 | What chamois? |
6931 | What city in the world can compare with thee? |
6931 | What do we see in our own history? |
6931 | What does possess botanists to afflict the most fragile and delicate of earth''s children with such mountainous and unpronounceable names? |
6931 | What gnome''s cave is this Antwerp, where I have been hearing such strange harmonies in the air all night? |
6931 | What has happened? |
6931 | What head conceived those harmonies, so ghostlike? |
6931 | What parent was ever far from home that did not espy in every group of children his own little ones-- his Mary or his Nelly, his Henry or Charlie? |
6931 | What was in this man''s head when he painted this representation of the hour when his Maker was made flesh that he might redeem a world? |
6931 | What will become of you? |
6931 | What, then, must he think of the Almighty Being, all whose useful work is so overlaid with ornament? |
6931 | Where is H.? |
6931 | Where was I? |
6931 | Where would Shakspeare''s dramas have been, had he studied the old dramatic unities? |
6931 | Who can paint the air-- that vivid blue in which these sharp peaks cut their glittering images? |
6931 | Who doubts you? |
6931 | Why do n''t storks do so in America, I wonder? |
6931 | Why do the Germans leave this place so dirty? |
6931 | Why do they not cry out?" |
6931 | Why not on the Seine, as well as on the Thames? |
6931 | Why should not the yeasty brain of man, fermenting, froth over in such crestwork of Gothic pinnacle, spire, and column? |
6931 | Why so? |
6931 | Why wish to detain here those whose home is evidently from hence, and who will only then fully live when the shadow we call life is passed away? |
6931 | Why, then, do not we go up? |
6931 | Why? |
6931 | Why?" |
6931 | Why?--why this veil of dim and indefinable anguish at sight of whatever is most fair, at hearing whatever is most lovely? |
6931 | Will not something eventually grow out of this? |
6931 | Will they leave out Cromwell? |
6931 | With a passionate agony he seems to say,"Am I not right? |
6931 | Yes; and could not a peach tree bear peaches without a blossom? |
6931 | Yet if we_ could_, would we efface from the world such cathedrals as Strasbourg and Cologne? |
6931 | Yet what painter would dare attempt the same? |
6931 | Yet, with this, was there not a solemn triumph in the thought that she alone, of all women, had been called to that baptism of anguish? |
6931 | a chime of chimes? |
6931 | and if they did n''t do it, would n''t somebody else?" |
6931 | and is it not the word of God?" |
6931 | and what can it do? |
6931 | and while the former will perish with the body, is not the latter immortal? |
6931 | could nothing suit him so well as Goethe''s coat of arms? |
6931 | did he not bear all the expense of caring for them, that they might furnish public pleasure grounds and exhibition rooms? |
6931 | do not all persons feel themselves competent to pronounce on the merits of natural landscapes, and say which of two scenes is finer? |
6931 | does not this word say it? |
6931 | he that planted the ear, shall he not hear?" |
6931 | is it thus America fulfils her high destiny? |
6931 | said I;"but do n''t avalanches generally come in the same places every year?" |
6931 | stirred their sugar into their tea, and went on as before, because, what was there to do?--"Hadn''t every body always done it? |
6931 | the ruling of the glorious, dazzling forces of nature? |
6931 | the wondrous ways of Him who is perfect in wisdom?" |
6931 | was it a presage of the hour when a sword should pierce through her own soul? |
6931 | was it adoration and faith? |
6931 | was it sorrow? |
6931 | was that channel a channel at all? |
6931 | what''s that? |
6931 | who shall say that Claude is finer than Zuccarelli, or Zuccarelli than Claude? |
6931 | yet what sinning, suffering soul could find sympathy in them? |
46451 | ''Dot wart? 46451 Am I dot man? |
46451 | And Jennie? |
46451 | And Nancy? |
46451 | And after you land safely in New York? |
46451 | And are you content with the change? |
46451 | And get it into your stomach? |
46451 | And is the Them Shanghais? |
46451 | And what are your wages? |
46451 | Are you in arrears for rent? |
46451 | Are you in earnest, Herr Caspar? |
46451 | Are you not exaggerating? |
46451 | Are you one of the new servants? |
46451 | Are you satisfied to work for so many hours for so little money? |
46451 | But how shall we get the corpses? |
46451 | But if the performance is so hazardous, and she should be killed, would it not entail a heavy loss upon you? |
46451 | But suppose you die too suddenly to repent? |
46451 | But the children were eaten by the bears? |
46451 | But what am I to do? |
46451 | But who are you, anyhow? |
46451 | By the way,he stopped to say,"are the Argyle rooms in London actually closed, and is the Mabille in Paris as lively as it used to be? |
46451 | D''ye ever meet Ned Sothern? 46451 Did she hurt herself?" |
46451 | Did you enjoy this trip to the land of Tell? |
46451 | Did you know what that Frenchman was saying last night? |
46451 | Did you pay it? |
46451 | Did you succeed? |
46451 | Do my eyes deceive me? |
46451 | Do people enjoy such perilous feats? |
46451 | Do people live in such places? |
46451 | Do you forge this shaft originally? |
46451 | Do you permit your pupils to attend your rival''s exhibition? |
46451 | Do you speak English? |
46451 | Eh, Monsieur? 46451 Eh? |
46451 | Fife francs? 46451 Have You Tobacco or Spirits?" |
46451 | Have you been to the Louvre? |
46451 | How Long Must I Endure This? |
46451 | How are you getting on? |
46451 | How could he have got out on the street, if he had pawned all his clothes and his boots? |
46451 | How do you live? |
46451 | How does any one know that there was no Tell? 46451 How far have we to go before we come to one of the houses you spoke of?" |
46451 | How long does it take you to cut this slot in it? |
46451 | How long does it take you to get out upon the street? |
46451 | How many hours do you work? |
46451 | How much for that lobster? |
46451 | How much? |
46451 | How shall we get water? 46451 How too religious?" |
46451 | I trust, Mrs. Thompson,he said, professionally,"that you are prepared to die?" |
46451 | I was called to it,was the answer,"what would these poor people do without me?" |
46451 | If he do n''t like the country and the laws, why do n''t he get out of it? |
46451 | In the name of all that''s good what_ is_ all this about? |
46451 | Is it good? |
46451 | Is it on Mickey Doolan''s farrum? |
46451 | Is this safe? |
46451 | Jim, me boy, and is them the Shanghais? 46451 Know Ned Stokes? |
46451 | May I ask what part of the Great Republic you are from? |
46451 | Must you go? 46451 Pay it? |
46451 | Suppose you do n''t pay the rent, then what? |
46451 | The clerk? |
46451 | The maiden leaped from this spot? |
46451 | The poor man is sick,quoth the kindly dame,"why do n''t you help him?" |
46451 | Then the prevailing impression is that everybody in the world is a thief? 46451 Then why do n''t you have the piece of iron forged with this slot made down to within say a quarter- inch and save nine- tenths of this time?" |
46451 | To what swindling scoundrel do you refer? |
46451 | Vat dey vant? 46451 Was he actually dangerous?" |
46451 | Well, how in the world can you raise enough on such a holding to pay such an exorbitant rent? |
46451 | Well? |
46451 | What am I here for, anyhow? 46451 What are you doing?" |
46451 | What are you intending to do when you are older? |
46451 | What are you sobbing so for? |
46451 | What do these items mean? |
46451 | What do you know about it? 46451 What do you pay for the rooms?" |
46451 | What do you pay for this apartment? |
46451 | What is his prayer? 46451 What is the matter?" |
46451 | What is the price of it? |
46451 | What is this for? |
46451 | What is''Oui Monsieur''in English? |
46451 | What is''stirabout''? |
46451 | What kind of a banker was he? |
46451 | What rent do you pay for this place? |
46451 | What will you do if he dies? |
46451 | Where are your classes to- day? |
46451 | Where were you born? |
46451 | Who Put that Ribbon in your Cap? |
46451 | Who gave you permission to make a ditch on my land? |
46451 | Who put that ribbon in your cap? |
46451 | Who was Joan of Arc, anyway? |
46451 | Who? |
46451 | Why did you ask him ten francs when you only asked me five to begin with, and intended to take two? |
46451 | Why do n''t you go up the Alps? |
46451 | Why do n''t you lecture on temperance? |
46451 | Why do you,I asked,"a man capable of doing so much in the world, stay and do this enormous work, for nothing?" |
46451 | Why does he sign a lease, the conditions of which he can not fulfil? |
46451 | Why have you quit the hotel? |
46451 | Why join a wholesale liquor dealer? |
46451 | Why not now? |
46451 | Why not? 46451 Why not? |
46451 | Why this condition of things, then? |
46451 | Why,said I to the waterman,"do you make us pay for doing what those men do for nothing?" |
46451 | Will they? 46451 Will you let me see your memorandum book?" |
46451 | Would You Oblige Me? |
46451 | Would it not have been better for you had you followed a more reputable career? |
46451 | Yis, sor, what is it? |
46451 | You are to marry her? |
46451 | You do n''t mean to say that these people actually live on that fare? 46451 Your business?" |
46451 | Ze yellow fevair and General Butlair in one season? 46451 ''City of Paris?'' 46451 16th? 46451 A death bed repentance is all very well, but suppose you die too suddenly to repent? |
46451 | A dirty, squalid, beggarly- looking street is Judengasse, but who knows what wealth is hidden behind all this apparent poverty? |
46451 | A funeral procession was passing:--"Who is it that is dead?" |
46451 | Am I a baby in my A B Abs? |
46451 | Am I like any grandson you have? |
46451 | And as for the expense, what is it? |
46451 | And as for the names of the places, havn''t I got a guide book, and ca n''t I read? |
46451 | And do you remember when you gave out at the foot of the first glacier how I pulled you up?'' |
46451 | And she took my effects?" |
46451 | And then why should Satan be perpetually swindled? |
46451 | And there''s Chet Arthur; who''d ever spose that Chet would ever have got to be President? |
46451 | And who that cockade in yours?" |
46451 | And, as they all lie about it, anyhow, why not, if you are going to lie, commence lying at the beginning, and save labor? |
46451 | Another expressive shrug, as if to say"Who knows?" |
46451 | As if the favorite should say:"Your majesty, what shall we do with Sir Thomas Buster? |
46451 | Behead him?" |
46451 | But ai n''t the dear departed inside the lion? |
46451 | But how did this woman get it? |
46451 | But how ish dot wart to be got off? |
46451 | But how to get rid of Adolph? |
46451 | But what are you going to do about it? |
46451 | But what becomes of the English investors? |
46451 | But what is he in Ireland? |
46451 | But what of that? |
46451 | But where is it to come from? |
46451 | But where is the necessity of supporting them at all? |
46451 | But why am I thus? |
46451 | But why not? |
46451 | But, Henri, should you fall, what would become of me?" |
46451 | By the way have you met any of the nobility? |
46451 | By the way, is she paying enough?" |
46451 | Ca n''t you_ stand_ another one?'' |
46451 | Can I tell? |
46451 | Can a country afford to fit out costly armaments and maintain vast armies for such purposes? |
46451 | Can there be any way of making a great estate so delightful as this? |
46451 | Can you tell? |
46451 | Come to think of it, wuz it Elijah, or Elisha? |
46451 | Could a saint, be she ever so devout, find that number in Cologne now? |
46451 | Could she, a plain country girl, with no dowry to speak of, hope to we d a man with a fortune of sixty- eight dollars and fifty cents? |
46451 | Could there be modeled a more vicious face? |
46451 | Did I ascend any of these mountains? |
46451 | Did all this happen? |
46451 | Did n''t I scoop in that jack pot nicely last evening? |
46451 | Did you write down your impressions of the places you visited?" |
46451 | Do I resemble any friend of yours? |
46451 | Do n''t I know the difference between a Western prairie and an Alpine peak? |
46451 | Do you know Billy Vanderbilt? |
46451 | Do you know the hour at which the tide comes in at New Haven? |
46451 | Do you know the hour the tide serves to enter Dieppe? |
46451 | Do you remember Dickens''Montagu Tigg in Martin Chuzzlewit? |
46451 | Do you want a glass of water? |
46451 | Do you? |
46451 | Does he get anything for the making of the land? |
46451 | Does he shoot it? |
46451 | Does it not inculcate a great principle just the same? |
46451 | For instance, if we should lose our propeller what would happen? |
46451 | For instance:--"Thompson, do you know how many States there are in the Union?" |
46451 | Has your company any interest in the ham sandwich and beer counter in New Haven? |
46451 | Have these people from first to last ever added one penny to the wealth of the world? |
46451 | Have ye a job ye can give me?" |
46451 | Have you anything better in Germany?" |
46451 | Have ze great God no maircy, zen?" |
46451 | Havn''t I got eyes? |
46451 | He can be happy with rags and a crust, and what is money to such a being? |
46451 | How can I bring up children for France on nothing and encumbered with a five- foot four husband with sandy hair, a pug nose, and bandy legs? |
46451 | How could a man get a glass of water into his stomach without its going down his throat? |
46451 | How could she fall five huntret veet and not hurt hairselluf?" |
46451 | How do you know but what the Indians are older than the Gauls? |
46451 | How many hats, coats and walking sticks would be left by the time the entertainment was over? |
46451 | How many landlords have been shot? |
46451 | How much do the little Princes and Princesses cost the Nation? |
46451 | How much do you suppose it cost Mr. Foote to have this trifle of work done? |
46451 | How much does the Queen receive? |
46451 | How much the Dukes and Dukelings, the Right Honorables and the Generals and Colonels, and the Secretaries and all that? |
46451 | How, possibly, could a government send out a complement of wives, sisters, cousins and aunts to nurse and weep over each wounded individual? |
46451 | How? |
46451 | I could have done anything that I wanted to, but to what purpose? |
46451 | I have just come from one, at which--"You are not going to send this infernal aggregation of lies to your mother, are you?" |
46451 | I overheard this conversation between two young ladies one morning:--"Mary, dear, where did you go last evening? |
46451 | I remember one night--""Where are you from?" |
46451 | I will, you bet?" |
46451 | If French phrases must be used in English writing, why not take them from a bill of fare? |
46451 | If I give one hundred and ten thousand francs to one, what will become of the others? |
46451 | If rags and apple cores suffice, why more? |
46451 | If so, could you, for the sake of the resemblance, lend me a hundred francs?" |
46451 | If so, why not give us the five and a half hours that were consumed in useless waiting at New Haven and Dieppe, in London? |
46451 | If tongue work is to do it, why not use your tongue, and save your legs? |
46451 | If we berry the lion, do n''t we berry the dear deceast? |
46451 | In the coming years what may happen to me? |
46451 | In the name of all that''s good, what does the Queen of England want of eight ladies of the bed- chamber, and thirteen women of the bed- chamber? |
46451 | Is the Chicago& Northwestern in this row?" |
46451 | Is there any one thing they have ever done to push forward the progress of the nations? |
46451 | Is yours in pants yet, or is he in kilts? |
46451 | It would be easier to answer the question, What do n''t they do? |
46451 | Lemuel stared at him and replied:--"Are you addressing me, sir?" |
46451 | Let''s see, where was I? |
46451 | May I ask your name, and why you address me, a perfect stranger? |
46451 | No? |
46451 | No? |
46451 | No? |
46451 | Or,''What day of the month is this? |
46451 | Possibly St. Ursula was skillful enough to corner that number of virgins; but would the Huns have slain them all? |
46451 | See? |
46451 | See? |
46451 | Send it? |
46451 | Shall I put it into your basket?" |
46451 | Shall I say three francs?" |
46451 | She said to herself,"I could marry, by virtue of my face and figure, a grand gentleman, but-- what then? |
46451 | Should I go into business, and make a great fortune? |
46451 | Should I go into literature, and make myself an imperishable name? |
46451 | Should I go into politics, and control the destinies of nations? |
46451 | Should I live? |
46451 | Speaking of monuments and commemorative structures, how many has the United States? |
46451 | Suppose I should n''t come back with it?" |
46451 | Suppose Tell did n''t shoot the apple? |
46451 | Suppose he had always lived a perfectly correct life, and some emergency should come to him that demanded economy, what would he have to economize on? |
46451 | That the feat is possible every schoolboy knows, for have we not all seen Buffalo Bill do the same thing in the theaters? |
46451 | The old alleys were good enough for their fathers, and why not for the present generation? |
46451 | The priest asked:--"If you get that earth back by Monday morning, will you hold the land?" |
46451 | The question is, where do all these things come from? |
46451 | The question was, what should I do? |
46451 | The seller says it was, and if he happens to be mistaken, what difference does it make so that you believe it? |
46451 | The translation is so good(?) |
46451 | Their fathers were scarified, and why should they not be? |
46451 | Then with an inflection in my voice that had something of sarcasm, I suppose, in it, I asked:--"Is that all?" |
46451 | They at least have meat with their potatoes?" |
46451 | They know you to be an American at once, and one introduces himself, claiming to have seen you in the States:"What are you doing here?" |
46451 | They simply said:"Avez vous tabac ou liquers?" |
46451 | They were satisfied with themselves for a while, at least, and when happiness can be had for a penny, why should any one be miserable? |
46451 | This is war, and what was this war all about? |
46451 | To whom could he sell the corn at a profit? |
46451 | Under such circumstances who would care to own a city, or to possess in fee simple the cattle on a thousand hills? |
46451 | We were hungry, it''s true, but what was hunger to the delight of waiting three hours in an abominable steamer? |
46451 | Were we over with it? |
46451 | What Shall We Do with Sir Thomas? |
46451 | What are you doing here?" |
46451 | What became of them? |
46451 | What becomes of them? |
46451 | What can Pat do? |
46451 | What could Mr. Bartleman ask more? |
46451 | What could be better than this? |
46451 | What did I sail across the Atlantic, and come to Switzerland for? |
46451 | What did the old folks do about it?" |
46451 | What difference does it make if it is a fable? |
46451 | What do all these people do? |
46451 | What do you suppose this liquid is? |
46451 | What do you suppose this magnificent man gets for all this? |
46451 | What does he pray about?" |
46451 | What does she want of all these people about her? |
46451 | What does that prove? |
46451 | What earthly good would all this do me? |
46451 | What good of making a name, and what earthly use was there in controlling the destiny of nations? |
46451 | What good of piling up money? |
46451 | What happened to the''City of Boston?'' |
46451 | What happens to him then? |
46451 | What is a man with rheumatism, inflammatory or otherwise, to five men trying to mend their ways? |
46451 | What is a waterfall, anyway? |
46451 | What is an old lady in silver spectacles on a farm thirty miles from any water more than a well, going to know about a steamer? |
46451 | What is beef going to be worth then? |
46451 | What is he now? |
46451 | What is it? |
46451 | What is the amount paid the drones of England in the form of pensions? |
46451 | What is the reason for this? |
46451 | What is to prevent the Jew at the table who has a paper before him containing, say, two hundred diamonds, from secreting one or two? |
46451 | What kind of an infamy is it that will not permit a mother to mourn the death of her first born without connecting it with"rint?" |
46451 | What kind of an infernalism is it that grips the hearts of women, that lays its icy iron finger upon the tenderest chords in a mother''s heart? |
46451 | What must be the condition of the poor if such as she were paying to support them? |
46451 | What necessity is there for their existence? |
46451 | What on? |
46451 | What sense was there in laying traps for Caspar when Caspar was doing his level best to get to him anyhow? |
46451 | What should be the plan of my life? |
46451 | What should the citizen of Terre Haute, Ind., know of the value of bronzes? |
46451 | What then? |
46451 | What to My Lord is Nancy and her woes or her hopes? |
46451 | What was duty? |
46451 | What was the matter? |
46451 | What will become of me?" |
46451 | When the earth melts and the sky is rolled up like a scroll, where is your Shakespeare? |
46451 | Where did you get that lace? |
46451 | Where is Milton, Byron, Burns, and the long list of men who have written that their names may be everlasting? |
46451 | Where is your cheapness now? |
46451 | Where was you born? |
46451 | Who can analyze that subtle and unknown thing we call mind?" |
46451 | Who can control tastes? |
46451 | Who could tell? |
46451 | Who has not heard of Bond''s, the great resort of boating parties on the Thames? |
46451 | Who is responsible for what happens to him? |
46451 | Who knows? |
46451 | Who shall say? |
46451 | Who went to Mabille? |
46451 | Who would cut a throat for oroide gold with imitation stones? |
46451 | Why buy twinty gondolas, to- wanst? |
46451 | Why ca n''t everybody have spirit? |
46451 | Why did I spring from that couch and break open the window? |
46451 | Why do you and that other weazened monkey interrupt me when I am contemplating nature, by calling my attention to it, and asking me to note it? |
46451 | Why keep all the good things for the nobility? |
46451 | Why not Petticoat Lane? |
46451 | Why not buy two-- a male and a faymale, and breed thim ourselves?" |
46451 | Why should he go to the trouble of helping them, when he knows perfectly well that he will get them, anyhow? |
46451 | Why should it be the exclusive property of women? |
46451 | Why will such men come to places intended as reformatories? |
46451 | Why? |
46451 | Why? |
46451 | Why? |
46451 | Why? |
46451 | Will you go over now, and see for yourself if I have exaggerated?" |
46451 | Without the Opera the rich American would not come to Paris, and then what would trade be? |
46451 | Would he not throw the money in my face and feel so insulted that he would throw up my case?" |
46451 | Would you mind lending me five pounds till Saturday?" |
46451 | You are not going to send this to your mother?" |
46451 | You are not surely going to send that?" |
46451 | You can do it, but you know the terms?" |
46451 | You have done it? |
46451 | You have kept a diary?" |
46451 | You know Filkins& Beaver, of Buffalo? |
46451 | You promise?" |
46451 | You understand?" |
46451 | [ Illustration: HAVE YOU TOBACCO OR SPIRITS?] |
46451 | [ Illustration: WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH SIR THOMAS BUSTER?] |
46451 | [ Illustration:"HOW LONG MUST I ENDURE THIS?"] |
46451 | [ Illustration:"JIM, MY BOY, AND IS THEM THE SHANGHAIS? |
46451 | [ Illustration:"WHO PUT THAT RIBBON IN YOUR CAP?"] |
46451 | [ Illustration:"WOULD YOU OBLIGE ME WITH A HUNDRED FRANCS TILL SATURDAY?"] |
46451 | [ Sidenote: WOULD THE QUEEN ACCEPT A TIP?] |
46451 | _ Perfide!_ But we die for France all the same?" |
46451 | and is this delay in that most uninteresting place for the purpose of compelling the waiting passengers to leave a few more shillings in England? |
46451 | do n''t I vish I''ad just''arf of vot ails him?" |
46451 | how long must I endure this?'' |
46451 | into cash and take a shy at it, as Wall street would say, and set up his carriage on the profits? |
46451 | said he to himself, as he took one last look at her, curled up gracefully on the floor,"shall I leave her thus? |
46451 | that they have nothing else? |
46451 | was my reply,"do you say that I, a perfect stranger to you, may carry off a ring worth forty pounds? |
46451 | where is the inscription? |
46451 | will the grave and great man take twenty francs? |
46451 | you were taken in, were you?" |
45026 | Am I interrupting some important study? |
45026 | And do n''t you think it is horrid for him to jerk her away just as he has come? |
45026 | And is Miss Dolores with you? |
45026 | And may we go this afternoon to look at them? |
45026 | And not go to Sicily and Greece? 45026 And shall you stay long?" |
45026 | And what are we? |
45026 | And what did Konrad do? |
45026 | And why not for Miss Josephine Keyes, pray? |
45026 | And would you get Wordsworth and Rossetti here or trust to finding copies at Grasmere? |
45026 | And you know the way perfectly? 45026 And you say there is no light at the entrance?" |
45026 | And you wo n''t do any of the things you said you would? 45026 And you wo n''t have those sword cuts all over your face?" |
45026 | And your music, your college career and all that? |
45026 | And your own family? |
45026 | Are there merry- go- rounds and side- shows? |
45026 | Are we going in a gondola first thing? |
45026 | Are we going to have plum- cake? |
45026 | Are we going to stay right in San Sebastian? |
45026 | Are you dreaming, Nan? 45026 Are you enjoying the present moment?" |
45026 | Are you going to take up counterpoint and thorough- bass? |
45026 | Are you going to wear a green or a blue cap or what color? |
45026 | Are you sighing because it is so beautiful? |
45026 | Are you sure you will want to, Nan? |
45026 | Are you trying to conjugate is going? |
45026 | Are you trying to make a pun? |
45026 | As long as we do and we shall be here at least a week or ten days, sha n''t we, Aunt Helen? |
45026 | Ask a Virginian that? 45026 But I may go? |
45026 | But did n''t I tell you it would be awfully nice to have them both live with you? |
45026 | But did n''t you realize that Jean would n''t know where you had gone, and that she would be frightened about you? |
45026 | But do n''t you want her to be happy? |
45026 | But will she let them in till the tree is lighted? |
45026 | But you did want to see us, did n''t you, Carter? |
45026 | But you''re not going right after breakfast, are you? |
45026 | By the way,said Mr. Pinckney,"did you happen to leave word where you had gone so early? |
45026 | Ca n''t we divide up? |
45026 | Ca n''t we have torpedoes or firecrackers or some kind of fireworks? |
45026 | Ca n''t we? 45026 Can you realize, girls? |
45026 | Carter? 45026 Cider? |
45026 | Could n''t we have one? |
45026 | Could n''t we walk about a little? |
45026 | Could n''t you be a little more exact, Jack dear? |
45026 | Dear me, Nan, is it as late as that? |
45026 | Dear me, it would take a lifetime, would n''t it, Carter? |
45026 | Did Madame say Bas or Pas? |
45026 | Did he come home with her? |
45026 | Did she look very poor? |
45026 | Did the other boys see her skating with this fellow? |
45026 | Did you ask her name, Jean, and where she lived? |
45026 | Did you ever see such wonderfully colored creatures as some of these are? |
45026 | Did you get a description of the man? |
45026 | Did you know you were going to get the chain, Nan? |
45026 | Do n''t you love Miss Dolores? |
45026 | Do n''t you think it will give as much pleasure there, the music, I mean, as anywhere? 45026 Do n''t you think we shall have time for the Portrait Gallery to- day?" |
45026 | Do n''t you think,said Jo,"that we ought to have speeches or something?" |
45026 | Do n''t you want to see Naples? |
45026 | Do people really think there are such fairies? |
45026 | Do we turn off here? 45026 Do what?" |
45026 | Do you all know what day it is? 45026 Do you know anything about the old book?" |
45026 | Do you know him? |
45026 | Do you know how long they are going to stay? |
45026 | Do you know many of the students? |
45026 | Do you know where he intended to go? |
45026 | Do you like stingy people? |
45026 | Do you make friends with many of the German students? |
45026 | Do you mean a cracker or a Quaker? |
45026 | Do you see that gray building perched away up there? |
45026 | Do you suppose the little monkey could have gone off by herself? |
45026 | Do you think I''m afraid of the dark, Nan Corner? |
45026 | Do you think there should be thirteen stripes? |
45026 | Do you think we may really count upon his being the right man? |
45026 | Do you think we need sit here in this station for a mortal hour and a half? |
45026 | Do you think you could have left it at the hotel? |
45026 | Do you think, Dr. Paul, that he has then deserted his little daughter? |
45026 | Even if it is back to the Wadsworth school? |
45026 | Everybody? |
45026 | Everything all right? |
45026 | Exactly,returned the doctor,"and we know if our own country postmasters are so often stupid what must some of these Germans be? |
45026 | Get where? |
45026 | Go where? 45026 Go where?" |
45026 | Had you met the Pinckneys here in Venice before you came across us? |
45026 | Had you much money in it? |
45026 | Has it been as great as all that? |
45026 | Has n''t it been an interesting day? 45026 Have n''t we had a good time?" |
45026 | Have n''t you had enough_ krippen_ for one day? 45026 Have n''t you told her, mother?" |
45026 | Have you an idea what she is talking about? |
45026 | Have you been in the city twenty- four hours and have not made its acquaintance? 45026 Have you dared to sit on a sofa lately?" |
45026 | He did? |
45026 | Here, you Josephine Schlüssel, are you asleep? 45026 How about giving it to Nan?" |
45026 | How are you going to do it? |
45026 | How can we see it all? |
45026 | How did you dare to go there? |
45026 | How did you ever remember that long name, Nan? |
45026 | How did you happen upon such a charming spot, Helen? |
45026 | How did you know? |
45026 | How do you get there, Aunt Helen? |
45026 | How do you know so much? |
45026 | How does it get here? |
45026 | How old is this Dr. Paul Woods? |
45026 | How should you like to take a furnished apartment? |
45026 | How will you get out? |
45026 | How you would look,cried Nan,"and what would she do that day, pray?" |
45026 | However, I will talk to your Aunt Helen about it and----"If there can be a way managed you''ll let us go, wo n''t you? |
45026 | I know she likes him and I know he came over because she was here, and did you see how cross he looked? |
45026 | I mean is she a doctor or a teacher or anything like that? 45026 I see four_ Dienst_--do you say_ mannen_?" |
45026 | I think Carter will have plenty for both of us, do n''t you? |
45026 | I was n''t scared a bit, was I, Carter? |
45026 | I wonder why they call them_ aldeana_ costumes? |
45026 | I''d look pretty, a great long- legged girl like me in a crowd of French''_ bonnes_''and''_ blanchisseuse_,''would n''t I? 45026 I''ve seen Harvard, you know, and what are colleges anyhow? |
45026 | If I do n''t know anything about it,said Jack,"wo n''t you please tell me? |
45026 | If the streets are all water we shall have to, sha n''t we? |
45026 | If we should happen to find any one going that way who would chaperon us it would be all right, would n''t it? 45026 If you think it is so horrible what makes you stand and gaze at it?" |
45026 | Is he to be here for any length of time? |
45026 | Is he very poor? |
45026 | Is it a real dove? |
45026 | Is it a real street? 45026 Is it anything like pastilles, those funny sweet- smelling things we had in California? |
45026 | Is it just like them? |
45026 | Is it very far? |
45026 | Is n''t it solemn? |
45026 | Is n''t it too delicious for anything? 45026 Is n''t it wonderful?" |
45026 | Is n''t that interesting? 45026 Is she any kind of an anything?" |
45026 | Is that you here in the dark, Jacksie? |
45026 | Is that you, Carter Barnwell? |
45026 | Is the whole outfit going? 45026 Is there a tent, or what?" |
45026 | Is there anything special that tells of him? |
45026 | Is this little stream really the Avon? |
45026 | It''s a great place, is n''t it? |
45026 | Jack has been told that every one in Paris does as he or she chooses upon the fourteenth of July, and why not she with the rest? 45026 Leave Rome?" |
45026 | London is an awfully big place, is n''t it? |
45026 | Mary Lee,she cried,"have you my pocketbook?" |
45026 | May I have another piece, mother? |
45026 | May n''t I stripe my stockings, Nan? |
45026 | May n''t we go out into that pretty square where the big fountain is? |
45026 | Me? |
45026 | Must you go? |
45026 | Nan,she said presently,"wo n''t you go with me to Hyde Park or somewhere? |
45026 | Need it be unwholesome because it is sweet? |
45026 | No wonder they call the city Florence, for what could be more flowery at this time of year? |
45026 | No,she answered truthfully, then hurriedly,"Why do you ask?" |
45026 | Not be here? |
45026 | Now, do n''t you want to see mother and Miss Dolores and Jean? 45026 Now, what will you have?" |
45026 | Oh, Aunt Helen, do you think we shall be able to see both as well as the Portrait Gallery? |
45026 | Oh, Nan, did I? |
45026 | Oh, Nan, do you think she could have been run over by an automobile? |
45026 | Oh, and did you speak to her? |
45026 | Oh, but ca n''t we? |
45026 | Oh, but can we find time to come again? |
45026 | Oh, ca n''t we go back and do it all over? |
45026 | Oh, did n''t you see that lovely great book? |
45026 | Oh, do n''t you know? 45026 Oh, do they have them anywhere but in the churches?" |
45026 | Oh, that? 45026 Oh, they are never late in ours, are they?" |
45026 | Oh, would you really take me in, too? 45026 Sent up where? |
45026 | Shall we ever be content to settle down again, I wonder? |
45026 | Shall we go at once to see Miss Selby? |
45026 | Shall we have another day of it, Miss Helen? |
45026 | Shall we have to wear funny hats and do our hair in braids up over the tops of our heads or around our ears like the German girls do? |
45026 | She asked Jo; did n''t she, Jo? |
45026 | She knew why? |
45026 | Six o''clock? |
45026 | So long as that? 45026 So the opera was great, was it, Nan?" |
45026 | Suppose you were to make another, what would it be? |
45026 | That cross old creature? 45026 That was the one from which we had such difficulty in dragging you, was n''t it?" |
45026 | Then do n''t you want her to be happy? 45026 Tut, tut, how was that? |
45026 | Want a guide? |
45026 | Was I superior? |
45026 | We are n''t going to stay in this hotel, are we? |
45026 | We shall go back to stay some day, sha n''t we, mother? |
45026 | Well, did n''t you? |
45026 | Well,she exclaimed eagerly,"did you manage to get anything?" |
45026 | Were they real people? 45026 Were you out there? |
45026 | What a queer idea, and when shall you get your supper? |
45026 | What are they saying? |
45026 | What are we going to have for lunch? |
45026 | What are you doing wandering about Munich alone? |
45026 | What are you doing with my paints? |
45026 | What are you girls talking about? |
45026 | What are you going to do this evening, Carter? |
45026 | What are you going to do with them? |
45026 | What are you loitering here for? |
45026 | What are_ krippen_? |
45026 | What can we do? |
45026 | What castle, chickadee? 45026 What did Dr. Paul give you?" |
45026 | What did the little girl say? |
45026 | What did you all talk to her about? |
45026 | What did you do then? |
45026 | What did you say? |
45026 | What did you think of it, Helen? |
45026 | What do you do when you get there? |
45026 | What do you like best, Jo? |
45026 | What do you like best, Nan? |
45026 | What do you like, you Jo Keyes over there? |
45026 | What do you mean, Mary Lee? |
45026 | What do you propose, Aunt Helen? |
45026 | What do you say we do, Jo? |
45026 | What do you say, Mary? |
45026 | What do you say, Mary? |
45026 | What do you say, Mary? |
45026 | What do you see, Sister Anne? |
45026 | What do you think of the new girl and boy? |
45026 | What does Bastille mean, anyway? |
45026 | What does it look like? |
45026 | What else did you get? |
45026 | What for? |
45026 | What have you found? |
45026 | What have you lost? |
45026 | What horrid boy? |
45026 | What in the world is the matter? |
45026 | What is Crosby Hall? |
45026 | What is a bobby? |
45026 | What is a_ Conditorei_? |
45026 | What is his name? |
45026 | What is the matter with Jean? |
45026 | What is the matter with it, girls? |
45026 | What is there to see here, Miss Helen? |
45026 | What is your charge? |
45026 | What kind? |
45026 | What makes you think so? |
45026 | What shall you buy with the rest of it, Nan? |
45026 | What was she doing? 45026 What''s Jo doing, Carter?" |
45026 | What''s that? |
45026 | What''s your particular wanity? |
45026 | What? |
45026 | What? |
45026 | What? |
45026 | What? |
45026 | What? |
45026 | When can we go to the glass factory? 45026 When can we go to the sitting- room?" |
45026 | When did you come? 45026 When do we start for England, Aunt Helen?" |
45026 | When the others are off looking at their old churches and dried up specimens we''ll come here and see these fine wet ones, wo n''t we? |
45026 | When was she at the height of her glory? |
45026 | When you use that authoritative manner, Aunt Helen, we all of us have to give in, do n''t we, mother? |
45026 | Where are the kiddies? |
45026 | Where are the pigeons? |
45026 | Where are the twinnies? |
45026 | Where is Hal? |
45026 | Where is Jack? |
45026 | Where is it? |
45026 | Where is it? |
45026 | Where shall we go in Venice, to a hotel or a_ pension_? |
45026 | Where was he last seen? |
45026 | Where was the place? |
45026 | Where? 45026 Where?" |
45026 | Where? |
45026 | Who all are coming to- night to help you celebrate? |
45026 | Who all are in there? |
45026 | Who are the men wearing the white things with holes for their eyes? 45026 Who can tell?" |
45026 | Who else? 45026 Who has taken my paint box?" |
45026 | Who is Jo? |
45026 | Who is the German youth with the green cap I saw skating with your friend Jo, this afternoon? |
45026 | Who is the_ München kindel_? |
45026 | Who was Pelayo, anyhow? |
45026 | Who will change with me? |
45026 | Who''s getting English expressions now? |
45026 | Who''s to begin? |
45026 | Who? |
45026 | Why could n''t she be satisfied with the nice boys she already knows? |
45026 | Why did n''t I know enough to do it right? |
45026 | Why do n''t you say baggage? |
45026 | Why do n''t you talk about something not quite so obvious as that? |
45026 | Why not? |
45026 | Why should n''t they come out and look at the pretty things? 45026 Why was that, Miss Helen?" |
45026 | Why, yes, did n''t Jean tell you? 45026 Why,"cried Miss Helen,"what are you doing here?" |
45026 | Why? |
45026 | Will Aunt Helen go with you? |
45026 | Will he be rich some day? |
45026 | Will there be a moon? |
45026 | Will there be any other little girls? |
45026 | Will you come up or will you wait till she comes down to open the lower door? 45026 Wo n''t I? |
45026 | Wo n''t it be fun? |
45026 | Would n''t it be a better plan to select what you''re sure you want to- day and come again after you have made a list? |
45026 | Would n''t it be the queerest thing if your going to Dresden should be the means of finding him? |
45026 | Would you be afraid we''d get lost if we went alone? |
45026 | Would you like to see an old, a very old loom, and some one weaving linen? |
45026 | You are? 45026 You can hire them,"Nan told her,"and that is what we are all going to do, for who can tell whether we shall like the sport or not? |
45026 | You did n''t get wet? |
45026 | You do n''t mean me, do you? |
45026 | You do n''t mean to say that you thought we would leave a single lamb to the ravening wolves of Paris? |
45026 | You do n''t want to discipline me, do you? |
45026 | You had? 45026 You have money with you? |
45026 | You should, should you? |
45026 | You''ll be sure to let us know as soon as you find out, wo n''t you? |
45026 | You''re a saint, is n''t she, Aunt Helen? |
45026 | You''re going to stay with us, mother, are n''t you? |
45026 | You''re not going to leave us here all alone like we were last year? |
45026 | Your mother and father? |
45026 | Your train was an hour late,Mr. Pinckney told them;"but what can you expect in this country?" |
45026 | _ Americanos?_"Yes. 45026 _ Gehen zie_ in theatre?" |
45026 | _ Warum?_inquired Jack. |
45026 | ''Hallo,''I said,''where did you get that?'' |
45026 | ''Was his name Hans Metzger?'' |
45026 | ''What''s the matter with him?'' |
45026 | ''Where was he from?'' |
45026 | ''Who is that?'' |
45026 | And how goes the German, Nan?" |
45026 | And the_ ramas_? |
45026 | And what about England, Aunt Helen?" |
45026 | Are n''t they going to live with you?" |
45026 | Are n''t they interesting? |
45026 | Are n''t they just the thing? |
45026 | Are n''t they nice and crusty?" |
45026 | Are the cats looking all right? |
45026 | Are we going inside, Aunt Helen?" |
45026 | Are you afraid Miss Dolores has n''t enough love to go around?" |
45026 | Are you sure, Nan, that it is the same?" |
45026 | At first I did n''t believe I could ever think of anything else for days, but I had an adventure and----""What do you mean, Nan?" |
45026 | But at last she said, a little reluctantly:"Could n''t I write the letter, Nan?" |
45026 | Can they sell so many, I wonder? |
45026 | Can you tell me what was his last address?" |
45026 | Come to have breakfast with me? |
45026 | Corner,"said Jo,"could I possibly afford it?" |
45026 | Could you not stay a year?" |
45026 | Dear me, what are you thinking of? |
45026 | Did I understand you to say, Jack, that you had seen her before?" |
45026 | Did he cheat you?" |
45026 | Did you buy them yourself, Jack, with your own money? |
45026 | Did you ever know anything so strange?" |
45026 | Did you ever see anything quite like that? |
45026 | Did you ever see such wild- looking, impish little things? |
45026 | Did you have good places?" |
45026 | Did you see Phil and Gordon? |
45026 | Do n''t they look like pictures of the old Roman carts?" |
45026 | Do n''t you know the common expression,''I''ll meet you on the Rialto''?" |
45026 | Do n''t you know you are to see the whole of Oxford to- day and go to Stratford to- morrow?" |
45026 | Do n''t you like her, Mary Lee? |
45026 | Do n''t you like the gondolier, Mr. St. Nick? |
45026 | Do n''t you love the way the men come sauntering along and stand before the windows? |
45026 | Do n''t you see her?" |
45026 | Do n''t you think it is fun? |
45026 | Do n''t you think, Aunt Helen, it would be nice to buy books at the places associated with the authors? |
45026 | Do we have to go from shop to shop in a gondola?" |
45026 | Do you have cider here?" |
45026 | Do you know its origin?" |
45026 | Do you know the man? |
45026 | Do you know where we are going?" |
45026 | Do you know who Beza was? |
45026 | Do you know you have scared Jean and me nearly to death? |
45026 | Do you mean that you think she could n''t love you both? |
45026 | Do you remember last year and little Christine? |
45026 | Do you trust me?" |
45026 | Does n''t it make you think of Dickens and Thackeray and all those? |
45026 | Does n''t she remind you of one of the witches in Macbeth?" |
45026 | Does n''t that sound fascinating?" |
45026 | Every one laughed and then every one turned eagerly to the doctor, for what did not Jack''s questions bring before them? |
45026 | Finally when the city gates were flung open out came a long train of women, and what do you think they had on their backs?" |
45026 | Frau Pfeffer and all those children?" |
45026 | Hallo, Jack, in there, why do n''t you let us hear from you?" |
45026 | Hallo, Jo, what do you think of it? |
45026 | Has he ever told you so?" |
45026 | Have you been to Nuremburg, Nan?" |
45026 | Have you forgotten what I told you when you went off with the_ cocher_ in Paris?" |
45026 | Have you said anything to her on the subject?" |
45026 | Have you taken passage yet, Miss Helen?" |
45026 | How did you find it out?" |
45026 | How did you think of all this?" |
45026 | How do you know this Mr. Kirk wants to marry my granddaughter? |
45026 | How is that, Jo? |
45026 | How much have you, Mary Lee?" |
45026 | How soon are you going to take us to feed the pigeons? |
45026 | How was Aunt Sarah when you left? |
45026 | Hoyt?" |
45026 | I can play much better than some of those great big girls, and I know I can, so what is the use of pretending I do n''t?" |
45026 | I do n''t suppose I need be limited in making my gifts, need I?" |
45026 | I do n''t suppose she will have any Christmas tree, do you?" |
45026 | I never expect to take a degree and why should I be interested in Oxford? |
45026 | I say but we''ll have a lot of boxes, sha n''t we?" |
45026 | I was so excited about the play, but Aunt Helen asked, did n''t she, mother?" |
45026 | I wish we had such nice cheap cab service at home, do n''t you, Aunt Helen?" |
45026 | I wonder whose grave it is? |
45026 | If she were Russian why does n''t she talk to the other Russians at the table?" |
45026 | If they were not Americans what could they be? |
45026 | Is Mitty there? |
45026 | Is go the word, mother?" |
45026 | Is he very wicked?" |
45026 | Is n''t Mr. Kirk an awfully nice young man, or what is the matter? |
45026 | Is n''t it Warwick, Jack?" |
45026 | Is n''t it a beauty, Aunt Helen? |
45026 | Is n''t it a lovely name?" |
45026 | Is n''t it all queer and different from anywhere else? |
45026 | Is n''t it fun to get your history lessons in this way?" |
45026 | Is n''t it nice to have a Spanish girl friend? |
45026 | Is n''t it overpowering? |
45026 | Is n''t it ridiculous? |
45026 | Is n''t the table lovely? |
45026 | It is just like an illustrated story, is n''t it? |
45026 | Just over there the guillotine was set up, was n''t it? |
45026 | Just walking along?" |
45026 | Kirk?" |
45026 | Let me see, how long was the place covered up?" |
45026 | May I get in bed with you?" |
45026 | Miss Helen bit her lip, but managed to ask,"What do you know about being a guide, a little boy like you?" |
45026 | Mother must not think of wearing herself out in that way, must she, Aunt Helen?" |
45026 | Must we leave it?" |
45026 | Nice old place, eh?" |
45026 | Nick?" |
45026 | Nick?" |
45026 | Now, Mary Lee, what do you choose?" |
45026 | Now, what''s on for this evening? |
45026 | Oh, I do wonder----""What is it, Nan?" |
45026 | Oh, Jean, what do you think we did? |
45026 | Oh, Nan, what would Frances Powers give to have this chance?" |
45026 | Or,"Mother, would you mind not going with us to- day?" |
45026 | Paul?" |
45026 | Paul?" |
45026 | Paul?" |
45026 | Shall I be taken for an English girl, do you think? |
45026 | Shall you ever forget her blasé look and set smile?" |
45026 | Should n''t you like to see the little Pfeffers when they discover the tree?" |
45026 | So quiet, Jo? |
45026 | So then you waited, and the_ cocher_ brought you back?" |
45026 | Suppose we have callers in the evening, what is to be done?" |
45026 | Suppose we should be seen by some of our friends, what would they think to see me twirling around in the midst of such a gang as this?" |
45026 | Then I''ve no prescriptions to write, no advice to give you this time?" |
45026 | Then after a pause,"What is the Rialto, anyhow, Miss Helen?" |
45026 | Vernon that we saw the big key there?" |
45026 | Was it because he liked Miss Dolores so much?" |
45026 | Was n''t it strange that it should happen to be he who came along at just the right moment?" |
45026 | Well, then, wo n''t you have her and Mr. Kirk both, and Nan and Mary Lee and Jean and me besides?" |
45026 | What a beautiful blue, blue sea, and how gay it looks on the Esplanade, do they call it? |
45026 | What are they all doing next door?" |
45026 | What are we going to do till then?" |
45026 | What are you going to wear, Nan?" |
45026 | What can I do, mother, to pass away the time?" |
45026 | What could he think of a girl alone in the street after ten o''clock? |
45026 | What do you all say to a few days in the mountains to look at the winter sports and get a bit more sunshine than we do here?" |
45026 | What do you all say?" |
45026 | What does he say?" |
45026 | What is it like?" |
45026 | What is that place over there, Aunt Helen?" |
45026 | What is to become of me?" |
45026 | What is your choice, Jack?" |
45026 | What made you get mad with him? |
45026 | What next? |
45026 | What shall I do when you all leave me? |
45026 | What shall we do to be in keeping with Christmas Eve?" |
45026 | What should suddenly decide Mr. St. Nick to go? |
45026 | What was it the key of? |
45026 | What was old Pete mule doing when you saw him last?" |
45026 | What was there wrong about it, Aunt Helen?" |
45026 | What we?" |
45026 | What will you do, Mary Lee?" |
45026 | What''s a hard question?" |
45026 | When can we go to the bead shop? |
45026 | When do we start out?" |
45026 | When shall I know so much as all that? |
45026 | When shall we be ready for another ride in a gondola?" |
45026 | Whenever a church was being discussed her first inquiry was always,"Has it a tower?" |
45026 | Where are the rest?" |
45026 | Where are you going?" |
45026 | Where can we go? |
45026 | Where did they come from? |
45026 | Where did you hear about white peacocks?" |
45026 | Where do strangers sit? |
45026 | Where have you been?" |
45026 | Where is Nan?" |
45026 | Where?" |
45026 | Who dares brave the elements with me? |
45026 | Who thought of the red Baedekers and the blue books?" |
45026 | Who was Caracalla, Carter? |
45026 | Who was it that had come on Miss Dolores''account? |
45026 | Who''ll go to market with me?" |
45026 | Who''s your letter from?" |
45026 | Why ca n''t we all go out and take it easy in a gondola or so? |
45026 | Why ca n''t we stay here instead of going to Germany so soon?" |
45026 | Why could n''t he let them marry and all of them live together? |
45026 | Why could n''t we be fellow passengers across the sea? |
45026 | Why do n''t the men wear it?" |
45026 | Why do n''t you speak up?" |
45026 | Why, may I ask?" |
45026 | Will you go with us to feed the pigeons the first thing?" |
45026 | Will you go with us, or shall we leave you and the twinnies here?" |
45026 | Wo n''t the girls at home be interested when we tell them about her?" |
45026 | Wo n''t you come dance with me, Nan?" |
45026 | Wo n''t you take my candle, even if you do n''t the candlestick?" |
45026 | Would it not do as well as German?" |
45026 | You all are way ahead of me when it comes to literature and pictures and things, and what must she have been?" |
45026 | You all have deserted your old neighbors, why should n''t I follow your example?" |
45026 | You are glad you came, Jo, are n''t you? |
45026 | You are not going to take all those things, are you, Jo? |
45026 | You do n''t have to get back before school begins, do you?" |
45026 | You do n''t mean to say you came from Paris alone?" |
45026 | You promise?" |
45026 | You think it will be fascinating to leave us?" |
45026 | You will not want it till then?" |
45026 | You wo n''t take us to the bead shop nor the glass factory nor anywhere?" |
45026 | Your Fräulein will not object?" |
45026 | Your old Nan understands, does n''t she? |
45026 | and where are you staying, and why did n''t you let us know?" |
45026 | asked Jack solicitously,"or because you ate too much supper?" |
45026 | asked Mary Lee;"and are they nice?" |
45026 | cried Nan, not refraining from giving the child a little shake,"where have you been? |
45026 | do you suppose there are not thousands of girls who would give their eyes to be in this beautiful place and have the chances you have? |
45026 | ejaculated Mr. Pinckney,"am I on the witness stand or not?" |
45026 | he said,"and what is the why?" |