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 |
---|---|
15785 | "5***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15789 | ***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15919 | = THE GREAT ROUND WORLD==3 AND 5 WEST 18TH ST. NEW YORK CITY=***** Do you Cover your Books? |
18746 | B) 57 E. 9th ST., NEW YORK CITY=*****= Mention...= Great Round World= When Writing Advertisers...=[ Illustration: DO YOU BIKE AT NIGHT?] |
16031 | Do you think I would disobey him?" |
16029 | Would you not like to have our premium list and learn the easiest way for you to become a subscriber? |
15918 | =---- SEND A LIST TO----== WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON==_ 3 and 5 West 18th Street New York City_=***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15386 | ***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15386 | Do you see now wherein Trusts are dangerous to us? |
15619 | Did young Prince George of Greece marry that"Holy Child,"as I think she is called? |
15619 | Do you think the Cubans will win? |
16032 | ( Strange, is n''t it, that foreign names should sound so funny to us, and be so difficult to pronounce? |
16030 | Now what do we do with the things that belong to us? 16030 Do we throw them away, or destroy them? 16030 We take care of them so that they may last, do n''t we? 16177 Because they oppose, are they to be called wild, obstinate, and ill- governed? 15970 Are you following from day to day the war in the East? 16475 Well, why do n''t you?" |
16475 | If I write about pets, what kind of pets are they most interested in-- dogs or cats, horses or birds, squirrels or fishes? |
16475 | If I write about wild animals, must it be about their homes and what they do, or about the best ways to hunt and trap them? |
16191 | In the mean while, will you not send us an account of the mine to which your father has gone? |
16191 | Wo n''t you write us another letter, giving us your father''s account of the mine he has gone to? |
15601 | Did the ten Chinamen who were invited to have their heads chopped off, escape? |
15601 | Do you think Cuba is winning, or Spain? |
15601 | Do you think that Greece can keep its little island Crete? |
15601 | What have these generals done for her? |
18854 | And for the eggs? |
18854 | You do n''t expect me to pay this bill? |
18854 | A strong remark, eh? |
18854 | Vous buvez de ce poison- là?" |
15916 | Are you following from day to day the war in the East? |
15916 | SAMPLE SET, RELIEF MAPS( 15),$ 1.00 SAMPLE ROMAN EMPIRE,- 10 CENTS WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,-- 5 West 18th Street, N.Y.***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15916 | Will you please make another one that no one shall wear our feathers, so that no one will kill us to get them? |
15539 | *****= MONOGRAMS MONOGRAMS= Who is Collecting Monograms? |
15539 | Are you following from day to day the war in the East? |
15539 | DEAR EDITOR: I want to ask you about the great monster, and did they take him to Washington? |
18745 | B) 57 E. 9th ST., NEW YORK CITY=*****= Mention...= Great Round World= When Writing Advertisers...=[ Illustration: DO YOU BIKE AT NIGHT?] |
18745 | Could you suggest something that a little girl could do? |
18745 | It has been suggested that we cede them to some European power; the question is, Can we do this? |
18745 | Who is correct? |
15650 | Do you think it is a good make? |
15650 | Do you think that Greece will fight Turkey any more? |
15650 | Do you think that the Cubans will take Havana soon? |
15650 | Who are the manufacturers? |
19203 | It may be asked,the Queen writes,"Why did the King give them his signature? |
19203 | ( We wonder if he has seen Grant''s book on birds, or"Bird Neighbors"?) |
19203 | How are our interests in China to be affected by the European encroachments there? |
19203 | In France the Dreyfus clamor has grown to a disturbance, the disturbance to riot;--what next? |
18663 | *****"B. S."asks:"For how long are foreign ministers to this country appointed? |
18663 | Could any better evidence of perfect discipline and heroism be given? |
18663 | Is it possible that an accident could have happened on that ship through lack of discipline? |
18663 | and how are our foreign ministers appointed? |
18663 | and what is their salary?" |
18663 | by whom? |
15326 | ***** Did you ever see a house move? |
15326 | They have been saying among themselves,"What on earth are we going to do if Turkey flatly refuses to make any reforms at all?" |
15326 | What?" |
15326 | When? |
15451 | Into what three branches is the Government of the United States divided? |
15451 | What is the highest department of the United States Courts? |
15451 | Why July 4th and February 22d were made legal holidays? |
15451 | Is England in favor of Turkey or Greece? |
15451 | To the question:"On what instrument is the Government of the United States founded?" |
15451 | and will United States ever help Cuba? |
16175 | 47? |
16175 | And do you think that Cuba will get its freedom? |
16175 | DEAR EDITOR: Can you give me further information relative to condensed food described on page 1267 of THE GREAT ROUND WORLD? |
16175 | Do you think the man that went up in the balloon will succeed in finding the North Pole? |
15716 | Can the prisoners in Sing Sing prison talk together? |
15716 | Can they, after doing their day''s work, do work for themselves and keep the money? |
15716 | If not, why not? |
15716 | Now shall I tell you something more about this great King, and who it was who became his wife after he went back to Persia? |
15716 | Transcriber''s note: Extra"to"removed from"he went back to Persia?" |
15716 | Will you please answer a few questions? |
15457 | *****= WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,==3& 5 West 18th Street.=***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15457 | Do you think that Cuba will ever be free? |
15457 | Do you think that the United States will help Cuba? |
15457 | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR DEAR MR. EDITOR: Would you kindly tell me what books to read? |
15457 | Please send me full particulars of the"Who? |
15457 | What? |
15457 | When? |
15827 | "5***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15827 | ***** What family is this whose history we have briefly sketched? |
15827 | Do you think there is any chance of Greece winning if the Powers stop their foolishness? |
15827 | Is it a real family, and a true history? |
15827 | Or is it just a"made- up"story, the fancy of an idle moment? |
15827 | Will you please explain this? |
15827 | Will you tell us something more about the Freeville Junior Republic, and what did they do with the insane Empress, Carlotta of Mexico? |
15917 | What, then,is the natural question,"what can we know of such times, and of earlier ones still? |
15917 | *****= THE GREAT ROUND WORLD==3& 5 WEST 18TH STREET NEW YORK CITY=***** Do you Cover your Books? |
15917 | Are you following from day to day the war in the East? |
15917 | How do we know things happened in the manner described a few pages back?" |
22147 | Is there no remedy? |
22147 | And Simeon answered:"Is it not evident that our sins have shut us away from the mercy of the Lord? |
22147 | How can we sleep in comfort when the children of Jesus Christ live in torments? |
22147 | Peter asked,"May not the warriors of the West come to your help?" |
22147 | Whose bowels are not stirred with shame and sorrow? |
22147 | Whose soul does not melt? |
22147 | [ Sidenote:_ Peter Belabors His Followers_][ Sidenote:_ Peter''s Failure as Leader_] But where was Peter? |
15518 | Are you following from day to day the war in the East? |
15518 | Can you tell us about how many people pass over Brooklyn Bridge in a day? |
15518 | Did the Admiral ever bring her into the Havana harbor as he boasted that he would, with flags flying on her? |
15518 | Do they have schools in Freeville? |
15518 | Do you think Cuba is going to win? |
15518 | Or if General Rivera is to be put to death? |
15518 | Why do n''t you try and get it for yourself by becoming one of our agents? |
15518 | Will you please tell me if General Maceo is dead or not? |
15404 | ***** Did you ever hear a singing mouse? |
15404 | Does it not seem absurd for two grown men to quarrel about a title which neither of them has the slightest use for? |
15404 | What?" |
15404 | What?" |
15404 | When? |
15404 | When? |
15404 | Will you please send me a"Who? |
15404 | chart? |
15613 | Do rebels or suspected rebels live in them? |
15613 | How long will that be? |
15613 | Chart? |
15613 | DEAR EDITOR: Will you please publish an account of the phonographic graphophone-- its invention, when, and by whom? |
15613 | Do you know any more about the big python that was found in Florida, or was it just taken to the Smithsonian Institute? |
15613 | What?" |
15613 | When? |
15613 | Why was the fleur- de- lis placed on the shield supplied to the statue? |
15613 | Will you please send me a"Who? |
15358 | *****= WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON_ 3& 5 W. 18th St. · · · New York City_= EXTRA EYES***** Have you ever seen the beautiful colors in a fly''s wing? |
15358 | About how large is it? |
15358 | Can you tell me where you get your news? |
15358 | Could you send me a copy of THE GREAT ROUND WORLD about the time the news of Maceo''s death was first heard of, if you have a spare one? |
15358 | Do you think United States will declare war with Spain? |
15358 | How many will it carry? |
15358 | Is there more than one? |
15358 | Will the platform carry you down as well as up? |
15358 | or the hole through a hair, or the little seed babies in the different seeds? |
15471 | Are you following from day to day the war in the East? |
15471 | Can you tell me, where can they be got? |
15471 | DEAR MR. EDITOR: Miss Bessy reads THE GREAT ROUND WORLD, and will you please send me a pattern of the kite of Lieutenant Wise? |
15471 | If they can be bought, where and how much? |
15471 | Will you kindly answer in next week''s number of the Magazine, and oblige three constant and interested readers of the Magazine? |
15471 | Wo n''t you tell us something about golf, or what you see when you go out riding? |
15471 | Would you not like to form a Band of Mercy to help your animal friends? |
15471 | Would you not like to know just how to help these poor little kindly things, who can not help themselves? |
15631 | And do n''t you think the bicycle car will be in Baltimore? |
15631 | DEAR EDITOR: I want to ask you about the seals; do you think the seals will be killed any more? |
15631 | Do you think that America can get him out? |
15631 | I hope the Cubans will gain their freedom, do n''t you? |
15631 | I want to ask you where the seals are caught besides the Bering Sea? |
15631 | If you have not room for a note on these, where could I obtain best account of them? |
15631 | Is a Japanese born in this country a citizen? |
15631 | What does the name mean? |
15631 | When may a United States Senator have two votes upon one question? |
15631 | Where did it originate, and what have they to do with Cuba? |
15452 | And for what purpose? |
15452 | And is this what 700 years of civilization has done for us? |
15452 | DEAR MR. EDITOR: Have the astronomers succeeded in finding out whether people live on the planet Mars or not? |
15452 | Did Fischer make two statues? |
15452 | Do you think there is any prospect of the Cubans gaining independence? |
15452 | Have any of the Hindustanees risen yet? |
15452 | I wonder how it got there? |
15452 | Shall I tell you how this question is being answered to- day? |
15452 | Was n''t it extraordinary that all the trees in India were covered with that queer stuff? |
19081 | What State was named first; give its history? |
19081 | For example, the question is asked,"Name the divisions of this country in the year 1600 in order of size?" |
19081 | How did England and France injure American commerce? |
19081 | How did it affect American commerce? |
19081 | In any event it would mean to many loss of fathers or brothers, destruction of property, paralysis of business-- and all for what? |
19081 | What complaints did England enter against us? |
19081 | What complaints did we make against England about searching American vessels and impressing American seamen? |
19081 | What was Jefferson''s purpose in securing the passage of the Embargo Act? |
19081 | What was the Embargo? |
2131 | Besides this, how is it in nature possible that Heracles, being one person only and moreover a man( as they assert), should slay many myriads? |
2131 | How then should it flow from snow, when it flows from the hottest parts to those which are cooler? |
2131 | Shall we then allow him to sail out unharmed, or shall we first take away from him that which he brought with him?" |
15325 | Complain to party giving offence, to police, or what? |
15325 | It seems a remote cause, does it not? |
15325 | Strange, was it not? |
15325 | TO THE EDITOR OF THE GREAT ROUND WORLD: I am an enthusiastic reader of your most interesting little paper, and would like you to send me a"Who? |
15325 | What_ action_ do you suggest for them? |
15325 | When? |
15325 | Will you kindly tell him, through your magazine,_ how_ the children may help abate the terrible cruelty? |
15325 | Would you not rather live in the country? |
15325 | and What?" |
15428 | But what do you think was the reply of the Prime Minister of Greece? |
15428 | Do you know, my dear young friends, that you and I ought to be very glad and grateful that we are_ Americans_? |
15428 | Does not their request seem outrageous? |
15428 | If the clouds over Turkey and those over Europe should unite-- what then? |
15428 | Now, do you know the name of this people? |
15428 | The Powers could fight battalions; but could they stand before a whirlwind of popular sentiment? |
15428 | Then why do they not? |
15428 | Was that not the very thing they had for a century been trying_ not_ to do? |
15428 | What could such a little atom of a country do alone? |
15428 | Will they meet the other three States half- way, and effect a peaceful compromise? |
18685 | How can we send Mary to the scaffold on the testimony of perjured witnesses? |
18685 | If it was a grievance to pay more for a commodity, how could it be a grievance to pay less for the same commodity? |
18685 | In that case, how can we accept evidence which the forgers have supplied? |
18685 | Le plus souvent le pere n''est- il pas penetre de l''esprit de routine, tandis que le fils represente et defend la science progressive? |
18685 | May we be allowed to imagine the minds of men everywhere working together during many ages for the completion of our knowledge? |
18685 | Si la force materielle a toujours fini par ceder a l''opinion, combien plus ne sera- t- elle pas contrainte de ceder a la conscience? |
18685 | What have men to do with interests? |
12745 | But is this all? |
12745 | But what is this progress? |
12745 | Have we exhausted the natural and usual sense of the word? |
12745 | His mournful exclamation was heard,"Can not there be found a Christian to cut off my head?" |
12745 | How manie nose gaies did her grace receive at poore women''s hands? |
12745 | How oftentimes staid she her chariot, when she saw anie simple bodie offer to speake to her grace? |
12745 | Is it the Blue Nile, which seems to come down from the distant mountains? |
12745 | Or is it the White Nile, which has traversed the immense plains of equatorial Africa? |
12745 | The guardianship of the crowns almost approached the dignity of a priesthood, for was not the urseus, which adorned each one, a living goddess? |
12745 | What is this development? |
12745 | What were the causes of this depression from which Babylon suffered at almost regular intervals, as though stricken with some periodic malady? |
12745 | What, then, is civilisation-- this grave, far- reaching precious reality that seems the expression of the entire life of a people? |
12745 | Which is the true Nile? |
22115 | At this I began to knock on the door, and he at once called out:"What now? |
22115 | I once asked Gooley Can confidentially:"How many statues did the great king put up for himself-- two hundred?" |
22115 | If they are happy, why should we object? |
22115 | One man shouted with glee, as he waved a small bag of them in the air:"What''s the use of bothering with Steel common? |
22115 | Stepping up to him he said:"Excuse me, sir, but are you any person in particular?" |
22115 | The question arose, What is the meaning of it all? |
22115 | What will you haf to drink, signor? |
22115 | What you want?" |
29554 | But, I would submit to you, is a literary production answering to this precept, really_ History_? |
29554 | For after all, what is freedom? |
29554 | Is it anything more than a well- prepared annal or chronicle? |
29554 | Is it, in fact anything else than a compilation containing the materials of which real history should be composed? |
29554 | Opportunity for what, I ask? |
29554 | To understand this task, to appreciate that mission, he must ask himself the broad questions: What is the aim of history? |
29554 | What are the purposes for which it should be studied and written? |
29554 | What is the mission with which he is entrusted? |
29554 | What now is the real nature of the task he sets before himself? |
29554 | What, you will ask, is offered in their stead? |
21114 | Is it thus that you allow your innocent subjects to be persecuted? |
21114 | Shall I not easily crush these people of butter? |
21114 | What on earth has he, at his age, to think about? |
21114 | Who elected me to be Prior-- God or Lorenzo? |
21114 | Who is the young man who talks so loud? |
21114 | You have cut boldly into the stuff, my son,she answered him,"but will you know how to sew it together?" |
21114 | Conscience or authority, the Scriptures or the Church, Germany or Rome? |
21114 | How is such a thing possible? |
21114 | Is it not obvious what manner of men they are? |
21114 | They have not had wisdom enough to manage their own estates, and are they now to teach the King{ 84} and Your Highness how to govern the country? |
21114 | Was not Faesulae, lying close to her, the first city built when the Flood had washed away the abodes of men and left the earth quite desolate? |
21114 | What do I care about peace? |
21114 | is it possible that your highness can entertain fears of these beggars? |
14809 | And then he said to him"Are you willing to wrestle now after your running, my little Thracian?" |
14809 | And what 90 more? |
14809 | And what more? |
14809 | And who would hesitate to choose one of the Amali, if there were an empty throne? |
14809 | And why say more? |
14809 | And why? |
14809 | But to what will not the"cursed lust for gold"compel men to assent? |
14809 | But why need we speak of what the subject does not require? |
14809 | For what is war but your usual custom? |
14809 | Or what is sweeter for a brave man than to seek revenge with his own hand? |
14809 | To say nothing about ourselves, can you suffer such insolence to go unpunished? |
14809 | What just cause can 193 be found for the encounter of so many nations, or what hatred inspired them all to take arms against each other? |
14809 | Who can rate this as death, when none believes it calls for vengeance?" |
14809 | Who was it revealed to our sires the path through the Maeotian swamp, for so many ages closed secret? |
14809 | Who, moreover, made armed men yield to you, when you were as yet unarmed? |
14809 | Why say more? |
14809 | [ Sidenote: Consulship of Theodosius 439][ Sidenote: FIRST BREACH BETWEEN THEODORID I AND THE ROMANS][ Sidenote: The Truce 439] XXXIV And what more? |
14809 | [ Sidenote: KING VALAMIR 445?] |
20335 | Among the moral forces does one exist that is superior to justice? 20335 Has not the hour arrived to restore the Court House to the judiciary corps? |
20335 | Why these sacrifices, why this sorrow? 20335 _ What are your sources of information?_"Besides the judges, the men of the Secret Service and the denouncers( in French:''délateurs''). |
20335 | But why the exception? |
20335 | Does Herr Conrad deny this? |
20335 | If it be permitted to destroy one life for the welfare of the military administration of Belgium, why stop at two? |
20335 | If the innocent living are to be sacrificed, why spare the unborn? |
20335 | Is it not a religion in itself? |
20335 | Of what was General Baron von Bissing afraid? |
20335 | Otherwise how can we account for the poverty of information as to what actually took place on the trial? |
20335 | What could be more chivalrous or present a greater contrast to the assassination of Miss Cavell? |
20335 | Will you not carry on in her name and for her memory those sacred ministrations of mercy which were her lifework? |
10940 | Am I not fit to be your master? 10940 And that one,"I asked,"with the large Milanese cap on his head, who holds an old book?" |
10940 | Eh, but, my son,they said,"have you dispensation from fasting on a Friday?" |
10940 | How did our fathers live? |
10940 | Of what use are these cloaks? |
10940 | That one,I replied,"and who has turned towards us?" |
10940 | That one,he answered,"who is scratching the end of his nose with one hand and his beard with the other?" |
10940 | What do you think of that? |
10940 | What institutions had they? 10940 Whose garments are the more valuable and the more useful? |
10940 | Can there be a greater_ miracle_ than is to be seen in this court, where the maimed walk upright?" |
10940 | Can you not place before us their pastimes, their hunting parties, their meals, and all sorts of scenes, sad or gay, which composed their home life? |
10940 | Frédégonde said one day to Rigouthe,''Why do you continually trouble me? |
10940 | One respectable lady approached her and said,''My friend, what do you call that fashion?'' |
10940 | What were their political rights? |
10940 | Where, then, did the gipsies obtain interpreters? |
10940 | Who is there who could thoroughly describe or even appreciate all the happy or unhappy vicissitudes relating to the establishment of the Communes? |
10940 | mine, for which I have only paid a sou( about twenty- two francs of present money), or yours, which have cost so much?" |
10940 | they answered,"if He had appeared on earth should we still be miserable?" |
10940 | what will the Duke Francis and his Bretons do? |
10641 | And then, under what form of government should this union be effected? |
10641 | But mutual interests brought them together; for when has England turned her back on her interests, or what she supposed to be her interests? |
10641 | By his death the Schleswig- Holstein question again burst upon distracted Europe,--Who was to reign over the two Danish provinces? |
10641 | How could Naples, Rome, Venice, Florence, Sardinia, and the numerous other States, be joined together under one government? |
10641 | Is it pessimism to say that it is likely to become more and more desperate? |
10641 | The question which everybody now asked was, What will the Lords do? |
10641 | This conduct on the part of the king may seem like ingratitude; but what else could he do? |
10641 | What could any man of genius, however great his abilities, have done without this support of the people? |
10641 | What could the leaders of the American Revolution have done unless the thirteen colonies had rallied around them? |
10641 | What shall we say of a nation that so ignominiously surrendered its liberties? |
10641 | When shall be this consummation of the victories of peace? |
10641 | Who among American statesmen or even scholars are competent to such an undertaking? |
10641 | Why did not the allies at once begin the assault of the city? |
10641 | Why should not such a man, at the age of thirty- three, aspire to a seat in Parliament? |
10641 | Would the nation at the elections sustain the usurpation? |
10641 | Yet what more visionary than a united Italy as a republic? |
10641 | thought Bismarck, angrily,"give you back part of what was won for Prussia by Frederic the Great? |
10644 | Friend Franklin,said a noted Quaker lawyer,"thou knowest everything,--canst thou tell me how I am to preserve my small beer in the back yard? |
10644 | Have you considered the consequences of seizing the General? |
10644 | What would these be? |
10644 | And how should the required revenue be raised? |
10644 | But how was an impoverished country to raise money to pay the duties when there was no money? |
10644 | But when have Philadelphia Quakers disdained what is called good living? |
10644 | But why expect perfection? |
10644 | For what? |
10644 | He modestly claimed to be only a printer, but who, among the great lights of his age, with the exception of Washington, has left a nobler record? |
10644 | His question and comment show his feeling:"Did the militia fight? |
10644 | How was the dead corpse to be revived? |
10644 | How was the new Congress likely to succeed any better? |
10644 | Is it not those who, in cities at least, have made self- government-- the great principle for which Jefferson contended-- almost an impossibility? |
10644 | The statement of the Declaration has been formally made good; and yet, whence came it? |
10644 | What if he was personally vain, pompous, irritable, jealous, stubborn, and fond of power? |
10644 | What mattered it whether the triumphant belligerents were called"Colonies"or"States"so long as they were free? |
10644 | What was it to occupy a city at the extreme end of the continent, when the British government expected to hear that the whole country was overrun? |
10644 | Where then did Jefferson get his ideas as to the equal rights to which men were born? |
10644 | Who are the greatest men of the present day, and the most beneficent? |
10644 | Who has not infirmities, defects, and weaknesses? |
10644 | Who have earned the proudest national fame in the history of America since the Constitution was made? |
10644 | Who now rule the cities of New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Cincinnati, and Chicago? |
10644 | Who reads a prosaic novel, or a history of dry details, if ever so accurate? |
10644 | Why did Parliament retain the duty on tobacco and wines and other things? |
20389 | Can it be said that the old- age pension policy is compatible with this condition? |
20389 | Could this constitution last? |
20389 | How could we prevent the introduction of tithes, magistracy, the Catholic question itself? |
20389 | How far have they succeeded in their attempt, and furnished us with a real compass for political guidance? |
20389 | Is character becoming of greater or less importance? |
20389 | Is history a study of real use in practical, and especially in political, life? |
20389 | Sir Evelyn Wood then added,''and equal privileges?'' |
20389 | What, asked Foster, will be the end of this? |
20389 | Why, then, he asks, do European nations maintain them? |
20389 | above all, if Catholic enfranchisement brought a vast, ignorant, and possibly seditious element into political life? |
25855 | Do n''t you know then,he asked after a moment''s silence,"what is to happen to- day?" |
25855 | How much did the Archbishop give you? |
25855 | How,a prelate, whose nearest relative had joined the Church of Rome, asked Archbishop Howley,"how shall I treat my brother?" |
25855 | It is such fun, is n''t it, papa? |
25855 | Well,replied Bonner,"you sent for me: have you anything to say to me?" |
25855 | What do you look on as the greatest boon that has been conferred on the poorer classes in later years? |
25855 | Where do you go to church? |
25855 | Whom have you taken to wife? |
25855 | Against whom do ye will to fight? |
25855 | Against your brethren? |
25855 | And yet was the abbot foolish in his generation? |
25855 | Bonner turned laughingly round and addressed the Archbishop,"What, my Lord, are you here? |
25855 | Then the Bishop, who was short- sighted, asked,''Those there: what walls be they?'' |
25855 | What is it which makes men in Alpine travel- books write as men never write elsewhere? |
25855 | What was it that foiled alike the counsel of statesmen and the passionate love of liberty in the people at large? |
25855 | What was it which drove Dante into exile and stung the simple- hearted Dino into a burst of eloquent despair? |
25855 | Why does page after page look as if it had been dredged with French words through a pepper- castor? |
25855 | Why is it that the senior tutor, who is so hard on a bit of bad Latin, plunges at the sight of an Alp into English inconceivable, hideous? |
25855 | Why is the sunrise or the scenery always"indescribable,"while the appetite of the guides lends itself to such reiterated description? |
25855 | [ 4]"Quibus Hector ab oris Expectate venis?" |
25855 | [ 5]"Cur dextræ jungere dextram Non datur, ac veras audire et reddere voces?" |
25855 | and"Why do n''t you go to church?" |
26901 | For, how can you free your country,said Petion,"if you do n''t free all the people in it?" |
26901 | So do I,replied the Duke;"but do you think that in the present condition of France it would be advisable for us to adopt it?" |
26901 | What would you have me do? |
26901 | Where do the rebels get their powder? |
26901 | Another story has it that when the physician put a handglass to the lips of the dying man and said,"Can you hiss( siffler)?" |
26901 | As bullets penetrated the walls of the Pope''s ante- chamber, Pio Nono exclaimed:"Has Heaven no lightning?" |
26901 | If this bill shall be thrown out by a narrow majority and the scale should be turned by the votes of the prelates, what would be their situation? |
26901 | If thou regret''st thy youth, why live? |
26901 | Is this too ambitious?" |
26901 | Proudhon carried Etienne Cadet''s"Icarian"theories so far that in his famous book,"What is Property?" |
26901 | The first message,"What hath God wrought?" |
26901 | The offended beau retaliated one day, when some of his friends saluted the Prince on Rotten Row, by asking,"Who is your fat friend?" |
26901 | The question now was no longer,"What will the Lords do?" |
26901 | Until I have executed this, I have no peace; and what can comfort me until I know that I have with upright will set my life at stake? |
26901 | What could I revive of Napoleon? |
26901 | What will he do then? |
26901 | When objections were raised that he was a heretic, the Holy Father asked:"Is there any doubt that Thorvaldsen is the greatest sculptor in Rome?" |
26901 | Where is a man in the Church since the time of Constantine who has at one stroke enfranchised six millions of souls?" |
26901 | Where shall I find a chief to ride The jungle paths with me? |
26901 | Why? |
26901 | Will he bring to his assistance the force of the bayonet? |
26901 | [ Sidenote: Meagre literary remains] It was Sydney Smith, too, who asked the famous question:"Who ever reads an American book?" |
26901 | but,"What will be done with the Lords?" |
26901 | would the angels laugh to mark A bright soul driven, Fiend- goaded, down the endless dark, From hope and heaven? |
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?" |
2980 | But to what good, if the charming descriptions of my offences excite the readers more to action than to repentance? |
2980 | Do you not think that is an excellent preservative? |
2980 | Livy? |
2980 | On what day and in what year were you born? |
2980 | Someone has put your portrait in the privy? |
2980 | Tell me yourself whether or not I should burn my work? |
2980 | Thus, the 9th August 1786, the poor girl, in an excess of chagrin writes:"Where are all the pleasures which formerly you procured me? |
2980 | VI SUMMARY of MY LIFE The 2nd November, 1797, Cecilia Roggendorff wrote to Casanova:"By the way, how do you call yourself, by your baptismal name? |
2980 | What had I to do at Hamburg?" |
2980 | What is the metaphysical being who prevents me from slaying myself? |
2980 | What is the other being who enjoins me to lighten the burdens of that life which brings me only feeble pleasures and heavy pains? |
2980 | When have I not been always sincere with you, and when have I not at least listened to your good advices and offers? |
2980 | When will the Count return? |
2980 | Where are all the pleasures which formerly you procured me? |
2980 | Where are the theatres, the comedies which we once saw together? |
2980 | Where are the theatres, the comedies which we once saw together?" |
2980 | You say your letters have been intercepted? |
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? |
14260 | God has subjected many peoples to me,wrote the barbarian to him:"will you alone refuse to recognize my power? |
14260 | Now,cried he,"who will dare a fight for the honor of God?" |
14260 | ''What extraordinary powers,''they will say,''what miracles, have been displayed by its ministers?'' |
14260 | Am I not one wheel of thy chariot?" |
14260 | But how came this hypocrisy, if it existed, to elude, during a long and bitter contest, the keen eyes of his adversaries? |
14260 | But how was the position to be maintained or to be improved? |
14260 | Chang Hi said,''How can I bear to leave them?'' |
14260 | Did I intrigue for power? |
14260 | Did you not then become Anda(_ i.e._, sworn friend) with my father, and was not this the reason I styled_ you_''father''? |
14260 | Do you know Charles and his thousands of executioners, and can you yet amuse yourselves with the decoration of banners? |
14260 | His reason for not so doing he assigned:"Wherefore should I become a Christian? |
14260 | How, then, was it possible for any traffic, however lucrative, to endure such perpetual exactions? |
14260 | If it be his wish to shoot arrows at them until his finger be weary, who shall complain? |
14260 | If you go and slay all the people, and only secure the land, what use is that? |
14260 | In what had Charles injured him or his city? |
14260 | It may perhaps be asked by some why, if he showed such a preference to the faith of Christ, he did not conform to it and become a Christian? |
14260 | O Khan, my father, why suspect me of ambition? |
14260 | The clause was admitted when the clergy swore fealty to the sovereign; why should it be rejected when they only promised the observance of customs? |
14260 | The kingdom of Sicily and Naples has not been wanting in men to desolate it; where now are they that will defend it?" |
14260 | Their departure from the country was a vain boast, for whither should they go? |
14260 | To the vociferations of Hugh of Horsea, a military subdeacon,"Where is the traitor?" |
14260 | What count or duke or knight of these days but would seize a crown thus offered, however great the peril? |
14260 | What had the Pope done in England but stir up the barons against John, and then abandon them to death or ruin? |
14260 | What is thy object now? |
14260 | What were the Palermitans to him that he should share their madness? |
14260 | When the King entered, they put aside their swords; but Henry, alarmed at their unusual appearance, exclaimed,"Am I then your prisoner?" |
14260 | While the robbers were within earshot, Merghen shouted:"There are two wild ducks, a male and a female; which shall I bring down?" |
14260 | Who then shall set foot upon her soil, except to find in it a yawning grave? |
14260 | Why does our territory on the Onon remain without a master? |
14260 | and now, far from restraining the people from rushing to their ruin, shouldst spur them wildly on? |
14260 | no answer was returned; but when Fitzurse asked,"Where is the Archbishop?" |
2668 | And what answer have you returned? |
2668 | And where were you before you went to Berlin? |
2668 | But where shall I get the wood? |
2668 | Has he not light hair? |
2668 | Has your excellency actually seen this drawing of Trenck''s? |
2668 | Have you it,continued Hyndford,"at home? |
2668 | Is he not of my height? |
2668 | What has this traitor done? |
2668 | What is his name? |
2668 | What,said he,"would have been the consequence, had not the countess warned you of the impending danger? |
2668 | Whence came you? |
2668 | Where are we, Schell? |
2668 | Where does Bohemia lie? 2668 And who might be blamed but the imprudent Count Puebla? 2668 Goltz? |
2668 | He seated me by his side at table, and asked me,"Why came you here, Trenck?" |
2668 | How could he do otherwise than imprison a subject who thus endeavoured to injure him and aid his foes? |
2668 | How did this worthy man, in a moment so dangerous, act toward his friend? |
2668 | How might a man, imbued with the heroic principles of liberty, hope for advancement and happiness, under the despotic and iron Government of Frederic? |
2668 | How was it possible to suspect me? |
2668 | I asked him,"Where is the Neiss?" |
2668 | I was too proud to discover myself; and, indeed, to whom could I discover myself in a strange land? |
2668 | In the meantime I entered; Hyndford then addressed me, with the openness of an Englishman, and asked,"Are you a traitor, Trenck? |
2668 | Indeed, what other story could be told at Magdeburg, or how could it be known I had been betrayed to the Prussian ministry by the Imperial secretary? |
2668 | She was terrified at seeing a sturdy fellow in a beggar''s dress; which perceiving, I asked,"Molly, do not you know me?" |
2668 | The moment he came in, Hyndford said,"Sir, where is that plan of Cronstadt which Trenck copied?" |
2668 | Thus deceived and strengthened in his suspicion, must he not imagine my desire to forsake my country, and desert to the enemy, was unbounded? |
2668 | Was he not obliged to act with this severity? |
2668 | What could I do? |
2668 | What could be done? |
2668 | What must the King think? |
2668 | What was my business at Dantzic? |
2668 | Whether I was acquainted with M. Goltz, Prussian ambassador to Russia? |
2668 | Who but must be astonished, having read the daring efforts I made at Glatz, at this strange insensibility now in the very crisis of my fate? |
2668 | Who was concerned with me in the conspiracy at Dantzic? |
2668 | Would this be believed by listening nations? |
2668 | on which side is the river Neiss?" |
32659 | If then the Matter of Fact be true( nor dares_ de Cros_ deny it) where''s the Imposture? |
32659 | T._ has not dishonoured Monsieur_ de Cros_, why all this Fury, this Heat and Indignation? |
32659 | _ I have no Occasion_, says he,_ that I know of, to complain either of his Wife, his Son, or his Daughters_; why then all these invidious Hints? |
32659 | _ but only a blind Obedience to the Will of the King his Master_? |
32659 | _ by being a Counsellor of State to King Charles the II._ How then in the name of Wonder came he by it? |
32659 | _ that I had quitted the Frock, for the Petticoat, what of all that? |
32656 | Can there be a greater absurdity than this? |
32656 | If I was a Fool, a peice of an Agent, or a Knave, How comes it that the King suffer''d me to stay in_ England_ near a year? |
32656 | Upon what account did the King bestow several other Favours upon me? |
32656 | What means the King then, when he says, That_ I had been too cunning for them all_? |
32656 | Why did he recompence me for my Voyage from_ Nimeguen_? |
32656 | Why was the King so civil to me? |
10484 | And for what? |
10484 | And what is the possession of a human body without the sympathy of a living soul? |
10484 | And when the mind was both neglected and undervalued, how could respect and admiration be kindled, or continue after sensual charms had passed away? |
10484 | As for her,--this selfish, heartless sorceress, gifted and beautiful as she was,--what does she do when she sees her lover dead,--dying for her? |
10484 | But in these letters he also evinces a friendship which is immortal; and what is nobler than the capacity of friendship? |
10484 | But why such an eclipse of the glory of man? |
10484 | Can Paganism show a greater magnanimity? |
10484 | Can you expect perfection in him who"is born of a woman"? |
10484 | Does she share his fate? |
10484 | If Plato or Aristotle had been contemporaries with Thales, would they have matured so wonderful a system of dialectics? |
10484 | Is it not something to have been one of the acknowledged masters of human composition? |
10484 | Is it to be wondered at that even so good and great a man as Cicero should bitterly feel his disgrace and misfortunes? |
10484 | Take away the soul of woman, and what is she? |
10484 | Was this madness sent upon him by that awful Power who controls the fate of war and the destinies of nations? |
10484 | What European monarch ever possessed such a sum? |
10484 | What charities did they contribute to? |
10484 | What churches did they attend? |
10484 | What could be more polite and courteous than the intercourse carried on in Greece among cultivated and famous people? |
10484 | What glitter or artistic splendor can make home attractive when women are mere butterflies or slaves with gilded fetters? |
10484 | What hospitals did they enrich? |
10484 | What if he was vain and egotistical and vacillating, and occasionally weak? |
10484 | What is a home where women are treated as inferiors? |
10484 | What is home when women are ignorant, stupid, and slavish? |
10484 | What miseries did they relieve? |
10484 | What missions of benevolence did they embark in? |
10484 | What poor man''s name appears in any will?" |
10484 | What schools did they teach or even visit? |
10484 | What selfish woman ever killed herself for love? |
10484 | What social gatherings did they enliven? |
10484 | What was that mighty machinery by which nations were subdued, or rose to greatness on the ruin of States and Empires? |
10484 | What was to be expected of a class who had no object to live for? |
10484 | What were these to women who did not know what was the most precious thing they had, or when this precious thing was allowed to run to waste? |
10484 | When was art ever brought in support of luxury to greater perfection? |
10484 | When were symposia more attractive than when the_ élite_ of Athens, in the time of Pericles, feasted and communed together? |
10484 | Where was salvation to a Republic which banished its savior, and for having saved it? |
10484 | Who blinded Napoleon at the very summit of his greatness? |
10484 | Who can improve upon the Doric columns of the Parthenon, or upon the Corinthian capitals of the Temple of Jupiter? |
10484 | Who has added substantially to what the Greeks worked out of their creative brain? |
10484 | Who sent madness upon Nebuchadnezzar? |
10484 | Who was ever allowed at Borne to become a son- in- law, if his estate was inferior? |
10484 | Would such a love have been permanent? |
10484 | Yet who has copied the Flavian amphitheatre; who erects an edifice after the style of the Thermae? |
10484 | Yet who have been greater ornaments and lights than these two distinguished Greeks? |
15345 | But, should we perish in your cause,asked they,"what will be our reward?" |
15345 | From_ Dei ira_[''God''s wrath''] are they to be freed? |
15345 | How call ye the king of that country? |
15345 | If you desired a speedy journey,answered Ali,"why did not you ask Omar to pray for you? |
15345 | What do ye? |
15345 | What is his name? |
15345 | Wherefore hast thou dishonored our race,said Clovis,"by letting thyself wear bonds? |
15345 | ''Is not Charles,''asked Didier of Ogger,''with his great army?'' |
15345 | ''What should we do, then,''rejoined Didier, who began to be perturbed,''should he come accompanied by a larger band of warriors?'' |
15345 | Abdallah, having paid his respects to Mahomet, Ali asked him whether he did not think of going? |
15345 | Afterward, when Mahomet said to the helper,"Did not I bid you tell Kaled not to kill anybody in Mecca?" |
15345 | Amazed and confounded they demanded,"Where is Mahomet?" |
15345 | And in what place was this first victory of Charlemagne won? |
15345 | Asked by Augustine: How must we do with the bishops of Gaul and Britain? |
15345 | Asked by Augustine: I pray thee, what punishment shall he suffer-- whosoever takes away anything by stealth from a church? |
15345 | Asked by Bishop St. Augustine: At what generation shall Christian people be joined among themselves in marriage with their kinsfolk?... |
15345 | But are we therefore to deny altogether their historical existence? |
15345 | But, as to those living in common life, what have we to say how they deal their alms, or exercise hospitality, and fulfil mercy? |
15345 | Could he have been two years about performing the course of a single one?" |
15345 | Do n''t you know that the prayers of Omar will not be turned back? |
15345 | Do you promise to pay me one hundred pieces of gold? |
15345 | How could it be otherwise? |
15345 | If worldly advantage had been his object, how had it been attained? |
15345 | In what province of England do they live?" |
15345 | Is it a miracle? |
15345 | Is it the influence of the sun? |
15345 | Is it the regular course of his revolution? |
15345 | Mahomet, being told of these underhand practices, said, one day,"Who will rid me of the son of Ashraf?" |
15345 | Martin?''" |
15345 | Next, on the gifts of the faithful which they bring to holy tables and to God''s churches-- how many doles of them shall be? |
15345 | Quoth they again,"How may we know that distinctly?" |
15345 | Quoth they to him,"How may we know whether he be so?" |
15345 | Should they cross the Apennines and blot out Rome as they had blotted out Aquileia from among the cities of the world? |
15345 | The awe of Rome was upon him and upon them, and he was forced incessantly to ponder the question,"What if I conquer like Alaric, to die like him?" |
15345 | The ministers of the senate presumed to ask, in a modest and suppliant tone,"If such, O king, are your demands, what do you intend to leave us?" |
15345 | Then he lifted up his head, and the tears ran down his cheeks, and he said,"Who is able to do this without the divine assistance?" |
15345 | To which of the two, Catholics or Arians, would Clovis ally himself? |
15345 | To whom, Arian, pagan, or Catholic, would Clotilde be married? |
15345 | What can you oppose to them? |
15345 | What character and weight must be attached to their intervention in the government of the State? |
15345 | What shall I say concerning his boots? |
15345 | What, then, was the government of this empire of which Charlemagne was proud to assume the old title? |
15345 | What, then, went on in their midst? |
15345 | Wherefore keepest thou here thine army whilst thine enemy doth hide himself in a well- fortified place? |
15345 | Who were these Teutons? |
15345 | and, What is thy religion? |
15345 | and, Who is thy prophet? |
14644 | Then will you,asked Odo,"censure your four ambassadors who have misled us and the other Powers?" |
14644 | Where do you see that? |
14644 | And for what purpose? |
14644 | As a gentleman, could you advise this course? |
14644 | Besides, was it true that British influence at Cabul was permanently lost? |
14644 | Besides, why should the Sultan have encouraged it? |
14644 | But how could that bankrupt State and its undisciplined hordes hold up against the might of Russia and the fervour of her liberating legions? |
14644 | But how were the Egyptian garrisons to be withdrawn? |
14644 | But what were these in face of Ayub''s victorious army, now joined by tribesmen eager for revenge and plunder[323]? |
14644 | But why? |
14644 | CHAPTER XVI GORDON AND THE SUDAN What were my ideas in coming out? |
14644 | Did not every decade bring further proofs of the decline of the Ottomans in governing capacity and military prowess? |
14644 | How are we to reconcile these statements with the undoubted fact that the Emperor Napoleon certainly expected help from Austria and also from Italy? |
14644 | How could I look the world in the face if I abandoned them and fled? |
14644 | I said,"You will not guarantee future government of the Sudan, and you wish me to go up to evacuate now?" |
14644 | If he struck how could the blow be warded off? |
14644 | If the survival of the fittest were the last word of philosophy, where was the need to struggle on behalf of the weak and oppressed? |
14644 | If this were so, they said, what need of recounting our complaints against Shere Ali? |
14644 | In a conversation which he had with Bismarck on January 5, 1886, he put the question:--"Why have we not been able to secure the Santa Lucia Bay?" |
14644 | In the unfortunate state into which affairs had drifted in 1878, how was that to be effected without war? |
14644 | Is it surprising that his usual stolidity gave way to one of those fits of bull- like fury which aroused the fear of all who beheld them? |
14644 | It may be asked: Why have not the Christians of Turkey united in order to gain civic rights? |
14644 | Might it not be restored by money and diplomacy? |
14644 | They said,"Did Wolseley tell you our orders?" |
14644 | To secure this control, what place could be so suitable as Khartum, at the junction of the White and Blue Niles? |
14644 | What brought about this momentous change? |
14644 | What caused the change of front at Berlin? |
14644 | What have Italians in common with Austrians and Prussians? |
14644 | What is the reason for this? |
14644 | What wonder that he was thenceforth known as"Chinese Gordon"? |
14644 | What, then, hindered the fulfilment of Mr. Gladstone''s pledges? |
14644 | When was it that the friction between Great Britain and Germany first became acute? |
14644 | Who could drive a better bargain than Thiers, the man who knew France so well, and had recently felt the pulse of the Governments of Europe? |
14644 | Why should he risk their new- found unity merely in order to abase Servia? |
14644 | Will the future see the hapless, unguided efforts of to- day championed in an equally masterful way? |
14644 | Will you go and do it?" |
14644 | asked Dragomiroff"Where? |
10627 | Wat is dat? |
10627 | And then who can estimate the value of Cromwell''s experience on the patriots of our own Revolution? |
10627 | And who is superior to the ideas of his age? |
10627 | And yet, has civilization no higher aim than the imitation of the ancient Romans? |
10627 | But how was he to get them? |
10627 | But if Maria Theresa could not recover Silesia, aided by the great monarchies of Europe, what could she do without their aid? |
10627 | But sad as this experiment seemed, can it be pronounced to be wholly a failure? |
10627 | But what oath, what promise, what law can bind a man who is a slave of religious bigotry, when his church requires a bloody and a cruel act? |
10627 | Can nations progressively become strong by ignoring the spirit of Christianity? |
10627 | Carlyle has somewhere said:"Is not every genius an impossibility until he appear?" |
10627 | Did the Antonines, or Theodosius, or Charlemagne, or''Frederic II.? |
10627 | From what country did they come?" |
10627 | Having disinherited him, out of regard to public interests more than personal dislike, the question arises, what shall he do with him? |
10627 | His financiering had saved a nation; and who had ever before heard of a nation being saved by stock- jobbing? |
10627 | How can there be even family government without some compromise, inasmuch as husband and wife can not always be expected to think exactly alike? |
10627 | How was the revocation of the edict of Nantes overruled for the good of the Huguenots of France? |
10627 | Is a nation only to thrive by adopting the sentiments peculiar to robbers and bandits? |
10627 | Oh, was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war, As our sovereign lord, King Henry, the soldier of Navarre?" |
10627 | Shall he shut him in a state- prison, or confine him to a convent, or make way with him? |
10627 | She may not have carried reforms as far as the Puritans desired, and who can wonder at that? |
10627 | Should he leave to him the work of carrying out his policy and aims? |
10627 | The question then arises, Was it necessary that a Caesar should reign at Hampton Court? |
10627 | Very likely,--and what then? |
10627 | Washington ruled our empire in its infancy; and Buchanan, with all its majestic resources,--yet who is dearest to the heart of the world? |
10627 | What availed the struggles of the Waldenses in the Middle Ages? |
10627 | What beneficial effects resulted ultimately from the Inquisition in Spain? |
10627 | What does he say? |
10627 | What friendship can last without mutual respect? |
10627 | What hope for ordinary culprits when the proudest feudal nobles were executed or exiled, like common malefactors? |
10627 | What is the name of their king?" |
10627 | What matter, the tempter said, whether he reigned as a Catholic or Protestant monarch, so long as religious liberty was given to his subjects? |
10627 | What was Peter to do with such a rebellious, undutiful, profligate, silly youth as Alexis,--a sot, a bigot, and a liar? |
10627 | What was it to Frenchmen, so absorbed with themselves, whether a Hohenzollern or a Hapsburg reigned in Germany? |
10627 | When have ever such great changes proved so popular and so beneficial, and, I may add, so permanent? |
10627 | When was ever a religious revolution effected, or a national church established, with so little bloodshed? |
10627 | Where do we find a greater or a better queen? |
10627 | Wherefore a navy, when he had no seaports? |
10627 | Who came to the rescue of Savonarola when he attempted to reform the lives of degenerate Florentines? |
10627 | Who can resist universally accepted ideas? |
10627 | Who claimed that she was perfect, any more than other great sovereigns whom on the whole we praise? |
10627 | Who could believe that his word of honor would be broken, or that he, a king, could commit such an outrageous and unprecedented crime? |
10627 | Who has not almost forgotten the names of its ordinary generals? |
10627 | Who now reads the details of our last great war? |
10627 | Why did he condescend to these mean details? |
10627 | Why should Elizabeth spare such a culprit? |
10627 | Would Catholic Austria, supreme in Germany, have established schools, or rewarded literary men? |
10627 | Would he obey the order? |
10627 | Would he retire to private life? |
10627 | Would the father have used his prerogative and pardoned him? |
10627 | Yet who were greater and better, upon the whole, than these favorites of Heaven? |
10151 | But where,demanded the wise grandson of Olga,"is your country?" |
10151 | But,says he,"it will be said, perhaps, how do we know that this work came from the Lord? |
10151 | Desirest thou power? |
10151 | Did not I tell thee,said the latter, mournfully,"what the consequences would be; that we should be driven from our palace and country?" |
10151 | See you,said he to his disciples,"these hills? |
10151 | Thou wert indeed a true prophet,replied the self- accused father;"but what power could avert the decrees of fate?" |
10151 | Valiant warriors,said Hastings to Rollo,"whence come ye? |
10151 | Yes,said Rollo,"we have heard tell of him; Hastings began well and ended ill.""Will ye yield you to King Charles?" |
10151 | And what shall we do-- whither shall we go, when we have no longer a country?'' |
10151 | Are these military ensigns, or are they not rather the garnishments of women? |
10151 | Are you ignorant that these fierce inhabitants of the desert resemble their own native tigers? |
10151 | But what can one man, however able and advanced, do against the current of his age? |
10151 | But who art thou, thou who speakest so glibly?" |
10151 | Can it happen that the sharp- pointed sword of the enemy will respect gold, will it spare gems, will it be unable to penetrate the silken garment? |
10151 | Could the holiest office in Christendom be more deeply outraged than by a sale such as this? |
10151 | Dost thou not perceive that thy Moslems flee? |
10151 | Dost thou wish the Mussulmans to curse me? |
10151 | Had he the right to massacre? |
10151 | How can our Lord say to such,''Ye are the light of the world,''''the salt of the earth''? |
10151 | How can the saying be applied to them,''Blessed are the poor in spirit''? |
10151 | How can they say with the apostle Peter,''Lo, we have left all and followed thee,''and,''Silver and gold have I none''? |
10151 | If peradventure these walls had been confided to thy keeping as they have been to mine, wouldst thou do as thou biddest me?" |
10151 | If these can only be rallied, who can say what may follow? |
10151 | Is it peace, or is it war?" |
10151 | Knowest thou not that King Charles doth purpose thy death by cause of all the Christian blood that thou didst aforetime unjustly shed? |
10151 | Now who is it who writes thus? |
10151 | The weight of the name of Olga decided her grandson, and he said no more in answer than these words:"Where shall we be baptized?" |
10151 | Upon one occasion the King came to speech with Leif, and asked him,"Is it thy purpose to sail to Greenland in the summer?" |
10151 | What are they about? |
10151 | What did that signify to him? |
10151 | What do ye, sirs? |
10151 | What does it matter? |
10151 | What insufferable madness is this-- to wage war with so great cost and labor, but with no pay except either death or crime? |
10151 | What is the name of your lord and master? |
10151 | What miracle dost thou work that we should believe thee? |
10151 | What seek ye here? |
10151 | Whence, therefore, O soldiers, cometh this so stupendous error? |
10151 | Who can say that, in such a case, the three kingdoms would have taken the form they took in 843? |
10151 | Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury upon thee? |
10151 | [ 40][ Footnote 37: These chains are not mentioned by the Arabs; but what can be expected from their brevity?] |
10151 | said the African,"how long wilt thou remain here? |
10151 | what tidings bringeth this stranger? |
12990 | And the answer? |
12990 | But you have been wounded in the leg, monsieur? |
12990 | By the way,he suddenly asked me,"where was the idea of Harvey Birch, in the Spy, found?" |
12990 | Could I tell him which was the window of his room? |
12990 | Does Mein Herr see it? |
12990 | Duke!--what Duke? |
12990 | Madame goes to Paris? |
12990 | Not left France!--Was he not carried into Switzerland? |
12990 | Oh,said he,"it is a disease that only kills the rabble: I feel no concern-- do you?" |
12990 | Sire, how would you like to be an honorary king? |
12990 | That convent,I called out to the postilion,"is still inhabited?" |
12990 | Wie ist diesen fluschen? |
12990 | Would I try a bottle? |
12990 | _ Et, il vino, signore; quale è il prezzo del vino?_demanded the_ padrone_. |
12990 | --"And can we cross with your horses?" |
12990 | Are rights thus to be purchased by concessions so unworthy and base? |
12990 | Are they necessarily inseparable? |
12990 | But why name a solitary instance? |
12990 | Did you know him?" |
12990 | How is it with, us? |
12990 | How long would an English tide- waiter, for instance, keep his place should he vote against the ministerial candidate? |
12990 | I asked him if he had ever known a true liberal in politics, who had been educated in the school of Napoleon? |
12990 | I asked him why he remained in Paris, having no family, nor any sufficient inducement? |
12990 | It may appear presumptuous in a foreigner to give an opinion against such high authority; but,"what can we reason but from what we know?" |
12990 | Master Harry,"exclaimed the latter,"you are here, are you?" |
12990 | My companion now looked at me as hard as a well- bred man might, and said earnestly,"Where did you learn to speak English so well?" |
12990 | The family of Talleyrand- Perigord is so ancient, that, in the middle ages, when a King demanded of its head,"Who made you Count de Perigord?" |
12990 | The"Par quelle route, monsieur?" |
12990 | This he would not admit, for what man is ever willing to confess that his own opinions are prejudiced? |
12990 | This is all that the throne does in England, and why need it do more in France? |
12990 | Tieck?" |
12990 | We got"_ monsieur sait-- monsieur pense-- monsieur fera_"--for"_ que voulez- vous, monsieur?_"We had no more to do with mountains. |
12990 | We have some extraordinary words, too: who, but a Philadelphian, for instance, would think of calling his mother a_ mare_? |
12990 | [ 42][ Footnote 42: Has it not? |
12990 | [ Footnote 11: Was Mr. Jefferson himself free from a similar charge?] |
12990 | ship ahoy!--what cheer, what cheer?" |
12990 | ship ahoy!--what cheer, what cheer?" |
12990 | you are not a Scotchman?" |
10477 | But how shall I know the men of virtue? |
10477 | Canst thou by searching find out God? 10477 If I am not to mourn bitterly for this man, for whom should I mourn?" |
10477 | Professing ignorance, he put perhaps this question: What is law? 10477 Again,If a minister can not rectify himself, what has he to do with rectifying others?" |
10477 | But what did they discover? |
10477 | But whence the original atoms, and what force gave to them motion? |
10477 | Duke Gae asked,"What should be done to secure the submission of the people?" |
10477 | For instance: One of his disciples asked,"If you had the conduct of armies, whom would you have to act with you?" |
10477 | From what source did the people learn the necessity of obedience to parents, of conjugal fidelity, of truthfulness, of chastity, of honesty? |
10477 | Have we any reason to adduce that God has ever been without his witnesses on earth, or ever will be? |
10477 | How far did they arrive at lofty and immutable principles of morality? |
10477 | If a Christian poet can see divinity in the chiselled stone, why should we wonder at the worship of art by the pagan Greeks? |
10477 | If you lead on the people with correctness, who will not dare to be correct?" |
10477 | May there not be the greatest practical infidelity with the most artistic beauty and native reach of thought? |
10477 | Now, what has given to the religion of Buddha such an extraordinary attraction for the people of Eastern Asia? |
10477 | Some one asked:"What do you say about the treatment of injuries?" |
10477 | The master heard this observation, and said to his disciples:''What shall I practise, charioteering or archery? |
10477 | This Yu-- what is the use of my reproving him?''" |
10477 | What for? |
10477 | What is courage? |
10477 | What is temperance? |
10477 | What is the great first cause of all things? |
10477 | What is the just and the unjust? |
10477 | What keeps alive the"Provincial Letters"of Pascal? |
10477 | What more important or vital than water? |
10477 | What sincerity was there in Julius Caesar when he discharged the duties of high- priest of the Republic? |
10477 | What truths did they arrive at to serve as foundation- stones of science? |
10477 | What uninstructed reason can? |
10477 | What will promote this? |
10477 | Where was the ennobling influence of the gods, when nobody of any position finally believed in them? |
10477 | Who gave to him this insight into the fundamental principles of morality? |
10477 | Who gave to him this wisdom and this almost superhuman virtue? |
10477 | Who has copied the Flavian amphitheatre except as a convenient form for exhibitors on the stage, or for the rostrum of an orator? |
10477 | Who has not copied the Parthenon as the severest in its proportions for public buildings for civic purposes? |
10477 | Who has not devoured the classical dictionary before he has learned to scan the lines of Homer or of Virgil? |
10477 | Who has surpassed Pindar in artistic skill? |
10477 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifices? |
10477 | Who made him, in all spiritual discernment, a wiser man than the gifted John Stuart Mill, who seems to have been a candid searcher after truth? |
10477 | Who, in this respect, made him a greater light and a clearer expounder than the Christian Paley? |
10477 | Why could he not have imparted wisdom both to Buddha and Socrates, as he did to Abraham, Moses, and Paul? |
10477 | Why was so bright a glory followed by so dismal a shame? |
10477 | _ Cui bono?_ this, the cry of most men in periods of great outward prosperity, was the popular inquiry. |
10477 | canst thou know the Almighty unto perfection?" |
2456 | ( a) Of what should we be afraid?--what gathering of numbers, or what resources of money? |
2456 | 28 Are we not worthy then to have this post by reason of that deed alone? |
2456 | And why must thou needs run the risk of sea- battles? |
2456 | Come tell me this:--thou sayest that thou wert thyself king of these men; wilt thou therefore consent forthwith to fight with ten men? |
2456 | Did not Artaphrenes send thee to obey me, and to sail whithersoever I should order? |
2456 | Didst thou suppose that thou wouldest escape the notice of the gods for such things as then thou didst devise? |
2456 | Do ye mean to take away the king of the Spartans, thus delivered up to you by his fellow- citizens? |
2456 | Dost thou see these Persians who are feasting here, and the army which we left behind encamped upon the river? |
2456 | For what nation did Xerxes not lead out of Asia against Hellas? |
2456 | Hast thou not Athens in thy possession, for the sake of which thou didst set forth on thy march, and also the rest of Hellas? |
2456 | He inquired thus, and the other made answer and said:"O king, shall I utter the truth in speaking to thee, or that which will give pleasure?" |
2456 | He then when he heard this went out, having first said these words:"Master, thou hast not surely brought ruin upon me?" |
2456 | How then do these wrong us, since they are conveying provisions for our use?" |
2456 | Now therefore how thinkest thou that this is well? |
2456 | This then, I say, is evenly balanced: but how should one who is but man know the course which is safe? |
2456 | To this Xerxes made answer in these words:"Thou strangest of men, 47 of what nature are these two things which thou sayest are utterly hostile to me? |
2456 | To this Xerxes said:"Demaratos, in what manner shall we with least labour get the better of these men? |
2456 | What have I to seek for in addition to that which I have, that I should do these things; and of what am I in want? |
2456 | What if thou shouldest send three hundred ships from thy fleet to attack the Laconian land? |
2456 | Why dost thou meddle with things which concern thee not?" |
2456 | and how without thy counsels was anything of this kind done? |
2456 | and most Editors read{ ti},"what will ye say after this?" |
2456 | and what water was not exhausted, being drunk by his host, except only the great rivers? |
2456 | or dost thou think that our fleet will fall short of theirs? |
2456 | or even that both of these things together will prove true? |
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?" |
27602 | ''And what do you think of her?'' |
27602 | ''Are you sure you have killed him?'' |
27602 | ''Can you swim, Donald?'' |
27602 | ''Can you tell me where bilberries are to be found here?'' |
27602 | ''Did you not feel her twist, and hear her split, when we came into the burst of the stream?'' |
27602 | ''Have you killed a bear, that you come back so soon, and walk so fast?'' |
27602 | ''If there had been anyone in it, what would you have done?'' |
27602 | ''Is he quite dead?'' |
27602 | ''My name is Gudrid; but what is thine?'' |
27602 | ''Was it the package of cord?'' |
27602 | ''We can die but once,''said her husband,''could we ever die in a better cause?'' |
27602 | ''What do you say, my son?'' |
27602 | ''What is thy name?'' |
27602 | ''What,''he said,''do you slay me, my brothers-- dogs of mine own house whom I have fed, thinking to possess the land? |
27602 | ''Why does your master refuse to treat with me,''he said,''when in a single hour I can crush him and all his people?'' |
27602 | ''Why not?'' |
27602 | ''Will you turn back from the door of the lodge, and put this young woman to shame, who is in all respects better than you are? |
27602 | ''Worse,''said Rawlins,''what can be worse? |
27602 | And the rest of the ship''s company-- what of them? |
27602 | But he was met by several chiefs, who, holding out their emaciated arms, exclaimed,''Why do you delay so long to put an end to our miseries? |
27602 | But when the galley had set sail, and was past the shelter of the road, the two castles had full power over it, and what could save it from sinking? |
27602 | But whose was the dead body? |
27602 | Can he have reached the Aztecs, and been regarded as a god? |
27602 | Can it be wondered if all concerned in this breach of faith fell victims to the indignation of the''Shannon''s''men? |
27602 | Did Azan ascribe his captive''s defiance of death and worse than death to his bearing a charmed life? |
27602 | Had he forgotten it in his room, or had he lost it in his descent? |
27602 | Had they all gone down by the island crag with never a hand stretched out to help them? |
27602 | Have you come to drive them from the city? |
27602 | He exclaimed in deep dejection,"Of what avail is resistance when the gods have declared themselves against us? |
27602 | He was much surprised to see such grand people in the forest, and asked,''What are you doing with the young lord?'' |
27602 | How could they be sure that they were not friends of Montezuma? |
27602 | How dare you touch the bed of such a man as I am? |
27602 | I thought to myself,''How does she know that I have killed a bear?'' |
27602 | Is it that you think your sovereign a prisoner, and wish to release him? |
27602 | Mr. Pulman was standing by the ropes''in the country''and the ball soared towards him; would it cross the ropes? |
27602 | Then Thorhall, approaching them, says:"Did not the Red- beard( that is, Thor) prove more helpful than your Christ? |
27602 | Then turning round he said,''Benvenuto, if you had everything you required for it, do you think you could fly?'' |
27602 | To this the Aztec noble replied haughtily,''How is it that you have been here only two days, and demand to see the emperor?'' |
27602 | When they returned one carried a bunch of grapes, the other ears of native wheat( maize?). |
27602 | Why, you may ask, did the Greeks not send a stronger force? |
27602 | With his former calm authority and confidence he addressed them:''Why do I see my people here in arms against the palace of my fathers? |
27602 | Yet who dare alter and''improve''the narrative of Herodotus? |
27602 | what have I deserved of thee that thou shouldest seek my death?'' |
27602 | would Pulman reach it; he had a long way to run? |
19893 | Do you desire it? |
19893 | Have you hope? |
19893 | Is it so, old fox? |
19893 | What is your request? |
19893 | Against whom was the satire levelled? |
19893 | Although conqueror, his forces were diminishing every day, and was not the need of aid the only and true motive for his bearing toward Ivan? |
19893 | And what is the secret of his success? |
19893 | And why can not we believe the author when he avers that never did his humble pen stoop to satire? |
19893 | But how shall these colonial subjects be governed? |
19893 | But how shall we blame him for struggling to realize it? |
19893 | But is this true? |
19893 | Do not let our impious foe ask us,''Where is your God?'' |
19893 | Every such man is the born enemy of Disorder; hates to be in it: but what then? |
19893 | He hailed,"Who goes there?" |
19893 | He has the power of holding his peace over many things which do not vitally concern him--"They? |
19893 | Henry IV entering the Chapel of St. Denis, the Archbishop said to him,"Who are you?" |
19893 | How could Cervantes''romance fail of holding the field against all the romances? |
19893 | Is there a moment in history more tragic than that? |
19893 | Mother of God? |
19893 | Mother? |
19893 | Nay, how shall they at Foulkstone be able to do it, who are nearer by more than half the way? |
19893 | Nay, is it not what all zealous men, whether called Priests, Prophets, or whatsoever else called, do essentially wish, and must wish? |
19893 | Nay, what was Cervantes''own life but a romance of chivalry? |
19893 | Or what of Scotland? |
19893 | Says the Pauper in the interlude:"Quhair will ye find that law, tell gif ye can, To tak thine ky, fra ane pure husbandman? |
19893 | See to it at once-- at once; do you hear?" |
19893 | Some answered very promptly,"Why should they waste their time in giving reasons? |
19893 | The King looking at me that moment,"Monsieur de Rosny,"said he,"what makes you so thoughtful? |
19893 | This indeed is properly the sum of his offences, the essential sin; for which what pardon can there be? |
19893 | Thou hast been at Parris Garden, hast not?'' |
19893 | What wonder if the curse of God seemed upon it? |
19893 | Whether run you nowe? |
19893 | Who was the bold man who, being neither courtier nor ecclesiastic, made sport for the world out of the weaknesses of_ caballeros_? |
19893 | Who, then, was the man-- the original of Don Quixote? |
19893 | Why can not we believe the author, when he thus plainly and candidly avows his purpose? |
19893 | Will not you speak your mind absolutely any more than the others?" |
19893 | Would these persons now be willing to lay their possessions at the feet of the ministers from whom they professed to have received the true Gospel? |
19893 | Yet what matters it? |
19893 | Yet, at bottom, after all the talk there is and has been about it, what is tolerance? |
19893 | [ 1]"Has he yet taken Paris?" |
19893 | and from whom shall they derive their laws? |
19893 | from some of the very errors he had himself burlesqued? |
19893 | said the preacher, appealing to all the audience: what then is_ his_ duty? |
19893 | what are they?" |
19893 | what is there that does not prove the inconstancy of worldly matters? |
10103 | And do you reply to me,exclaimed the Protector,"with your_ ifs_ and your_ ands_? |
10103 | My brother,he asked,"am I not safe in your dominions?" |
10103 | Of what avail,said they,"are chivalry and heroic valor? |
10103 | When do you mean to finish my chapel? |
10103 | Who will stand by me,said he,"in an enterprise of desperate peril?" |
10103 | Whom shall a man trust,he said,"when those who I thought would most surely serve me, at my command will do nothing for me?" |
10103 | Would you,exclaimed the Primate,"give up Russia to fire and sword, and the churches to plunder? |
10103 | Again arose that difficult question: Who should be the new king under such difficult circumstances? |
10103 | And what said the magistracy and the people? |
10103 | But what shall we say of a faith that could only hope to be kept alive in the world by the extinction of charity, honor, pity, and humanity? |
10103 | But while Ferdinand, Isabella, Torquemada, and the nuncio were concerting their plans and preparing death for heretics, what said Spain to it? |
10103 | But, having tried Sir Robert''s scruples, and found them somewhat stronger than he anticipated, what follows? |
10103 | Can you make your nest amid the stars? |
10103 | Can you soar upward like the eagle? |
10103 | Could he have desired a more glorious death? |
10103 | Does not this show an advanced state of organization, which might have become fatal if it had not been watched? |
10103 | How could even Ferdinand,"the Wise,"keep them employed now that there were no longer Moors to fight against? |
10103 | How give an idea of these countless sublime figures to those who have not trembled and turned pale in this awful temple? |
10103 | How, indeed, could there possibly be two opinions about a rumor of this kind, seeing that it was never contradicted by the King himself? |
10103 | I leave my readers to consider whether this punishment of an error of the understanding was consistent or not with the doctrine of the Gospel? |
10103 | If such were the women of Spain, what was to be expected of the men? |
10103 | Is it in this way Praxiteles and Phidias would have represented Lycurgus and Solon? |
10103 | Is it not a sure sign that the indignation of the people was at its height and that they were quite opposed to the Inquisition? |
10103 | Is it the Moses of the Bible? |
10103 | My people, what desire hath ever been mine but to see ye saved, to see ye united? |
10103 | Of painting speech and speaking to the eyes? |
10103 | Peter and Paul? |
10103 | So that, making the proportion, if twenty- four hours are equal to three hundred and sixty degrees, what are five hours and a half equal to? |
10103 | That we, by tracing magic lines, are taught How both to color and embody thought?" |
10103 | Was it a sudden idea which occurred to him upon his progress? |
10103 | Was the Inquisition as unpopular as it has been represented? |
10103 | What advantage is it to the victim to hear his executioners proclaim toleration? |
10103 | What could have induced Richard to time his cruel policy so ill and to arrange it so badly? |
10103 | What is the meaning of this terrible work? |
10103 | What means this long evolution of human destiny? |
10103 | What more evident proof, we shall be told, can you have than the assassination of the inquisitor? |
10103 | What, then, was the system advised by Luther, according to Seckendorff, one of his apologists? |
10103 | Whither would you fly? |
10103 | Why otherwise should it especially be called"the Discovered Cape"if not because this cape was first discovered? |
10103 | Would they otherwise have been hurried into such excesses? |
10103 | Would those who imagine that Rome has always been the hot- bed of intolerance, the firebrand of persecution, have imagined this? |
10103 | and will it be said that its adversaries were the majority of the people? |
10103 | exclaimed he;"when did misfortunes ever equal mine?" |
10128 | ''We can all swim,''they said;''who carried the white man across the river but himself?'' 10128 What would you have them do?" |
10128 | Again in another key:"Am I on my way to die in Sebituane''s country? |
10128 | And why the hasty after- indorsement of the decision by the President and others? |
10128 | As well might it be asked, How can any civilized nation still, as some still do, believe in such a principle? |
10128 | But can we, for that reason, run ahead, and infer that he will make any particular change, of which he himself has given no intimation? |
10128 | But if it is, how can he resist it? |
10128 | But what of his aged mother, his wife and children, his helpless followers in the deira? |
10128 | But what shall be said of the popular hero, sprung from the ranks of the people, who had given a kingdom to his sovereign? |
10128 | But who could stop those fiery and impetuous volunteers in their rush on the foe? |
10128 | But why do I speak of denouncing? |
10128 | Can he possibly show that it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest? |
10128 | Can we safely base our action upon any such vague inference? |
10128 | Could it be an outer planet? |
10128 | Could this planet be inside the orbit of Uranus? |
10128 | Did we brave all then, to falter now--- now, when that same enemy is wavering, dissevered, and belligerent? |
10128 | Do those gentlemen see what that may lead to? |
10128 | Does Douglas believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching? |
10128 | Does he really think so? |
10128 | Hardly anything else was known of them; and people asked with curiosity,"What had been their fate-- what their fortunes?" |
10128 | Have I seen the last of my wife and children, leaving this fair world and knowing so little of it?" |
10128 | Have we no tendency to the latter condition? |
10128 | How can he oppose the advances of slavery? |
10128 | How can we best do it? |
10128 | How, it may be asked, could any sane legislator adopt such measures? |
10128 | In 1855 he inquired of the Sardinian minister,"What can I do for Italy?" |
10128 | Is not this the history of human selfishness in every country? |
10128 | Lesser examples of this are seen in his grim jest at Westminster Hall--"What use of so many lawyers? |
10128 | Now what was"such a trade"as we carried on with China? |
10128 | Shall we be slaves or free? |
10128 | The fugitive princes ought to have returned to their States, but how was it possible? |
10128 | They listened to the story of cotton- mills as fairy dreams, exclaiming:"How can iron spin, weave, and print? |
10128 | Was it likely that a young and unknown man should have solved so extremely difficult a problem? |
10128 | Was it not a proof of their confidence in him? |
10128 | Was the break to be accomplished peacefully or in flame and wrath? |
10128 | Was the long- predicted, and to most of Europe eagerly desired, disruption of the United States at hand? |
10128 | Were they caused by a failure in the law of gravitation or by the presence of a resisting medium? |
10128 | Were they due to some large but unseen satellite or to a collision with some comet? |
10128 | What was the motive that had induced Napoleon to break his lately made promise of freeing Italy from the Alps to the Adriatic? |
10128 | Where were they? |
10128 | Wherein, then, lies the difference? |
10128 | Who then were those Representatives assembled at the_ mairie_ of the Tenth Arrondissement, and what did they do there? |
10128 | Why even a Senator''s individual opinion withheld, till after the Presidential election? |
10128 | Why mention a State? |
10128 | Why the delay of a reargument? |
10128 | Why the incoming President''s advance exhortation in favor of the decision? |
10128 | Why the outgoing President''s felicitation on the indorsement? |
10128 | Why was the amendment, expressly declaring the right of the people, voted down? |
10128 | Why was the court decision held up? |
10128 | Will you grant me this further service?" |
10640 | How did you acquire your riches? |
10640 | Now, if Mirabeau is the greatest of these six hundred, who may be the meanest? 10640 Where are we going?" |
10640 | Another aspect of the question is, How far shall Russia be permitted to make conquests in the East? |
10640 | But have you considered the trouble? |
10640 | But how could this weak- minded sovereign co- operate with plebeians against the orders which sustained his throne? |
10640 | But what excuse had he to give to the bar of enlightened posterity for the invasion of Egypt? |
10640 | But what harm had Turkey or Syria or Egypt done to France? |
10640 | But what were Metternich''s services, by which great men claim to be judged? |
10640 | Charlemagne, Theodosius, Peter the Great, and Oliver Cromwell? |
10640 | Could men who ignored all duties be the expounders of rights? |
10640 | Did I not break up those combinations which would have perpetuated the enslavement of Europe? |
10640 | Did I not come to the rescue of law and order when France was torn with anarchies? |
10640 | Did I not deliver the constituted authorities from the mob? |
10640 | Did I not give unity to great States and enlarge their civilization? |
10640 | Did I not rebuke and punish Austria, Prussia, Russia, and England for interfering with our Revolution and combining against the rights of a republic? |
10640 | Did I not rescue France from foreign enemies when they sought to repress the Revolution and restore the Bourbons? |
10640 | Did I not seek to plant liberty in Italy and destroy the despotisms of German princes? |
10640 | Did Napoleon, then, live in vain? |
10640 | Did even suffering Egyptians call upon him to free them from a Turkish yoke? |
10640 | Did he rise in wrath and indignation, and order his guards to disperse the rebels? |
10640 | Did they menace the peace of Europe? |
10640 | Do they offset his aspirations and crimes? |
10640 | Great deeds he performed, but did they ultimately tend to the welfare of France and of Europe? |
10640 | Have we not the example of the French Revolution, which was invincible when its cause became identical with that of our independence?" |
10640 | He with the thick locks, will it be? |
10640 | How could it be raised? |
10640 | How will he be judged by enlightened posterity? |
10640 | In other words, did he render great services to France, which make us forget his faults? |
10640 | In their despair, well might they exclaim,"Who shall deliver us from the body of this death?" |
10640 | Is he worthy of the praises of mankind? |
10640 | Is it necessary for mankind to win its greatest boons by going through a sea of anarchies, madness, assassinations, and massacres? |
10640 | Now, how far can these claims be substantiated? |
10640 | The National Assembly were all different without that one; nay, he might say with old Despot,--The National Assembly? |
10640 | This is the"Eastern Question,"--How long before the Turks will be driven out of Europe, and who shall possess Constantinople? |
10640 | Was I not the avenger of twenty- five hungry millions on those old tyrants who would have destroyed their nationality? |
10640 | Was it the Duc de Richelieu, grand- nephew of the great cardinal, whom the king selected for his prime minister on the retirement of Talleyrand? |
10640 | What could the students of the Polytechnic School and an undisciplined mob do against these armed troops? |
10640 | What did the King say at this defiance of royal authority? |
10640 | What good could grow out of such an evil tree? |
10640 | What matter, whether the battlefield is large or small? |
10640 | What structure could last, when its foundation was laid on the sands of hypocrisy, injustice, ignorance, and inexperience? |
10640 | What to them were legalities that perpetuated wrongs? |
10640 | What was to be expected of such a monarch but continual blunders, encroachments, and follies verging upon crimes? |
10640 | What, in reality, were his services? |
10640 | When has there been a long period unmarked by war? |
10640 | When have wars been more destructive and terrible than within the memory of this generation? |
10640 | When will passions and interests cease to be dominant or disturbing forces? |
10640 | When, I ask, will such truths become obsolete among enlightened people; and when will they become stale?" |
10640 | Which of the six hundred individuals in plain white cravats that have come up to regenerate France might one guess would become their king? |
10640 | Who can wonder at this? |
10640 | Who was then the great exponent of reaction, and of antagonism to liberal and progressive opinions, during the reigns of the restored Bourbons? |
10640 | Who were these favored representatives? |
10640 | Will a revolution cease when the independence of the people who are suffering from it is threatened? |
10640 | shear a wolf? |
15299 | Does Mr. Pitt,said he,"not know that Mr. Fox was of all persons most offensive to him?" |
15299 | Had not Fox always cheered the popular Government of France, and had he not always advocated peace with bloodstained rebels? 15299 Well, Hardy,"says Nelson to him,"how goes the battle?" |
15299 | What will Nelson think of us? |
15299 | Who has lived as long as he chose? 15299 Would our ancestors have done it?" |
15299 | And, after all, does not mine furnish, on the whole, a record which does me honour? |
15299 | But have I anything to resemble these? |
15299 | But what of Nelson? |
15299 | Do you not think more highly of Nelson than of the best engineers who construct fortifications? |
15299 | Do you suppose I did it in order that some disaster should be the result? |
15299 | Drake quickly disillusioned him, and demanded,"If we are not at war, why have English merchants been arrested?" |
15299 | For what other reason do you think I disobeyed orders? |
15299 | Hardy is long in coming; he fears that he may be killed, and calls out,"Will no one bring Hardy to me?" |
15299 | Is it an ideal ambition to bring it about? |
15299 | Is it possible that he knew that Nelson was her father, and believed in the purity of his friendship for Emma and himself? |
15299 | May not the people give their own Magistrate the name they choose?" |
15299 | The colonies are to France only a secondary object; and does not your Majesty already possess more than you know how to preserve? |
15299 | To destroy our finances? |
15299 | To form a coalition with some Powers on the Continent? |
15299 | To renew intestine troubles? |
15299 | To wrest from France her colonies? |
15299 | What business had he, as the first sailor in the world, to enter into such a compact with another man''s wife? |
15299 | What difference would his lack of knowledge have made? |
15299 | What family as numerous could make a finer impression?" |
15299 | What family, in similar circumstances, would have done better? |
15299 | What is the good of it if it turns out nothing but unrestrained confusion? |
15299 | What need was there for Nelson to take umbrage at and violate the treaty made by Foote in the British name? |
15299 | Where''s the foot will not flinch or fly? |
15299 | Where''s the heart that aspires the fray? |
15299 | Who can stop him?" |
15299 | Who so confident as to defy Time, the fellest of mortals''foes Joints in his armour who can spy? |
15299 | Why bleeds old England''s band By the fire of Danish land, That smites the very hand Stretched to save? |
15299 | Why ceased not here the strife, Oh, ye brave? |
15299 | Why"luckily"? |
15299 | Will they let us have any? |
15299 | Your nation is at the highest point of prosperity, what can it hope from war? |
15299 | _ 3rd Verse_: Drake, he''s in his hammock till the great Armadas come,( Capten, art tha sleepin''there below?) |
32879 | 25._ He tells us further, That_ Prince_ Rupert_ askt him upon his Return, with a stern Countenance, If the Peace was concluded? |
32879 | And why is not he contented to_ Give_ as well as to_ Take_? |
32879 | But if he will believe right or wrong, why will not he believe in his turn? |
32879 | Does_ de Cros_ understand what a man of_ great worth_ means? |
32879 | He is ungrateful to his Friend, and why? |
32879 | He must neither live at Court, nor at his own House, in publick Business, nor out of it; In Town, nor in Country: where shall we find a place for him? |
32879 | If he_ deserves well_, why is he used so very ill? |
32879 | T._ is the_ proudest Man_ in the World; and what are the proofs, or the Instances? |
32879 | Why? |
32879 | _ De Cros_? |
32879 | or who can tell what will become of him? |
32879 | whoever informed this Conjurer it was? |
26337 | And would you not do better to return to Noyon and to God? |
26337 | How long will you sleep? |
26337 | Master,said he,"what think you of the new- comer?" |
26337 | Where are you going, Master John,he demanded,"in this fine disguise?" |
26337 | Where then do you mean to take refuge? |
26337 | Who art thou? |
26337 | Why,said they,"should slavery be perpetuated in the state while the Church invites all men to a glorious liberty? |
26337 | You recognize me as Emperor now? |
26337 | And why was this? |
26337 | Besides, why this proselytism of a moral_ curé_? |
26337 | But in what manner are we to deal with the account that is presented to us of that which took place on this occasion? |
26337 | But what are we to understand by the Bible? |
26337 | Do you feel your heart beat at the mention of justice and truth? |
26337 | Flight to France was continually talked of; had he not followed in his appeal a precedent set by the University of Paris? |
26337 | Had the fault been committed by a Catholic, where is the Protestant who would not have done the same thing as Varillas? |
26337 | Has any dogmatist succeeded in drawing up a confession of faith by means of the Bible which could not be attacked by means of reason? |
26337 | How could he apply to the Mommor family? |
26337 | How could he aspire to rule others, who so poorly could rule himself? |
26337 | How would it be, think you, if we were to demolish Nambanji?'' |
26337 | Is not this a fearful error-- a desolating doctrine? |
26337 | It has been said that all Christendom demanded a reformation-- who disputes it? |
26337 | Las Casas was asked what number of negroes would suffice? |
26337 | Offend Charles who was just helping him crush the Florentines, or refuse his"Defender of the Faith"? |
26337 | On which would the storm burst? |
26337 | On your consciences, I ask you, am I a traitor?" |
26337 | Then he asks,"Who are our accusers?" |
26337 | Then the decrees debated in the last session and at its adjourned meeting were adopted, being subscribed by 234( or 255?) |
26337 | Then, observing a pocket- book, he took it up, and found several letters addressed to Thomas Munzer,"Art thou Munzer?" |
26337 | To whose hands could the ten consign the irresponsible disposal of their souls and bodies? |
26337 | What could there be in the son of a butcher to command such deference? |
26337 | What decision, then, was to be expected on the crucial question as to the relations between papal and episcopal authority? |
26337 | What is it to rebel, if it be not to avenge one''s self? |
26337 | What is the meaning of this fine word, Reformation? |
26337 | What was poor Pope Clement to do? |
26337 | Who does not remember that exclamation of Melanchthon,"We have committed many errors, and have made good of evil without any necessity for it"? |
26337 | Who, having read the lives of such adventurers as these, shall ridicule the wildest extravagance in all the romances of chivalry? |
26337 | Why should governments rule only by force, when the Gospel preaches nothing but gentleness?" |
26337 | Yet further he asked where so many mouths might obtain sustenance? |
26337 | Yet to whose hands should be assigned-- and for life-- this irresponsible power over the bodies, souls, and understandings of his companions? |
26337 | and that so many generations should have had no other pastor but Antichrist? |
26337 | said he;"art thou one of the rebels?" |
26337 | that he would have allowed millions of his creatures to walk in the shadow of death? |
33038 | Did he take his baggage with him? |
33038 | Is all blown up? |
33038 | Is any charge made for this service? |
33038 | Is monsieur cold? |
33038 | Is this also the land of wooden shoes? |
33038 | What King so strong can tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue? |
33038 | Who would have thought that a nation would burn its own capital? |
33038 | But what cared the ravaging warrior for the eighty thousand lives there sacrificed? |
33038 | Has not the phonograph proven that it receives mechanically, through the waves of sound, spoken words, which it records and repeats? |
33038 | How many people remember Agassiz''s noble answer when offered a large salary to lecture,--''I can not afford to waste time in making money''?" |
33038 | We were speaking to a resident upon these matters, when he closed by saying:"Ah, yes, it is to be regretted; but what can you expect? |
33038 | What then must be their appearance during the long, trying winter of these hyperborean regions? |
33038 | When Elliott, the Corn- law rhymer was asked,"What is a Communist?" |
33038 | Who can say that inanimate objects are not susceptible to minute impressions which they retain? |
33038 | replied the true woman,"how dare you be wiser than God?" |
33038 | something of far- off America?" |
33038 | what do they represent but condensed drops of blood? |
12309 | Am not I,he said,"a Count, a Field- Marshal, a man of wealth? |
12309 | And what about that rascal, the Duc de Richelieu? |
12309 | Are the Polignacs still with the Queen? |
12309 | Are you mad, Alexis? |
12309 | Can it be possible that you are going to take my place? |
12309 | How can I ever atone? 12309 How do you contrive,"he asked,"to have your house so well kept, and to wear such fresh and dainty linen?" |
12309 | Is it as bad as that? |
12309 | My light, my soul, my joy,she wrote in one distracted letter,"has the cruel hour of separation come already? |
12309 | Sire,he said,"am I to give you my candid opinion on this document, without fear of anger or giving offence?" |
12309 | The Polignacs? |
12309 | Then are you not afraid to lead the life you do? |
12309 | What do you mean by such senseless behaviour? |
12309 | What else? |
12309 | What matters it,she said,"how France is governed? |
12309 | What more shall I say,continued the gipsy,"except that you will be a Queen, and the mother of a King; but then--""But then, what?" |
12309 | What tricks has he been up to lately? |
12309 | What,as Thackeray asks,"could be expected from a wedding which had such a beginning-- from such a bridegroom and such a bride? |
12309 | Why do you do that? |
12309 | Why on earth does my daughter want to run away to Holland? |
12309 | Ah, my darling, why am I not with you in a wilderness rather than in Orleans?" |
12309 | And again:"Why am I not dead? |
12309 | And what is his latest game?" |
12309 | And what is twice nothing?" |
12309 | But what mattered that? |
12309 | But why do you ask?" |
12309 | Could he not have put aside his love for this low- born woman? |
12309 | Could this be the lover who, but a few days ago, had been at her feet, vowing that she was the only bride in all the world for him? |
12309 | For was not Orloff the man whose strong hands had strangled her husband and placed the crown on her head; also her most devoted slave? |
12309 | Forthwith, bursting into tears, she addressed her new protector:''Who put these ornaments here? |
12309 | Had Konstantinovitch then brought him here only to humiliate him? |
12309 | Have I been guilty without knowing it? |
12309 | How can I endure existence? |
12309 | How should I feel otherwise for the one I love best?" |
12309 | How, indeed, can she? |
12309 | I said,''Sir, had you not better have a glass of water?'' |
12309 | In face of a lover so weak, and a fate so inflexible, what could she do but submit? |
12309 | Mad? |
12309 | She had been poisoned beyond a doubt; but who had done the dastardly deed? |
12309 | Steeped in selfishness, impotent for faithful attachment and manly enduring love-- had it not survived remorse, was it not accustomed to desertion?" |
12309 | The Regent had gone to find for himself an answer to the question his lips had framed a few minutes earlier--"is there any hell-- or Paradise?" |
12309 | Three weeks later Peter was dead; was he done to death by Catherine''s orders? |
12309 | To her tearful inquiries,"What have I done to offend you? |
12309 | Was hers the only one he had wounded? |
12309 | Was it Domanski who set them circulating? |
12309 | What cared she for such exhibitions of spite and jealousy? |
12309 | What could be the meaning of these secret assignations between the Princess, who was the destined bride of their Duke, and the obscure young refugee? |
12309 | What fault have you to find with me?" |
12309 | What then?" |
12309 | What was this trick that had been played on him? |
12309 | Who could oppose the union of two souls who seek to find no other happiness than in a mutual love?" |
12309 | Who was she, this woman of beauty and mystery? |
12309 | Who was she, this woman whose beauty dazzled the eyes and whose witchery turned the heads of men in the forties and fifties of last century? |
12309 | Why art thou angry with me? |
12309 | Why do I love thee so much, my adored one, that without thee life is so worthless? |
12309 | Why dost thou cause me such anguish? |
12309 | Why not make him husband in name as well as in fact? |
12309 | Why should I hide his name? |
12309 | Why, my_ batioushka_, dost thou not come to see me? |
12309 | how can I live apart from thee? |
12845 | Am not I happy to have such a son to leave behind me? |
12845 | Do you call that nothing? |
12845 | How much blood will it require to wash out our own? |
12845 | President of assassins,he cried,"for the last time, will you let me speak?" |
12845 | What shall we be doing to- morrow at this time? |
12845 | What, Valazé, are you losing your courage? |
12845 | And Abbé Sieyès has come to Paris to ask three questions, and answer them:_ What is the Third Estate? |
12845 | And if Mirabeau is the greatest, who of these six hundred may be the meanest? |
12845 | And though Dissenters appeared to be allowed relief, what guarantee was there for the sincerity of the Court? |
12845 | And to his servants:"Why do you weep? |
12845 | And to whom should these be returned, since the college and the schoolhouse no longer exist? |
12845 | And why did it display certain characteristics which have appeared nowhere else, or, at least, have appeared only in part? |
12845 | And yet, what was the Emperor Charles to the inhabitants of the Netherlands that they should weep for him? |
12845 | Are we breaking down, then, into the horrors of national bankruptcy? |
12845 | Austria is now sure to invade Silesia; will Frederick not block the passes against Prince Karl, now having no Traun under his cloak? |
12845 | But Pitt at last has hold of the reins in England, and Ferdinand of Brunswick gets nominated to succeed Cumberland-- Pitt''s selection? |
12845 | But how to form it? |
12845 | But if the Parlement of Paris refuse to register them? |
12845 | But why, we may ask, did this revolution, which was imminent throughout Europe, break out in France rather than elsewhere? |
12845 | But, what to do with the finances, having no Fortunatus purse? |
12845 | Can we carry your country away on the sole of our shoe?" |
12845 | Canada and Louisiana mean all America west of the Alleghanies? |
12845 | Did you think I was immortal?" |
12845 | For what precise reason was it made, and what did it effect? |
12845 | From our own traitors? |
12845 | From which springs a new idea:"Why all France has not one federation and universal oath of brotherhood once for all?" |
12845 | Have we not a virtuous Pétion, Mayor of Paris, a wholly patriotic municipality? |
12845 | He with the thick black locks, shaggy beetle- brows and rough- hewn face? |
12845 | How does it come to be able to govern at all? |
12845 | In effect, will he choose English or French alliance? |
12845 | In which we observe a clear ground for Anglo- Spanish War, and Austro- Prussian War; but what were the rest doing? |
12845 | Is Frederick, then, not secure of Silesia? |
12845 | Is it the healthy peace or the ominous unhealthy, that rests on France for the next ten years? |
12845 | Is it wise so to change all our rulers? |
12845 | Is there not on record a trial of Charles I.? |
12845 | Of massacring, altar- robbing, Hébertism, is there beginning to be a sickening? |
12845 | Other troops, then? |
12845 | Our revenue is assignats, our army wrecked disobedient, disorganised; what, then, shall we do? |
12845 | Peace of a father restored to his children? |
12845 | Surely the true reign of Fraternity is now not far? |
12845 | What apparition, then, could be welcomer than that of M. de Calonne? |
12845 | What do the movements of Russian and Austrian troops mean? |
12845 | What does it want? |
12845 | What does this mean? |
12845 | What has it hitherto been in our form of government? |
12845 | What is kaisership without Silesia? |
12845 | What is the service which the public power renders to the public? |
12845 | What was its peculiar character? |
12845 | What was the real object of the revolution? |
12845 | When he heard that Churchill and Grafton had forsaken him, he exclaimed,"Est- il possible?" |
12845 | When man offers himself a victim to Heaven, what more can he give?" |
12845 | Which of these six hundred individuals in plain white cravat might one guess would become their king? |
12845 | Why then? |
12845 | Will England get him what will satisfy him from Austria? |
12845 | Will he be more fortunate than ourselves? |
12845 | Will the hold be maintained? |
12845 | Words? |
12845 | _ III.--The Silesian Wars_ Shall we, then, have the philosopher- king, as Europe dimly seems to half expect? |
35710 | Have you received your instructions from his own mouth, or from one of his ministers? |
35710 | Have you seen Prince Smerdis personally? |
35710 | Do n''t kill-- why man kill?" |
35710 | I will not reproach you; your position imposes a religious silence upon me; but mine-- have you considered it? |
35710 | Moreover, what reason could the labourer have had for keeping the boy concealed all that time? |
35710 | Secondly, By whom, and in what place, had he been invested with knighthood? |
35710 | Thirdly, In what place, and on what day, was he married to his wife Marguerite, daughter of the Count of Champagne?" |
2669 | For God''s sake, my dear Trenck,said he,"in what have I injured you, that you endeavour to effect my ruin? |
2669 | How do you do? |
2669 | How do you obtain money in this dungeon? |
2669 | Is this the fulfilment of the pledge of the Prince? 2669 What is that you are talking about?" |
2669 | --"Are you promised?" |
2669 | --"Why should you die?" |
2669 | --The rank of major!--From this preamble who would not have expected either the rank of general, or the restoration of my great Sclavonian estates? |
2669 | And wherefore? |
2669 | And who are more capable of commanding a Hungarian army than Tillier and Laudohn? |
2669 | And who are those who have divided his spoils-- who slew him that they might fatten themselves? |
2669 | And why? |
2669 | At the place of execution he called to his colonel:"Father, if I receive a thousand blows, will you pardon me?" |
2669 | But what expectations can I form from Baron Trenck? |
2669 | By what right therefore, could such debts be demanded or paid? |
2669 | Can the virtuous heart conceive affliction more cruel? |
2669 | Compared to you, of what could I complain? |
2669 | Could it be believed that the great Frederic would revenge himself on the children and the children''s children? |
2669 | Day at length returned; but where was its splendour? |
2669 | Does the worth of a man depend upon his actions? |
2669 | Dost thou not blindly follow the opinion of the prince, be he severe, arbitrary, or just? |
2669 | Have you considered how dissimilar our past lives have been; how different, too, are our circumstances? |
2669 | He remained some moments silent, and at last answered in a low voice,"What, have you money, then?" |
2669 | How came you by them?" |
2669 | How describe my despondency, and yet account for that latent impulse that withheld my hand on this fatal, this miserable night? |
2669 | How often have I been asked,"What didst thou see?" |
2669 | How shall I express my extreme joy when, after eleven months of intolerable hunger, I was again indulged with a full feast of coarse ammunition bread? |
2669 | How shall I make the reader feel as I then felt? |
2669 | How then may hope be wholly eradicated from the heart of man? |
2669 | How, indeed, could it be, that lee should work underground, at such a distance from his dungeon?" |
2669 | I listened-- what could it be? |
2669 | In what do these differ from the arbitrary order of a military despot? |
2669 | My answer was,"Who calls?" |
2669 | My answer was--"But will you not load me with heavier irons than before?" |
2669 | Oh, Nature, what are thy operations? |
2669 | Or, omitting these, have you considered to whom you would have me appeal? |
2669 | Sickness itself is sufficient to humble the mightiest mind; what, then, is sickness, with such an addition of torment? |
2669 | The constable desired him to break the door open, which he did; the Jews came running, and asked--"What do you want, gentlemen?" |
2669 | They often had asked me where I concealed all my implements? |
2669 | Was it not sufficient that he should wreak his wrath on my head alone? |
2669 | What have I gained? |
2669 | What shall I say? |
2669 | When he came to examine--"What in the name of God is that?" |
2669 | Where is the country in which the people are all satisfied? |
2669 | Wherefore then do you class him among such wretches?" |
2669 | Who was it sent the honest Gelfhardt, at such a moment, to my prison? |
2669 | Who would have had the temerity to affirm that their evil deeds should bring them to attend on the city scavenger? |
2669 | Who would suppose that a man fettered as I was could find means of exercising himself? |
2669 | Whom can I accuse? |
2669 | Why has the name of Trenck been hateful to him, to the very hour of his death? |
2669 | Will you, if I do, be pleased to grant me my pardon?" |
2669 | are you married, then?" |
2669 | his reward or punishment upon his virtue? |
2669 | was there ever creature of Thine more justified than I in despair? |
2669 | what was I at this moment? |
2707 | 18[{ kou ge de}:"where then would not a gulf be filled up?"] |
2707 | 95 Shall we then allow him to sail out unharmed, or shall we first take away from him that which he brought with him?" |
2707 | Against what city, think you, shall we make expedition sooner than against this, and what city before this shall we endeavour to reduce to slavery?" |
2707 | And Croesus, marvelling at that which he said, asked him earnestly:"In what respect dost thou judge Tellos to be the most happy?" |
2707 | And now with what face must I appear when I go to and from the market- place of the city? |
2707 | And she said to him:"Now, therefore, what is it in thy mind to do?" |
2707 | And when Harpagos came, Astyages asked him thus:"By what death, Harpagos, didst thou destroy the child whom I delivered to thee, born of my daughter?" |
2707 | And whom of men or women didst thou slay?" |
2707 | Besides this, how is it in nature possible that Heracles, being one person only and moreover a man( as they assert), should slay many myriads? |
2707 | But he cried aloud and said:"Master, what word of unwisdom is this which thou dost utter, bidding me look upon my mistress naked? |
2707 | But this tale I do not admit as true, for how then did they pass over the river as they went back? |
2707 | Dost thou carry away by force from my temple the suppliants for my protection?" |
2707 | Finally, to sum up all in a single word, whence arose the liberty which we possess, and who gave it to us? |
2707 | Hearing this on his way, Cyrus said to Croesus as follows:"Croesus, what end shall I find of these things which are coming to pass? |
2707 | How then should it flow from snow, when it flows from the hottest parts to those which are cooler? |
2707 | How, O thou senseless one, will the enemy surrender to us more quickly, because thou hast maltreated thyself? |
2707 | How, think you, will king Dareios be content to receive such an insult; and how shall this which ye do be well for you, if ye take him away from us? |
2707 | In what manner, then, it will be asked, are they used up? |
2707 | Now therefore, to what does it seem to you that these things tend?" |
2707 | On the one hand, if thou shalt overcome them, what wilt thou take away from them, seeing they have nothing? |
2707 | Was it a gift of the people or of an oligarchy or of a monarch? |
2707 | What kind of a man shall I be esteemed by the citizens, and what kind of a man shall I be esteemed by my newly- married wife? |
2707 | Which of you, I say, will either bring Oroites alive to me or slay him? |
2707 | With what kind of a husband will she think that she is mated? |
10649 | He''s got one letter; why does he want another? |
10649 | Is not the Emperor the same as God? |
10649 | And now what have we found as the fruit of all this labor of exploration? |
10649 | And who were these kings, Cyrus and Xerxes, whose names burst upon us with dim light out of a black antiquity? |
10649 | But for his timely intervention who knows that the French consulate would not have been reduced to ashes? |
10649 | But what is this to the great work that needs to be done? |
10649 | But what memory had been kept of the Ionia and Greece of the days before Homer? |
10649 | Didst thou not agree with me for a penny? |
10649 | Empires were lost, buried in chiliads of forgetfulness; would they ever be recovered? |
10649 | For Egypt did not Napoleon provide the most elephantine books of monuments and records that printing- presses have yet issued? |
10649 | Has history no record? |
10649 | Have we not seen, even in this our day, the rank and file of the Chinese army equipped with bows and arrows? |
10649 | He knew that the Prussian Meyerbeer had won fame and fortune there,--why should not he have the same good luck? |
10649 | He reasoned that he had written four good operas and nobody seemed to want them; why, therefore, should he compose any more? |
10649 | How could they doubt that a large community of native Christians would act as an auxiliary to any foreign invader? |
10649 | How does the belief in the advancement of man from some low organized form bear on the belief in the immortality of the soul? |
10649 | How many men are there in the annals of art who would have refused, after all these disappointments and bitter lessons, to make_ some_ concessions? |
10649 | In case the attack is not successfully repelled at the outset, what happens? |
10649 | Is it surprising that this lost opportunity was followed by a century and a half of open persecution? |
10649 | Is it worth the labor and the expense? |
10649 | Or was it still further east, in the highlands of Persia, that men first learned how to write and record history? |
10649 | Or would you know of some great revolution in Egypt? |
10649 | Or would you learn how Egypt ruled its subject territory? |
10649 | Steam Navy of the United States: Bennett, Frank M. Who invented the Screw Propeller? |
10649 | Taking Ericsson''s life and work, what portion remains as a permanent acquisition or as a part of the practice of the present age? |
10649 | The Arabs say:"I had a horse, but no desert; I had a desert, but no horse; now I have a desert and a horse, and shall I not ride?" |
10649 | Was there not, moreover, an open door before his face inviting him to win for himself the honors of a mandarinate? |
10649 | Was there such a real palace of Minos as the Greek poets sung? |
10649 | Were they Dorians, or Heraclidae, Achaeans or Pelasgi? |
10649 | Were they autochthons? |
10649 | Were they uninhabited before the times of Xerxes and Cyrus? |
10649 | What actual, useful, commercial machines have been based on them? |
10649 | What do we mean by a moral being? |
10649 | What eulogy is too great for such a work and such a man? |
10649 | What if he were to write a comic opera? |
10649 | What kings and kingdoms came before them and passed away? |
10649 | What of Persia and Elam? |
10649 | What of the early civilization of Cyprus and Crete? |
10649 | What practical results have attended these discoveries? |
10649 | What shall we call them? |
10649 | What unforeseen occurrence had effected a union of powers whose usual attitude is mutual jealousy or secret hostility? |
10649 | What useful processes or industries have grown out of them? |
10649 | What was the mainspring of this tragic movement? |
10649 | Whence came that first dynasty? |
10649 | Who can blame him for this? |
10649 | Who can say that we shall not triumph over cancer while the Twentieth Century is still young? |
10649 | Who invented writing? |
10649 | Why is it that we see there both the dawn of civilization and the tardiest development of human progress? |
10649 | Why, it may be asked, did nearly all the most eminent naturalists and geologists until recently decline to believe in the mutability of species? |
10649 | Would any one trust the convictions in a monkey''s mind, if there are any convictions in such a mind?" |
10649 | Would not that be likely to get him access to the stage again, and help him financially? |
10649 | Yet was not his next work,"Lohengrin,"of a popular character? |
20814 | And why should Germany, even with all her preparedness and her resources not be afraid? |
20814 | Are there also principles which, when once observed, will be accepted as the fundamental"causes"of the war? |
20814 | Are these and all such issues that we find in war, causes of war? |
20814 | Are wars willed, or are they the results of the complex, the illogical and uncontrollable factors of the world''s existence and movement? |
20814 | Are we not, then, to take the attitude in education that_ our culture is an experimental culture and represents an experimental civilization_? |
20814 | Bertrand Russell, in answer to the question,"Why do men fight?" |
20814 | But can we indeed do these things which after all have their main virtue in being general and social, and a part of a program? |
20814 | But where thus far shall we find any democratic society that is so sound that it can offer itself as a model to the rest of the world? |
20814 | Can we say that the work of education, in the religious life, is that of inculcating and extending Christianity? |
20814 | Do individuals in any real sense create history? |
20814 | Do nations fight for principles? |
20814 | Does conscious effort, the having of ideals, exert any profound effect upon the history of spirit? |
20814 | Does it accelerate, give direction, provide energy? |
20814 | How completely, in a word, do the interests and purposes of nations determine wars? |
20814 | Howe, Why War? |
20814 | If it is also worked for with intelligence and good will, why should it not come to pass? |
20814 | In teaching occupation and in all preparation for vocation ought we not to take this into consideration? |
20814 | In the long run will it not be the country that can do without military training that will have the advantage? |
20814 | Is it too much to expect now that greater ingenuity be displayed in education itself to the end of producing more originality? |
20814 | Is the course of history inevitable or is the making of it in our hands? |
20814 | Is the world governed after all by the laws of nature in all its progress? |
20814 | Is there not, in a word, a preparedness that will make a country superior and safe both in war and in peace? |
20814 | Lamprecht, What Is History? |
20814 | May we speak of motives that always tend to produce wars, but never seem to will them? |
20814 | Must we not do this even at a loss of efficiency in some directions, if necessary? |
20814 | Must we not indeed now examine once more all the foundations upon which our ideas about education rest? |
20814 | Or shall we be still apostles of the heroic order? |
20814 | Or the country in which military preparedness is so merged in everything else as to be indistinguishable from the rest of life? |
20814 | Ought not education to prepare the way for a different attitude in which all should become vitally interested in the economic problems of all? |
20814 | Ought we not to take advantage of this example and use the suggestion it offers for bridging over the differences that we complain of? |
20814 | R. Lehmann, Was Ist Deutsch? |
20814 | Shall we as teachers take the standpoint of pacifism? |
20814 | Shall we continue, in one moment, to assume that war is the greatest glory in the world, and in the next to condemn it as the greatest of evils? |
20814 | Shall we say also that there are fortuitous factors, historical causes that are not contained in any logic of human desires? |
20814 | What is it that nations really desire? |
20814 | What is it, we might ask, that an individual desires? |
20814 | What is the relation of patriotism to war? |
20814 | What is the truth about this? |
20814 | What other conclusion can we come to, then, than that ambition for country must be subjected to radical educational influences? |
20814 | What other spirit is there, in fact, in which our history can now be taught? |
20814 | What, then, in the most general way, can we say is the legitimate function or purpose of government? |
20814 | Who can doubt that such religion must henceforth have a large place in the world? |
20814 | Why, then, do nations so ardently desire colonies; and why, without colonies, do they feel themselves inferior and at a disadvantage? |
39522 | An officer in the English Army of Occupation turned to his dragoman and cried at the top of his voice, angrily:"Do you call this worth ten piasters? |
39522 | And how do the marbles look under the soot- stained windows or the gray of London fog? |
39522 | And which do you think would pay best, and what is there to see in Tangier, anyway? |
39522 | But_ which_ should I say, old chap? |
39522 | But_ who_ has ever been to the British Museum? |
39522 | He might very well say to Lord Cromer,"It was all very well to dissemble your love, but why did you kick me down- stairs?" |
39522 | Like the few Lord Elgin did not want, and that stand out like ivory in their proper height against the soft sky that knows and loves them? |
39522 | We who have kept our secret from Herodotus and Cæsar, are we likely to give it up to Ebers and Mark Twain?" |
13529 | In fact,says Ramatuelle, upholding the French policy,"of what consequence to the English would be the loss of a few ships?" |
13529 | And if the English position was as strong as good judgment, professional skill, and bold hearts could make it, had it not weak points? |
13529 | As for a seafaring population adequate to her possible needs, where is it? |
13529 | At Trafalgar it was not Villeneuve that failed, but Napoleon that was vanquished; not Nelson that won, but England that was saved; and why? |
13529 | But how far was this concentration intended by Suffren? |
13529 | But the chain of reasoning was as clear two hundred and fifty years ago as it is now; why then was it so long in being worked out? |
13529 | But what was the effect upon the vastly greater state, the extreme ambition of whose king was the principal cause of the exhausting wars of this time? |
13529 | Can a policy or a tradition which justifies such a line of conduct be good? |
13529 | Could both be held? |
13529 | Did not the Comte de Grasse know a month before how long, to a day, the supplies on board would last? |
13529 | Her commerce is even now carried on by others; why should her people desire that which, if possessed, must be defended at great cost? |
13529 | How account for the seeming reluctance of the man who three years before had made the desperate attacks of Solebay and the Texel? |
13529 | How can this be, seeing the French had the more ships? |
13529 | How did they avail themselves of this recognized enormous advantage? |
13529 | How many ask themselves the strategic question,"How did the ships come to be just there?" |
13529 | How was it as to Spain? |
13529 | How would a delay like that of Plevna have affected the fortune of war, had Turkey had any reserve of national power upon which to call? |
13529 | How, again, does it react upon the people that practise it? |
13529 | If England with her navy should fail, what could Spain achieve? |
13529 | If the van ship could not be reached, had he not force enough to double and treble on the third and following ships, as far down the line as he chose? |
13529 | If they did attempt to beat to windward, had he not ships to"contain"them? |
13529 | Is it meant, it may be asked, to attribute to sea power alone the greatness or wealth of any State? |
13529 | Is it necessary, to constitute a real danger to blockade- runners, that the blockading fleet should be in sight? |
13529 | Is that principle sound? |
13529 | Thus situated, and putting aside questions of national pride or sensitiveness, what did military wisdom prescribe to England? |
13529 | Was it France, whose only gain was to seat a Bourbon on the Spanish throne? |
13529 | Was it Holland, with its barrier of fortified towns, its ruined navy, and its exhausted people? |
13529 | Was it Spain, whose only gain was to have a Bourbon king instead of an Austrian, and thus a closer alliance with France? |
13529 | Was it, lastly, Austria, even though she had fought with the money of the sea powers, and gained such maritime States as the Netherlands and Naples? |
13529 | Was this a mere coincidence, or was it due to conditions that recurred, and may recur again? |
13529 | Were not the lee ships to leeward? |
13529 | What disposition was made of it, and how did it thereafter influence the struggle? |
13529 | What hope for French succor to Canada, when the English fleet had Louisburg under its lee? |
13529 | What in fact would the loss of a few ships matter to the English? |
13529 | What made the difference in the results? |
13529 | What shall be said of this talk about provisions? |
13529 | What was the determining factor in this strife? |
13529 | What would become of ships having neither crews nor admiral? |
13529 | What would happen if Admiral Byron''s fleet should arrive? |
13529 | What, however, is the effect of this policy upon the general ends of the war, to which it is one of the means, and to which it is subsidiary? |
13529 | When is a navy to fight, if this was not a time? |
13529 | Which was more easily to be reached and supported by the fleet? |
13529 | Why did England dictate, and France accept, terms of peace? |
13529 | Why did it take so long for the capable men of that day to reach it? |
13529 | Why was France miserable and exhausted, while England was smiling and prosperous? |
13529 | Why? |
13529 | Will there be no money loss, no suffering, consequent upon this? |
13529 | With what results? |
13529 | Would it not always have been easy for our rear to remedy the accident by promptly standing on to fill the place of the vessels cut off? |
13529 | Yet looking only, for the moment, to immediate and evident results, who reaped the benefit? |
13529 | Yet, admitting that our line was broken, what disasters then would necessarily threaten the fleet? |
13529 | [ 15] Can this navy be had without restoring the merchant shipping? |
13529 | was perhaps alone in his kingdom in wishing it? |
3050 | Are the Boers on Bulwana? |
3050 | Are you from Ladysmith? |
3050 | Are you from Ladysmith? |
3050 | Are you sure I am not robbing you? |
3050 | Besides, we do n''t know where the press- censor is, do we? |
3050 | But you knew he was a general officer, you knew he was the first of the relieving column? |
3050 | Crossed the bridge? |
3050 | Do you hear? 3050 Do you think you can carry me?" |
3050 | Does it pain you? 3050 General Sumner''s compliments, and why are you not in your place?" |
3050 | How did you happen to get that right? |
3050 | I mean before this war? |
3050 | I see that the London_ Chronicle_,he said,"asks if, since I have become a rebel, I do not lose my rights as a Barrister of the Temple? |
3050 | Ice, have got? |
3050 | Oh, was that General Buller? |
3050 | Oh, you are an officer? |
3050 | Stand_ this_? |
3050 | That''s all very well for you chaps, but what protects me if the Admiralty finds out I have led a charge on a Spanish garrison? |
3050 | What am I to do then? |
3050 | What''s the good of your money? 3050 What-- what,"he gasped,"is that man doing with that axe?" |
3050 | When did they take you? |
3050 | Where''s your pass? |
3050 | Why did n''t you people cheer General Buller when he came in? |
3050 | Why? |
3050 | Will General Wilson think I should have waited for him? |
3050 | Will you have these? |
3050 | You are not tired, are you? 3050 Can you eat money? 3050 Can you stand it? |
3050 | Can your horse eat money? |
3050 | Does he go around with a brass band?" |
3050 | Down in the Garcia campaign along the Rio Grande I said to one of them:"Why do you go to all that trouble? |
3050 | Finally, one of them, with an inward struggle, brought himself to ask,"Are you from the outside?" |
3050 | He said:"Do we? |
3050 | I order you; damn you, I order-- We must give them hell; do you hear? |
3050 | Is that the way a Russian spy works? |
3050 | THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR I-- WITH BULLER''S COLUMN"Were you the station- master here before this?" |
3050 | The Boers were still on Bulwana then? |
3050 | There was a long, grateful pause, and then in a voice that trembled, I again asked,"Champagne, have got?" |
3050 | They''ve killed my captain-- do you understand? |
3050 | Was it possible that it stretched already into the beleaguered city? |
3050 | Were we, after all, to be cheated of the first and freshest impressions? |
3050 | What''s the use?" |
3050 | What?" |
3050 | When he crawled over to where we lay, I explained,"I knew that would fetch you,"and he grinned, and said,"Oh, was that it?" |
3050 | When we gathered up the corners of his blanket and lifted him, he tried to sit upright, and cried out,"You''re taking me to the front, are n''t you? |
3050 | Yes?" |
3050 | and"Where is the bridge?" |
2963 | ''You laugh, do you, rascal? 2963 Am I to blame,"said she, timidly,"for having discovered the cause of your sorrow?" |
2963 | And pray what is that? |
2963 | And what would you say,she asked,"if I give my promise, and do not keep it?" |
2963 | Are you persuaded, dearest Esther, that I have had nothing to do with framing this answer? |
2963 | Are you the man,I said,"who told me that you were the son of a Count Peccini, of Padua, although there is no such count in Padua at all?" |
2963 | As the duke gives audience to the first comer,I said to myself,"why should I not have as good a reception as a labouring man?" |
2963 | But if that were so how could I have known where the pocket- book was, or whether the ship was safe? |
2963 | But if you were to teach me the cabala, you would impart to me these holy names? |
2963 | But what is the matter, papa dear? |
2963 | But, Esther dear,said I,"did not the oracle reveal a circumstance of which you knew perfectly well before?" |
2963 | Can I hope to dance with you all the evening? |
2963 | Dearest one, would I not do for thee a task a thousand times more difficult than this to prove my love and my devotion? 2963 Death? |
2963 | Did you tell the duke you were my cousin? |
2963 | Do you really think, Esther, that I am the sole possessor of this science? 2963 Do you think of staying long?" |
2963 | How can that have happened? |
2963 | I shall believe as much of that as I choose, but, by- the- by, have you thought of any way of convincing me? |
2963 | I suppose you think,said she, blushing, and evidently a little vexed,"that if you touched it your desires might be lessened?" |
2963 | Is he going to arrest me, then? |
2963 | Is he? |
2963 | Is it possible,said M. d''O,"for my daughter to obtain the answers of the oracle without your having taught her?" |
2963 | Is the count right,said she, pleasantly,"in attributing such power to me?" |
2963 | Is this the first time you have been to Stuttgart? |
2963 | Is your Marion fair to see all over? |
2963 | Put off your departure: why should you desire to go to Stuttgart so earnestly? 2963 Shall I be impertinent,"said Esther,"if I ask you where your portrait is? |
2963 | Shall you send back the portrait to your faithless mistress? |
2963 | Then I may read all the letters? |
2963 | Then you have never been curious enough to inspect your own person? |
2963 | To do what? |
2963 | Well, gentlemen, what have I to do with that? |
2963 | Well, what do you want with me now? |
2963 | What can I do for you, sir? |
2963 | What do they mean? |
2963 | What do you want to be convinced about? |
2963 | What is the matter with you, my dear Casanova? |
2963 | Where did you get that pomade which perfumes the air? 2963 Where do you come from?" |
2963 | Why do you laugh? |
2963 | Why do you not send him about his business? 2963 Why not, if you refuse his invitation to dinner tomorrow?" |
2963 | Will you deign to accept it, Esther, though it has been possessed by another? |
2963 | You are M. Casanova, are you? |
2963 | You ask me thus? 2963 You have never felt it, then?" |
2963 | You knew it? 2963 You must have a different notion of me?" |
2963 | A sigh escaped from Esther, and her head fell upon her breast: but what could I do? |
2963 | And pray what outrage can I have committed against girls who live in a brothel, and whom I have paid according to their deserts?" |
2963 | But are you aware that you are exposing me to the danger of losing my life or taking his? |
2963 | But how could you reply that there would be another comptroller- general in a year''s time, and run the risk of compromising the oracle? |
2963 | But how much do you want to spend?" |
2963 | But your father must think that I taught you the secret?" |
2963 | Do you think that to possess you would be a disagreeable condition in my eyes?" |
2963 | How can one resist entreaty from such lips?" |
2963 | How could you have seen it? |
2963 | I like your post- chaise; will you let me have it for what it cost you?" |
2963 | I was just going, when the count said:"I am sure madame has prevailed on you to stay, and to come to my ball and supper to- morrow?" |
2963 | If I could live my life over again, should I be wiser? |
2963 | If I violate this command I should lose my knowledge; and this condition is well calculated to insure secrecy, is it not?" |
2963 | Where is the portrait? |
2963 | Who has not experienced the persuasive influence of money? |
2963 | Will you leave the pyramid with me?" |
2963 | Will you present me to him now?" |
2963 | Will you shew it me?" |
2963 | said I,"he does not live with his highborn nieces, then?" |
2963 | said she, in an imperious and indignant voice,"he has not asked you? |
2963 | two- three hundred ducats; will that do?" |
2963 | what is it that you have said? |
39540 | Gentlemen,said he,"from whence shall we get freedom, if we do not maintain it in our dealings with each other, in our most intimate circle?" |
39540 | And from whence does the agitation which has thus been produced arise-- an agitation which increases the more they try to restrain it? |
39540 | From whence comes this universal disquiet? |
39540 | From whence this suspicion between governors and governed? |
39540 | General Moga had therefore to be removed; and the question was, who was to take his place? |
39540 | Jacoby:"Of what law do you speak?" |
39540 | Jacoby:"Of what law?" |
39540 | Jacoby:"What is your name?" |
39540 | Jacoby:"Who has given you this authority?" |
39540 | One of the leading students then demanded of Montecuccoli whether this was the whole of the petition they intended to send to the Emperor? |
39540 | The latter have, perhaps, just reasons to complain; and if they have, who ought to present those reasons to the Prince? |
39540 | Will you not grant us a gracious hearing?" |
2955 | Amiable companion of the captain,I said in French,"will you kindly accept me as a third guest at the breakfast- table?" |
2955 | And how much would that person give me for the knife? |
2955 | And what did he answer? |
2955 | Are you always playing? |
2955 | Are you, then, so very sorry to have made my acquaintance? |
2955 | But are you aware that you look very angry? |
2955 | But tell me,said Count Spada,"does the bank receive much?" |
2955 | Can I keep you company? |
2955 | Captain,I said,"will you take a fourth share in my bank?" |
2955 | From what country,I asked him,"is your travelling companion?" |
2955 | Have I killed him? |
2955 | Have I not some reason to be so? |
2955 | Have you any lover? |
2955 | How could I be so through the possession of the knife? |
2955 | How did the husband take it all? |
2955 | How much would it cost me? |
2955 | How so? 2955 I? |
2955 | Madame Franzia,said I, to the mistress of the house,"what is the cause of that bad smell?" |
2955 | May I invite myself to breakfast with you? |
2955 | Most willingly, but shall I know how to do it well? |
2955 | Perhaps you are thinking of a duel for to- morrow? 2955 Pray, tell me,"I said to him,"what relation there is between this collection and natural history? |
2955 | Then you do not want to go out? |
2955 | Then you speak French? |
2955 | Then you were all right before that night? |
2955 | Very good,I said;"now tell me what grounds you have for supposing that there is a treasure in your house?" |
2955 | What is that hemp worth, madam? |
2955 | Who are you? |
2955 | Who can she be,I said, speaking to the walls;"this girl who seems to have the most elevated feelings under the veil of the most cynical libertinism? |
2955 | Who has broken open the door of his room? |
2955 | Who is that lovely lady? |
2955 | Why have you not a lady''s maid with you instead of a male servant? |
2955 | Why, madam? 2955 Why,"I said to her,"did you move?" |
2955 | Will you, madam, grant me the favour of accompanying you to Parma? |
2955 | You could take my knife from me? 2955 You do not? |
2955 | You would not? |
2955 | ''Well gentlemen,''she said,''what lucky wind has brought you here together at this hour? |
2955 | ?" |
2955 | Are not those the three kingdoms?" |
2955 | As we were on the point of going to bed, she said to me,"Would it injure the success of your operation if we were to sleep together?" |
2955 | Being alone with her after supper, I said to her,"My dear Javotte, have you been displeased at all I have compelled you to submit to this evening?" |
2955 | But how can you hand the amount to her without letting her know that you have forced me to refund it? |
2955 | But what is the meaning of that smile playing on your lips?" |
2955 | But where can we find roses without thorns? |
2955 | But who is she-- what is she? |
2955 | Can you tell me how it is that magicians are not more powerful than the Inquisitors?" |
2955 | Confess that you can not, in all fairness, give me such an answer; am I not right?" |
2955 | Did I not? |
2955 | Do you not try to cure yourself?" |
2955 | Do you think, for instance, that the ugly wretch I met at the guard- room is worth what I now suffer on her account?" |
2955 | Guilty or not guilty?" |
2955 | How could they have imagined that a writer''a rouet''could be a man of genius? |
2955 | I exclaimed,"you are the possessor of this knife, and you are not as rich as Croesus?" |
2955 | Marina, seeing that I was thoughtful, said,"Are you sorry to have saved me from the rage of that brute?" |
2955 | O you who despise life, tell me whether that contempt of life renders you worthy of it? |
2955 | Of course I have it; do you think I would have bought one without the other?" |
2955 | She smiled jeeringly, and said,"Will you take four tickets for the four performances?" |
2955 | That was enough for me, and in reality what more did I want to know? |
2955 | The hair- dresser being in the room Celi did not answer, but as soon as we were alone he said,"How could you possibly expect my visit?" |
2955 | Then you converse in pantomime?" |
2955 | To feel certain of my love, do you want to see me kneeling before you like a simpleton, crying and entreating you to take pity on me? |
2955 | What have I done?" |
2955 | What impression would Melanchthon have made with his name of Schwarzerd? |
2955 | What would have become of Metastasio under his true name of Trapasso? |
2955 | Who are they that, having known him, have not shed tears in his memory? |
2955 | Why do you not take the bank yourself?" |
2955 | Would he then have dared to raise the voice of a moralist philosopher, of a reformer of the Eucharist, and so many other holy things? |
2955 | Would the Bourbeux have made as good a figure on the throne as the Bourbons? |
2955 | You do not see the antediluvian kingdom, that of Sesostris and that of Semiramis? |
2955 | always the same song?" |
2955 | if I love you? |
2955 | in case I should make up my mind to sell the knife, who would give me the thousand sequins?" |
2955 | opportunity makes a thief, does it not? |
2955 | what is this? |
2955 | you want women worthy of love? |
2954 | And if anyone should inform your mistress that we are in love with each other, or even that you have given your arm to a young girl? |
2954 | And if our intercourse should be discovered? |
2954 | And when will he do so? |
2954 | And will you love me? |
2954 | And will you make me happy, too? |
2954 | And you do not believe me, sir? |
2954 | Are mine black? |
2954 | But are not these desires happiness when they are always accompanied by hope? |
2954 | But do you imagine, reverend sir, that marriages can be made like omelets? 2954 But do you think I would have come if I had not been attracted by the beauty of your lovely niece?" |
2954 | But he is not a prisoner? |
2954 | Could you accept a man like me? |
2954 | Do we make a mystery of it? 2954 Do you know what is the matter?" |
2954 | Do you suppose I could refuse you? |
2954 | For me? |
2954 | Have you, then, given yourself to some wretched woman? |
2954 | How canst thou complain,she said tenderly,"when it is to that very imperfection of our enjoyment that we are indebted for its continuance? |
2954 | How long will that be? |
2954 | How so? 2954 How so?" |
2954 | I am very sorry for you, for we can not go again to Venice; and even if we could, how could we remain there six months? 2954 If your friend should feel pleased with me, when would he marry me?" |
2954 | In what were they deficient? |
2954 | Indeed? 2954 Is it quite certain that in leaving C---- she proceeded to this city?" |
2954 | Is it then necessary to know how to write in order to become a wife? 2954 Is my sister,"I enquired,"still with him?" |
2954 | Then, you no longer want to know me better? |
2954 | To whom, dear sister, are we indebted for the happiness of having found you again? |
2954 | Well, sir, what does it matter to you? 2954 What are you doing there at this time of night?" |
2954 | What disease was it? |
2954 | What do you mean by character? |
2954 | What is this? |
2954 | What means? |
2954 | What offence have I to forgive you for, dear friend? 2954 What sort of declaration did you want?" |
2954 | What will my uncle say to- morrow? |
2954 | When you promised to marry me, after we had both been weak enough to give way to our love, did you intend to deceive me? |
2954 | Where is my husband? |
2954 | Where is she? 2954 Why an idiot? |
2954 | Why are you angry, lovely Christine, at my hearing that you liked my appearance, when I am so glad to let you know how truly charming I think you? |
2954 | Why do you laugh so heartily, beautiful''demigella''? 2954 Why not, my dear niece?" |
2954 | Why not? |
2954 | Why so, signora? |
2954 | Why, my dear son, do you not ask M. de l''Abbadie to render you that service? |
2954 | Will he believe me? |
2954 | Will you allow me to have some breakfast with you? |
2954 | You are laughing? |
2954 | You are not deceiving me? |
2954 | You have then some hope of recalling him to the path of duty? 2954 And Christine? 2954 But now that I have your arm, what will people think? |
2954 | Christine was the first to break the silence"What have we done?" |
2954 | Could I possibly entertain any doubt after the fearful crime I had committed for him? |
2954 | Do you know what she said, sir, when she saw you on the wharf? |
2954 | Had she deceived me? |
2954 | Have I not reason to be thoughtful?" |
2954 | How did you use to amuse yourself at home?" |
2954 | I returned with my companions, but how can I paint that truly dramatic situation? |
2954 | I saw it when the good woman, instead of answering me, said,"Does she not know who you are?" |
2954 | I suppose he has promised you marriage?" |
2954 | Is he likely to possess a sane judgment when he refuses to lend you one hundred sequins? |
2954 | Is it not a fact, uncle?" |
2954 | Is it not so, uncle?" |
2954 | Is it not true, uncle? |
2954 | Is it not, uncle?" |
2954 | Is it to shew me your fine teeth? |
2954 | Is my uncle informed of this wonderful change?" |
2954 | Tell me, now, what I can answer to your friend in case he should ask me, during the first night, why I am so different to what a virgin ought to be?" |
2954 | What was to become of me? |
2954 | When he visits this city he always puts up at Boncousin; will you ascertain whether he is there?" |
2954 | Which is the fool, and which is the wise man? |
2954 | Would anyone, then, knowing the whole case, have condemned me if I had destroyed my own life in order to deliver myself from everlasting remorse? |
2954 | Yet we remained a fortnight in Venice; did we not, uncle?" |
2954 | asked Christine;"is it a beautiful hand- writing?" |
2954 | what shall I say now? |
2954 | what will my uncle say?" |
2954 | where shall I go to- night?" |
2954 | why can we not belong for ever to each other?" |
2959 | And supposing the news vexes her? |
2959 | And what did your mother say? |
2959 | But my dear doctor,said I,"ca n''t you make your own prescription?" |
2959 | But the ambassador worked all night? |
2959 | But, sir,answered the man,"we have not had a special courier for the last two months:""What? |
2959 | Do you know me? |
2959 | Do you know who she is? |
2959 | Do you think you have it? |
2959 | Good evening, my two divinities, where is our charming Frenchman? |
2959 | Had we not better turn her out? |
2959 | Have you got any more weapons? |
2959 | Have you had her several times? |
2959 | How did you make this nice acquaintance? |
2959 | How is the problem to be solved? |
2959 | How old is he? |
2959 | I do n''t know you,said she;"who are you?" |
2959 | If I keep quiet what will become of me? |
2959 | Is he a married man? |
2959 | Is the nun there? |
2959 | It is like mine,answered M---- M----,"would you like to see for yourself?" |
2959 | My dear Barberine, what do you think I can see? |
2959 | On whose authority do you order me to do this? |
2959 | Shall I come? |
2959 | These,said I,"are rare charms, with which you have doubtless a near acquaintance?" |
2959 | Well, even if I loved him, do you think I would go and tell him? 2959 Well,"said I,"are you convinced now that you have been cheated?" |
2959 | Well,she said,"shall I go and dress myself and then do your hair?" |
2959 | What do you mean? 2959 What time is it now, then?" |
2959 | What was this saint''s name when she was in the world? |
2959 | Who is the cook? |
2959 | Whom do I hear playing the violin? |
2959 | Why do you think I have been deceived? 2959 Will an hour after sunset suit you?" |
2959 | Will you give me what I have caught, dearest? |
2959 | Will you hold your tongue, and keep quiet till Capsucefalo comes,said the ambassador,"or go to prison?" |
2959 | With him? |
2959 | You are English, I think? |
2959 | You are in my house, and do n''t know who I am? |
2959 | You are quite sure, then, that if she be in the convent she will come down? |
2959 | You have told her, then, what we are going to do? |
2959 | You have, I suppose, visited her in the parlour, after having her here? |
2959 | You know, do you, that I have a young servant? |
2959 | You love her? 2959 You will not come alone, then?" |
2959 | As you have only seen her once, I suppose you would not recognize her portrait?" |
2959 | But what is the matter with you, dear C---- C----? |
2959 | But whence all this anxiety? |
2959 | Could anyone be insensible to his merit?" |
2959 | Could he have any doubt of my answering affirmatively? |
2959 | Did not a special cabinet messenger arrive here last night?" |
2959 | How could I help seeing them? |
2959 | I came up to them, and said,"Who will take me to Venice for eighty sous?" |
2959 | In what school could she learn better than yours? |
2959 | May I hope that you will explain this riddle to me at your next interview?" |
2959 | May I hope that you will kindly grant me on Friday the pleasure of which I am so unfortunately deprived to- day? |
2959 | Must I then say good- bye for ever to my country, and all that is dear to me?" |
2959 | Need I say what an ardent fire that ravishing sight sent coursing through my veins? |
2959 | Now, when I think of that, I say to myself,"That might have been the case, but of what good would it have been to me?" |
2959 | Only tell me if you love him?" |
2959 | The ambassador having first procured me a delightful night, how could I refuse to let him enjoy as pleasant a one? |
2959 | We will take our mess whenever you like:""You astonish me, sweetheart, for how did you manage to get such a good dinner?" |
2959 | What do you think I could do by myself for four hours with that creature who is waiting for me? |
2959 | What was I to do? |
2959 | Whence? |
2959 | Who will be your surety?" |
2959 | Why have you left her, then?" |
2959 | Will you come on Friday?" |
2959 | Will you do it for me? |
2959 | Yet I was not so; but whence came the anxiety which was a torment to me? |
2959 | she said,"whom shall I love, not knowing whether I shall be loved in return?" |
10647 | What,said the leaders of public opinion,"can not the lowest subjects of the Czar or the Shah appeal to ultimate authority? |
10647 | Who wrote that? |
10647 | Am I to be an American no longer,--a sectional man, a local man, a separatist, with no country in common? |
10647 | And even suppose he sought to conciliate the South when the South was preparing for rebellion,--is peace- making such a dreadful thing? |
10647 | And why not? |
10647 | And why not? |
10647 | Are all his services to be forgotten because he did not lift up his trumpet voice in favor of immediate emancipation? |
10647 | Because he opposed the public sentiments of his constituents on one point, when perhaps they were right, is he to be hurled from his lofty pedestal? |
10647 | Both parties had now alike appealed to reason and Scripture, and where were the judges who could settle conflicting opinions? |
10647 | But what was he doing all this while, when he was not in his log- office and in the log- court- room, sixteen feet square? |
10647 | But what was incendiary matter? |
10647 | Can any Union sentiments be stronger? |
10647 | Can anything be more decided or more patriotic? |
10647 | Can it be necessary for me to show what must be the inevitable consequences?... |
10647 | Did not Caesar and Cyrus, Louis and Napoleon receive petitions? |
10647 | Do they sound like bidding for Southern votes? |
10647 | Does a man fall hopelessly because he stumbles? |
10647 | Had he not rendered great services? |
10647 | Has there ever been an empire so despotic as to deny so obvious a right? |
10647 | He probably made mistakes, but who could have done better on the whole? |
10647 | How can a young man, however gifted, be infallible? |
10647 | How is each of the thirty States to defend itself? |
10647 | In other words, in matters of national importance, which should rule? |
10647 | Is a man to be dethroned because he is not perfect? |
10647 | Is it desirable to cut off that great arm of national strength? |
10647 | Is it right, is it generous, is it patriotic to drive us to such an alternative? |
10647 | Is this not fame enough for a modest man, who felt his inferiority, in many respects, to those to whom he himself intrusted power? |
10647 | It was entitled"Shall we Compromise?" |
10647 | Now, what is the real gist and spirit of that speech? |
10647 | Shall we march on to our destiny, blind and lame and halt? |
10647 | Should the majority yield to the minority, or the minority to the majority? |
10647 | Should they be direct or indirect? |
10647 | Should they be imposed for a revenue only, or to stimulate and protect infant manufactures? |
10647 | The country was expanding; should there be national provision for internal improvements,--roads, canals, etc.? |
10647 | There had been active and even acrimonious opposition, but who could compete with him? |
10647 | Was he not able and patriotic? |
10647 | Was he not universally admired for his genius and experience and wisdom? |
10647 | Was he pondering the principles or precedents of law, and storing his mind with the knowledge gained from books? |
10647 | Was it not natural that he should have aspired to be one of the successors of Washington and Adams and Jefferson? |
10647 | What States are to secede? |
10647 | What am I to be? |
10647 | What are men sent to Congress for, except to advance the interests intrusted to them by their constituents? |
10647 | What audiences were ever more enthusiastic than those that gathered to hear his wisdom and eloquence in public halls or in the open air? |
10647 | What could the Abolitionists do now with their Northern societies to show that slavery was a wrong and a sin? |
10647 | What general would Lincoln select to succeed McClellan? |
10647 | What had been the history? |
10647 | What if he did, in straitened circumstances, accept their aid? |
10647 | What is more marked in our history than the extravagance and speculation attending the expansion of paper money irredeemable in gold and silver? |
10647 | What is to become of the army? |
10647 | What is to become of the navy? |
10647 | What is to become of the public lands? |
10647 | What is to remain American? |
10647 | What means that cheering on the left? |
10647 | What then? |
10647 | What would England be if it were only an agricultural country? |
10647 | What would be the result? |
10647 | When are these to be merged in national considerations? |
10647 | When was Webster''s vote ever bought and sold? |
10647 | Where is the eagle still to tower? |
10647 | Where is the flag of the Union to remain? |
10647 | Where is the line to be drawn? |
10647 | Where would the towns of Lowell, Manchester, and Lawrence have been without the aid extended to manufacturing interests? |
10647 | Who ever sat with more dignity in the councils of the nation? |
10647 | Who has proved a greater benefactor to this nation, on the floor of Congress, than he? |
10647 | Who in the nation was more eminent than he? |
10647 | Who should determine that point? |
10647 | Who was more prominent than he, among the statesmen of the country, or more thoroughly fitted to fulfil the duties of that high office? |
10647 | Will you cut the Mississippi in two, leaving free States on its branches and slave States at its mouth? |
10647 | Would he have bought a seat in the Senate, even if he had been as rich as a bonanza king? |
10647 | Would he have voted for"back pay"? |
27562 | Am I your king or your prisoner? |
27562 | But if you should be deprived of the privilege of hearing mass? |
27562 | Do your voices forbid your submitting to the Church militant? |
27562 | Have you not good hope in the Lord? |
27562 | Soft, your Hungarian Majesty,thinks Jobst:"till my cash is paid may it not probably be another?" |
27562 | What is your age? |
27562 | Who are the true martyrs, of those who are slain on my side or on that of my enemies? |
27562 | Who is this we have got for a Governor? |
27562 | Why am I thus guarded? |
27562 | Will these men fight? |
27562 | Will you put on a woman''s dress, in order to receive your Saviour at Easter? |
27562 | A servant waiting at dinner inadvertently let slip the word:"Ziska there? |
27562 | After all, what, who was she, to undertake to gainsay these prelates, these doctors? |
27562 | And may we not be certain that if we were to treat with the King of England, the King of France would not be the less urgent in seeking our alliance? |
27562 | Are the elements in league with this enemy of the Church? |
27562 | Besides, have we not with us all the communes of Brabant, of Hainault, of Holland, and of Zealand?" |
27562 | But, supposing it to be vacant, what pretensions could Henry of Lancaster advance to it? |
27562 | Can the King of France prevent us from treating with the King of England? |
27562 | Can we believe that he would meet with opposition from his associates, the Percy family? |
27562 | Do you not see banners and pennons in the valley?" |
27562 | Galloping up to the archers he exclaimed:"What are ye doing, my lieges? |
27562 | Had he falsified the divine message to the people in his charge? |
27562 | He began to think: Was it for him to hope to discover that land which had been hidden from so many princes? |
27562 | How could they abandon their obedient girl, they who had so often promised her"safety and deliverance"? |
27562 | How dared she speak before so many able men-- men who had studied? |
27562 | How far was the Christianity of the day unlike the Christianity to be found in the record of Christ and his apostles? |
27562 | If it was not-- if the council had wrongfully or uncanonically condemned the successor of Peter-- how could it be infallible? |
27562 | Kaiser of the Holy Roman Empire, and so much else: is not Sigismund now a great man? |
27562 | On the other hand, if the deposition was a valid one, with what consistency could the French continue to regard Eugenius as their legitimate pastor? |
27562 | On the whole, was not the old strategy best, the strategy of retreat? |
27562 | On whom, then, was vengeance so likely to fall as on the Jews, the usurers and the strangers who lived at enmity with the Christians? |
27562 | Shall they give up the trial? |
27562 | Than the kynge sayde, is my sonne deed or hurt or on the yerthe felled? |
27562 | The Duchess of Bedford sent her female attire; but by whom? |
27562 | The King replied,"Is my son dead, unhorsed, or so badly wounded that he can not support himself?" |
27562 | The great general might well be of doubtful mind-- was to- morrow to bring a second and a more fatal Falkirk? |
27562 | This was the beginning of pawnings to Brandenburg; of which when will the end be? |
27562 | To every man whom they met they put the question,"With whom holdest thou?" |
27562 | Was he turning men''s hearts from the worship of God? |
27562 | Was his priestly office disgraced by carelessness or drunkenness or impurity of life? |
27562 | Was it a crime? |
27562 | Was there not presumption and damnable pride in an ignorant girl''s opposing herself to the learned-- a poor, simple girl, to men in authority? |
27562 | What are we to think of the imbecility of the judge, or of his horrible connivance? |
27562 | What think you, reader, were the evils which this pale ascetic had wrought, needing a very earthquake to cleanse them from the land? |
27562 | What were pedlers and mechanic fellows made for, if not to be plundered when needful? |
27562 | Where find a finer legend than this true history? |
27562 | Wherefore is the so long promised deliverance delayed? |
27562 | Which of us now warms and thrills with emotion at hearing the name of Aldus Manutius or of Henricus Stephanus or of Johannes Froben? |
27562 | Which was to come first, the election of a new pope or the adoption of a scheme of ecclesiastical reform? |
27562 | Who will be able to make this partition without great difficulty? |
27562 | Who, pray, shall forbid that we defend our interests by using our rights? |
27562 | Would it not, he thought, be ingratitude to God, who thus moved his mind to these attempts, if he were to desist from his work, or be negligent in it? |
27562 | _ Question_:"You say that you wear a man''s dress by God''s command, and yet, in case you die, you want a woman''s shift?" |
27562 | am I to be treated so horribly and cruelly? |
27562 | and when should its legislation in any other particulars be indisputable? |
27562 | do they come no more in this pressing need of hers? |
27562 | must I then die here?" |
27562 | must my body, pure as from birth, and which was never contaminated, be this day consumed and reduced to ashes? |
27562 | to do homage to the laws and me?" |
27562 | what must her feelings have been? |
27562 | what need of their solemn ambassage to him? |
40537 | *****"L''Empereur Frederic avoir déjà? |
40537 | Is this historical justice? |
40537 | The only question was,"Where are they?" |
40537 | Then Saladin asked,''Where is he?'' |
40537 | Where go you Tancred? |
40537 | Whither fly you Boemond?" |
40537 | Who shall tell the children and the infirm that, animated with the same spirit, hastened to the war? |
2957 | And why, if you please? |
2957 | As you please; but may I enquire your reasons? |
2957 | But does your sister know that you intend me to join you? |
2957 | Can you suppose him capable of such an action? |
2957 | Did you see,she said to me,"what my brother did to Madame C---- when she placed herself astride on his knees? |
2957 | Do you know that I am twenty- eight? |
2957 | Do you then feel much interest in me? |
2957 | Does your mother know it? |
2957 | Has he not told you? |
2957 | Has she had any visitors? |
2957 | Have you never been to the opera? |
2957 | How can she possibly know that? |
2957 | How can you judge of that? |
2957 | I adore your sister,I said to him;"but do you think that your father will be willing to give her to me?" |
2957 | I am very glad it is so; but how could I not trust you? 2957 I must ask you to tell me what sort of a woman you take me for?" |
2957 | Is there any motto upon them? 2957 Is there by any chance a law to prevent the husband from undressing himself?" |
2957 | My dear friend,he said to me at last,"why did you dissuade M. Dandolo from doing what I had insinuated to him?" |
2957 | Of what good is all this reserve? |
2957 | Purposely? 2957 Sir,"I asked him, politely,"may I ask why you are laughing?" |
2957 | So soon? 2957 Then you can take charge of the letters entrusted to you by the nuns?" |
2957 | Then you have not any lover? |
2957 | To- day? 2957 Well, where can you see a man of your age having a daughter of mine? |
2957 | Were you not afraid of my treating you in the same manner? |
2957 | What are you trembling for? |
2957 | What can he do? 2957 What do you see,"he asked me one day,"on the countenance of that prince?" |
2957 | What does she eat? |
2957 | What had you insinuated to him? |
2957 | What? 2957 Where, and how?" |
2957 | Which of your operas,I enquired,"do you like best?" |
2957 | Why not before? |
2957 | Will you teach me how to fasten my beautiful garters? |
2957 | Would you rather offer her a supper in Venice? 2957 You my father? |
2957 | Your majesty is right, but what are we to think of those who sell it? |
2957 | Your pillow, darling? 2957 After my return to Venice, I resumed my usual habits; but with a nature like mine how could I possibly remain satisfied without positive love? 2957 Am I a woman to sell myself to the first comer for the sum of thirty sous? 2957 And that fear makes you begin by what ought to be the end? |
2957 | Are you sure that you will never repent being my wife?" |
2957 | As I was rather thoughtful, she added,"Tell me what you are thinking of?" |
2957 | But what will my father do when he hears that I have a lover?" |
2957 | But will you explain to me, dearest, the meaning of the words embroidered upon my garters?" |
2957 | Do you know that I am fourteen?" |
2957 | Do you mean to remain here until we return?" |
2957 | Do you not think so?" |
2957 | Do you recollect having told me that you never married for the very same reason? |
2957 | Do you recollect telling me that you envied the fate of the man who would have me for his wife? |
2957 | Do you recollect your strong arguments in favour of celibacy while we were at Parma? |
2957 | Do you suppose her foolish enough to expect that I will give way to her wishes? |
2957 | Do you think me capable of deceiving you? |
2957 | Do you think that a good shot can miss a man when he is firing in his very face, unless he does it purposely?" |
2957 | Have you not letters of exchange to the amount of six thousand florins, or the goods bought with them?" |
2957 | How could I be angry with you, my love, in the happiest moment of my life?" |
2957 | How could I possibly fear such a thing, knowing how much you love me? |
2957 | How could I refuse him? |
2957 | I exclaimed,"do you feel certain of my love? |
2957 | I had to procure the amount, but to whom could I apply? |
2957 | Is that a calumny likewise?" |
2957 | May I ask you to forward my answer?" |
2957 | Tell me, what could I do in such a case?" |
2957 | The charming runner, thoroughly amazed, said to me,"Then you did not hurt yourself?" |
2957 | The woman came up to me, and, handing me the letter, she said,"Are you the person to whom it is addressed?" |
2957 | We looked at one another without speaking, for how could we find words to express our feelings? |
2957 | We will wait until we are married, will we not, dear? |
2957 | What will you do in your grief? |
2957 | Where could I find a man courageous enough to be my lover in such a house as this? |
2957 | Will you be kind enough to endorse my note of hand?" |
2957 | Will you do me the honour to introduce me to these ladies?" |
2957 | Will you oblige me in this instance? |
2957 | You are laughing; what do you mean?" |
2957 | You know a great many things; do you happen to know the posting regulations? |
2957 | You suppose that you do not please me? |
2957 | beautiful C----, you do not condescend to ascribe my reserve to the feeling which you have inspired me with? |
2957 | what are you complaining of?" |
2957 | who could have supposed it?" |
36475 | ''What?'' 36475 All very well,"said Wright,"but how am I to know that King George intended this ship to go free? |
36475 | How many men of yours have I killed? |
36475 | I suppose each one of you is more than equal to one Englishman? 36475 Pray, sir,"he said,"can you tell me where our people are?" |
36475 | Say, Cap., do you see that fellow with the white hat? |
36475 | Shall we fight them? |
36475 | ( Why a_ stick_, at sea?) |
36475 | And what were all those Englishmen thinking about, each ship with an officer in charge of the deck? |
36475 | And what were they to do, now that they had been placed on deck? |
36475 | Are there to be any privateering actions in future naval warfare? |
36475 | Are we not still trying in vain to win back the"America"Cup? |
36475 | At 8 p.m. on a February evening, with a bright moon, the stranger came within hail, ran up her colours, and asked,"What ship is that?" |
36475 | But is it absolutely true? |
36475 | But what says Mr. Coggleshall? |
36475 | Can it be doubted that some of them will be utilised for the purpose? |
36475 | Can not we build ships? |
36475 | Captain White''s little argument in favour of boarding the_ Amiable_(?) |
36475 | Do you want him to run aboard us?" |
36475 | On seeing this the American captain seemed not a little astonished, and addressed the Welsh captain as follows:"''Captain, what is this?'' |
36475 | One of the first questions Mr. Walker asked was, whether they were insured? |
36475 | Or do you prefer to rot in a beastly English prison- ship?" |
36475 | Perhaps it may be permitted to ask, would Captain Elton have been shot had he survived the action? |
36475 | She had been waiting off the port for some time, and her captain had been heard to ask in Leghorn,"When is Captain Wright coming out? |
36475 | Such recognition was certainly due; but how many sailors would so faithfully have rendered it? |
36475 | The men paused in their labour, looking round the horizon; the officers ran on deck, and closed round the captain:"Sir, do you think of engaging?" |
36475 | To what is this owing? |
36475 | Was ever a more masterly speech from a chief to his subordinates? |
36475 | What was to be done? |
36475 | Why not fit out a privateer, and place Mr. Wright in command? |
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? |
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? |
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?''" |
31609 | Am I? |
31609 | Are these alleys ever swept or cleaned? |
31609 | Are these vagabonds and tramps the descendants of the noble Greeks whom we have honored all our lives? |
31609 | Are you willing to trust a stranger? |
31609 | But where is the Hippodrome? |
31609 | But why was Aben''s head cut off? |
31609 | But why was it built in a depression? |
31609 | Can these be the offspring of the great orators who electrified their hearers, or of the famous architects and artists whose names are immortal? 31609 Captain, can you not send us ashore?" |
31609 | Did you ever see any eyes like that in a statue? |
31609 | Did you ever see geraniums and heliotropes growing in such luxuriance? |
31609 | Did you ever see such wonderful coloring on the waters of sea or river? |
31609 | Did you see anything remarkable in that dark cellar? |
31609 | Did you see those women on the hillside road at Capri carrying wine kegs on their heads? 31609 Do you think that a man of my size could squeeze through a hole like that?" |
31609 | Have you decided to go? |
31609 | How much to the Cathedral? |
31609 | How shall we spend the day without a definite plan laid out for us? |
31609 | If the Moslems believe in the Bible and in God as a supreme being, why did they destroy the mosaic representation of God on the ceiling? |
31609 | Is not this a German vessel? |
31609 | Is there a charge for admittance? |
31609 | Is this building very old? |
31609 | May we go ashore to- night? |
31609 | Must I get up? |
31609 | Shall we return through the gorge or take the shorter path over the cliffs and obtain a view of the Nile valley? |
31609 | Share it with us while the stewards are bringing the coffee, wo n''t you? |
31609 | Then,pointing to the red ensign floating at the top of the foremast,"why does the Moltke fly the British colors?" |
31609 | Want a guide? 31609 Were you never cheated?" |
31609 | What is the Fast of Ramazan and when does it occur? |
31609 | What is the distance from the summit? |
31609 | What must be the thoughts of these Neapolitan exiles as they sail away from''Sunny Italy,''their place of birth, their homeland, and their friends? |
31609 | What soldier of the present day could march or even ride any distance so encumbered with steel? |
31609 | What war vessels are those? |
31609 | What''s the matter? 31609 Who''s there?" |
31609 | Why did n''t you come along? |
31609 | Why do we stop here? |
31609 | Why do you want backsheesh now? |
31609 | Why is it the bells ring so sweetly here? |
31609 | Why was the temple built here two miles away from the river, instead of near the banks of the Nile? |
31609 | Why, how could that be? |
31609 | Why? |
31609 | Will it be difficult for the tourists to find their way through the narrow crooked streets of the city without a guide? |
31609 | Are these swarthy- faced, plain- featured idlers the representatives of the Greek beauty of form and feature?" |
31609 | First, are seventy days long enough to make a cruise of nearly fourteen thousand miles and visit so many places? |
31609 | Perhaps you have heard of the lady?" |
31609 | Second, with five hundred passengers will there not be a crowd?" |
31609 | The first day I felt rather timid in the saddle when the custodian asked,''Fast or slow?'' |
31609 | WANT A GUIDE?" |
31609 | What shall I do?" |
31609 | What''s the trouble?" |
31609 | Where is Jerusalem? |
31609 | Who sat so sweetly at my feet With red tarbouche and slippers neat And stirred my heart with many a beat? |
31609 | Who whipped the donkey when he fell And then the donkey boy as well, And dressed himself a howling swell? |
31609 | [ Illustration:"MAY WE KODAK YOU?" |
31609 | [ Illustration:"WANT A GUIDE? |
31609 | is there not a man among you who can call to prayer?'' |
31609 | said one of the amateurs indignantly,"let the Turks take us? |
31609 | want a guide?" |
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? |
2960 | A piece of bad fortune, you mean, surely? |
2960 | And you can find no better way than abuse to express the joy you ought to feel at seeing me again? |
2960 | Are you, then, not the inventor of the scheme which has been shewn me? |
2960 | Ask monks for money? 2960 But which is it?" |
2960 | But.... what are The Leads? |
2960 | Can a man who leaves another well provided for and an assured future be said to abandon him? |
2960 | Do you go,said she,"to see your ambassador?" |
2960 | Do you pray to God? |
2960 | Dost love Judas who betrayed Jesus Christ? |
2960 | Has the angel a beard? |
2960 | Have you anybody ready for the Castelletto? |
2960 | Have you had time yet to think about what you will take to eat? |
2960 | Have you received orders,said I,"to kill me with hunger and heat?" |
2960 | How can they leave me here to the mercy of their successors,I thought,"to whom they can not leave any evidence capable of condemning me?" |
2960 | How did you pierce the roof? |
2960 | How is the money to be found? 2960 How shall I expiate this sin?" |
2960 | I am delighted, not at being anticipated, but to find that we think alike; but may I ask you why you have not carried out the plan? |
2960 | I am under the Leads, then, am I? |
2960 | I could not tell your lordship in less than half an hour:"Why were you shut up? |
2960 | It might, therefore, be formed by a company who would pay the Crown a fixed sum? |
2960 | Let us grant, then, that they will gamble: how is the money to be found? |
2960 | Never mind that, the king will let his subjects gamble as much as they like: the question is, will they gamble? |
2960 | Shall I have the pleasure or seeing him? |
2960 | Shall we not be able to remain at Venice? |
2960 | The nation, then, would furnish the sum in question? |
2960 | What did you think had become of me? |
2960 | What do you want at Paris? |
2960 | What do you want with money? 2960 What do you want yourself?" |
2960 | What do you want? |
2960 | What do you want? |
2960 | What expense would there be to the Crown? |
2960 | What have you been doing all this time? |
2960 | What is the name of this village, my friend? |
2960 | What miracle is that, reverend father? |
2960 | What sin have I done? |
2960 | When? |
2960 | Where can I get some? |
2960 | Where shall I go for it? 2960 Who are you?" |
2960 | Why did n''t you go by yourself? |
2960 | Why is he away for such a long time, my dear madam? |
2960 | Why? |
2960 | Will you be good enough to express your sentiments on the subject before the council? |
2960 | Will you give me your plan? |
2960 | Yes, of course; but how is it that the Castelletto can not guarantee the Crown a certain gain? |
2960 | You are a believer, then, in final causes? 2960 You are determined, are you, not to follow the good advice I have given you?" |
2960 | You are right; but can you shew me as simply that I gave you the tools to make that hole? |
2960 | You have not heard, then, that two prisoners have escaped from The Leads? 2960 You will answer all objections?" |
2960 | Your gossip? 2960 A wretched kitchen- lamp would have made me happy, but how am I to get such a thing? 2960 And do you think it likely that a man like me would be left without anything to eat? |
2960 | And if you swear, will you become a perjurer a second time?" |
2960 | And if you want pocket- money, why do n''t you ask your brethren the monks?" |
2960 | And supposing that one of you is heroic enough to do so, can you tell me on which side you are going to descend? |
2960 | But what is the matter with your knees?" |
2960 | Can the love of country, all holy though it be, prevail in the heart of the man whose country is oppressing him? |
2960 | Do you know the reason of your imprisonment?" |
2960 | Do you promise me entirely to do this thing?" |
2960 | Do you?" |
2960 | Have you any matches? |
2960 | Have you gone mad? |
2960 | How did you do it?" |
2960 | How, may I ask?" |
2960 | I had no appetite, certainly; but were my gaolers to guess as much? |
2960 | I suppose, sir, I might consider the young countess as my wife?" |
2960 | May I ask, sir, how you obtained access to him?" |
2960 | Should the thought of gaining my liberty at the expense of a fellow- creature have made me desist? |
2960 | Tell me, then, how I gave you a hatchet?" |
2960 | The new- comer thought he was in hell, and cried out,"Where am I? |
2960 | They say it''s cruel to disallow writing and visitors; but that''s foolish, for what are writing and company but waste of time? |
2960 | They would take you from hell to put you in heaven, and you would refuse to stir? |
2960 | This fondness for gossip was not altogether appropriate to his office, but where is one to find beings absolutely vile? |
2960 | What will you do after you have obtained the decree? |
2960 | When we had traversed half the length of the canal I put my head out, and said to the waterman on the poop,"When do you think we shall get to Mestre?" |
2960 | Which of you three has a vocation for this dangerous work of charity? |
2960 | Will you come?" |
2960 | Will you swear to me that you will spy no more? |
2960 | Will you swear to me to spy no more?" |
2960 | With whom am I?" |
2960 | You have been put by yourself as an additional punishment, and you want me to thank the secretary on that account?" |
2960 | You have only the canal side left, and where is your gondola to take you off? |
2960 | You must grant the possibility of the Crown losing an enormous sum at the first drawing?" |
2960 | You will be M. Vetturi, then? |
2960 | You will confess that the reason ought to yield to a mathematical proof?" |
2960 | a moneyed man like you have no money?" |
2960 | scoundrels? |
2960 | what do I hear? |
2960 | where have I been put? |
2979 | And supposing he told you not to be scrupulous about trifles? |
2979 | And what do you do after? |
2979 | And who will do my room? |
2979 | Are not all men able to make love every day, and every hour, just as they eat, drink and sleep every day? |
2979 | Are you not aware that you have a beautiful breast? |
2979 | Casanova has been here for the last ten days, and does not know the Venetian consul? |
2979 | Difficult? 2979 Do you like the little heart?" |
2979 | Do you mean to say,said she,"that one man is not as good as another?" |
2979 | Do you think them interesting? |
2979 | Do you want any money? |
2979 | Have you any obligations towards her? |
2979 | Have you got her with child? |
2979 | Have you never loved a white man? |
2979 | Have you no suspicion that the sight is a very pleasant one for me? |
2979 | How can I sigh? 2979 How could you, my lord? |
2979 | How do you mean? |
2979 | How do you mean? |
2979 | How in the world,I exclaimed,"could he contract this enormous debt?" |
2979 | I am sorry to hear that; but you like foie gras? |
2979 | I know, but lacking normal strength what am I to do? 2979 I suppose you are afraid of being poisoned?" |
2979 | I told you so,said the consul;"now, what do you think of the wisdom of our sages?" |
2979 | Is he a general in the Polish service as well? |
2979 | Misfortune? 2979 My heart tells me,"I began,"that your excellence''s name is Zaguri?" |
2979 | Nevertheless, you have made up your mind to marry her sooner or later? |
2979 | No novelty for you? |
2979 | Shall I ask your father to give you leave to be kind? |
2979 | She had just left my arms,I continued,"was I not therefore her natural protector? |
2979 | She''s certainly very pretty, but what am I to do with her? 2979 Then she has a key of her own?" |
2979 | Then you can give me a pound of wax lights if I pay you for them? |
2979 | Then you do it, too? |
2979 | Then you let lodgings to Christians? |
2979 | Then you think it lives on its reputation? |
2979 | To- morrow? |
2979 | Very good indeed; and which would you prefer-- swords or pistols? |
2979 | What do you mean? |
2979 | What do you want, my dear? |
2979 | What have you done? |
2979 | What have you got to say? |
2979 | What is that? |
2979 | What shall I say if people ask me who she is? |
2979 | Where shall I be? |
2979 | Who is there? |
2979 | Why did n''t you take any supper? |
2979 | Why so? |
2979 | Why so? |
2979 | Will he pay for my journey? |
2979 | You stupid fellow,I exclaimed,"how can you ever be certain of the purity of wine unless you have made it yourself?" |
2979 | Are you not come here merely to humiliate me, to obtain an empty victory? |
2979 | But general what? |
2979 | But where are your things?" |
2979 | But which is the better, to go beyond these bounds, or not to come up to them? |
2979 | Does she make you sigh in vain? |
2979 | Have you any debts?" |
2979 | How much did you get of the twelve thousand guineas?" |
2979 | Is it pure gold?" |
2979 | Of what use are desires when one can no longer satisfy them? |
2979 | Rather it was she who might complain of me; what right had I to spy over her? |
2979 | She locked my door softly, and when I cried,"Well; what do you want with me?" |
2979 | There was a short silence, and then I said,--"Dearest Leah, you oblige me to adore you; why did you first inspire me with hate? |
2979 | What do girls learn in convents, especially in Italian convents? |
2979 | What object could she have for feigning pregnancy?" |
2979 | What will become of France? |
2979 | When she brought the chocolate I noticed that there were two cups on the tray, and I said,--"Then it is not true that you do n''t like chocolate?" |
2979 | Whether I write sense or nonsense, what matters? |
2979 | Whom do you know in Florence?" |
2979 | Why should I have come to Bologna rather than to any other place?" |
2979 | Will you promise not to make me go with him even if he guesses that I am with you?" |
2979 | Would you like to start to- morrow?" |
2979 | You will not be so cruel as to drive me away?" |
2979 | has Nina been brought to bed?" |
2979 | have you been expelled, too?" |
2979 | he like it? |
2979 | said he, laughing,"that is really too strong; why should n''t she have a child? |
39696 | Do you pay your musicians better than I do? |
39696 | Eh, Sire, tout n''est- il pas possible à la puissance de Dieu? |
39696 | Is your Government mad? |
39696 | Really? |
39696 | Shall we have any new songs? |
39696 | And if there is a new girl come into the village, the inquiry at once passes round,"Does she know any new songs?" |
39696 | And then, where would his son be? |
39696 | At one time he asked indignantly: Why did she not come to share his prison? |
39696 | But who could expect her to observe that command? |
39696 | Et ne vaut- il pas mieux que nous le voyions hypocrite ici que scandaleux ailleurs?" |
39696 | God forbid; how could he, a devout"Catholic,"presume to infringe the Pope''s explicit command? |
39696 | Had he not bidden her go back to Besançon? |
39696 | How many, indeed, among us can be said to know very much at all about that family? |
39696 | How should the Lorrains"sing songs"in what had become to them practically"a strange land?" |
39696 | Might she not stay at Remiremont? |
39696 | Now, would Henry buy those Italian possessions of him? |
39696 | The Virgin''s flight into Egypt is put into strongly agricultural language,"Has a woman with a child passed this way?" |
39696 | What right had she to be there? |
39696 | Whatever might be added in the shape of malt, who would recognise in this decoction anything remotely worthy of the name of beer? |
39696 | Why should they know about the Pretender? |
39696 | Would he not consent at any rate to see her? |
39696 | he exclaimed,"est- il possible que le roi souffre cet affront et que sa gloire subisse une tache que toute l''eau de la Seine ne saurait laver?" |
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? |
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? |
33540 | Of what avail are statutes,says Walsingham,"since the king with his privy council is wo nt to abolish what parliament has just enacted? |
33540 | A feudal principle was surely the more ancient; and what could be more alien to this than a baron, a peer, an hereditary counsellor, without a fief? |
33540 | And therefore it was demanded of the said lords by way of question what aid would be sufficient and requisite in these circumstances? |
33540 | And was his son really illegitimate, as an usurping uncle pretended? |
33540 | But did any hold of the king in socage, except on his demesne lands? |
33540 | But is there sufficient evidence of their genuineness? |
33540 | But who were these, and how distinguished? |
33540 | But why is it asserted that this jurisdiction was inherent in the council? |
33540 | Can anything be lower than this, if nothing is omitted more valuable than what is mentioned? |
33540 | Et dato, quòd_ nullus omnino tortor inveniri valeat_ in Angliâ, utrum pro tortoribus mittendum sit ad partes transmarinas? |
33540 | Et si torquendi sunt, utrum per clericos vel laicos? |
33540 | Even if the book were Charlemagne''s own, might he not have dictated it? |
33540 | How could a villein in gross be lower than this? |
33540 | How, they said, can you procure them? |
33540 | Hæc[ etiam?] |
33540 | It has been observed, that Quid mores sine legibus? |
33540 | Or did the crime of Richard, though punished in him, enure to the benefit of Henry? |
33540 | The former epithet can not, I think, be possibly applicable in the face of statute law; for what else determines our constitution? |
33540 | These of course were Normans; but what inference can be drawn in favour of parliamentary representation in England from the behaviour of the rest? |
33540 | What way shall we make this commensurate to the present value of money? |
33540 | Who then was king after the death of Edward IV.? |
33540 | Why are we to interpret Magna Charta otherwise than according to the natural meaning of the words and the concurrent voice of parliament? |
33540 | [ 32] What can one who adopts this opinion of Dr. Brady say to the following record? |
33540 | and afterwards had been knighted at Crecy and Poictiers? |
33540 | and his successors, such means of enforcing the execution of law as left no sufficient pretext for recurring to an arbitrary tribunal? |
33540 | claim a book against Luther, which was not written by himself? |
33540 | de l''Italie, t. i. p. 55, would be more to the purpose: Quid dicamus columnarum junceam proceritatem? |
34086 | And if this step had been taken, and there had been no war, what then? |
34086 | And without Jackson-- should we ever have had machine politics? |
34086 | But while he was making these terrible admissions of his own duty, what was Buchanan doing? |
34086 | By what means could the Confederacy have forestalled the North in the provision of a really effective navy? |
34086 | Could she do that? |
34086 | Doubtless many would have come forward gladly to claim the distinction and the legacy, but who was worthy of them? |
34086 | Had Penn always been in this favorable position? |
34086 | Had the discouragement and incredulity of his men affected him? |
34086 | If this incident had not suggested and been followed by the Aulick- Perry expedition, what then? |
34086 | Is it conceivable that northern sentiment would have permitted chattel slavery to continue? |
34086 | Is it too much to say that the American republic would have been fatherless without Washington? |
34086 | New Hampshire had refused to comply with the requisitions of the Confederation; why should it look with more favor on the Constitution? |
34086 | Should we have had the New England migration at all, if England had continued its calm and homogeneous development under Elizabethan influences? |
34086 | Was not war inevitable on that main question alone? |
34086 | What about slavery? |
34086 | What if Champlain had been more sagacious, and had made his stand on the coast of Massachusetts? |
34086 | What if he had become a plantation and slave owner, and had thus subjected his boy Abraham to the overmastering influence of a southern environment? |
34086 | What if he had come on and landed an army of trained veterans upon England''s undefended shores? |
34086 | What then? |
34086 | What was it that enabled Themistocles to win this decisive victory for Greece after disastrous defeats on land? |
34086 | What was it that enabled the Greeks, in the crucial test, the ultimate contingency, to turn back the Persians and maintain their independence? |
34086 | What was the rest of it? |
34086 | What would have resulted? |
34086 | What would the New England country and the people have been like, if Champlain had never turned back from Plymouth Bay? |
34086 | When--_nombre de Dios!_--does the reader suppose that this invincible fleet, ready in January, really set sail from Coruña? |
34086 | Who was the bravest man in England? |
34086 | Why was his choice thus made? |
34086 | Why? |
34086 | Will she ever be able to escape them? |
34086 | Would the western world have remained at the stage of cultivation in which we see Arabia to- day? |
34086 | Would there be a ninth? |
10533 | E''en in thy desert what is like to thee? 10533 Old Marlborough is dying,"said the wit;"but who can tell? |
10533 | Why did he love her? 10533 Why,"said she,"should we marry at our age? |
10533 | And among the Pagan nations, who does not admire the heroism of such women as we have already noticed? |
10533 | And even if the form remains, what is a mortal body without the immortal soul which animates it? |
10533 | And if we do suffer, what of that? |
10533 | And shall a woman dare to take to herself that man whom Nature meant to be the ornament and benefactor of the human race? |
10533 | And the voices which inspired the Maid of Orleans herself,--what were these? |
10533 | And what young woman with such a nature and under such circumstances could resist the influence of such a teacher? |
10533 | And who can point out any fundamental inferiority or superiority between them? |
10533 | And why not, since they have more leisure for literary pursuits than men? |
10533 | And, as a wedded wife, why should she conquer it? |
10533 | Are not all His ways mysterious, never to be explained by the reason of man? |
10533 | As a rule, is she not already better educated than her husband? |
10533 | But Christianity said,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
10533 | Can any words be as vivid as a sensation? |
10533 | Did not the occasion seem to warrant something extraordinary? |
10533 | Do not well- educated women speak French before their brothers can translate the easiest lines of Virgil? |
10533 | Do we wish to enthrone them in the chairs of our universities, to deliver oracles, harangues, and dissertations? |
10533 | Do you admire the one who prevailed over him? |
10533 | Does any one doubt or deny that the sphere of women_ is_ different from the sphere of men? |
10533 | From lips like those, what precept failed to move? |
10533 | Have they not quickness, brilliancy, sentiment, acuteness of observation, good sense, and even genius? |
10533 | He suffered for our sake, shall we not suffer for his cause?" |
10533 | How could she thus triumph over all the inequalities of feudalism unless divinely commissioned? |
10533 | How could she work what seemed to be almost miracles if she had not a supernatural power to assist her? |
10533 | How could she, unacquainted with wars and sieges, show the necessary military skill and genius? |
10533 | How long her fame will last, who can tell? |
10533 | However domestic she may be, can not she still paint and sing, and read and talk on the grandest subjects? |
10533 | If she was sent by a voice that spoke to her soul, and that voice was from God, what was human greatness to her? |
10533 | In America, what single novel ever equalled the success of"Uncle Tom''s Cabin"? |
10533 | Is human love the fruit of human will?" |
10533 | Is she not really more privileged than her husband or brother, with more time and less harassing cares and anxieties? |
10533 | Is this statement denied? |
10533 | Is woman, in restricting herself to her sphere, thereby debarred from the pleasures of literature and art? |
10533 | It is harder to tell what captured her, for who can explain the mysteries of love? |
10533 | May He not choose such instruments as He pleases? |
10533 | Now, what is meant by a high education for women? |
10533 | O Death, where is thy sting?" |
10533 | She doubtless will live as long as any English novelist; but do those who amuse live like those who save? |
10533 | Should women murmur because they can not be superior in everything, when it is conceded that they are superior in the best thing? |
10533 | Take away intellect from woman, and what is she but a toy or a slave? |
10533 | The question is, Is it wise for boys and girls to pursue the same studies in the more difficult branches of knowledge? |
10533 | To some it may seem exaggerated in its transports; but can transports be too highly colored? |
10533 | True it is that the impression we receive of human life is not always pleasant; but who in any community can bear the severest scrutiny of neighbors? |
10533 | Was Josephine to blame because she loved a selfish man after she was repudiated? |
10533 | What can satisfy a restless and ambitious woman whose happiness is in external pleasures? |
10533 | What could be more flattering even to a woman of the world, especially if this man had noble traits and great cultivation? |
10533 | What good can I do? |
10533 | What is Christmas without the sentiments which hallow the evergreen, the anthem, the mistletoe, the family reunion? |
10533 | What is impossible for God to do? |
10533 | What is inspiration? |
10533 | What man does not accept woman as a fellow- laborer in the field of letters? |
10533 | What schools are better kept than those by women? |
10533 | What sympathy could feudal barons have with a low- born peasant girl? |
10533 | What was his glory, as a conqueror, compared with the cause she loved, trodden under foot by an iron, rigid, jealous, irresistible despotism? |
10533 | What was rank or learning to her? |
10533 | What would become of our world if men and women were left to choose their partners with the eye of unclouded reason? |
10533 | When did supernatural voices first begin to utter the power of God? |
10533 | When will the voices of inspiration cease to be heard on earth? |
10533 | Who can deny that the daemon of Socrates was something more than a fancied voice? |
10533 | Who can explain such mysteries? |
10533 | Who can sit in judgment on the ways in which Providence is seen to act? |
10533 | Who can tell? |
10533 | Who could save it? |
10533 | Who could stand before such insinuations? |
10533 | Who denies the insight, the superior tact, the genius of woman? |
10533 | Who laughs at blue- stockings? |
10533 | Who now sneers at the intellect of a woman? |
10533 | Why have I chosen her as one of the Beacon Lights of history? |
10533 | Why may not women cope with men in the proudest intellectual tournaments? |
10533 | Why should a young woman have selected such books to translate? |
10533 | Why should not the most unquestioning faith have preserved her from the charge of heresy? |
10533 | Why should the priests of that age have treated her as a witch, when she showed all the traits of an angel? |
10533 | Why should they not become great linguists, and poets, and novelists, and artists, and critics, and historians? |
10533 | Will the witty sayings of Dickens be cherished like the almost inspired truths of Plato, of Bacon, of Burke? |
10533 | Would she really exchange her graceful labors for the rough and turbulent work of men? |
2974 | All this is very sad; what does your mother say? |
2974 | Am I to withdraw my bail, countess? |
2974 | And I suppose you are in love with someone else? |
2974 | And do you repent of what you did? |
2974 | And has your sister learnt? |
2974 | And is she going without telling me, as if she were leaving an inn after paying her bill? |
2974 | And the Neapolitan ambassador allows him to languish in prison for such a beggarly sum? 2974 And what do you think of doing?" |
2974 | And what have you done? |
2974 | Are you angry with me? |
2974 | Are you in love with her? |
2974 | Are you not afraid of the gallows? |
2974 | But the monarch may lose? |
2974 | But will he reply? |
2974 | But, my lord, how can I write to a monarch of whom I know nothing, and who knows nothing of me? 2974 Certainly;"said I,"but have you a man''s riding suit or a woman''s costume?" |
2974 | Could you love me? |
2974 | Did you think, sweetheart, that I was vile enough to abuse your weakness? 2974 Do you know how grievously you make me suffer?" |
2974 | Do you know that that may possibly be true? 2974 Has he not kept the conditions you have mentioned?" |
2974 | Have you got an introduction to the empress? |
2974 | Have you not pity for our situation? |
2974 | How did you come to know these ladies? |
2974 | How many people will your carriage hold? |
2974 | How much does the marquis owe? |
2974 | I am very sorry, but look around you and say what choice have I? 2974 I daresay, but do n''t you wish to speak to him?" |
2974 | I wish you a pleasant journey; but what do you hope to do in that land? |
2974 | If the persons who have the matter in hand should drop it, would you discount the bill? 2974 In the right?" |
2974 | In what class would you put this taxation, for you will agree that it is taxation of a kind? |
2974 | Is that conclusion the result of a mathematical calculation? |
2974 | It is very fine,said I,"but what good is all this?" |
2974 | Madam is not English, then? |
2974 | Madam,I began,"what can I do for you?" |
2974 | Pardon me, but what use is rank without a halfpenny? 2974 Then he knows you? |
2974 | Then why do you treat me to a refusal, after having once surrendered unreservedly? |
2974 | Then you have not yet got new rooms? |
2974 | Then you no longer love me? |
2974 | Very good,said he;"may I come and see you?" |
2974 | What are the land forces? |
2974 | What do you mean my''changing my ideas''? |
2974 | What do you want? |
2974 | What has God got to do with it? |
2974 | What have you got in that little bundle? |
2974 | What will you do for us,said she,"if I consent to share your couch?" |
2974 | When does she intend to leave? |
2974 | Where did you leave our father? |
2974 | Who are your friends? 2974 Who is M. du Claude?" |
2974 | Whose bed is this? |
2974 | Why ca n''t you take me with you? |
2974 | Why did you not send to me? |
2974 | Why, divine Sara,said I,"do you oppose my loving ecstasy?" |
2974 | Will you be annoyed,said I,"if I call upon you frequently?" |
2974 | You know, dear Redegonde, that I have always loved you, and I am ready to take you with me to Brunswick; what more can I say? |
2974 | Are you not the person who wrote to me?" |
2974 | But can it really be you?" |
2974 | But do you know this man whom you call your friend?" |
2974 | Can you love, and yet entertain this fatal prejudice? |
2974 | Could I enjoy a pleasure in which you had no share?" |
2974 | Did he name any time?" |
2974 | Do you remember what happened at Berne?" |
2974 | Have you reflected that this resistance may cost me my life? |
2974 | How can they abandon you at such a time?" |
2974 | I bowed to him as he passed, but he came up to me and said,--"You are leaving Brunswick, chevalier?" |
2974 | I said,--"Do you know me, sir?" |
2974 | I suppose you know Calsabigi?" |
2974 | Is it not so?" |
2974 | Is it the Jew or me that he pities? |
2974 | Two years ago I set out for Hamburg, but my good genius made me turn back to Dux; what had I to do at Hamburg? |
2974 | What do you say to this?" |
2974 | What do you think of my garden?" |
2974 | What is it that you want? |
2974 | When are you leaving?" |
2974 | Why do n''t you take it to your banker?" |
2974 | Yesterday I was the happiest of beings, and why should I not be as happy all my days? |
2974 | but it is not you I am angry with; where is your governor?" |
2974 | you would leave me all alone?" |
40043 | Is a half- naked Arab to have independence, and am I not good enough to have even self- government? |
40043 | Things being in this state,the Government pleads,"how can we be expected to govern Ireland according to civilized standards?" |
40043 | ***** What is wrong with this policy? |
40043 | But who could refuse the price? |
40043 | England? |
40043 | France? |
40043 | Germany? |
40043 | Is it entirely quixotic and idealist to hope that, even in post- war conditions, a great nation may remain true to her word? |
40043 | RUSSIA''S NEIGHBOURS But what of the war outside Russia? |
40043 | Russia? |
40043 | THE POSITION OF FRANCE If that is so, what is the position of France? |
40043 | The late King Leopold of Belgium once said to M. Hanotaux,"Qu''est- ce que vous cherchez en Afrique, vous autres Français?" |
40043 | To do what? |
40043 | What is there to attract America towards further coöperation with any of the larger European nations? |
40043 | Who knows exactly what"justice"is, or what may be regarded as consideration for"the true interests"of the German people? |
40043 | Why could not the Russians be allowed to conduct their revolution and settle their form of government by themselves? |
40043 | Why, then, did they accept them? |
40043 | Why? |
40043 | Why? |
40043 | You may call it devilish, if you will, since it is based on the deliberate and artificial creation of human misery; but is it bad policy? |
30186 | Are you afraid? |
30186 | Damme, Jack,they shouted,"didst ever take h-- ll in tow before?" |
30186 | How, my father,said they in reply,"are you so bent upon death that you would also sacrifice us? |
30186 | I want to know on what ground the volition of the human species and its opinions rest under the circumstances in which it is placed? |
30186 | I want to know what the course of my life, such as it has been, has made of me? 30186 They nourished up by your indulgence? |
30186 | They protected by your arms? 30186 What is history,"said Napoleon,"but a fiction agreed upon?" |
30186 | What would I not give, except in Silesia? |
30186 | Who run? |
30186 | Will it be safe for the consignees to appear in the meeting? |
30186 | And should I thank thee, who wast sleeping whilst I worked?" |
30186 | And whence should magazines for the spring, uniforms, and recruits be obtained? |
30186 | Are there any other resources of German art and thought which can account for the advent of the great musician? |
30186 | Because a number of creditors had been ruined by the falsity of nominal values, was it a reason to continue the fiction that it might extend the ruin? |
30186 | But are not all ideals of an essentially aristocratic nature? |
30186 | But would Amherst get through to Montreal and down the St. Lawrence in time to be of use before the short season had fled? |
30186 | Cope might be here to- morrow, the day after to- morrow, to- day, who knows? |
30186 | Do you know it was he who made me the mode?" |
30186 | Have you nothing you desire to keep secret?" |
30186 | How shall we attempt to characterize this movement? |
30186 | How were you delivered? |
30186 | Indeed, how should they do otherwise when they have not spared one another? |
30186 | Is it not my heart, burning with a sacred ardor, which alone has accomplished all? |
30186 | No reverence in the boy who would kneel to the picture of the great Frederick? |
30186 | On her side she"distributed compliments in abundance, gold medals also( but more often in bronze? |
30186 | Ought any married person to be there unless husband and wife be there together?" |
30186 | Pontiac, conscious of his power and position, haughtily asked Major Rogers,"What his business was in that country?" |
30186 | Shall I again give the Austrians battle, and drive them out of Silesia? |
30186 | The bad passions of those men to whom I have been most useful( would you believe it?) |
30186 | The following, among others, were the questions asked at every meeting:"What known sin have you committed since our last meeting? |
30186 | The great question was, would Cope come in time? |
30186 | The only allusion he made to the fate of the battle was to softly repeat once or twice to himself,"Who would have thought it?" |
30186 | To what other influence than the Lutheran can we attribute the growth of Bach? |
30186 | To which Colonel Barre replied:"They planted by your care? |
30186 | Was there no light, no touch of nobility at all in that strange chaotic temperament? |
30186 | What have I done? |
30186 | What have you thought, said, or done of which you doubt whether it be sin or not? |
30186 | What is the human species doing? |
30186 | What is the human species? |
30186 | What remains, then, for man? |
30186 | What temptations have you met with? |
30186 | What, in fact, took place? |
30186 | When speaking one day to Kummer- u- din, who was then vizier, he demanded how many ladies he had? |
30186 | Who can prove that with time the same might not have occurred to everybody? |
30186 | Who does not know this temper of the man of the world, that worst enemy of the world? |
30186 | Who shall say that young Bach knew not of these things? |
30186 | With our eight hundred men do you ask us to attack four thousand English? |
30186 | and I want to know what the course of life, such as it has been, has made of the human species? |
30186 | and how he dared enter it without Pontiac''s permission? |
30186 | are they not conceived without trouble or labor? |
30186 | exclaims an eye- witness,"there are plenty of sketches to be seen, but where is the finished picture?" |
30186 | will you suffer your father to depart alone?" |
31278 | And who will deny,adds a Protestant classic,"that the fault was partly owing to them?" |
31278 | What boots it,he exclaimed,"to condemn errors that have been long condemned, and tempt no Catholic? |
31278 | What remains of Christianity,exclaimed Beza,"if we silently admit what this man has expectorated in his preface?... |
31278 | [ 313] Two generations later Salvianus exclaims:Quid est aliud paene omnis coetus Christianorum quam sentina vitiorum? |
31278 | 6):"Miramur si terrae... nostrorum omnium a Deo barbaris datae sunt, cum eas quae Romani polluerant fornicatione, nunc mundent barbari castitate? |
31278 | And for all this, what have they gained? |
31278 | But how can a view of policy constitute a philosophy? |
31278 | Connaissez- vous un roi qui mérite d''être libre, dans le sens implicite du mot?... |
31278 | Darf ich andre verurtheilen_ in eodem luto mecum haerentes_?" |
31278 | Depuis la révolution il semble que ces sortes de différences s''évanouissent.... Les Bostoniens ne sont- ils pas fort dévots?... |
31278 | Dr. Martineau attributes this doctrine to Mill:"Do we ask what determines the moral quality of actions? |
31278 | Et George IV., croyez- vous que je serais son ministre, s''il avait été libre de choisir?... |
31278 | Et non è questo peggio che heretica dottrina? |
31278 | For what is the Holy See in its relation to the masses of Catholics, and where does its strength lie? |
31278 | Has God gone to sleep and let the house be destroyed, or let in the enemy through want of watchfulness? |
31278 | How can the stranger understand where the children of the kingdom are deceived? |
31278 | How could these principles be favourable to them? |
31278 | If the end be not religion, is it morality, humanity, civilisation, knowledge? |
31278 | Is it a process of renovation or a process of dissolution in which European society is plunged? |
31278 | Is she therefore to deny or smother it? |
31278 | Is she therefore to say that his right is no right, or that all intolerance is necessarily wrong? |
31278 | Me déclarer contre l''Italie parce que ses chaînes tombent mal à propos? |
31278 | Numquid( Dominus) dormitando aedificium suum perdidit, aut non custodiendo hostes admisit?... |
31278 | Oubliez- vous que les rois ne doivent pas donner des institutions, mais que les institutions seules doivent donner des rois?... |
31278 | People used to know how often, or how seldom, Washington laughed during the war; but who has numbered the jokes of Lincoln? |
31278 | Quand un roi dénie au peuple les institutions do nt le peuple a besoin, quel est le procédé de l''Angleterre? |
31278 | Qui aurait pu même songer à un développement dogmatique?" |
31278 | Quid expavescis quia pereunt regna terrena? |
31278 | St. Augustine, after quoting Seneca, exclaims:"What more could a Christian say than this Pagan has said?" |
31278 | The question was not, what crimes has the prisoner committed? |
31278 | The religious world has been long divided upon this great question: Do we find principles in politics and in science? |
31278 | To a friend describing Herder as the one unprofitable classic, he replied,"Did you ever learn anything from Schleiermacher?" |
31278 | Was Rome herself tainted with Gallicanism, and in league with those who had conspired for her destruction? |
31278 | Welcher Entschluss, ich möchte sagen, welche Unverschämtheit ist es, nach Ihnen und bei Ihren Lebzeiten, Kirchengeschichte in München zu doziren? |
31278 | What but a schism could ensue from this inexplicable apathy? |
31278 | What is matter? |
31278 | Where was their liberality in one case, or their catholicity in the other? |
31278 | Why fearest thou when earthly kingdoms fall? |
31278 | [ Footnote 181: Crudelitatisne tu esse ac non clementiae potius, pietatisque putas? |
31278 | [ Footnote 189: Quo demum res evaderent, si Regibus non esset integrum, in rebelles, subditos, quietisque publicae turbatores animadvertere? |
31278 | [ Footnote 204:"Quid hoc ad me? |
31278 | [ Footnote 314:"What is well- nigh all Christendom but a sink of iniquity?" |
31278 | [ Footnote 387: Quid enim expedit damnare quae damnata jam sunt, quidve juvat errores proscribere quos novimus jam esse proscriptos?... |
31278 | but, does he belong to one of those classes whose existence the Republic can not tolerate? |
31278 | was in the hands of the Whigs? |
31278 | why wait for five months? |
32370 | _ Query I._ How do we, according to this article, join with Sweden to_ assert, protect, and preserve the Protestant religion_? 32370 And by what time, using all proper methods and succeeding in them, may he obtain these ends? 32370 But how was the slave to get the money wherewith to bribe the master? 32370 But pray with what success? 32370 But, pray, what have they done? 32370 By what means can he gain these ends? 32370 Could our Protestant succession have a better friend or a bolder champion? 32370 Do n''t we suffer that nation, which has always been a bulwark to the said religion, most unmercifully to be torn to pieces?... 32370 For what reason or to what good end? |
32370 | How comes it then that we do n''t make use of so just a remedy against an evil we are so great sufferers by? |
32370 | How far from him, and in what place, can these ends be best obtained? |
32370 | How, then, are we to explain this contrary treatment of similar cases? |
32370 | How, then, did Ivan accomplish these high deeds? |
32370 | If the Czar should thus engross''the supply of what we can not do without,''where then is our fleet? |
32370 | Or, indeed, where is the security for all our trade to any part of the earth besides?" |
32370 | So that all the inconveniences we laboured under upon that account ought to have been laid to the Czar''s door, and not to the King of Sweden''s? |
32370 | These gentlemen pin entirely their faith upon other people''s sleeves; ask as to everything that is proposed to them, how it is liked at Court? |
32370 | Was he a hero? |
32370 | _ Do n''t we ourselves give a helping hand towards its destruction?_ And why all this? |
32370 | _ Do n''t we ourselves give a helping hand towards its destruction?_ And why all this? |
32370 | and if the contrary party is for or against it? |
32370 | was devoid of"judgment, precision of idea, reflection, and_ l''esprit de combinaison_"? |
32370 | what the opinion of their party is concerning it? |
2951 | And no one knows where they are? |
2951 | And now,I said,"you are certain of being forgiven, for, of course, you have wisely confessed your error?" |
2951 | And the lightning? |
2951 | And why not? |
2951 | But where can I find such table companions? |
2951 | But,said I,"what name did Nanette, in her rapture, give to her husband?" |
2951 | Did you not see the St. Andrew''s cross on the door? |
2951 | Do you love anyone, Nanette? |
2951 | Do you sometimes visit her? |
2951 | Do you want me to stand where I am until morning? |
2951 | Had he known her long? |
2951 | Has he been killed? |
2951 | He can well do it,she answered,"for he is a man of talent; but I should like to know what he can do with you?" |
2951 | How can you ask such a question? 2951 How did you find your bed?" |
2951 | How so? |
2951 | I can not help being convulsed,she answered,"but what do you mean by applying to the Jacobin that epithet of handsome? |
2951 | I have had no sleep through the night:"And why? |
2951 | I have no fear of it, but how could I find the heart to sleep, while on my account you are compelled to sit up? |
2951 | In a disreputable place? |
2951 | It is useless to plead ignorance,said the mother;"where did you sleep last Thursday night?" |
2951 | Shall I disturb you? |
2951 | Tell me, then, art thou thinking that thy knowledge is greater than mine? |
2951 | Then thou art of opinion that a devil must rejoice in a masculine name? 2951 Then you must have made a false confession: you are at all events guilty of disobedience?" |
2951 | To which school do you wish to belong? |
2951 | Was it at midnight that Razetta was so well treated? |
2951 | We know that,said my mother,"but can you explain it?" |
2951 | Well, you dreadful man, are you satisfied, now that you have insured my misery for the remainder of my life? |
2951 | What are you laughing at? |
2951 | What can we do in the dark? |
2951 | What cross is that? |
2951 | What has she done? |
2951 | What is that? |
2951 | What more do you want? |
2951 | Where is Angela? |
2951 | Why did you feign such ignorance at the examination? |
2951 | Why did you not tell them? |
2951 | Why do you quote Seneca, Tertullian, Origen, and Boethius? 2951 Why, I beg?" |
2951 | Why,I answered,"were you unjust enough to compel me to the degradation of an examination?" |
2951 | Why,said the doctor,"did you not enter my mother''s room this morning through the usual door?" |
2951 | Will you forgive me if I am bold enough to offer you six? |
2951 | Yet, loving you, is she wrong to think of having you for her husband? |
2951 | You argue very well, but how do you know that she loves me? |
2951 | ''Why not, monseigneur? |
2951 | ''You have all the Italians, then?'' |
2951 | After such a night, was it not natural for me to be cheerful this morning? |
2951 | Am I guilty because I have pleased you? |
2951 | And how is it that, being in the dark, you did not suppose that you were mistaken yourself?" |
2951 | Besides, you are two against one, what can you fear? |
2951 | But Lucie, do you know what danger you are exposing yourself to?" |
2951 | But what did it matter? |
2951 | But when we accept it readily in physics, why should we reject it in religious matters? |
2951 | Can you get any bread?" |
2951 | Could I in any way suppose that you were outside of my door, exposed to the wind and to the snow? |
2951 | Could you suppose--?" |
2951 | Did he ask to marry Lucie?" |
2951 | Does it not suggest a view of Casanova not quite the view of all the world? |
2951 | Does it satisfy you?" |
2951 | How is it possible for an immaterial substance, which can neither touch nor be touched to receive impressions? |
2951 | How many more discreet and less changing lovers have had the quality of constancy in change, to which this life- long correspondence bears witness? |
2951 | I exclaimed,"what is this? |
2951 | Is it possible that I am mistaken, and that my feeling towards you should not be love? |
2951 | It is not a secret,''Is His Majesty coming to Dux?'' |
2951 | It was ridiculous, of course; but when does man cease to be so? |
2951 | My dear abbe, if love is a torment for you I am very sorry, but would it be possible for you to live without love? |
2951 | No, I am aware it is sheer folly, but I want to be busy, I want to laugh, and why should I deny myself this gratification? |
2951 | Only tell me, reverend sir, why, after calling me''thou''yesterday, you treat me today respectfully, like a lady? |
2951 | Pray, who are you?" |
2951 | She felt certain of her success, but in what school had she obtained her experience of the human heart? |
2951 | Tell me, Nanette, do you think I am an honest man?" |
2951 | Tell me, beautiful Nanette, if I were as much attached to you as I was to Angela, would you follow her example and make me unhappy?" |
2951 | This is very fine, but, apart from religion, where is the proof of it all? |
2951 | Was it in reading novels? |
2951 | What have I done? |
2951 | What say you to such a triumphant reappearance? |
2951 | What, then, can cause so abundant a bleeding? |
2951 | Who is the witch?" |
2951 | Who is there interested in men and letters, and in the life of the past, who would not cry,"Where can such a book as this be found?" |
2951 | Who would have been bold enough to go in? |
2951 | Why was I, against all right and justice, prevented from entering my own dwelling?" |
2951 | Will you not be free to get out of the bed in case I should not keep quiet? |
2951 | You will not be so cruel as to let me eat alone? |
2951 | You wish to banish me from your presence because you stand in fear of your love, but what would you do if you hated me? |
2951 | dear aunt, why do you not insist upon my sister obeying your orders?" |
2951 | is it not a dream?" |
2951 | is it true? |
2951 | is she dead?" |
2951 | you would have the courage to spend seven hours alone with us? |
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?" |
2967 | And if it comes two or three weeks sooner you will not be sure that you are the parent? |
2967 | And when you got to Switzerland, where there are no theatres, what would you do for a living? |
2967 | Are you married? |
2967 | Are you stopping long in Florence? |
2967 | But do you want to give him a brother? 2967 Ca n''t I do it?" |
2967 | Dearest ones,said I,"you have played me a pretty trick; was it premeditated? |
2967 | Do n''t you like wine? |
2967 | Do you know what she was writing about? |
2967 | Do you know whether our dear Cesarino has been in love yet? |
2967 | Do you mean that? |
2967 | Does the ointment do them good? |
2967 | Have I done well or ill? |
2967 | Have n''t you a better room to receive your friends in? |
2967 | Have you any ladies with you? |
2967 | How am I to do that? |
2967 | How can I be calm when you can have such a suspicion? |
2967 | How long have you been here? |
2967 | How old are you? |
2967 | I guess why; but as I am short- sighted, how shall I see the blisters? |
2967 | I should like to believe that, but what would you have done if she had accepted your offer? 2967 I swear to you that so far from being angry with you I am very fond of you; but would you like us to be fond in your presence?" |
2967 | In what respect? |
2967 | Rascal,said I, as soon as he came in,"who told you to come here with my carriage?" |
2967 | See you after what your mother said? |
2967 | That''s an anagram of my Christian name and my surname; is it not a happy combination? |
2967 | Then you are very fond of Veronique? |
2967 | To possess me? 2967 Under what name?" |
2967 | Well, why not, who knows of it? |
2967 | Well, would you like to make an exchange? |
2967 | What are you going to do in Rome? |
2967 | What can he do?. |
2967 | What could you have seen? 2967 What do you say,"said I to my blonde,"will you allow your heroic sister to remain a mere looker- on at our sweet struggles? |
2967 | What do you want it for? |
2967 | What harm is there? 2967 What is that, pray?" |
2967 | What is the prima donna''s name? |
2967 | What will people say in Venice when they see Casanova again, who escaped from The Leads and has become twenty years younger? |
2967 | When shall I find you alone? |
2967 | Where does she live? |
2967 | Where is your sister? |
2967 | Who are you, my angel? |
2967 | Who is that? |
2967 | Who knows? 2967 Who told you that I was here?" |
2967 | Whom did I give it to, then? |
2967 | Whom do you think you are talking to, sir? 2967 Whom have you chosen for this expedition?" |
2967 | Why do you allow this horrible union? |
2967 | Why not, dearest? 2967 Why what did she think about me?" |
2967 | Will you allow me,said I to her,"to have my footman in?" |
2967 | Yes, and you are going to Rome? |
2967 | You are going to Venice, then, for the Ascensa? |
2967 | You have only come to Florence to- day, sir? |
2967 | You mean you will not marry her till you have ceased to be her lover? |
2967 | You will do me the same service, then, to- morrow? |
2967 | Your love was not very great, then? |
2967 | And was Veronique false this morning, or is she false now?" |
2967 | Are you not generous enough to let me make her an actress in the drama?" |
2967 | Are you pleased with her in other respects?" |
2967 | But do you think she ought to make me suffer so?" |
2967 | But what do you think of her advice as to Veronique? |
2967 | But what made the old gentleman get me a girl like that? |
2967 | By way of reply the infamous woman said,--"He''s a pretty lad, is n''t he?" |
2967 | Can you come and spend an hour with me?" |
2967 | Did I not give the money to you?" |
2967 | Did he look at me while he was talking?" |
2967 | Did you notice what the aunt said? |
2967 | Do you think he did it out of mischief?" |
2967 | How are you off? |
2967 | However, I said,--"You have interrupted our enjoyment, and hurt your sister''s feelings; perhaps you will despise her for the future?" |
2967 | I called the man, and said,--"Where did you get this letter?" |
2967 | I give myself out as only twenty- four, how do you think I look?" |
2967 | I sat on the bed, gave her back the letter, and said,--"Why write, when we can talk the matter over?" |
2967 | I suppose your husband knows nothing of our connection, and my best plan will be to be reserved, will it not?" |
2967 | I thought Rosalie looking sad at dinner, and said,"What is the matter, dearest? |
2967 | Is it not so?" |
2967 | Is that right? |
2967 | Shall I speak to him on the subject? |
2967 | She took it modestly, saying,--"This is for my sister, I suppose?" |
2967 | Take Rosalie''s arm, and leave the room with her? |
2967 | The absent always fare ill."You want to leave me, then, Rosalie?" |
2967 | Then looking at me attentively with an astounded stare, he said,"Are you not the gentleman who asked me my wife''s name last night?" |
2967 | What could I do? |
2967 | What makes you look so sad?" |
2967 | What shall I do to possess you?" |
2967 | What would become of me, I should like to know, if I abandoned myself to the feelings I have for you?" |
2967 | Where are you staying?" |
2967 | Why should you refuse me a pleasure which after all is a mere mark of friendship?" |
2967 | Will you allow me to speak to Rosalie myself about it?" |
2967 | Would you be so kind as to ask her to step up for a few minutes?" |
2967 | You would be in one bed by this, I suppose?" |
2967 | why are you married?" |
25821 | Gain influence? |
25821 | Shall we allow the Jesuit scoundrels to come here? |
25821 | Why? |
25821 | And now what was Richelieu''s statesmanship in its sum? |
25821 | And thus we doubt not but God will be with us; and if God be with us, who can be against us?" |
25821 | And where did he find this? |
25821 | And who are you that prate of constitutional formulas, rights of Parliament? |
25821 | Are there any now who practically repeat their error, and resist new truth? |
25821 | But did they not leave a mark also upon the country and upon the world? |
25821 | But was the change sudden? |
25821 | By examining the nature of his thoughts? |
25821 | By examining the process of his thoughts? |
25821 | By looking inward? |
25821 | Can a great soul be possible without a_ conscience_ in it, the essence of all_ real_ souls, great or small? |
25821 | Can we not understand him? |
25821 | Could he not hit on the device and make an instrument capable of bringing the heavenly bodies nearer? |
25821 | Did he not, in spite of all, accomplish much for us? |
25821 | Do we find in it any trace of the influence of the_ Novum Organon_? |
25821 | England, Scotland, Ireland, all lying now subdued at the feet of the Puritan Parliament, the practical question arose, What was to be done with it? |
25821 | Ever the constitutional Formula: How came_ you_ there? |
25821 | Fame, ambition, place in History? |
25821 | For the first question which in any state emergency sprang into the mind of a French noble was not, How does this affect the welfare of the nation? |
25821 | Having whispered to Kniphausen that Gustavus was dead, he asked him what was to be done? |
25821 | He asked of the Parliament, What it was they would decide upon? |
25821 | He courts no notice: what could notice here do for him? |
25821 | How could they throw off in a moment the shackles of custom and old opinion? |
25821 | How is he to know himself? |
25821 | How will you govern these Nations, which Providence in a wondrous way has given- up to your disposal? |
25821 | If inquiry is to be independent, if reason is to walk alone, in what direction must she walk? |
25821 | In all this what"hypocrisy,""ambition,""ca nt,"or other falsity? |
25821 | In dealing with these historic events will you allow me to repudiate once for all the slightest sectarian bias or meaning? |
25821 | In the commonest meeting of men, a person making what we call"set speeches,"is not he an offence? |
25821 | Is it over yet? |
25821 | Is it surprising that local attachments soon sprung up in the breasts of the survivors, endearing them to the place of refuge and their sorrows? |
25821 | Is it surprising that the thoughts of the exiles were enraptured in contemplating this beautiful land? |
25821 | It is like Pococke asking Grotius, Where is your_ proof_ of Mahomet''s Pigeon? |
25821 | Nay, a man preaching from his earnest_ soul_ into the earnest_ souls_ of men: is not this virtually the essence of all Churches whatsoever? |
25821 | Not so Cromwell:"For all our fighting,"says he,"we are to have a little bit of paper?" |
25821 | Oliver''s life at St. Ives and Ely, as a sober industrious Farmer, is it not altogether as that of a true and devout man? |
25821 | Reform Bill, free suffrage of Englishmen? |
25821 | Should they settle at Cold Harbor or seek a more eligible site? |
25821 | Should they trust their monarch''s word, when bitter experience had taught them the ease with which it could be broken? |
25821 | The fair questions, then, are: did he not commit the fewest and smallest wrongs possible in beating back those many and great wrongs? |
25821 | The poor old mother!--What had this man gained; what had he gained? |
25821 | This was natural enough, but was it moving the right way? |
25821 | Was it criminal to seek a pleasant abode? |
25821 | Was it possible the tables were wrong? |
25821 | Were his opponents convinced? |
25821 | What old liberties? |
25821 | What was his object? |
25821 | What will he do with it? |
25821 | What_ will_ he do with it? |
25821 | Whatever wrongs he did, were they not all frightfully avenged on him? |
25821 | When a friend showed him a person dying of hunger, he said:"Does that astonish you? |
25821 | Where should an asylum for their children be reared? |
25821 | Which policy was cruel? |
25821 | Which policy was tyrannical? |
25821 | Whither should they turn their steps? |
25821 | Whither, then, should they go? |
25821 | Why are you not here? |
25821 | Why not ask for more when everything was granted to them? |
25821 | Why not? |
25821 | Why should we? |
25821 | Would the princes of Germany come to the help of the directors? |
25821 | Wrong has often a quick, spasmodic force, but was there not in his arm a steady growing force, which could only be a force of right? |
25821 | [ 31] Why did not others make any of these observations? |
25821 | and"How?" |
25821 | but, How does this affect the position of my order? |
25821 | was not his doom stern enough? |
25821 | who cling to any old anchorage of dogma, and refuse to rise with the tide of advancing knowledge? |
18879 | ''Think ye,''quoth she,''that subjects, having power, may resist their princes?'' 18879 If some dogmas are incomprehensible and some rites superstitious,"he seemed to say,"what does it matter? |
18879 | My dog,sneered one of them,"were you not at mass last Sunday? |
18879 | Vanity makes most humanists skeptics,wrote Ariosto,"why is it that learning and infidelity go hand in hand?" |
18879 | What if you should be a saint like Dominic or Francis? |
18879 | What is it to you,he apostrophizes the pontiff,"if our republic is crushed? |
18879 | ( English translation,_ What is Christianity_? |
18879 | All claim inspiration and who can tell which inspiration is right? |
18879 | And hast thou become so totally different from what thou wast, so cruel and contrary to thyself? |
18879 | And now I ask you whether it is not the same whether you enter Paradise by the door or by the window? |
18879 | And to all great men, her own and others, he puts but one inexorable question,"What did you do for the people?" |
18879 | And what do the stories amount to? |
18879 | And what means the smile? |
18879 | And yet there was a sprinkling of saintly parsons like him of whom Chancer[ Transcriber''s note: Chaucer?] |
18879 | Another Earl of Warwick had been a king- maker, why not the present one? |
18879 | But among all these fairly- tales[ Transcriber''s note: fairy- tales?] |
18879 | Can any man now readily understand the following definition of"pronoun,"taken from a book intended{ 664} for beginners, published in 1499? |
18879 | Can the same Spirit tell the Catholic that the books of Maccabees are canonical and tell Luther that they are not? |
18879 | Did he doubt anything? |
18879 | Did he think he wrote well? |
18879 | Did he{ 61} like anything? |
18879 | Do we not see that noble cities are erected by the people and destroyed by princes? |
18879 | Does not his Medusa chill us with the horror of death? |
18879 | Dürer while in the Netherlands paid a messenger 17 cents to deliver a{ 469} letter( or several letters? |
18879 | For what else would Satan do than burn those who call on the name of Christ? |
18879 | He blamed Brenz for his tolerance, asking why we should pity heretics more than does God, who sends them to eternal torment? |
18879 | He might have been supposed to be ready to support any enemy of such an institution, but what does he say? |
18879 | How much more natural and more likely do I find it that two men should lie than that one in twelve hours should pass from east to west? |
18879 | If our temples have been pillaged? |
18879 | If our virgins and matrons have been violated? |
18879 | If the city is innundated with the blood of citizens? |
18879 | Imagine that Christ, the judge of all, were present and himself pronounced sentence and lit the fire,--who would not take Christ for Satan? |
18879 | In short, truth is a near neighbor to falsehood, and the wise man can only repeat,"Que sais- je?" |
18879 | Indeed, in this enlightened era of the Renaissance, what porridge was handed to the common people? |
18879 | Is it not notable that in_ The Labyrinth_ the thread of Ariadne is not religion, but reason? |
18879 | Is n''t that maintaining the gospel? |
18879 | Is not Beatrice d''Este already doomed to waste away, when he paints her? |
18879 | Is not his portrait of himself a wizard? |
18879 | O Christ, creator of the world, dost thou see such things? |
18879 | Or what are you within this commonwealth?" |
18879 | Shall we choose the master of a ship and not choose him who is to have the care of so many cities and so many souls? |
18879 | T. C. Hall:"Was Calvin a Reformer or a Reactionary?" |
18879 | The Lord, however, objected and addressed the suppliant:"Hast thou never heard that I am the way and the door to life everlasting?" |
18879 | The doctor of the gentiles saith,"If an heathen come in and hear you speak with several tongues, will he not say that you are mad?" |
18879 | Thou hast freed us from the yoke of tradition, who is to free us from the more unbearable yoke of the letter? |
18879 | To take but one example out of many that might be given: what has modern criticism made of Calvin''s doctrine of the inerrancy of Scripture? |
18879 | W. Sombart:_ Der Moderne Kapitalismus?_ 2 vols. |
18879 | Was not Bayard, the captain in the army of Francis I a"knight without fear and without reproach"? |
18879 | What cause detached North Germany, Denmark, most of Switzerland, Holland, England, Scotland, and Ireland[ sic] from the Roman communion? |
18879 | What could a heresy trial do? |
18879 | What could art be in the life of a man who was fighting for his soul''s salvation? |
18879 | What did Leonardo make of it? |
18879 | What do you say to that? |
18879 | What family more holy, what home more pure?" |
18879 | What glory can compare with that of Homer?" |
18879 | What is the etiology of religious revolution? |
18879 | What mercy was shown to the Lollards or to Savonarola? |
18879 | What serious clergyman would now compare three of his friends to the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, as did Luther? |
18879 | What tolerance was extended to the Hussites? |
18879 | What was free, except dentistry, to the Jews, expelled from Spain and Portugal and persecuted everywhere else? |
18879 | What was he trying to express? |
18879 | What wealth or what scepters would I exchange for my tranquil reading?" |
18879 | What, indeed, are smoking, drinking, and other wooings of pure sensation at the sacrifice of power and reason, but a sort of pragmatized poetry? |
18879 | When Erasmus wrote:"Who ever heard orthodox bishops incite kings to slaughter heretics who were nothing else than heretics?" |
18879 | When Knox took the liberty of discussing it with her she burst out:"What have you to do with my marriage? |
18879 | When Sir David Lyndsay asked,[ Sidenote: 1528] Why are the Scots so poor? |
18879 | Who will finally bring us Christianity such as thou thyself would now teach, such as Christ himself would teach?" |
18879 | Who would not think that Christ were Moloch, or some such god, if he wished that men be immolated to him and burnt alive? |
18879 | Who would now name a ship"Jesus,"as Hawkins''s buccaneering slaver was named? |
18879 | Would he have thought so after 1919? |
18879 | [ 1] Could he have been David Borthwick or David Lyndsay? |
18879 | [ Sidenote: 1515] Was he already a Reformer? |
18879 | [ Sidenote: Browne, 1550?-1633?] |
18879 | [ Sidenote: Valla attacks the Pope] And if the legality of the pope''s rule was so slight, what was its practical effect? |
18879 | [ Transcriber''s note: 691?] |
18879 | do yet get so hard and so poor a living and live so wretched a life that the condition of the laboring beasts may seem much better and wealthier?" |
18879 | he asked himself,"ay, what if you should even surpass them in sanctity?" |
18879 | or opinion so strange,"he asked,"that custom hath not established and planted by laws in some region?" |
18879 | that a state grows rich by the industry of its citizens and is plundered by the rapacity of its princes? |
18879 | that good laws are enacted by elected magistrates and violated by kings? |
18879 | that the people love peace and the princes foment war? |
18879 | { 65}"What can I do,"he kept asking,"to win a gracious God?" |
18879 | { 717} To whom do I owe the power of publishing what I am now writing, save to this liberator of modern thought?" |
38825 | Elle ne vas pas te faire couper la tête? |
38825 | Est- elle toujours si méchante? |
38825 | How could your parents let you start off like that? |
38825 | Is she pretty? |
38825 | M. Waddington married-- I never should have dreamed of it--and after a moment,"What is his wife like?" |
38825 | Who comes to replace you? |
38825 | Why did you go? |
38825 | Admiral Jaurès was very hospitable and en train-- all sailors are, I wonder why? |
38825 | Are n''t they all_ dreadfully_ clever?" |
38825 | Can you ever begin?" |
38825 | Do you know anything about Phelps? |
38825 | Do you remember how I always loved getting out at all the buffets at no matter what time of night, when we used to go down to Italy every year? |
38825 | Do you remember how much I admired her in Rome the first time I met her? |
38825 | Do you remember how much put out all the women were there when his engagement was announced? |
38825 | Do you remember the picture in Mark Twain? |
38825 | Do you remember the poem we were so mad about in the days of our youth,"Word was brought to the Danish King that the love of his heart lay dying"? |
38825 | He looked rather preoccupied, so I said,"You are not surely going to Vienna?" |
38825 | I overheard one timid old gentleman saying to W.,"Vous emmenez votre femme? |
38825 | I said,"What in the world have you been doing, cleaning the chimneys?" |
38825 | I said,"What is the matter?" |
38825 | I saw his face change a little, so when we were alone, he said, tremulously,"Tu vas voir la Reine?" |
38825 | I suppose he is genuine, is n''t he? |
38825 | I sympathised with Philip Stanhope, who has been beaten, and said,"Why did n''t you spend more money while you were about it?" |
38825 | I tried for some Christmas carols"We Three Kings of Orient Are"( do you remember that at Oyster Bay? |
38825 | I was amused by one of the ladies saying to me after dinner,"Did you really enjoy your visit to Hatfield? |
38825 | I wonder if we shall meet him anywhere? |
38825 | Is n''t it awful? |
38825 | Precisely at three a servant in black appeared and said,"Will you come to see the Queen?" |
38825 | She was sure M. Waddington would find plenty to do when he got back-- would he continue his literary work? |
38825 | Should he ask the Prince of Wales and order champagne? |
38825 | Teck, who was dancing a quadrille with me, was much put out, and said to me,"Do you really find Battenberg so very handsome? |
38825 | The streets are curiously banal-- I wonder why? |
38825 | Waddington à Moscow? |
38825 | Was n''t it funny? |
38825 | What do you suppose it would have been? |
38825 | What do you think I did as soon as they had all gone? |
38825 | What do you think she did? |
38825 | What do you think we will look like in full Court dress at that hour in the morning? |
38825 | What is there underneath?" |
38825 | Who do you think came to see me? |
38825 | Will you ever forget Coligny''s face at Oyster Bay when we started trotting down hill without any breeching? |
38825 | de Bury lira une étude de critique littéraire sur Racine, son milieu, et sa tragédie de Bérénice._ Do you think it would have tempted you? |
16352 | After the death of King Wan,said he,"was not the cause of truth lodged in me? |
16352 | And how, Lord, do they treat the remains of a king of kings? |
16352 | And what kind of man is he? |
16352 | But of what kind of spirits is the Lord, the venerable Anuruddha, thinking? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the higher penalty? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | For whom have you come? |
16352 | Has the superior man,said Tsze- loo,"indeed, to endure in this way?" |
16352 | Has your majesty,said this officer,"any servant who could discharge the duties of ambassador like Tsze- kung? |
16352 | Have you heard any lessons from your father different from what we have all heard? |
16352 | How do you mean that you are unknown? |
16352 | If the great mountain crumble,said he,"to what shall I look up? |
16352 | Kung Kew,replied the disciple,"Kung Kew, of Loo?" |
16352 | No,replied Le,"he was standing alone once when I was passing through the court below with hasty steps, and said to me,''Have you read the Odes?'' |
16352 | Sir,replied Confucius,"in carrying on your government why should you employ capital punishment at all? |
16352 | What do you say,asked the chief of the Ke clan on one occasion,"to killing the unprincipled for the good of the principled?" |
16352 | What is this world? |
16352 | What makes you so late? |
16352 | Who are you, sir? |
16352 | Who is that holding the reins in the carriage yonder? |
16352 | Why, then, do you not remove from the place? |
16352 | Again he inquired of him, saying:"Canst thou act as my guide?" |
16352 | Am I a bitter gourd? |
16352 | Am I to be hung up out of the way of being eaten?" |
16352 | And even if some gain should accrue to the people, in what way would this interfere with the sage''s action? |
16352 | And if they existed, do the order and relation agree with actual truth? |
16352 | And until we know, is it not a waste of time to pore over the lesser happenings between? |
16352 | Another day, in the same place and the same way, he said to me,''Have you read the rules of Propriety?'' |
16352 | Arbaces communicated his ideas and projects to the prince then intrusted with the government of Babylon, the Chaldæan Phul( Palia? |
16352 | But did all those who preceded him, and those who followed him, exist as he did? |
16352 | But my principles make no progress, and I, how shall I be viewed in future ages?" |
16352 | But the real formula is,_ post trigesimum diem_, and we may ask, Why did Livy or the annalist whom he followed make this alteration? |
16352 | But what was the practical result? |
16352 | Can the vanishing pictures of the past be made as simply obvious as mathematics, as fascinating as a breezy novel of adventure? |
16352 | Can this be accomplished? |
16352 | Did not kings Wan and Woo, from their small states of Fung and Kaou, rise to the sovereignty of the empire? |
16352 | Did the Ptolemies admit the claims which the local priests attempted to deduce from this romantic tale? |
16352 | Heaven will not let the cause of truth perish, and what therefore can the people of Kwang do to me?" |
16352 | How is it possible that they should not be dissolved?" |
16352 | How is it possible that[ they should not be dissolved]?" |
16352 | How many of us do really know about them? |
16352 | How then is it possible[ that such a being should not be dissolved]?''" |
16352 | If I associate not with people, with mankind, with whom shall I associate? |
16352 | If the strong beam break, and the wise man wither away, on whom shall I lean? |
16352 | If while an ox is passing on the street[ market?] |
16352 | If you accept the invitation of this Pih Hih, who is in open rebellion against his chief, what will people say?" |
16352 | Is not he who neglects to teach his son his duties, equally guilty with the son who fails in them? |
16352 | Is there any who will assist me?" |
16352 | Miki In no no Mikoto, also indignant at this, said:"My mother and my aunt are both sea- goddesses; why do they raise great billows to overwhelm us?" |
16352 | No sooner had the envoys put the question to the Delphian priestess, on the day named,"What is Croesus now doing?" |
16352 | One time he said to his friend just named,"Do you think we are governing the people well?" |
16352 | That this poetry is very ancient can not be doubted; but did the legend at all times describe Romulus as the son of Rea Silvia or Ilia? |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor summoned him and then inquired of him, saying:"Who art thou?" |
16352 | The first problem to be confronted was, What were the Great Events that should be told? |
16352 | The question now is, What were these two towns of Roma and Remuria? |
16352 | Then the Mallas of Kusinara said to the venerable Ananda:"What should be done, Lord, with the remains of the Tathagata?" |
16352 | We are told that he reckoned a sheep and a medimnus( of wheat or barley?) |
16352 | What is his likeness?" |
16352 | What is to be done?" |
16352 | Where is the place in which the Nile is born? |
16352 | Which was the greater, the external magnificence, or the moral sublimity of this scene? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice?" |
16352 | Who is the god or goddess concealed there? |
16352 | Who would suspect any uncertainty here if it were not for this passage of Dionysius? |
16352 | Why do they harass me by land, and why, moreover, do they harass me by sea?" |
16352 | Why need there be such rectification?" |
16352 | Why should we not proceed thither, and make it the capital?" |
16352 | Why should we remain for a long time in one place? |
16352 | Why? |
16352 | Will this not be well? |
16352 | _ But will God in very deed dwell with men on the earth? |
16352 | and did the god regain possession of the domains and dues which they declared had been his right? |
16352 | he cried,"for whom have you come?" |
16352 | or any one to compare as a general with Tsze- loo? |
16352 | or any so well qualified for a premier as Yen Hwuy? |
16352 | or even know what they are? |
16352 | or one- twentieth part of them? |
16352 | surely thou knowest our Master?" |
4061 | But wouldst thou have ME share the prey? 4061 If I am innocent,"said he,"why did you place such a stain on me? |
4061 | What was to be done? 4061 ''Is it you, General? 4061 ''What can the English do to us worse than the things we suffer at the hands of our own princes?'' 4061 A little revived, we ask,''Where are we? 4061 And, indeed, what orders could Marshal Ney have given? 4061 Are they and we no longer the same men? 4061 As for my sister, whom the Duke claims that he may marry her to one of his chiefs, she has died within the year; would he have me send her corpse? |
4061 | Blucher had not stood before him; and who was the Adversary that now should bar the Emperor''s way? |
4061 | Could he hope to succeed where Hannibal and Mithridates had perished? |
4061 | Follow that crowd of runaways? |
4061 | If I am guilty, why am I more fit for a second consulship than I was for my first one?" |
4061 | Nay, how shall they at Foulkstone be able to do it, who are nearer by more than half the way? |
4061 | Suddenly the stillness was broken by a challenge,--''QUI VIVE?'' |
4061 | What cause can prevent the United States from having as numerous a population in time? |
4061 | What had been the doom of Viriathus? |
4061 | What hope was there of their being able to make head against them both, united under such a monarch as Louis XIV.?" |
4061 | Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury upon thee? |
4061 | and what warning against vain valour was written on the desolate site where Numantia once had fourished? |
4061 | succeed in establishing absolute power in Spain? |
10341 | And if throughout all your realm there is no good government, what is to be done then? |
10341 | If I can do this for others, why ca n''t I do it for myself? |
10341 | What does any woman get by it? |
10341 | Who will buy them? |
10341 | Why waste time over abstract resolutions? |
10341 | You are newspaper correspondents? |
10341 | ''What are you about?'' |
10341 | And as to Alexander the Great, has the world really made no progress since his time? |
10341 | And do our laws take note of this curious state of things? |
10341 | And to the rest, those who sit by inheritance, does it not apply even more? |
10341 | And what have been the consequences of this overwhelming tragedy? |
10341 | And who will deny the word"exceptional"? |
10341 | And whose negligence could conceivably come in there? |
10341 | But his mother was a Bourbon, and what more need be said? |
10341 | But then the question arises, how can the permanency of such a coalition be guaranteed? |
10341 | But they preferred their own ways, and what is the result? |
10341 | But whither-- and into what? |
10341 | But, you ask me, has not this confirmation of the ancient principles of Russian state policy in Finland been bought at too dear a price? |
10341 | Can Germany now be approached with a request to reduce her armaments, unless she is given the most solid guaranty against attack? |
10341 | Can anybody bring them to account? |
10341 | Did we not also beat the French, and the Austrians, and the Belgians, and all the other foreign adventurers who came with Maximilian? |
10341 | Did we not beat the Spaniards? |
10341 | Do n''t you know that some man with eloquent tongue, without conscience, who did not care for the Nation, could put this whole country into a flame? |
10341 | Do n''t you know that this country from one end to another believes that something is wrong? |
10341 | Do n''t you see by that theory that a man never can get redress for negligence on the part of the employer? |
10341 | Do they even attempt to distinguish between a man''s act as a corporation director and as an individual? |
10341 | Does either adjective require defending? |
10341 | Does that mean that this town is socialistic?" |
10341 | Does the public deal with that president and that board of directors? |
10341 | Finns are long- suffering and patient, but who could endure all this? |
10341 | Have we the proper hauling power? |
10341 | Have you not noticed the growth of socialistic sentiment in the smaller towns? |
10341 | How shall each in his wisdom or his folly interpret that well- worn motto which still has virtue both to quicken and control,"Noblesse oblige"? |
10341 | How will the sleds behave? |
10341 | I said,"What does that mean? |
10341 | ISRAEL ZANGWILL THE AWKWARD AGE OF THE WOMEN''S MOVEMENT"And what did she get by it?" |
10341 | If it is, what is the cause of the revolution? |
10341 | In doing so she had to pass the most powerful ship of the squadron, the_ Dom Carlos_: would she get past in safety? |
10341 | In other words, is the republic likely to last? |
10341 | Is it to be wondered at that, by the time his seventh term expired in 1910, he should have at last come to regard himself as indispensable? |
10341 | Is that freedom? |
10341 | Is there any clear purpose before our new leaders, and how does it differ from mankind''s former purposes? |
10341 | Meanwhile, what had become of the naval cooperation, on which so much reliance had been placed? |
10341 | Now, do the working men employed by that stock corporation deal with that president and those directors? |
10341 | On what, then, does the claim to Finnish autonomy rest and how was it conferred? |
10341 | Or do we believe nothing of the sort? |
10341 | Or the descendant of Confucius? |
10341 | Shall we lose that also? |
10341 | Should they or should they not be constrained to make good their threats, and use it? |
10341 | Should we summon to a conclave of the nations a king who had no kingdom? |
10341 | So many questions presented themselves: What will be the nature of the region we have to cross? |
10341 | So they began to ask,"What is the use of voting? |
10341 | Such is the theory; but what is the tragic result? |
10341 | The descendant of the Mings? |
10341 | The law instituting the income tax was approved October 31[? |
10341 | The moment that begins, there is formed-- what? |
10341 | The present situation of woman suffrage in England recalls the old puzzle: What happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable body? |
10341 | Was not loyalty to the sovereign part of the Chinese religion? |
10341 | Was not the Emperor a sacred being who represented an unbroken political continuity of thousands of years, and who ruled by divine right? |
10341 | Was not the ship"unsinkable"after all? |
10341 | Well, how are they going to raise it? |
10341 | Were there no reactionary movements to warn us of the terrible reassertion of autocratic power so soon to deluge earth with horror? |
10341 | Were we the first, or----? |
10341 | What are the main sources of Portugal''s pride? |
10341 | What could the poor boy do? |
10341 | What does this"immemorial China"--meaning thereby the great bulk of the Chinese, the un- Westernized Chinese-- think of the republic? |
10341 | What has been the precise effect on French prosperity? |
10341 | What indeed is the death of an organism all of whose parts may yet survive for some time? |
10341 | What is the meaning of democracy? |
10341 | What is the result to- day? |
10341 | What more is there to say? |
10341 | What natural barrier prevents a woman from accepting or rejecting a man who proposes to represent her in Parliament? |
10341 | What should he do with such a friend?" |
10341 | What sort of republic will it probably be, viewing the situation as it stands? |
10341 | What was the plan of campaign and the degree of preparedness of the principal belligerent in the second Balkan war which was about to commence? |
10341 | What will be its ultimate outcome? |
10341 | What will follow its success? |
10341 | What, then, can be done to save Europe from these impending dangers? |
10341 | What, under the circumstances, was to be his individual line of conduct? |
10341 | Who can say that her experience, her point of view, is not much better worth consulting than her husband''s on the housing problem? |
10341 | Who is his employer? |
10341 | Why are we in the presence, why are we at the threshold, of a revolution? |
10341 | Why did not General Demetrief go on? |
10341 | Why did that army which had proceeded thus far with such impetuous and irresistible momentum suddenly turn snail? |
10341 | Why is it that we have a labor question at all? |
10341 | Why load a vessel down with useless life- boats, which only hung the year in and year out, blocking up space? |
10341 | Why should I be? |
10341 | Why should they not? |
10341 | Why should we not try to make our observations at the Pole itself? |
10341 | Why was the cash idea inaugurated? |
10341 | Why? |
10341 | Will Bulgaria, Greece, and Servia quietly look on while the work of a generation is being undone? |
10341 | Will a republic be established and will it work successfully? |
10341 | Will our equipment meet the requirements of the situation? |
10341 | Will the Greeks, Serbs, and Bulgarians residing in Turkey allow themselves to be denationalized more or less forcibly? |
10341 | Would he in a new edition add General Diaz to his list? |
10341 | Yet how many people save those in the business, or who have bought cars, know this interesting fact? |
52889 | Q. if not rather Wurtzburg? |
52889 | When the duke had tarried three days with the queen, he appointed Charles l''Abbé? |
52889 | _ Blancquehem._] Blanckenburg? |
52889 | _ D''Ouffreville._] Q. Offrainville? |
52889 | _ Toncle._] Q. Tongres? |
18679 | ''How could you believe,''asked the Queen with angry eyes,''that I, who have not spoken to you for eight years, entrusted you with this commission?'' |
18679 | (''or any loud cry''), and presently asking,''with tolerable distinctness,''''New Gate Street?'' |
18679 | A sportsman who once fired off 1,300 cartridges in a day( can this be true? |
18679 | After Kaspar''s death, the question of''murder or suicide?'' |
18679 | All alike beheld this phenomenon, and Mr. Aïdé asks''was I hypnotised?'' |
18679 | And why must Harrison carry the money? |
18679 | And_ the other man_? |
18679 | Bennet knew him, and Bennet was not asked,''Did the woman call the dog"the tanner''s dog,"or do you say this of your own knowledge?'' |
18679 | But had she pirated the Scottish ship, the''Speedy Return,''Captain Drummond? |
18679 | But how did he know where Allan was to be found? |
18679 | But is the phrase correctly translated? |
18679 | But they could not condemn Perez, a mere accessory to Philip, without condemning the King, and how could the judges do that? |
18679 | But why did La Motte fight the young jeweller? |
18679 | By Adamson''s account he only asked her,''What kind of place was it?'' |
18679 | By May 1754 Adamson and Mrs. Myers, who was in the cab with Elizabeth, would believe that Adamson had asked''What kind of place is it?'' |
18679 | Can poets possess an imagination too exuberant, or a memory not wholly accurate? |
18679 | Could greater praise be given?'' |
18679 | Could he have had some such plan even then of putting fate to the touch? |
18679 | Did Fielding abandon his belief in Elizabeth?] |
18679 | Did John know something? |
18679 | Did Saint- Germain really die in a palace of Prince Charles of Hesse about 1780- 85? |
18679 | Did he, on the other hand, escape from the French prison where Grosley thought he saw him, during the French Revolution? |
18679 | Did the King have him assassinated for purely political reasons, really inadequate, but magnified by the suspicious royal fancy? |
18679 | Dismissing Harrison''s myth, we ask, what could account for his disappearance? |
18679 | Do I believe in this identification of_ the other man_? |
18679 | Does his passion account for his blindness? |
18679 | Far from that, she first spent an agreeable week-- with whom? |
18679 | From the allusion to his jewels( those of a deserted Mexican bride? |
18679 | Gowrie had not gone with his guests to aid the King; he was standing in the street, asking,''What is the matter? |
18679 | Guard House? |
18679 | Had the''Speedy Return''a sloop with her? |
18679 | Had this been the state of affairs, would Escovedo have constantly accepted the invitations of Perez to dinner? |
18679 | Harley visited his Egeria; she introduced the abbé; Gauthier( the abbé himself?) |
18679 | Harrison left his house in the morning(?) |
18679 | He has been in England already( 1743- 17--? |
18679 | How can we account for the story of Mr. Browning and Home''s foot? |
18679 | How could he recognise a fugitive shade vaguely beheld in a dark wood, on a sultry and starless night? |
18679 | How did such a dangerous prisoner make her escape? |
18679 | How far is James''s tale corroborated? |
18679 | How indeed could he believe it? |
18679 | If James was guilty, how did he manage his intrigue? |
18679 | If Jeanne was so great with the Queen as Rohan supposed, how could Jeanne also be in need of small charities? |
18679 | If he mistook the girl d''Oliva for the Queen, what is his recognition of the shadow worth? |
18679 | If he took notes of the evidence, why did he not produce the original notes? |
18679 | If they acquitted him, as they were morally certain to do, what Court of Appeal could reverse the decision of men who claimed to''judge angels''? |
18679 | If they had a great quantity of money, what did they want with 23_l._? |
18679 | In 1594(?) |
18679 | In 1713, Nairne, James''s secretary, desires Abram( Menzies) to inquire if Mrs._ Oglethorpe_ had credit with Honyton( Harley), and how far? |
18679 | Is he the mysterious Muscovite adviser of the Dalai Lama? |
18679 | Is that a white moving shadow which approaches through the gloom? |
18679 | Kaspar, merely with the bare hand, detected( without touching it?) |
18679 | Meanwhile, who was her''Oglethorpean majesty,''and why does the pamphleteer of 1716 talk of''James Stuart,_ alias_ Oglethorpe''? |
18679 | New Gate no doubt just built?'' |
18679 | Now did Don John, or Escovedo, entrust Perez with designs not merely chivalrous and impracticable, but actually traitorous? |
18679 | Now, is it likely that highwaymen would carry handcuffs which closed, says Harrison, with a spring and a snap? |
18679 | On November 28, 1902, Mr. Merrifield, in the_ Times Literary Supplement_, published a letter on August 30(? |
18679 | One day Madame said to him, while at her toilet,"What sort of man was Francis I., a king whom I could have loved?" |
18679 | People were sure that, like the mysterious prisoner of Pignerol, Les Exiles, and the Isle Sainte- Marguerite( 1669- 1703? |
18679 | Richard followed him into the grounds; John Perry, after a brief stroll, joined him there and found his mother( how did she come thither?) |
18679 | So Perez averred, at least, but is his date correct? |
18679 | Stevenson, when he was writing_ Kidnapped_? |
18679 | The Earl Marischal told Hume that life had been chemically produced in a laboratory, so what becomes of Creation? |
18679 | The girl told her story; but what did she tell? |
18679 | The man to whom seven pounds were mentioned( Wrenshaw was his name, as Harrison afterwards heard-- where?) |
18679 | They argued that Adamson had asked her,''Was there hay in the room?'' |
18679 | This sounds perfectly fair, but who was to decide what matters were spiritual and what were temporal? |
18679 | V_ THE CARDINAL''S NECKLACE_''Oh, Nature and Thackeray, which of you imitated the other?'' |
18679 | Was he known to Lord Lytton about 1860? |
18679 | Was he then Major Fraser? |
18679 | Was he usually sober? |
18679 | Was that track Kaspar''s? |
18679 | Was_ that_ the hole through which, in the English translation published after Jeanne''s death, the soldier introduced the end of his musket? |
18679 | We naturally ask ourselves, was Rohan in love with the daughter of the Valois? |
18679 | Weichmann said that they had better ask for him at the New Gate Guard House, and the boy said''Guard House? |
18679 | Were all hypnotised? |
18679 | What could he want with so large a sum as 8_l._, so suddenly, as he had no bill to meet? |
18679 | What fairy and fugitive princess can this be, whom not in vain the ardent Hebrew wooed? |
18679 | What was Philip''s aim and motive? |
18679 | What was the date of the capture of the''Speedy Return,''at Maritan, in Madagascar? |
18679 | What was the date of the letters from the''Speedy Return''to which, long afterwards, Forbes, and he alone, referred? |
18679 | What was the foot doing, and why did Mr. Browning not tell this, but quite a different story, to Mr. Myers? |
18679 | What was to become of them, if he returned to France in disgrace? |
18679 | What, then, the Southron used to ask,_ is_ the difference between the Free Church, the Established Church, and the United Presbyterian Church? |
18679 | When did they begin to become a second nature? |
18679 | Whence came his wealth in precious stones, people asked, unless from some mysterious knowledge, or some equally mysterious and illustrious birth? |
18679 | Whence then the cruel blisters caused by walking? |
18679 | Where had the old man been? |
18679 | Where was the land to which the ship would go? |
18679 | Where, meanwhile, was Allan? |
18679 | Who knows? |
18679 | Why did Philip thus dread Escovedo? |
18679 | Why did she not at once say,''My room was up the stairs, beyond the door at the further end of the room''? |
18679 | Why did the King do this, as his original idea involved no need of such a stratagem? |
18679 | Why should all these things be so? |
18679 | Why was the Kirk so often out''in the heather,''and hunted like a partridge on the field and the mountain? |
18679 | Would he declare the letters to be forgeries? |
18679 | Yet what folly was so great as to be beyond the capacity of Louis? |
18679 | _ Did_ he die? |
18679 | _ Que diable allait- il faire dans cette galère?_ Harrison was, however, put on board a casual vessel, and remained in the ship for six weeks. |
18679 | _ Why_ was Escovedo done to death? |
18679 | and the monarch of Spain rivals in the affections of a one- eyed widow of rank? |
18679 | of seventy years of age? |
18679 | xiv., in appendix to the case of Captain Green; which see,_ infra_, p. 193,_ et seq._] IV_ THE CASE OF ALLAN BRECK_ Who killed the Red Fox? |
47213 | Before the great statue of the founder of our family, what are we but pigmies, only able to behold a part and incapable of grasping the whole? |
47213 | Can any one fail to see what scorn and contempt the press would have poured out upon him had he failed to appear in person? |
47213 | He afterwards explained his incredulity by saying to a friend:"How could I believe he was Milord Salisbury and the Prime Minister of England? |
47213 | Now, shall we lunch up here or down by the tarn?" |
47213 | The amusements and distractions of Scarborough? |
47213 | The rain now came down harder than ever and as the Oxford man began to whistle"Wot Ch''er?" |
47213 | Turning to sweeter subjects-- who, having once tasted Devonshire clotted cream can forget it? |
47213 | or of Dutch William they would be stopped?" |
37603 | Any relation of the late Colonel Monroe? |
37603 | Does it hurt you up there? |
37603 | Gentlemen of the jury,said Philipon,"can I help it if His Majesty''s face is like a pear?" |
37603 | Hold up,says Hawaii,"did n''t you say it was wrong to eat man?" |
37603 | How do you mean? |
37603 | I do n''t care what they write about me,said Tweed,"but ca n''t you stop those terrible cartoons?" |
37603 | Is it my fault, gentlemen of the jury, if his Majesty''s face looks like a pear?] |
37603 | Is there any treason in that? |
37603 | May I not hear you say you have had enough? |
37603 | Pray, Mr. Abbé Sièyes, what was the cause of the poor lady''s death? 37603 Sister Press, do you see anything?" |
37603 | Sister Press, do you see anything? |
37603 | To whom do I owe the honor of this intrusion? |
37603 | What does he want to get right in my way for? 37603 What on earth are you doing in there, Willie?" |
37603 | _ Belle dame_,he is saying,"will you accept my escort?" |
37603 | _] In connection with this campaign of 1892, there was no cartoon of more interest than that entitledWhere Am I At?" |
37603 | _][ Illustration:Where am I at?" |
37603 | --where is my friend, John Bull? |
37603 | A bellicose little dwarf, McClellan, is advising the bulldog''s master:"Uncle Abraham, do n''t you think you had better call the old dog off now? |
37603 | Again the Constitution cries:"Sister Press, do you see nothing coming?" |
37603 | By his side is Lincoln, who is inquiring,"Chase, will it stay down?" |
37603 | Can I believe my spectacles? |
37603 | Dare these"Northern Barbarians"thus insult the"magnanimous Mexican Natian"? |
37603 | Did I not command you not to return until you had spread your wing of victory over the whole of Spain?" |
37603 | Dis wot yer call''mancipation?" |
37603 | Do n''t you see the clock is slow?" |
37603 | I say, little Boney, why do n''t you come out? |
37603 | Is that the way you stick to your friends? |
37603 | Massa Lincum, is dis wot yer call Elewating de Nigger?" |
37603 | McClellan, watching from his cab the discomfiture of his foe, calls derisively,"Would n''t you like to swap horses now, Lincoln?" |
37603 | McKINLEY--"I wonder what he holds?" |
37603 | One is calling,"War''s de rest ob dis ole darky? |
37603 | Reproduced in the San Francisco"Wasp,"Jan. 2, 1982._]_ Moonshine_, in a cartoon entitled"Are n''t they Rather Overdoing it?" |
37603 | SAMPSON--"Where is Cervera''s fleet?" |
37603 | THE HISTORY OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY IN CARICATURE[ Illustration: What it is and What is it?] |
37603 | The Men of To- day 355 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Page What It Is and What Is It? |
37603 | The first of these called"Quit- Pro Quo?" |
37603 | The ghost of the Grand Monarque is asking sadly:"Is this the end of''all the glories''?" |
37603 | The unfortunate"Constitution,"feeling that her last minute has come, calls out:"Sister Press, do you see nothing coming?" |
37603 | What was to be done? |
37603 | Why does n''t he let us have some rest?" |
37603 | Wo n''t you walk in and take something?" |
37603 | Yes, d---- you, why do n''t you come out? |
37603 | You are perfectly free to choose?"] |
37603 | [ Illustration: Japan--"Does it hurt up There?" |
37603 | [ Illustration:"Once more, Madame, do you wish divorce, or do you not wish divorce? |
37603 | [ Illustration:"What? |
37603 | _ From the collection of the New York Historical Society._] CHAPTER XIX THE FOUR- YEARS''STRUGGLE[ Illustration:"Why do n''t You take it?"] |
37603 | thunders Napoleon,"what is this I see? |
37603 | where are the French bugaboos? |
52911 | Ardres?] |
52911 | But in what degree shall I place my lords the princes who have sent us hither, or you, my lords, who hear me? |
52911 | D''Orgemont?] |
52911 | Dixmuyde?] |
52911 | He bade them send for the prince; and on his entrance, the king asked him why he had carried away the crown? |
52911 | Q. St Maur?] |
52911 | The king gave a deep sigh, and said,''My fair son, what right have you to it? |
52911 | Was sir J. de Neele lord of Ollehaing? |
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? |
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? |
39747 | A proper estimation of the services rendered by the Museum is yet wanting: what academy in modern Europe, however, has done so much? |
39747 | But can Philip be blamed for his endeavours to disarm the military servants of the Romans? |
39747 | Can the performance of these exploits be deemed improbable, in an age when western Asia did not contain a single great empire? |
39747 | Can the raising of difficulties deserve the name of criticism? |
39747 | Could it be supposed that the conqueror of Gaul would return to a private life, and leave his rival at the head of the republic? |
39747 | Could the idea, therefore, of a perfect equality between the states of Greece be other than chimerical? |
39747 | Descent of Cyrus from the family of Achæmenes,( Jamshid?). |
39747 | Hanno, however, was at the head of a powerful party at home, who were clamorous for peace, and who can say they were wrong? |
39747 | How those books were composed, and whether their authors may be considered as contemporary with the events they relate? |
39747 | Of all Germans the writings of Wieland, whether original or translations( and to which can we give the preference?) |
39747 | Of modern writers we dare only mention one:--and who is worthy to be ranked beside him? |
39747 | Of what use is the study of history if it do not make us wiser and better? |
39747 | Otherwise, why should he have given his daughter to a second pretender to the throne? |
39747 | The administration was in the hands of the opulent,([ Greek: gamoroi?]) |
39747 | Thus a succession of distinguished generals came to the throne: what authority, indeed, would an emperor at that time have had who was not a general? |
39747 | Was it not the same with Peter the Great? |
39747 | Was the account that Cato at his return gave of the resuscitated power of Carthage consonant to truth? |
39747 | What writer has so truly seized its spirit, and placed it so faithfully and elegantly before his readers? |
39747 | When indeed have not the plans of conquerors been dependent on the course of events? |
39747 | Where in those days of destruction and revolution could the sciences have found a shelter, if not under the protection of a prince? |
39747 | Where is to be found a time so full of terror as this, when even tears were forbidden? |
39747 | Where was it that Rome did not at this crisis send her ambassadors? |
39747 | Who can read it without admiring the royal statesman? |
39747 | Who could better cajole men and nations, while they were erecting altars to him, than T. Quintius? |
39747 | Who in these days, so terrible to Italy, was sure of his life or property? |
39747 | Why was so great a character disfigured by an ambition of conquest? |
39747 | unless the knowledge of the past teach us to judge more correctly of the present? |
39006 | Is it peace? |
39006 | Must Abner die as a godless man dieth? |
39006 | Shall Jonathan die,cried the soldiers,"who has won this great victory in Israel? |
39006 | What part have we in David, what portion in the son of Jesse? |
39006 | What peace,he replied,"while the whoredoms of thy mother Jezebel and her witchcrafts are so many?" |
39006 | Abimelech spoke to the men of Shechem:"Consider that I am your bone and your flesh; which is better, that 70 men rule over you or I only?" |
39006 | After the return of the victorious army Samuel came to Gilgal, and said, What meaneth this bleating of sheep and lowing of oxen in my ears? |
39006 | And Samuel said, What hast thou done? |
39006 | As Jehu approached she called to him from the window,"Had Zimri peace, who slew his master?" |
39006 | But Nabal answered:"Who is David, and who is the son of Jesse? |
39006 | But the elders feared the vengeance of the Midianites, and said,"Are Zebah and Zalmunna already in thine hand, that we should give bread to thy men?" |
39006 | Can we fix the time at which the Phenicians first set foot on the islands of Hellas? |
39006 | Could I do what ye have done?" |
39006 | Did not Jehovah give the princes of Midian into your hand? |
39006 | Did this stone belong to king Abibaal? |
39006 | From the city of Karkar as far as the city of Gilzana[574](?) |
39006 | Gideon replied modestly,"Is not the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage of Abiezer? |
39006 | Is all well with thee, my brother? |
39006 | Is the name of the witness( col. 2, 27), Sar- babil- assur- issu( p. 115), correctly explained by"The king of Babel has conquered Asshur"? |
39006 | Jehu made no answer, but called out,"Who is on my side?" |
39006 | Jephthah said,"Have ye not driven me out of the house of my father? |
39006 | On the streams of Reuben there was taking of counsel, but why didst thou sit still among the herds to hear the pipe of the herdsmen? |
39006 | Samuel answered in the tone of Isaiah, Hath Jehovah delight in burnt- offerings and sacrifice? |
39006 | Saul reproached his daughter for aiding David, and said,"Why hast thou allowed my enemy to escape?" |
39006 | The chiefs and the servants asked in wonder,"Wherefore came this madman?" |
39006 | The mother of Sisera looked from her window; she called through the lattice:''Why linger his chariots in returning? |
39006 | Then he spoke in scorn to the people,"I have slain one; but who slew all these?" |
39006 | Then the other princes said to Achish: What need of these Hebrews? |
39006 | To the captured princes he said,"What manner of men were they whom ye once slew at Tabor?" |
39006 | What were the sums paid in tribute, even if considerable, when compared with such serious disadvantages? |
39006 | Why should she not establish the division and the weakness of Israel? |
39006 | With three successive kings of Babylon, Marduk- sapik- kullat, Saduni(? |
39006 | Would a Persian have shown this to a Greek as a monument of Semiramis? |
39006 | [ 11] From what source is the narrative of Ninus and Semiramis derived? |
39006 | [ 228]"What am I, what is the life and the house of my father in Israel, that I should become the son- in- law of the king? |
39006 | [ 70] The legend runs,"From the Sidonians, Mother of Kamb, Ippo, Kith(? |
39006 | what title to credibility can be allowed it? |
39006 | why delay the wheels of his chariot?'' |
58083 | Bonvile? |
58083 | If not Thun- St- Martin?] |
58083 | Q. Fai? |
58083 | Q. Mechlin, or Menin?] |
2966 | A fair abode, certainly; how long has he been here? |
2966 | Ah, I see!--Do you think of staying here long? |
2966 | And this portrait is like her? |
2966 | And what would you say if the question was passed on to you? |
2966 | Are n''t you ashamed of making such a row for a wretched sum like that? |
2966 | Are you contented, dear? |
2966 | At Genoa? |
2966 | At least,I said,"I may have the honour of escorting you to your door?" |
2966 | But how if you did not love him? |
2966 | But if they did, what ought I to do? |
2966 | But what do you find in me that you will not find in most girls of my age? 2966 But you are not going to- morrow?" |
2966 | Can you hear them, sir? |
2966 | Correctly? |
2966 | Did anyone see you coming in here? |
2966 | Did he see you laughing at him? |
2966 | Do you know of any respectable house where I can keep her? |
2966 | Do you want me to get well? |
2966 | Has he a carriage and servants? |
2966 | Have you never had a lover? |
2966 | He was a man of spirit; but did n''t he hurt you? |
2966 | How can I give you an earnest? 2966 How could you lead me into such a dangerous position?" |
2966 | How does he live? |
2966 | How is it you do not partake my desires? |
2966 | How is that? |
2966 | How much will you board this young woman for? |
2966 | I see, the question is avoided; but is not that impolite? |
2966 | I, sir? 2966 If he was a good, kind man how could I help loving him?" |
2966 | If you really love met why should I oppose your love? 2966 Is that a sure method?" |
2966 | Is you daughter here? |
2966 | Is your favourite amongst them? |
2966 | May I have the pleasure of sending a glass to your wife? |
2966 | No, and what if she were? 2966 Shall I do your hair to- morrow?" |
2966 | Shall we have the pleasure of waiting on you at the table? |
2966 | So soon? |
2966 | So the auditor makes a boy of you? |
2966 | What about? |
2966 | What am I to do with this slice of lemon? |
2966 | What business have you to talk about feelings after what happened yesterday evening? |
2966 | What can you do? |
2966 | What do want me to do? |
2966 | What do you want? |
2966 | What is your name? |
2966 | What name is it? |
2966 | What were you doing at Madrid, and why did you leave? |
2966 | What''s an evasion? |
2966 | What''s that? 2966 What''s the matter with you, idiot?" |
2966 | When? |
2966 | Where are they, then? |
2966 | Where did he come from? |
2966 | Where is the famous Astrodi? |
2966 | Where, then? |
2966 | Who told you that? |
2966 | Why did you tell me you had a lover? |
2966 | Why do n''t you sell them? |
2966 | Why? 2966 Why?" |
2966 | Will you allow me to see for myself? |
2966 | Would you like me to take you to the play to- morrow? |
2966 | Would you like to stay here better? |
2966 | You do n''t? 2966 You know how to read, do you?" |
2966 | You pity me, then? |
2966 | You sir? 2966 You told me a lie, then?" |
2966 | You write well; but can you write correctly without a book? |
2966 | And what did he say when he saw it?" |
2966 | And when she gets to Paris is she to go to the king and say,''Here I am, your majesty''? |
2966 | And who is going to take her there? |
2966 | But do n''t you like that?" |
2966 | But why should you want to give me such a large sum?" |
2966 | Do n''t you think everything was very good?" |
2966 | Do n''t you think she is very pretty?" |
2966 | He gave me an excellent reception, and after the usual compliments had passed, said,--"Do you know a Russian who calls himself Charles Ivanoff?" |
2966 | How can I deserve such great kindness?" |
2966 | How could she leave Nice without any money?" |
2966 | How much do they owe you?" |
2966 | How much for the lot?" |
2966 | How was I to look on such beauties without desiring to possess them? |
2966 | How''s that?" |
2966 | I found him sitting up in a comfortable bed with a rubicund face which did not look as if he were dangerously ill."What is the matter with you? |
2966 | I had no doubts on that subject, for where is the man in love who does not think that his beloved object will win the hearts of all others? |
2966 | I looked at her more closely and finding her to be a dainty morsel I said, as soon as the knight had gone--"Will you give me my supper?" |
2966 | I resolved never to abandon her, and I did so in all sincerity; was I not in love? |
2966 | May I ask you to tell me whether you are more fortunate than I?" |
2966 | Ought you to shew your person like that?" |
2966 | Perhaps that is you?" |
2966 | We should therefore-- go to Paris, but how is it to be done? |
2966 | What are we to do? |
2966 | What are you doing? |
2966 | What are you laughing at, mademoiselle?" |
2966 | What do you think of it? |
2966 | What have you got in that parcel?" |
2966 | What was your father''s name?" |
2966 | Where are we to get the hundred louis necessary? |
2966 | Who cooked this delicious supper?" |
2966 | Who has not made his castles in Spain? |
2966 | Why do you blush?" |
2966 | Why should I go and look for the king, if you love me yourself?" |
2966 | Would you like to let me try?" |
2966 | Yesterday I thought I would be ill.""What made you think that?" |
2966 | You kiss me fast enough after you have shaved me, why should you be less polite to this gentleman?" |
2966 | but tell me why you would n''t let me see for myself?" |
48275 | For how can Christianity, that is to say, eternal truth itself, be for ever torn by divisions? |
48275 | We know what Pope made Charlemagne the first Emperor;_ but who made the first Pope_? |
45080 | How do you carry on your trade? |
45080 | Why is this? 45080 You call that a river?" |
45080 | [ 226- 1] What is desirable in this federation to preserve ourselves from the menace of other civilizations? 45080 An American was one day asked by a cutlery salesman from Birmingham( England),Are you not humiliated by having no national language?" |
45080 | And if the policy of one government, or the use it makes of its navy, does lead to war, what is to be the position? |
45080 | And who is to defend the other five Britannic nations? |
45080 | Are the other governments to be involved? |
45080 | Are the self- governing colonies to be united to each other and to the Mother Country?--or to these and to the dependencies besides? |
45080 | Are we backing the Pax Britannica and the Pax Americana with sufficient power to ensure their maintenance? |
45080 | Assuming Pownall''s premises to be correct he inquired,''which is best-- to have a total separation or a change of the seat of government? |
45080 | But between the United States and the younger Britannic nations, what is the relation? |
45080 | How long can the British Isles alone bear the strain of its own naval defence? |
45080 | How shall we bind ourselves for that all- time, the indefinite future, so that we shall be gladly bound, and yet be freemen still? |
45080 | In either of these cases, what would the American courts decide? |
45080 | Is Great Britain to be responsible for the policy of the Dominions? |
45080 | Is there anything we are forgetting? |
45080 | Moreover, what do most of us care about what foreigners think? |
45080 | Must it fall and its people be led into the bondage of alien ways? |
45080 | Need other cases of failure be mentioned? |
45080 | Shall we continue to be called"just and upright"? |
45080 | They are undoubtedly friendly, but where is the formal evidence of such friendliness? |
45080 | Was it not Dr. Johnson who said,"All foreigners are mostly fools"? |
45080 | What will be the position of the Empire then, if it has to depend upon the navy of England alone? |
3827 | And do you like it, dear? |
3827 | Clarke, can you remember the date of the Norman Conquest? |
3827 | How, then, do you account for the difference in colour between his whiskers and his hair? |
3827 | May I ask how you explained your absence to your flock, Father Healy? |
3827 | Now, Daniels, how about the date of Waterloo? |
3827 | What is Emery reading to you about? 3827 ''Ow dare you say dat? |
3827 | ''Would you kindly see if the sleeping accommodation is commodious enough, for we''ll alter it if it is n''t?'' |
3827 | ''s widow, the Empress Marie Louise, in to dinner?" |
3827 | A third question,"I trust that the crops in your Highness''dominion are satisfactory?" |
3827 | All these are, and will remain, unsolved problems? |
3827 | And has there ever been a finer animal- painter? |
3827 | And how came it about that these young men were so ignorant of the language and customs of the countries they were proposing to travel? |
3827 | Another long pause, and the second invariable question:"I trust that your Highness''Army is in its usual efficient state?" |
3827 | Are they, like some young men we know, always yearning to turn night into day? |
3827 | As I was a heretic( he put it more politely) and had the day to myself, would I do him a favour? |
3827 | But why the future, when the present seemed A flower- decked meadow in eternal spring? |
3827 | Could anything be more prosaic? |
3827 | Could they in their wildest moments have supposed that they would get one single order through their agency? |
3827 | Has Nature given this singular insect the power of dispensing with sleep? |
3827 | Have the cicadas a double dose of gaiete francaise in their composition, and is this their manner of expressing it? |
3827 | He was hard put to it to find enough fish for all these guests; would I catch him some trout in the streams in the forest? |
3827 | He was in a difficult position; nothing would induce him to tolerate such a practice, but how was he to avoid discourtesy to his Royal guest? |
3827 | How had it been managed? |
3827 | How then shall our German industries flourish, if they not protected be? |
3827 | I quite own that at times his colour is unpleasing, owing to the bluish tint overlaying it; but surely no one will question his draughtsmanship? |
3827 | I remember well how young Vieweg introduced himself to me in laboured English,"Are you a friend to fishing with the fly?" |
3827 | I was writing in there, do you see?" |
3827 | Is it about Heaven?" |
3827 | It began--"Crimson wreaths of passionless flowers Down in the golden glen; Silvery sheen of autumnal showers; When, my beloved one, when?" |
3827 | It was years before I could rid myself of the habit of inquiring quezaco? |
3827 | Murphy?'' |
3827 | Now is there anything I can do for you?" |
3827 | Now what possible object did the firms sending out these ill- equipped representatives hope to attain? |
3827 | One and all, At the call, Cap and pass and hurry on? |
3827 | Schon was?" |
3827 | The instant the cook returned from market, Mrs. Spiegelberg would rush into the kitchen with a breathless,"Na, Minna, was gibt''s neues?" |
3827 | Then he put the question point- blank, would the Embassy sanction this man''s arrest? |
3827 | What could be clearer? |
3827 | What for a doctrine is that? |
3827 | What possible object can it hope to attain by keeping up this incessant din? |
3827 | What will we do with them now? |
3827 | What would"Cinderella"be as a pantomime without the scene where she triumphantly puts on her glass slipper? |
3827 | Who would have thought that they would have carried so far out to sea?" |
3827 | Why is it that English people have this extraordinary reluctance to learn any foreign language? |
3827 | Why should British firms be compelled to use German travellers, owing to the ineptitude of their own countrymen? |
3827 | Will we put them in the little side- cabins here?'' |
3827 | and of substituting for"Comment cela va- t- il?" |
3827 | for, after all, why should people ever think of anybody but themselves? |
3827 | instead of"qu''est ce que c''est?" |
3827 | or"Now, Minna, what is the news?" |
3827 | says I,''and have them roaring and shouting, and knocking the place down maybe in half an hour or so? |
3827 | the Provencal Commoun as? |
6032 | And after what manner should we use diligence? 6032 Sir,"said Peter of Bracieux and Payen of Orléans to Geoffry the Marshal,"what would you have us do? |
6032 | What covenants are they? |
6032 | And shall I tell you in what wise? |
6032 | So they journeyed through Burgundy, and by the mountains of Mont- joux(? |
10114 | And that beauty and goodness are something? |
10114 | But how will they be able,said they,"to wrestle on ground so rough and bushy?" |
10114 | But if they expend all their stones,rejoined Xenophon,"is there anything else to prevent us from advancing? |
10114 | But what as to such things as these, Simmias? 10114 But what with respect to the acquisition of wisdom, is the body an impediment or not, if anyone takes it with him as a partner in the search? |
10114 | But what? 10114 But wouldst thou have_ me_ share the prey? |
10114 | Did you ever lay hold of them by any other bodily sense? 10114 Does not then the soul of the philosopher, in these cases, despise the body, and flee from it, and seek to retire within itself?" |
10114 | How not? |
10114 | If I am innocent,said he,"why did you place such a stain on me? |
10114 | Is it anything else than the separation of the soul from the body? 10114 It shall be done,"said Crito;"but consider whether you have anything else to say?" |
10114 | Must it not then be by reasoning, if at all, that any of the things that really are become known to it? |
10114 | Not at all"What then? 10114 Now, then, have you ever seen anything of this kind with your eyes?" |
10114 | We will endeavor then so to do,he said;"but how shall we bury you?" |
10114 | What then, Socrates,said Simmias,"would you go away keeping this persuasion to yourself, or would you impart it to us? |
10114 | What then,said he,"is not Evenus a philosopher?" |
10114 | What, Cebes, have not you and Simmias, who have conversed familiarly with Philolaus[40] on this subject, heard? |
10114 | When, then,said he,"does the soul light on the truth? |
10114 | Why, then, Socrates, do they say that it is not allowable to kill one''s self? 10114 (Who is like unto thee among the gods, O Jehovah? |
10114 | And Socrates, on seeing the man, said:"Well, my good friend, as you are skilled in these matters, what must I do?" |
10114 | And after we have made all these conquests, what shall we do then?" |
10114 | And when one that came in said angrily,''Was this well done of your lady, Charmion?'' |
10114 | As he sat in his tent in the dead of night, he thought a huge and shadowy form stood by him; and when he calmly asked,"What and whence art thou?" |
10114 | But he said:"What are you doing, my admirable friends? |
10114 | But is this conquest of Sicily to be the extreme limit of our campaign?" |
10114 | But what caused this whole emigration? |
10114 | But what could Cæsar do, in the centre of nearly the whole of the known world? |
10114 | But what could undisciplined bravery avail against the attack of an army skilled in all the arts of war and inspired by a long train of conquests? |
10114 | But why should I speak doubtfully about stealing? |
10114 | Chirisophus then said:"But why should you go, and leave the charge of the rear? |
10114 | Cineas then, after waiting for a short time, said:"O King, when we have taken Italy, what shall we do then?" |
10114 | Could he hope to succeed where Hannibal and Mithradates had perished? |
10114 | Cæsar, too, had some suspicion of him, and he even said one day to his friends:"What think you of Cassius? |
10114 | Do they not seem so to you?" |
10114 | Do we say that justice itself is something or nothing?" |
10114 | Do we think that death is anything?" |
10114 | Does it appear to you to be becoming in a philosopher to be anxious about pleasures, as they are called, such as meats and drinks?" |
10114 | Does it not seem so to you?" |
10114 | Does it not seem so to you?" |
10114 | Had there been similar flowerings of genius amid forgotten Asiatic times? |
10114 | If I am guilty, why am I more fit for a second consulship than I was for my first one?" |
10114 | In the fold of this garment I carry war and peace; which of the two do you choose?" |
10114 | Is death anything else than this?" |
10114 | Is not he the person, Simmias, if any one can, who will arrive at the knowledge of that which is?" |
10114 | Now, if heaven grants us the victory over them, what use shall we make of it?" |
10114 | On his coming up, one of the populace asked who that was? |
10114 | Or who will hear your friends when they attempt to show that this is not an open servitude on the one hand and tyranny on the other? |
10114 | The Carthaginians hesitating to comply, Fabius, who was at the head of the embassy, exclaimed:"What is the meaning of this delay? |
10114 | This also Meha granted, saying:"Why should we undertake a war for the sake of a woman?" |
10114 | To stand a comrade by my side, The sharer of my fame, And worthy of a brother''s pride And of a brother''s name? |
10114 | To this Simmias said:"What is this, Socrates, which you exhort Evenus to do? |
10114 | Two great Romans had yielded to her, why not the third, who seemed a smaller man? |
10114 | Were you personally present, Phaedo, with Socrates on that day when he drank the poison in prison? |
10114 | What else can one do in the interval before sunset?" |
10114 | What had been the doom of Viriathus? |
10114 | What was the reason of this, Phaedo? |
10114 | When the name of Nero is heard, who thinks of the consul? |
10114 | While he was so employed, there arose a question,"What kind of death was the best?" |
10114 | Why comes he not in battle''s van His country''s chief to be? |
10114 | Would you quarrel with your neighbors for a horse?" |
10114 | [ Footnote 58: Why should he be ashamed to admit that Rome was saved by the aid of the gods? |
10114 | _ Ech._ And what, Phædo, were the circumstances of his death? |
10114 | _ Ech._ But what is this ship? |
10114 | _ Ech._ But who were present, Phaedo? |
10114 | _ Ech._ How should I not? |
10114 | _ Ech._ Was anyone else there? |
10114 | _ Ech._ Well, now, what do you say was the subject of conversation? |
10114 | _ Ech._ Were any strangers present? |
10114 | _ Ech._ What then did he say before his death? |
10114 | _ Phæd._ And did you not hear about the trial how it went off? |
10114 | about the pleasures of love?" |
10114 | and how did he die? |
10114 | and what warning against vain valor was written on the desolate site where Numantia once had flourished? |
10114 | and who of his friends were with him? |
10114 | cried he,"how is it possible that a people possessed of such magnificence at home could envy me an humble cottage in Britain?" |
10114 | does such a man appear to you to think other bodily indulgences of value? |
10114 | or did you hear an account of it from someone else? |
10114 | or would not the magistrates allow them to be present, but did he die destitute of friends? |
10114 | were not Aristippus and Cleombrotus present? |
10114 | what dost thou mean?" |
10114 | what was said and done? |
10114 | whom they ordered to grant that peace, and whom to conduct the army out of Africa? |
6369 | And who, he asked, but the heir of the Prince of the Apostles could presume to claim a power so tremendous? |
6369 | How, then, are we to account for her triumphant progress? |
6369 | What then were his practical duties? |
38677 | Who would not ask, when contemplating the vast extent of this work, how many myriads of men were required to complete it, and for how many years? 38677 Adar opened his mouth and spoke to the warrior Bel( El): Who would then be left? 38677 And granting this, must not the first beginning of culture in Egypt be carried back at least 500 years before Menes? 38677 And to Moses they said: Is it not enough that thou hast led us out of Egypt, to slay us in the desert? 38677 Arsissa was captured; 20,000 prisoners, their treasures, the gods Haldia(?) 38677 At a fortress over which is written Magadil( Migdol?) 38677 But how could the various kinds of fluid, for instance, be represented in these indicatory pictures? 38677 But what could induce the children of Jacob to go to Egypt, or the Egyptians to give them a pasture- land on their north- eastern border? 38677 But why had he not at once led them thither? 38677 Could dwellers in tents make regulations about receiving the stranger in their gates, about cities of refuge and cities of the Levites? 38677 Could the Hebrews, a peaceful nation and without practice in war, venture to resist the numerous, disciplined, and drilled armies of Egypt? 38677 Could tribes wandering in the desert have made rules for the celebration of the festivals of sowing, of harvest, and of the vintage? 38677 Did I not set forth at thy command; has not thy mouth led my armies, and thy counsel guided them? 38677 Did the priests really possess sketches of kings and accounts of their reigns reaching back more than 5,000 years? 38677 Does not the meaning of the name in the places quoted seem rather to be of a general kind, than to denote any one particular stock? 38677 Has the like been done before? 38677 Hast thou but one blessing? 38677 Have I not celebrated many brilliant festivals, and filled thy house with booty? 38677 How could any reasoning creature venture to make an image which should truly represent this nature? 38677 How could they be freed from the mighty power of the Pharaohs? 38677 How hast thou found it so quickly, my son? 38677 If this is true, what must have been expended upon iron for the tools, and on food and clothing for the workmen? |
38677 | If this were not so, why should Sethos have hit upon the plan of protecting the eastern frontier from Pelusium to Heliopolis, by a vast fortification? |
38677 | In order to believe this, must we not allow that at such a remote time as the reign of Menes, or soon after it, writing was known and in use in Egypt? |
38677 | Is he a father who denies his son? |
38677 | Jacob asked again: Know ye Laban, Nahor''s son? |
38677 | Jacob asked of Laban; have I not served thee seven years for Rachel? |
38677 | Or have I followed my own thoughts? |
38677 | Shamelessness and sin(?) |
38677 | The king answered: Would ye free the people from their tasks? |
38677 | The names of these giants were given to the mountains of which they possessed themselves, to Casius, Libanus, Anti- libanus, and Brathy( Tabor?). |
38677 | Then Jacob said to the shepherds: Whence are ye, my brethren? |
38677 | Was it possible to escape this grievous oppression? |
38677 | What amount of authority should be ascribed to the lists of Manetho? |
38677 | What can I do for thee? |
38677 | What can we do, noble lord, Ramses Miamun? |
38677 | What is the will of my father Ammon? |
38677 | What shall I give thee? |
38677 | Who among the gods is like unto thee, Jehovah? |
38677 | Why did the Israelites remain so long in the miserable wilderness? |
38677 | Why hast thou deceived me? |
38677 | Wilt thou also make thyself a ruler over us? |
38677 | [ 620] But is the Egyptian name of the Hebrews really Apru or Apuriu? |
38677 | and Bagamazda(? |
38677 | why hast thou not allowed me to kiss my daughters, and why hast thou taken my gods?" |
40082 | I have sworn to obey the Emperor,answered Gordon, at last,"and who shall release me from my oath?" |
40082 | Is the Emperor,asked Wallenstein,"to be a mere image which is never to move?" |
40082 | You, gentlemen,who shall release me from my oath?" |
40082 | ''Shall we allow the Jesuit scoundrels to come here?'' |
40082 | ''Sons of the church,''he said,''why do you hang back? |
40082 | And if the Emperor and the Diet were overthrown, what had Christian to offer to save Germany from anarchy? |
40082 | And then, if sickness came, or wounds-- and sickness was no infrequent visitor in those camps-- what remained but misery or death? |
40082 | And without giving security to Protestantism, how could a permanent peace be obtained? |
40082 | And yet how was it to be done? |
40082 | But what was such a victory worth? |
40082 | But where were they to turn next? |
40082 | Did this mean only that they were to keep what they had got, or that they might take more as soon as it was convenient? |
40082 | For who could tell, when once the Palatinate was lost, whether the agreement of Mühlhausen would be any longer regarded? |
40082 | Frederick had failed, and Christian had failed, and why not Gustavus? |
40082 | How could he impose peace upon all parties when no single party trusted him? |
40082 | How is it possible to bring such scenes before our eyes in their ghastly reality? |
40082 | How, under such circumstances, was Protestantism, with which so many temporal interests were bound up, to feel itself secure? |
40082 | If Catholic and Huguenot could come to regard one another as Frenchmen and nothing else, what chance had foreign powers of resisting her? |
40082 | Might the ecclesiastics turn Protestants?] |
40082 | Might the princes seize more lands?] |
40082 | To stand above parties it is necessary to obtain the confidence of a nation, and how could men have confidence in Wallenstein? |
40082 | Was he in earnest?] |
40082 | Was he to go down to posterity with the title of Diminisher of the Empire? |
40082 | Was it likely that his successors would always imitate his example? |
40082 | Was it strange if the Swedish king thought that such work as this would be better in his own hands than in those of John George of Saxony? |
40082 | Was it yet possible to keep the Bohemian war from growing into a German one? |
40082 | Was it, forsooth, the Emperor''s majesty That gave the army ready to his hand, And only sought a leader for it? |
40082 | What could Christian do in the face of the danger? |
40082 | What could he effect?] |
40082 | What guarantee could be given that the French monarchy would not turn its back upon the principles from which its strength had been derived? |
40082 | What have you to do with the Empire?" |
40082 | What were his purposes?] |
40082 | Where was Frederick to expect help?] |
40082 | Who were they, to be driven to the combat by menaces, as the Persian slaves had been driven on at Thermopylæ by the blows of their masters''officers? |
40082 | Would Frederick accept the perilous offer? |
40082 | Would Tilly''s force be sufficient to overcome the King of Denmark and his foreign allies? |
40082 | Would he not, if he were allowed to recover strength, play the same game over again? |
40082 | Would she not soon acquire a preponderance over a divided Germany? |
40082 | Would the members of the circle of Lower Saxony be strong enough to maintain their neutrality? |
40082 | Would the princes of Germany come to the help of the Directors? |
46019 | ''And do you know who I am?'' 46019 ''What,''said the governor,''do you refuse to permit those horses to be harnessed into my carriage?'' |
46019 | And what,inquired the sovereign,"does the third one while the other two are sucking?" |
46019 | Now this talk heard the earl, and Kark, and they had a light there with them; and the earl said:''Why art thou so pale, or whiles as black as earth? 46019 Sylvanus"tells the truth in his remark:"Men speak not, think not of the king; they ask you,''Have you seen the Frue kirk?'' |
46019 | ''And do you, sir, know who I am?'' |
46019 | ( These look like sixteenth century work; can they have been erected when the transepts were cut back, perhaps at the Reformation?) |
46019 | And when they came to the end of the run, Harald asked:''Held I by the girth now?'' |
46019 | Are not Ellidaar and Hvita, salmon rivers of Iceland, to this assembly at any rate better than all the waters of Nile and Cephissus? |
46019 | But when evensong was over, the Archbishop''s clerks said to him,''How now, my lord bishop, have ye not yourself broken the rules ye made?'' |
46019 | Gizur, one of the plaintiffs, said,"What counsel shall we now take, kinsman Asgrim?" |
46019 | Is it not so that thou wilt bewray me?'' |
46019 | Said the king:''Slewest thou the earl?'' |
46019 | The king said:''Didst thou slay the earl?'' |
46019 | The king said:''Runnest thou away now, Wolf the Craven?'' |
46019 | Thrand heard this and said:''Seemeth the silver nought well to thee, Leif?'' |
46019 | Thurid says,''Dost think it better to get back the sword or not?'' |
46019 | Ufey answers,''A heavy blow thou wouldst think it would give?'' |
46019 | Ufey spake,''How wouldst like that way of death?'' |
46019 | Ufey spake,''What harm wouldst think it would do?'' |
46019 | What higher praise than that could any place of strength deserve? |
46019 | Where is thy kinsman Sigmund?'' |
46019 | Who are you?'' |
10478 | Are there any on my side? |
10478 | Art thou he who troubleth Israel? |
10478 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
10478 | Canst thou by searching find out Him? |
10478 | Hast thou, O Lord, utterly rejected Judah? 10478 How long,"cried the preacher, with a loud voice and fierce aspect,"halt ye between two opinions? |
10478 | In much knowledge is much grief, and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.... What profit hath a man of all his labor?... 10478 To what purpose,"said he,"is the multitude of sacrifices? |
10478 | To whom then will ye liken God? 10478 When, before or since, has there lived an outlaw who did not despoil his country?" |
10478 | Whence come ye? |
10478 | Whereby,said he,"shall I_ know_ that I shall inherit it,"--that is Canaan,--"and that my seed shall be in number as the stars of heaven?" |
10478 | And he took the fire in his hand and a knife, and Isaac said,"Behold the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?" |
10478 | And how did the prophet receive her message? |
10478 | And what was to be its fate? |
10478 | And whither did the prophet fly? |
10478 | But how was Samuel to rekindle a fervent religious life among the degenerate Israelites in such unsettled times? |
10478 | But these sheep, what have they done? |
10478 | Can stronger or more comforting language be made use of to assert the personality and providence of God? |
10478 | Did any man of genius ever conceive such an illustration of blended piety and obedience? |
10478 | Do not most great men utter sentiments hard to be reconciled with one another, yet with equal sincerity? |
10478 | Do you ask for a confirmation of the truths thus deduced from the denial of the supernaturalism of the Mosaic Code? |
10478 | Had he acted with the courage of a man sure of divine protection? |
10478 | Had he not been faint- hearted when he wished to die? |
10478 | Had the prophet been told to flee? |
10478 | Has dramatic poetry ever created such a display of conflicting emotions? |
10478 | Has there ever been from his time to ours such a transcendent manifestation of faith? |
10478 | Hast thou not known, hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? |
10478 | Have ye not known, have ye not heard, hath it not been told you from the beginning? |
10478 | He replies to the great_ I Am_,"Who am I, that_ I_ should bring forth the Children of Israel out of Egypt? |
10478 | How could city officials steal princely revenues, how could lawyers collect exorbitant fees, if it were not for the law? |
10478 | How could she remove the grievous eye- sore? |
10478 | How does he reply to the mysterious voice? |
10478 | How hard to shake off the burdens which even a rich man is compelled to bear? |
10478 | I can not dwell on the haughty scepticism and obdurate hardness of the King--"Who is Jehovah, that I should obey_ his_ voice?" |
10478 | If his own sons would take bribes in rendering judgment, who could be trusted? |
10478 | Is it possible for a human being to transcend so mighty a sacrifice, and all by the power of faith? |
10478 | Is it possible for language to express a deeper despondency, or a more tender grief? |
10478 | Is it true that in much wisdom is much grief, and that the increase of knowledge is the increase of sorrow? |
10478 | Is there not a change between youth and old age? |
10478 | Is thy soul tired of Zion? |
10478 | Isaac was a gentle, harmless, interesting youth of twenty, and what right, by any human standard, had Abraham to take his life? |
10478 | Moreover, had he not said that there should be neither rain nor dew but according to his word? |
10478 | Moreover, on principles of reason why should such a sacrifice be demanded? |
10478 | Now, whence had this man this wisdom? |
10478 | On their return to Ahaziah, without delivering their message to the god of the Phoenicians or Philistines, the king said:"Why are ye now turned back?" |
10478 | Or of whose hand have I received any bribe to blind my eyes therewith? |
10478 | People say contemptuously,"Is this the man that made the earth to tremble?" |
10478 | Said he:"What have I to do with thee, thou King of Judah? |
10478 | So from her open window she tauntingly accosted Jehu as he approached:"What came of Zimri, who murdered his master as thou hast done?" |
10478 | Then what follows? |
10478 | There is a higher law still which speaks to the universal conscience, asking, What is your duty? |
10478 | They repeated the words of the strange man who had turned them back; and the king said:"What manner of man was he who came up to meet you?" |
10478 | Was it revealed to his exultant soul what this blessing should be? |
10478 | Was it the result of his studies and reflections and experiences, or was it a wisdom supernaturally taught him by the Almighty? |
10478 | Was there ever such a supreme act of obedience in the history of our race? |
10478 | Was this voice reproachful? |
10478 | What career was ever more varied? |
10478 | What character in history presents such wide contradictions? |
10478 | What ear could he reach? |
10478 | What had he naturally to expect from the zealots for that Law but a renewed persecution? |
10478 | What had he to live for, but Isaac? |
10478 | What is it worth? |
10478 | What monarch has transmitted to posterity such inestimable treasures of thought and language? |
10478 | What ruler ever did so much for a people in a single reign? |
10478 | What was that call, coupled with such a magnificent and cheering promise? |
10478 | What, then, are we to think of the revival of observances which lost their force three hundred years ago, unless connected with artistic music? |
10478 | When and where, in the annals of the great, has such a dreadful imprecation been uttered? |
10478 | When before in the history of the world has there been such a progress among mere barbarians, with fetichism for their native religion? |
10478 | When, how,--by the gradual spread of knowledge, or by supernatural intervention,--who can tell? |
10478 | Where else at that period could they have found such teachers? |
10478 | Where would have been the glories of Solomon but for the genius and deeds of David? |
10478 | Where, then, is his authority? |
10478 | Who can escape anxiety and fear? |
10478 | Who denies his faults? |
10478 | Who does not change, and yet remain individually the same? |
10478 | Who in all Israel was greater than he, even after he had anointed Saul to the kingly office? |
10478 | Who is free from corroding cares? |
10478 | Who is happy with any amount of wealth? |
10478 | Who is this stricken, persecuted, martyred personage, bearing the iniquity of the race, and thus providing a way for future salvation? |
10478 | Who knows what the private life of Shakspeare and Goethe may have been, but who would part with the writings they have left us? |
10478 | Who was this Prince of Salem? |
10478 | Who would listen to him? |
10478 | Whose ox have I taken, or whose ass have I taken, or whom have I defrauded? |
10478 | Why did I come forth from the womb that my days might be spent in shame?" |
10478 | Why did error seemingly prove as vital as truth in all the varied forms of civilization in the ancient world? |
10478 | Why did even tradition fail to keep alive the knowledge of God, at least among the people? |
10478 | Why did not art, science, philosophy, and literature save the most lauded nations of the ancient world? |
10478 | Why hast thou smitten us so that there is no healing for us?" |
10478 | Why so rapid a degeneracy among people favored not only with a primitive revelation, but by splendid triumphs of reason and knowledge? |
10478 | Will a flattered woman, once beautiful, ever admit that her charms have passed away? |
10478 | Would he not be called a fanatic? |
10478 | Yet what nation, in the world''s history, ever improved so much in forty years? |
10478 | give not Thine heritage to reproach, lest the heathen make us a by- word, and ask, Where is now thy God?" |
10478 | if he were obliged to carry their load, knowing well what that burden was? |
10478 | replied Jehu;"what peace can be made so long as Jezebel bears rule?" |
10648 | Where did you pick up that style? |
10648 | ...[ Footnote 9: Literally,"Know''st thou it well?" |
10648 | And had James the Second no private virtues? |
10648 | And to what purpose? |
10648 | And what is this fame? |
10648 | And what, after all, are the virtues ascribed to Charles? |
10648 | Are the agents of nature, and the power to understand them, worth no more than a street serenade, or the breath of a cigar? |
10648 | Are the miseries of continued possession less horrible than the struggles of the tremendous exorcism? |
10648 | As to the question which of the two is the greater production, it is like asking which is the greater, Dante''s"Commedia"or Shakspeare''s"Macbeth"? |
10648 | But can anything be more antagonistic to all the history of the race? |
10648 | But could Mandeville have created an Iago? |
10648 | But if the test of patriotism is the service rendered to one''s country, who more patriotic than he? |
10648 | But what should he have done? |
10648 | But when the question is, to life and its materials and its auxiliaries, how does it profit me? |
10648 | But, it is said, why not adopt milder measures? |
10648 | Can any biography shed light on the localities into which the Midsummer Night''s Dream admits me? |
10648 | Can inexperience be a better guide than experience, when it encounters crime and folly? |
10648 | De Quincey said,"You have made a new hole in your society kettle: how do you propose to mend it?" |
10648 | Did Shakspeare confide to any notary or parish recorder, sacristan, or surrogate in Stratford, the genesis of that delicate creation? |
10648 | Did he feel himself overmatched by any companion? |
10648 | Did the bard speak with authority? |
10648 | Has the acquisition been worth the sacrifice? |
10648 | Have not all nations suffered periods of corruption? |
10648 | He believed in political and social progress for his own countrymen; why should he doubt the utility of the same in other countries? |
10648 | He had renounced oppressive prerogatives; but where was the security that he would not resume them? |
10648 | He had, no doubt, passed salutary laws; but what assurance was there that he would not break them? |
10648 | Homer lies in sunshine; Chaucer is glad and erect; and Saadi says,"It was rumored abroad that I was penitent; but what had I to do with repentance?" |
10648 | How could a great artist like Byron put sentiments into the mouth of Cain such as would be harmless in the essays of a country parson? |
10648 | How few read"Uncle Tom''s Cabin,"compared with the multitudes who read that most powerful and popular book forty years ago? |
10648 | If he should appear in any company of human souls, who would not march in his troop? |
10648 | In what soil grew the flowers and ripened the fruits which have been the delight and the aliment of nations? |
10648 | Is it possible to doubt what sort of legislature will be chosen? |
10648 | Is it so now? |
10648 | Is there at last in his breast a Delphi whereof to ask concerning any thought or thing, whether it be verily so, yea or nay? |
10648 | It is but a Twelfth Night, or Midsummer Night''s Dream, or Winter Evening''s Tale: what signifies another picture more or less? |
10648 | One remembers again the trumpet- text in the Koran,--"The heavens and the earth and all that is between them, think ye we have created them in jest?" |
10648 | Say that Mount Aetna is cold: do we not see the snow on its sides? |
10648 | Take out the"Elegy in a Country Churchyard,"and how much is left of Gray for other generations to admire? |
10648 | The question, then, is this: Had Charles the First broken the fundamental laws of England? |
10648 | This is easily said; but what if Milton could not seduce his readers to drop immateriality from their thoughts? |
10648 | To the question, Who composed"Hamlet"and"Othello"? |
10648 | To the question, Who sung the wrath of Achilles and the wanderings of the much- versed Odysseus? |
10648 | Was Oliver Cromwell, his bitterest enemies themselves being judges, destitute of private virtues? |
10648 | Was he a born genius, like Byron and Burns, or was he merely a most industrious worker, aided by fortunate circumstances and the caprices of fashion? |
10648 | Was he overrated, as most famous men have been? |
10648 | Were they again to advance their money on pledges which had been forfeited over and over again? |
10648 | Were they again to be cozened by_ le Roi le veut_? |
10648 | What are our own minds, the portion of spirit with which we are best acquainted? |
10648 | What are the characteristics of his productions? |
10648 | What doctrine of civil or political economy would be applicable in all ages and all countries and all conditions? |
10648 | What does it signify? |
10648 | What gave him his prodigious and extraordinary popularity? |
10648 | What gentleman has he not instructed in the rudeness of his behavior? |
10648 | What great man can say more? |
10648 | What if the contrary opinion had taken so full a possession of the minds of men as to leave no room even for the half- belief which poetry requires? |
10648 | What if we are forgotten, as most men are destined to be? |
10648 | What is spirit? |
10648 | What is the niche he will probably occupy in the temple of literary fame? |
10648 | What king has he not taught state, as Talma taught Napoleon? |
10648 | What lover has he not outloved? |
10648 | What maiden has not found him finer than her delicacy? |
10648 | What mystery has he not signified his knowledge of? |
10648 | What office, or function, or district of man''s work has he not remembered? |
10648 | What point of morals, of manners, of economy, of philosophy, of religion, of taste, of the conduct of life, has he not settled? |
10648 | What sage has he not outseen? |
10648 | What says Dante? |
10648 | What trait of his private mind has he hidden in his dramas? |
10648 | What were the intellectual forces of his day, and how did he come to be counted among them? |
10648 | What would his single arm or declamation have availed? |
10648 | What would not the Shakspeare clubs give for one more authentic anecdote of the world''s great dramatist? |
10648 | What would that monarch have said to the speeches of Mirabeau? |
10648 | What_ could_ he have done? |
10648 | Where are the writings of Varro, said to have been the most learned man of all antiquity? |
10648 | Where is the proof that they were_ his own_ agonies, remorse, despair? |
10648 | Where now are the eight hundred thousand in the Alexandrian library, which Ptolemy collected with so great care,--what, even, their titles? |
10648 | Where shall we find in literature a sterner fanatical Puritan than John Balfour of Burley, or a fiercer royalist than Graham of Claverhouse? |
10648 | Whither away? |
10648 | Who but a madman would sweep away civilization with its factitious and remediable evils for barbarism with its untutored impulses and animal life? |
10648 | Who could not repeat the most famous passages in the writings of these two authors? |
10648 | Who did not know the shape of the Byronic collar and the rough, plaided form of"the Wizard of the North"? |
10648 | Who ever painted the old Cameronian with more felicity? |
10648 | Who is the best authority for truthfulness in the description of Spanish people, Cervantes or Byron? |
10648 | Who knows? |
10648 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
10648 | Why did he have faith in the English people of England, and yet show so little in the English people of America? |
10648 | Why do n''t they buy those?" |
10648 | Why is this? |
10648 | Why not pursue an end confessedly good by peaceable and regular means? |
10648 | Why was James driven from the throne? |
10648 | Why was he not retained upon conditions? |
10648 | Why, then, discuss the ideas and influence of so despicable a creature? |
10648 | Will these later lights also cease to burn? |
10648 | Will they too pass away? |
10648 | and to have answer, and to rely on that? |
27603 | Ah, Monsieur,was their answer,"what cause have you to complain? |
27603 | And what news will you give me? 27603 ''And did you see nothing,"said Orthon,"when you leapt from your bed?" |
27603 | ''"And have you wings?" |
27603 | ''"And how far is it from Prague to this?" |
27603 | ''"And when did he die?" |
27603 | ''"And whence do you come?" |
27603 | ''"And you have come so quickly?" |
27603 | ''"And you, who are so faithful a messenger,"inquired the Chevalier,"what is your name?" |
27603 | ''"How far?" |
27603 | ''"How, then, do you fly so fast?" |
27603 | ''"Is it you who gave counsel that I should come hither by that bank of the stream, and not go straight where Talbot and the English are?" |
27603 | ''And who is your Lord?'' |
27603 | ''Have you no work to do? |
27603 | ''In what language do your Voices speak?'' |
27603 | ''Is he a prophet, or has he messengers who ride at night with the wind? |
27603 | ''My lord,''she cried,''have I given you cause to wish my death? |
27603 | ''Now, the knight was pleasing to Orthon, so he answered,"Is this truly your will?" |
27603 | ''One of us asked"Where is the column?" |
27603 | ''Then asked the Chevalier,"By whom are you sent here?" |
27603 | ''Traitor, why dost thou not eat?'' |
27603 | ''Well, my lass,''said he,''is our king to be driven from France, and are we all to become English?'' |
27603 | ''What did they say?'' |
27603 | ''What has he done?'' |
27603 | ''What have I or my children done,''he said to Pizarro,''that I should meet such a doom? |
27603 | ''What is there that a man does_ not_ dare?'' |
27603 | ''When do we start?'' |
27603 | ''Wilson came to me and said,"Burnham, can you follow back along the vlei where we''ve just come?" |
27603 | ''You did not expect this in the morning?'' |
27603 | Again asked King Olaf:''Who lies there out beyond with so many ships?'' |
27603 | Against 30,000 men what could 5,000 avail? |
27603 | Ah, gentle duke, are you afraid? |
27603 | All agreed that she had some strange help given to her; but who gave it? |
27603 | And Olaf Tryggvason asked his men:''Who is chief over this force that lies here nearest to us?'' |
27603 | And after the body of Don Alonzo was carried from the ground, he said to the second,''Don Diego, my lord, have I done enough?'' |
27603 | And chiefly pressed he on where Hacon''s banner was, crying,''Where is the Norsemen''s king? |
27603 | And the Chevalier leaped out of his bed and demanded,"Who is it that rocks my bed at this hour of the night?". |
27603 | And the Sieur de Corasse hid it in his heart and answered,"No; what have you heard?" |
27603 | And they said:''Is it true that Rolf Stake and his Berserks flee neither fire nor iron?'' |
27603 | And were the fires that I saw those of friends or enemies? |
27603 | And yet again asked King Olaf Tryggvason:''Who owns those large ships that lie out beyond the other squadrons?'' |
27603 | Besides, how could one land on the opposite bank among willows which would scuttle the boat, and with a flood of unknown extent? |
27603 | But how was the Maid to find the English? |
27603 | But was she partially insane? |
27603 | But what did that mean which he said about the under- payment, wildgoose for goose, little pig for old swine, half clay for gold?'' |
27603 | But who was the Man in White? |
27603 | Catherine?'' |
27603 | Charles caught sight of the eager young face, and, turning suddenly towards him cried,''Will_ you_ not assist me?'' |
27603 | Cruel and cowardly deeds are done in all wars, but when was there ever such a general as the Maid, to comfort the dying? |
27603 | Did Joan look forward to her end, did she know that her days were numbered? |
27603 | Did he notice, one wonders, that his gay anticipations were received in ominous silence by the chiefs? |
27603 | Do n''t you know a wolf''s howl when you hear it?" |
27603 | Don Alonzo on his side came forward to meet him, and asked,''Señor Bayardo, what do you want of me?'' |
27603 | Echo answers"Who?"'' |
27603 | Has anyone done you any harm, and have you not been well paid for your services?" |
27603 | Have you no work to do? |
27603 | Have you no work to do?''] |
27603 | He drew near, unable to see the boat, but perceiving that the agitation of the branches increased, he called out,''Who goes there?'' |
27603 | How did a woman defeat the hardy English soldiers who were used to chase the French before them like sheep? |
27603 | How did it happen that a girl of seventeen, who could neither read nor write, became the greatest general on the side of France? |
27603 | How many men were with him? |
27603 | IV HOW THE MAID RODE TO PARIS WHAT was to be done after the crowning of the king? |
27603 | Know you not that I promised your wife to bring you back safe and sound?" |
27603 | On horseback or on foot? |
27603 | One day she went to Charles and said,''Gentle Dauphin, why do you delay to believe me? |
27603 | Our army would doubtless go forward at daybreak, but was it already occupying this place? |
27603 | Said the King:''Skald, what news?'' |
27603 | Said the archbishop:''Oh, Jeanne, in what place do you hope to die?'' |
27603 | She asked how she, a girl, who could not ride or use sword and lance, could be of any help? |
27603 | She had saved his life at Jargeau, but where was the duke when Joan was a prisoner? |
27603 | She, therefore, prayed for counsel to her Saints; might she leap from the top of the tower? |
27603 | Should it be in Highland or English dress? |
27603 | So the Sieur de Corasse awoke with a start and inquired,"Who is there?" |
27603 | The King answered:''Great tidings these, and worth telling; but what is thy errand hither?'' |
27603 | The King asked:''What is it of which thou wouldst complain?'' |
27603 | The King asked:''Who are the leading men in this counsel to take the land from me?'' |
27603 | The cold is increasing: shall I be able to bear it till to- morrow, seeing that I feel my naked limbs stiffening already?" |
27603 | The judge asked her if her Voices had been with her again? |
27603 | Then asked the King,''Against whom is aimed this cut?'' |
27603 | Then said King Olaf:''What means that which Emund told of Atti the Silly?'' |
27603 | Then said the King:''What expedient can we find? |
27603 | Then said the King:''What wouldst thou say, boy, that thou lookest at me so?'' |
27603 | Then spake the King:''Tell me this, noble lords, whereto pointed that law question of which Emund asked yesterday?'' |
27603 | Then up stood Gudbrand of the Dales and spake:''Where is now thy God, O King? |
27603 | They were more surprised than ever when one of the young men in it cried out in English as they came alongside,''Wo n''t you heave us a rope, now?'' |
27603 | They were now again on Scottish ground, and the question was, whither were they to go next? |
27603 | To this the white figure only answered coldly,"What does that matter, as long as you are well paid?" |
27603 | Was it safe and wise to obey the Maid? |
27603 | What are we to think about these visions and these Voices which were with Joan to her death? |
27603 | What did Joan say to the king, and what was the sign? |
27603 | What is thy judgment herein, sire?'' |
27603 | What reward, then, was Joan to choose? |
27603 | When the rite was done, Joan asked:''Do they face us, or have they turned their backs?'' |
27603 | Whence come you?" |
27603 | Where were Dunois and d''Alençon, Xaintrailles and La Hire? |
27603 | Who can point me to him?'' |
27603 | Who could be lazy or a coward when a girl set such an example? |
27603 | Who hang so fiercely on the flying Gaul, Foiled by a woman''s hand before a battered wall?'' |
27603 | Who was the cause of the blunder? |
27603 | Who, then, was to be King of France? |
27603 | Why dares he not come forth and show himself? |
27603 | Why doth he hide him? |
27603 | Would the boat, however, resist more shocks of this kind? |
27603 | Would they not bear her up in their hands? |
27603 | [ Illustration: Robert thinks Joan crazed]''And who is your Master?'' |
27603 | and put out the flame'']''"Are you the Bastard of Orleans?" |
27603 | but with men faint and dispirited by hunger? |
27603 | have the children of my tribe forsaken me?'' |
27603 | have you never seen a ship amongst breakers before? |
27603 | said I to the Squire, who was telling me his tale,''and how could the Count know or guess what befell? |
1360 | Is that true, foster- father? |
1360 | Where is the lady? |
1360 | Ah, loving God, Are we as creeping things, which have no lord? |
1360 | And a truer law of social science than any that political economists are wo nt to lay down, is that old_ Dov''e la donna_? |
1360 | And even in their migration, far back in these dim and mystic ages, have we found the earliest link of the long chain? |
1360 | And he sat down by the door; and one said to him,"Why art thou so dead pale? |
1360 | And how was that strange chance lost? |
1360 | And made them like the dust before his sword, And the driven stubble before his bow? |
1360 | And then? |
1360 | And what came of it all? |
1360 | And what, to return, what was the end of the great Cyrus and of his empire? |
1360 | And whence came their Christianity? |
1360 | And who shall judge her harshly for so doing? |
1360 | And why? |
1360 | Are these all dreams? |
1360 | Are we no more than these, save in degree? |
1360 | As in the Hindoo cosmogony, the world stands on an elephant, and the elephant on a tortoise, and the tortoise on-- what? |
1360 | But civilisation must have begun somewhen, somewhere, with some person, or some family, or some nation; and how did it begin? |
1360 | But how did these wild Vikings become Christian men? |
1360 | But if so, why was he specially blamed for what certainly others did likewise? |
1360 | But let me ask you, Did I say too much, when I said, that to these Persians we owe that we are here to- night? |
1360 | But shall we despise those who went before us, and on whose accumulated labours we now stand? |
1360 | But was Paracelsus a drunkard after all? |
1360 | But what shall I say of the most famous of these men-- Paracelsus? |
1360 | But whence comes the royal race, the aristocracy, the priesthood? |
1360 | But which equality? |
1360 | But who forced it on the Norsemen of Scotland, England, Ireland, Neustria, Russia, and all the Eastern Baltic? |
1360 | Death-- what was death to them? |
1360 | Did any of you ever read-- if you have not you should read-- Archbishop Whately''s"Historic Doubts about the Emperor Napoleon the First"? |
1360 | Do they not put us in mind of the dreams of Nebuchadnezzar, in the Book of Daniel? |
1360 | Do you demur? |
1360 | Does the emperor send the thief to the gallows, or the thing which he has stolen? |
1360 | Dost thou not bear the marks of the wounds?" |
1360 | For if the agonising old nations fail to regenerate themselves, what can befall? |
1360 | For if we be, as we are wo nt to boast, the salt of the earth and the light of the world, what if the salt should lose its savour? |
1360 | For what cared they? |
1360 | Gentlemen, what concern is that of yours or mine? |
1360 | Harpagus comes; and after eating his fill, is asked how he likes the king''s meat? |
1360 | Have we not seen that it does not, can not last? |
1360 | Have we not seen that too, though, thank God, neither in England nor in the United States? |
1360 | Have you not read-- many of you surely have-- La Motte Fouque''s romance of"Sintram?" |
1360 | He, too, tried to solve for his people the mystery of evil; and if he did not succeed, who has succeeded yet? |
1360 | How can it last? |
1360 | How can they be otherwise, if Mr. Browning set them forth-- a genius as accurate and penetrating as he is wise and pure? |
1360 | How else shall we explain such a phenomenon as those old crusades? |
1360 | If the great and wise philosopher Iamblicus believed such things, why might not the men of the sixteenth century? |
1360 | Is it not rather that these men are our forefathers? |
1360 | Man? |
1360 | Men who held such a creed, and could speak truth and draw the bow, what might they not do when the hour and the man arrived? |
1360 | Nay, if anyone should ask-- And why not 400,000 years ago, on Miocene continents long sunk beneath the Tropic sea? |
1360 | On what side wert thou in the fight?" |
1360 | Romance? |
1360 | Shall it be thus? |
1360 | Shall we not reverence our spiritual ancestors? |
1360 | Strangeness? |
1360 | Such a nation-- such a society-- what nobler conception of mortal existence can we form? |
1360 | The Moors, the best physicians of the Middle Ages, had their heads full, as the"Arabian Nights"prove, of enchanters, genii, peris, and what not? |
1360 | The prince stated that he first took the apparition to be that of the blessed St. Francis; but not seeing the stigmata, he exclaimed,"How? |
1360 | They did it cruelly, clumsily, ill: but was there ever work done on earth, however noble, which was not-- alas, alas!--done somewhat ill? |
1360 | They have not said,"She did it; but after all, was the deed so very inexcusable?" |
1360 | To increase the inequalities of nature by their own selfishness, instead of decreasing them, into the equality of grace, by their own self- sacrifice? |
1360 | Under the genial influences of free institutions will the good seed which is in them take root downwards, and bear fruit upwards? |
1360 | Was he to go on to the end, die, and no more? |
1360 | Was he to sink into the mere pedant; or, if he could not do that, into the mere court versifier? |
1360 | We used to question in Jomsburg whether a man felt when his head was off? |
1360 | Well, that would be on the whole true, thank God; but what need is there to say it? |
1360 | Were they undertaken for any purpose, commercial or other? |
1360 | What but that lower depth within the lowest deep? |
1360 | What if that be the true key to the mystery of humanity and its origin? |
1360 | What if the Bible after all was right, and even more right than we were taught to think? |
1360 | What if the legend of the change of climate be the dim recollection of an enormous physical fact? |
1360 | What if the light which is in us should become darkness? |
1360 | What if the old Puritan doctrine of Election should be even of a deeper and wider application than divines have been wo nt to think? |
1360 | What if they have, each in their turn, abused that divine teaching to make themselves the tyrants, instead of the ministers, of the less enlightened? |
1360 | What is all this? |
1360 | What motives prompted Cyrus, and Darius after him, to do that deed? |
1360 | What site is more delicious and more lovely? |
1360 | What then? |
1360 | What was the result of all this misery and wrong? |
1360 | What will they make two thousand years hence, of the landing at Boulogne with the tame eagle? |
1360 | What, when even Imperialism has been tried and failed, as fail it must? |
1360 | Where could he have rather wished to find himself? |
1360 | While ever out of the eternal heavens Looks patient down the great magnanimous God, Who, Master of all worlds, did sacrifice All to Himself? |
1360 | Who hath performed and made these things, Calling the generations from the beginning? |
1360 | Who subdued nations at his presence, And gave him dominion over kings? |
1360 | Who will give me life? |
1360 | Who will help me? |
1360 | Who will quicken me? |
1360 | Why art thou so?" |
1360 | Why dost thou not call for the leech?" |
1360 | Why not? |
1360 | Why should he? |
1360 | Why talk of the shame of our ancestors? |
1360 | Will they revive? |
1360 | Will you complain of a dog for biting you, if you lay hold of his tail? |
1360 | Would not that be, indeed, the kingdom of God come on earth? |
1360 | of the Italian judge, who used to ask, as a preliminary to every case, civil or criminal, which was brought before him,_ Dov''e la donna_? |
1360 | sometimes too fearful to be told, or at least sensational romances, which we shall take care not to tell, because we shall not be believed? |
1360 | that their blood runs in the veins of perhaps three men out of four in any general assembly, whether in America or in Britain? |
39227 | Again: What shall teach thee what is the Day of Judgment? |
39227 | And all the devil''s service? |
39227 | And all the devil''s works? |
39227 | And of how many more has all remembrance perished through the want of records? |
39227 | And they asked him,"What were you thinking about, that you did not come along with us? |
39227 | And what shall teach thee what the Day of Judgment is? |
39227 | Believest thou in Christ the Son of God? |
39227 | Believest thou in God the Almighty Father? |
39227 | Believest thou in the Holy Ghost? |
39227 | But how shall information, accurate and trustworthy, be obtained? |
39227 | But what is to be done? |
39227 | For our belief teaches us that our blessed God suffers us not to be tempted more than we may; how should a man ask such service? |
39227 | Forsakest thou the devil? |
39227 | How could the great duke endure that a woman of the low rank of vassal should become queen and rule over him? |
39227 | How much more then oughtest thou to have done it for the King of Kings and Lord of all?" |
39227 | Indeed, his mother, when gossip arose among the neighbors concerning his prodigal ways, made answer:"What think ye of my son? |
39227 | Martin?" |
39227 | One soldier, having come across some hay which belonged to a poor man said,"Has, then, the king given us permission to take only grass? |
39227 | Then Clovis said:"Why have you disgraced our family by allowing yourself to be taken prisoner? |
39227 | Then he asked them with his own lips:"Is there any one here who has a cause? |
39227 | Upon which the monks said,"What didst thou ask of the Lord?" |
39227 | What more can we say? |
39227 | What more shall I say? |
39227 | What shall I say of the multitudes of bishops, hermits, and abbots? |
39227 | When the horses were in, our sailing- master called out to his mariners who were at the prow:"Are you all ready?" |
39227 | When will our meeting be? |
39227 | Whence arises such great audacity? |
39227 | Whence proceeds such rash presumption? |
39227 | Where are my chests which contain my treasures?" |
39227 | Who has ever fled to him for protection without receiving it? |
39227 | Who is he that shall intercede with Him, unless by His permission? |
39227 | Who that has been deserted by his friends has he ever failed to restore to his rights?" |
39227 | Who were these Wandering Students? |
39227 | Why do I say"of those who remained"? |
39227 | [ 252][ Sidenote: Objections to Charles of Lorraine][ Sidenote: Election of Hugh Capet urged]"What dignity shall we gain by making Charles king? |
39227 | [ 401] What shall I add? |
39227 | [ Sidenote: The value of sources to the student] But why should the younger student trouble himself, or be troubled, with any of these things? |
39227 | what hath seduced thee from thy generous Lord, Who created thee and fashioned thee and disposed thee aright? |
39227 | what is thy mind? |
6772 | Is it not,said he,"as if this people would make a God of me? |
6772 | But how could he consider an agreement valid, which was extorted from his sovereign, and based upon treason? |
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?" |
6773 | What should I have done with this madman? |
6773 | --"And how is that to be done?" |
6773 | But how was this union to be renewed? |
6773 | But if it was thus dangerous to be the secret depositary of such a commission, how much more so to execute it? |
6773 | Who would any longer devote his services to so ungrateful a master? |
6773 | and whence were to be derived the necessary means for continuing the war? |
2973 | And if they should be forgeries? |
2973 | And it was she? |
2973 | And what crime have I committed? |
2973 | And who is that other man over there? |
2973 | Are the members knaves? |
2973 | But how about signing bills of exchange? |
2973 | But if not? |
2973 | But now that the beloved object has left you, I suppose you are unhappy? |
2973 | But supposing such a man is attacked? |
2973 | But supposing they ask me a question? |
2973 | But to return to the dying man; what will be done to his antagonist? |
2973 | But we shall see each other to- morrow? |
2973 | But where had I the pleasure of speaking to you? |
2973 | But why do you condemn him to celibacy? |
2973 | But would my mother like me to go? |
2973 | By the way, M. de Seingalt, do you know that you are a very extraordinary man? |
2973 | Can not anything be done? |
2973 | Did you see her? |
2973 | Do they speak French there? |
2973 | Do you make a mystery of it? |
2973 | Do you mean that? |
2973 | Do you think it is all true? |
2973 | Do you think,said I,"that those four notes of theirs can be forgeries?" |
2973 | Does the charming Frenchwoman like gaming? |
2973 | For me? 2973 For what reason, my lord?" |
2973 | Goudar a rascal, is he? 2973 Has he any offspring?" |
2973 | Have you made up your mind not to have anything more to do with her? |
2973 | He is a Gascon? |
2973 | How can you tell how much they are worth, not knowing their names? |
2973 | How did you find out that she spent fourteen months in London? |
2973 | How much will he want? |
2973 | How would you punish me? |
2973 | I have n''t got them about me; but why do you want me to return them to you? |
2973 | I know that,I said,"but where did she pass the night?" |
2973 | I meant to carry it out this morning, but how was I to know that she had debts? |
2973 | I see it is, but why do you chain it? |
2973 | I suppose the marks of the blows you gave me make my face so repulsive? |
2973 | In what part of Paris? |
2973 | Is she married? |
2973 | Is the club treasury rich? |
2973 | It''s very strange Pembroke never told me; how did you find out the address? |
2973 | More of my charms? |
2973 | Nobody knows who she was, but I suppose you do? |
2973 | Nothing? 2973 Perhaps not, but how come you who are of their party to be talking to me in this fashion?" |
2973 | Shall I send you a note to warn you? |
2973 | Supposing I had written, what would your answer have been? |
2973 | Tall, thin, and dark, and marked with the smallpox? 2973 Then I will take some too, and you will give it me, wo n''t you, just to shew that you bear no malice?" |
2973 | Then do you know a better way? |
2973 | Then you are not in love with her? |
2973 | Then you are the Italian,she said,"who put up that notice that amused all the town?" |
2973 | Then you do n''t know the laws of this country? |
2973 | Then you have heard what has happened? |
2973 | Then you have no wish to do her any bodily harm? |
2973 | Twenty miles? |
2973 | What do they do? |
2973 | What do you mean? |
2973 | What have we here, my lord? |
2973 | What is it? |
2973 | What should I do with it? 2973 What would she do with the money?" |
2973 | What would you advise my doing to clear the matter up? |
2973 | What''s his name? |
2973 | What''s the matter? 2973 What? |
2973 | Where are you going? 2973 Where do you live?" |
2973 | Where does she come from? |
2973 | Where have you been hiding all this time? |
2973 | Who could prevent him? |
2973 | Whom shall I find to do so? |
2973 | Why did you delay putting your project into execution? |
2973 | Why do you want to lodge cheaply? |
2973 | Why not? |
2973 | Why wo n''t she consent? |
2973 | Will you be alone? |
2973 | Will you let the room again in the same way? |
2973 | Will you tell me your business now, or after breakfast? |
2973 | Wo n''t you fix the time? |
2973 | You have made up your mind, I suppose? |
2973 | You love me? 2973 You think that possible, you old witch, do you? |
2973 | And you have actually been all these months in London without giving it me?" |
2973 | Are you in love with her?" |
2973 | Besides; what''s in a name? |
2973 | But have you made up your mind not to see her again?" |
2973 | But may I ask your worship the name of my accuser?" |
2973 | Castelbajac?" |
2973 | Does she know that I owe my life to you?" |
2973 | From what quarter?" |
2973 | How do they recognize a dangerous hand?" |
2973 | I bowed to her and to her companion, and then said,--"What explanation do you require?" |
2973 | I ought to have treated this learned and distinguished man with more politeness, but who can sound human weakness to its depths? |
2973 | Is n''t the price enough?" |
2973 | May I ask you to be with me when I perform this exploit?" |
2973 | May I hope to obtain it?" |
2973 | Perhaps the reader will think that I was too presumptuous, but why should I suppose that there would be any difficulty? |
2973 | She must have made a great fortune here, and have I not a right to take it from her, were it only for vengeance sake?" |
2973 | Should I have been disabused if I had seen him a few days after? |
2973 | There is no question of bargaining; all I want to know is whether you think you have a right to insult me, and that I am going to bear it?" |
2973 | What should I have said if I had been told in the morning that instead of drowning myself I should take part in so pleasant an entertainment? |
2973 | What we want to know about a man is how much he has got? |
2973 | Where could he have seen her?" |
2973 | Where did you think of dining?" |
2973 | Who will introduce you?" |
2973 | Why did I not look another way? |
2973 | Why did I not press her? |
2973 | Would you be kind enough to inform me as to its nature?" |
2973 | Would you like to go to school? |
2973 | You will agree with me that his wife is very pretty?" |
2973 | said he,"your sadness has departed, then?" |
2973 | said she,"are you not going to spend the night with me?" |
32690 | And what is the proposed compensation to the Northern States for a sacrifice of every principle of right, every impulse of humanity? 32690 By whose instigation?" |
32690 | Can we carry on the war much longer? |
32690 | Champigny, are you not an ex- noble? |
32690 | Dorival, do you know anything of the conspiracy? |
32690 | Durfort, were you not in the bodyguard? |
32690 | Fortune,he exclaimed,"dost thou abandon me? |
32690 | Gondrecourt, is not your father- in- law at the Luxembourg? |
32690 | Guidreville, are you a priest? |
32690 | Have the armies been written to? |
32690 | In the name of whom? |
32690 | Is it possible,cried Henriot, as he came forth from the Hôtel de Ville,"that these scoundrels of gunners have abandoned me? |
32690 | Ménil, were you not a domestic of the ex- constitutional Menou? |
32690 | No matter; what is thy name? 32690 Vély, were you not architect for Madame?" |
32690 | What aim? |
32690 | What tempted you, then? |
32690 | Who is that person? |
32690 | Why do n''t you lay down your arms? |
32690 | Will he fight? |
32690 | Will this man long remain master of the Convention? |
32690 | Will you,they replied to the Governor,"will you, brave General, that we should, like sheep, throw ourselves into the jaws of the wolf? |
32690 | A black Flag hung on this latter noble Edifice, appealing to the pity of the besiegers; for though maddened, were they not still our brethren? |
32690 | A group of representatives went forth from the hall and cried,"What are you doing, soldiers? |
32690 | Admitting it as a certainty that I obtain both, what stock should I add to my little fund of happiness? |
32690 | And now, mere deaf madness and cannon- shot enveloping them, will not the desperate Municipality fly, at last, into the arms of Royalism itself? |
32690 | And so Marat,"People''s Friend"is ended: the lone Stylites has been hurled down suddenly from his Pillar-- whitherward? |
32690 | Apparently she will to Paris on some errand? |
32690 | Are they admitted as property? |
32690 | As for fame, what is it? |
32690 | At this moment Captain Pearson, her commander, hailed the Bonhomme Richard and demanded,"What ship is that?" |
32690 | Bad is growing ever worse here; and how will the worse stop, till it have grown worst of all? |
32690 | But who would dare to venture among the whites? |
32690 | Does not the Coalition, like a fire- tide, pour in; Prussia through the opened Northeast; Austria, England through the Northwest? |
32690 | Have not we destroyed the Knights of Malta, because these madmen believed that God had called them to make war upon Mussulmans? |
32690 | Have not we destroyed the pope, who called upon Europe to make war upon Mussulmans? |
32690 | He is gone then, and has not seen us? |
32690 | Her business is with Marat, then? |
32690 | His anticipations thus realized, his intentions accomplished, what must have been the feelings of such a man as Jenner? |
32690 | How can such political and legislative disorder be regulated? |
32690 | How shall we explain either puzzle-- that England should have so nearly missed success, to fail at last? |
32690 | If slaves are to be imported, shall not the exports produced by their labor supply a revenue to help the government defend their masters? |
32690 | If they were bastards, who had made them so? |
32690 | Is Catiline at our gates? |
32690 | Is it I who need to be accused of making myself master in any respect? |
32690 | Is not La Vendée still blazing-- alas too literally-- rogue Rossignol burning the very corn- mills? |
32690 | Many take off their hats, saluting reverently; for what heart but must be touched? |
32690 | Not to the reign of Brotherhood and Perfect Felicity; yet surely on the way toward that? |
32690 | Now what are the Traitors doing at Caen? |
32690 | O Reader, knowest thou that hard word? |
32690 | Ought population alone to be the basis of apportionment, or should property be taken into account? |
32690 | Ought the number from each State to be fixed, or to increase with the increase of population? |
32690 | Said Mr. Wilson:"Are they admitted as citizens? |
32690 | Soldiers, with such a prospect before you, can you fail in courage and constancy?" |
32690 | The British lieutenant, like a true officer, then questioned his commander,"Have you struck, sir?" |
32690 | The first important question determined by the convention was, whether the confederation should be amended or a new government formed? |
32690 | The hail was repeated:"What ship is that? |
32690 | The man from whom you take his Life, to him can the whole combined world do more? |
32690 | The presentiment existed, for had not the Abbé Raynal long before predicted a vindicator for the race? |
32690 | The procuring of supplies of linen yarn needed for the warp of these textiles was not difficult, but where was the cotton yarn to come from? |
32690 | The true question at present is, whether the Southern States shall or shall not be parties to the Union? |
32690 | Then why is not other property admitted into the computation?" |
32690 | Then why not on an equality with citizens? |
32690 | They were not allowed to vote; why should they be represented? |
32690 | They were not represented in the States; why should they be in the General Government? |
32690 | Was it not too late? |
32690 | Were not all outcasts, hunted beasts, fugitive slaves? |
32690 | What Deputies are at Caen?" |
32690 | What could it mean? |
32690 | What is the meaning of this insolent dictation, the array of arms, the violation of the national temple, merely to command you to be happy? |
32690 | What is the remedy for this evil? |
32690 | What temper he is in? |
32690 | What was his reply? |
32690 | What will become of Lyons? |
32690 | Where are the enemies of the nation, that this outrage should be attempted? |
32690 | Who gives you this command? |
32690 | Who imposes his imperious laws? |
32690 | Why repeat instances? |
32690 | Why, then, must we ask on the other side, did England fail at last? |
32690 | or that America should have succeeded, after having been almost constantly on the brink of failure? |
2975 | And supposing me to be inclined to give that sum? |
2975 | And supposing she is not willing? |
2975 | And you have been with him ever since you left England? 2975 As you are going to make me such a handsome present, why not send me back to my father''s house? |
2975 | Belongings? 2975 But why should your excellency not wait till tomorrow?" |
2975 | By whom? |
2975 | Ca n''t the prince find her a husband? |
2975 | Certainly, my lord; does not your excellency consider her as worthy of love? |
2975 | Did you not notice him walking up and down''under the windows? |
2975 | Does your excellency intend spending the spring at Warsaw? |
2975 | Does your highness accuse God of injustice, then? |
2975 | For how much is the forged bill? |
2975 | Have you seen any military service? |
2975 | How about his honour? |
2975 | How about your belongings? |
2975 | How can he, unless you have told him about our quarrel? |
2975 | How do you mean? |
2975 | How is that? |
2975 | How simple? |
2975 | How so? |
2975 | I am sorry for them, but it''s their own fault; why did n''t they take more care? |
2975 | I had forgotten to ask you,she said, graciously,"if you believe the new calculation of the calendar to be exempt from error?" |
2975 | I was your lover, and a fortunate one, too,I replied;"but before I tell you my name, with whom are you, and how are you?" |
2975 | In spite of the extenuating circumstances, my lord? |
2975 | Is n''t that rather a strong expression? |
2975 | Is the bill for a large sum? |
2975 | Is the lady to sup alone? |
2975 | May I presume to ask your excellency''s advice? |
2975 | Nervous? 2975 Nothing more than that?" |
2975 | Oh, but did n''t he come to call on me this morning? |
2975 | Perhaps you were nervous? |
2975 | Schwerin is here, is he? |
2975 | Tell me, at least, what is the nature of your punishment? |
2975 | Then she has the purse? |
2975 | Then what do you propose doing? |
2975 | Then what would you have done? |
2975 | Then why did you not answer my question? |
2975 | Then why have I been brought here? 2975 Then you give her up?" |
2975 | Very good; then will you arrange this matter for me? 2975 Warszawa?" |
2975 | Well, gentlemen,said I,"you have mustered in great strength; why is this?" |
2975 | Well, if she is satisfied and I enjoy her, can I still continue to keep her? |
2975 | What am I to do here? 2975 What are you doing at Vienna?" |
2975 | What boots it, since I am a lost soul? 2975 What circumstances? |
2975 | What do you mean? 2975 What do you want here?" |
2975 | What has happened? |
2975 | What has she against me? |
2975 | What have I done? |
2975 | What is your name? |
2975 | What must I give her per month? |
2975 | What way is that? |
2975 | What will your highness say on the day when I am proved to be right? |
2975 | What will your lover say? |
2975 | What will your salary be? |
2975 | Where are you living now? |
2975 | Where do you live? |
2975 | Where is the girl? |
2975 | Who are''us''? |
2975 | Who gave you the invitation? |
2975 | Who is this gentleman? |
2975 | Why is she so sour? |
2975 | Why should they? |
2975 | Why so? |
2975 | Without any light? |
2975 | Would it not be worthy of your majesty to put Russia on an equality with the rest of the world in this respect, by adopting the Gregorian calendar? 2975 You mean Caroline, I expect?" |
2975 | Your governess? 2975 And now tell me who you are? |
2975 | At this the general called out,"Is this a duel, sir?" |
2975 | But I hope you have seen other things in Russia less ridiculous than these statues?" |
2975 | But for myself; was it a piece of good or ill luck for me? |
2975 | But he returned to the charge and said,--"Can you cite any passage of Horace( not in manuscript) where he shews his talent for delicacy and satire?" |
2975 | But is it true that you do not distinguish between the day and night hours?" |
2975 | By the way, why did you send me the length of your sword? |
2975 | Do n''t you think I am right?" |
2975 | Do you expect the damned to acknowledge the justice of the decree which has consigned them to eternal woe?" |
2975 | Do you think me such a coward as to dread the approach of what is common to all? |
2975 | Everyone to his taste, and we can only hope that the editor may obtain his wish; but who told this silly fellow that Catherine desired such a death? |
2975 | Governess at your age?" |
2975 | Governess to your family, you mean, I suppose?" |
2975 | He has not abandoned me, but his regiment was ordered to Stetin, and since then--""And since then?" |
2975 | How could you have been so foolish as to come here without money?" |
2975 | I sent in my name, and the worthy old man greeted me with:"What can I do for you?" |
2975 | I suppose you have plenty of money?" |
2975 | I suppose you will give fifty florins?" |
2975 | If I had imitated you I should no longer be in the land of the living; I am told you made an excellent dinner?" |
2975 | Is it because that is his opinion, and are we to conclude that he is therefore person of genius? |
2975 | Is my death any the happier from my not foreseeing it? |
2975 | Is she your wife? |
2975 | Monday?" |
2975 | My brother is a poor lieutenant who can not help me; what can I do? |
2975 | Petersburg?" |
2975 | The king( who had taken the name of Augustus himself) looked grave and said,--"What sovereigns have adopted a disguised form of the name Augustus?" |
2975 | The next morning, as we were taking coffee together, two individuals came into the room, and asked the rude question,--"Who are you, madam?" |
2975 | Thereupon the palatin, speaking in his friendliest manner, said to me,--"What has taken place between you and Branicki?" |
2975 | To come to the truth we should have to interrogate the late empress, and ask her some such question as:"Are you well pleased to have died suddenly?" |
2975 | What am I to say? |
2975 | What business have you here at all, and who authorizes such disgraceful proceedings?" |
2975 | What else could I think, after an actor like Clerval had assured me I had a talent for acting and had offered me a good engagement? |
2975 | What would you do if I were to take you at your word?" |
2975 | When it came to losing a second game he said,--"Where is your head to- night?" |
2975 | Where did you find that?" |
2975 | Why did n''t they put him there before I ever knew him?" |
2975 | Why did you come back?" |
2975 | Will you carry the thing through?" |
2975 | Will you oblige me in the matter?" |
2975 | Would you like her now?" |
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? |
2958 | Alone? |
2958 | And for the rest you absolve yourself? |
2958 | And he forgives your amorous caprices? |
2958 | And if the weather were bad? |
2958 | And the gondola? |
2958 | And what is that decision? |
2958 | And why does he not fear the same danger for you, when your ecstasies are in reality much more frequent than mine? |
2958 | Are you mad, dearest? 2958 Are you sleepy?" |
2958 | But I hope that your lover...."Will not be there? 2958 But are you not certain that you do not worship a cruel divinity?" |
2958 | But how could you be persuaded to assume that disguise, and to come here? 2958 But may I hope that he will so far honour me as to throw up his incognito?" |
2958 | But what will your lover say? |
2958 | But you must have a lover? |
2958 | Can such an angel as you have any? |
2958 | Can you suppose that I would not have told you all about it, if I had ever left the convent, even once? 2958 Could I not wait for you at your casino?" |
2958 | Could you not say that you are ill? |
2958 | Cruel darling, have you promised me happiness only to make me suffer the tortures of Tantalus? 2958 Did you faithfully carry the message to Muran?" |
2958 | Do you believe her to be happy, madam? |
2958 | Do you know him? |
2958 | Do you love her still? |
2958 | Do you visit the foreign ambassadors? |
2958 | Does she think herself bound to be entirely faithful to me, with the knowledge she has now of my own unfaithfulness? |
2958 | He loves me as I love you; do you believe in my love for you? |
2958 | How can you know them if you do not see them? |
2958 | How could I hesitate, my love, in doing anything to please you, provided my honour is not implicated? 2958 How do you know that my friend can write poetry?" |
2958 | How so? |
2958 | It is a magnificent present, has he given you the snuffers likewise? |
2958 | It is impossible,I said to her once,"that some time or other one of the nuns should not want to speak to you when you are absent?" |
2958 | May I venture to ask you for a pledge? 2958 My beloved one, you reason beautifully, but will you tell me where you have managed, in a convent, to pass the Rubicon?" |
2958 | My grief would be as great as yours, believe me, but if I remain what shall we do? |
2958 | That will be the eighth? |
2958 | Then how can I answer? |
2958 | Then you are the only one able to perform that miracle? |
2958 | Then you did not begin by reading the writings of Lord Bolingbroke? 2958 Then, how did you come here? |
2958 | Was it arranged by your lover''s orders? |
2958 | What do you mean by caprices? 2958 What do you want?" |
2958 | What is the matter? |
2958 | What pledge do you want? |
2958 | What sort of a life do you lead in Venice? |
2958 | When did you confide in him? |
2958 | When shall I have the happiness of convincing you of my devotion with complete freedom and in all the joy of my heart? |
2958 | Where is the letter? |
2958 | Where is the mysterious closet? |
2958 | Who could want any with you? 2958 Why not in Venice?" |
2958 | Why so, I beg? |
2958 | Will he be curious to hear the particulars of this night? |
2958 | Would he believe himself to be the father? |
2958 | You would not, then, tell her in confidence the very legitimate obstacle which makes me wish that the new sisters never take supper? |
2958 | Your friend already knows, I suppose, who I am? |
2958 | Your lover? |
2958 | ''For whom? |
2958 | A voice called out:"Who is knocking?" |
2958 | Are you sure that no one can see you leave the convent?" |
2958 | But can you appoint a day for the supper? |
2958 | But do you know that such a way of arguing opens my eyes singularly? |
2958 | But do you know what will be the result of it? |
2958 | But listen to me, that night you were natural and thoroughly amiable, would you have been the same, if you had known that there was a witness? |
2958 | But tell me how you could flatter the nun with the hope of finding me out? |
2958 | But tell me, my love, where will you wait for me to- morrow, two hours after the setting of the sun?" |
2958 | But what will he say when he hears that you only laugh at the occurrence? |
2958 | But where is the man in love who can harbour such a thought? |
2958 | But, darling, what do you say of C---- C----? |
2958 | But, my darling, do you not run the same risk with him?" |
2958 | Did you think I was prudent at the gaming- table?" |
2958 | Do I offend you? |
2958 | Do you feel disposed to allow yourself to be seen by another man while you are abandoning yourself to the sweet voluptuousness of your senses? |
2958 | Do you know why she confided to you her barren loves with me? |
2958 | Do you know?'' |
2958 | Do you not wish to know whether my friend was with me during the fatal night which has cost me so many tears?" |
2958 | Do you understand how painful the doubt is for me? |
2958 | Do you understand me, dearest? |
2958 | Give you up? |
2958 | Has C---- C---- betrayed my secret? |
2958 | Have I not written to you that I would most willingly give you my place near M---- M----? |
2958 | Have we not now everything in common? |
2958 | Have you a mistress?" |
2958 | Have you never passed such a night with your lover?" |
2958 | Have you told your friend that you were not very uncomfortable in my small palace?" |
2958 | How can we imagine God grieved during Lent?" |
2958 | How could I cherish you with all my soul, and not be anxious to know the history of your adventure? |
2958 | How could you suppose that I would have any difficulty in procuring you that pleasure, when on the contrary, nothing could please me more myself? |
2958 | How did your friend contrive to discover everything? |
2958 | I believe him more wealthy than you, although this casino almost convinces me that I am mistaken, but what does love care for riches? |
2958 | I have already become as curious as a nun-- a fault very natural to idle people-- I placed my eye against the small opening, and whom did I see? |
2958 | I have guessed right, have I not? |
2958 | Is it not humiliating for me to have inspired her with nothing but a passing fancy? |
2958 | Is she not an incarnate angel who can be compared to no one but you? |
2958 | It is M---- M----, I said to myself, who has played that trick upon me, but how has she contrived to know that I am the lover of C---- C----? |
2958 | Since she had found out that I was the lover of her young friend, could she imagine that my heart belonged only to herself? |
2958 | Tell me, dearest, could you manage to live anywhere as comfortably as you do here?" |
2958 | Tell me, dearest, whether I could refuse that singular request to the man who was shewing me such compliant kindness? |
2958 | Then you must believe that I despise you likewise?" |
2958 | Was I to begin by giving her a bad idea of my truthfulness? |
2958 | What could I do in that case? |
2958 | What was I to do? |
2958 | When my only wish was to minister to the happiness of three persons, how is it that the very reverse of my wish has occurred? |
2958 | When shall we sup together?" |
2958 | Where have you ever seen, I should like to know, two lovers, excited by all the fury of love, think of politeness?" |
2958 | Who is he? |
2958 | Who taught you these words?" |
2958 | Why would you not play?" |
2958 | You have considered yourself trifled with; that is all you can say; but will this letter convince you of your error? |
2958 | You seemed surprised when you saw me, dearest; did you not know that I was waiting for you?" |
2958 | my love, no, but with you how could I be unhappy? |
2958 | she exclaimed,"are you ill?" |
2958 | what are you saying? |
2958 | who is without them?" |
2958 | you must be ill?" |
2969 | Am I to tell my girl,said she, with a smile,"of the way in which you proved to me that you love her?" |
2969 | And do you love him? |
2969 | And do you think that your delicacy of feeling makes you happier than they are? |
2969 | And do you think you have been performing an ecclesiastical function here? |
2969 | And how if I do not believe you? |
2969 | And where shall I give this dinner? |
2969 | And who is this person? |
2969 | And why? |
2969 | And you dare to make this horrible proposal to me? |
2969 | Are the young Genevans so ignorant, then? |
2969 | Are you aware that you are a couple of impudent scoundrels? 2969 Are you still at Madame R----''s?" |
2969 | But at your own house anybody may come? |
2969 | But do you think your learned cousin will be glad to be in my company? |
2969 | But how can I tell you? 2969 But what is your own opinion?" |
2969 | But where are the three dresses she said she would give me? |
2969 | But you are not a Spaniard or a Portuguese; you are an Italian: and, after all, how can one invent a name? |
2969 | But you will confess that there are laws against false names? |
2969 | Did you see him? |
2969 | Do you class the generative power as a weakness? |
2969 | Do you think of staying here throughout the carnival? |
2969 | Does he ever speak of the scion you are going to present to him? |
2969 | Does she know I am coming? |
2969 | Has Victorine found anyone to operate on her yet? |
2969 | Have I? 2969 Have you consulted her upon the point?" |
2969 | Have you heard anything of Lord Lismore? |
2969 | How are our sweethearts getting on? |
2969 | How are you getting on here? 2969 How can I help it? |
2969 | How can you be certain? |
2969 | How can you be poor, when you are still young and handsome, and have an angel for a daughter? |
2969 | How did you make his acquaintance? |
2969 | How is it to be done? |
2969 | How many are there in the company? |
2969 | I dare say; but does she love me? |
2969 | I know that; but your name is Casanova, so why do you call yourself Seingalt? |
2969 | I shall be delighted; but tell me, how is the treasury? |
2969 | If I happen to cough while I am in hiding might I be heard? |
2969 | Is it not rehearsed at the theatre? |
2969 | Is not M. Tronchin your banker? |
2969 | Is this from the marchioness? |
2969 | It is not so? |
2969 | It''s a pleasure, is it? |
2969 | Kindly tell me who was your teacher? |
2969 | May I have the pleasure of calling on you? |
2969 | Mortification? |
2969 | Oh, he is a young lord, is he? 2969 Really?" |
2969 | Shall I have to stay there long? |
2969 | Tell me,said I,"if you would agree to the change?" |
2969 | That is a hard task,I replied,"for how am I to know that what I ask is new to you? |
2969 | Then I shall have the pleasure of seeing you again here? |
2969 | Then he was not God? |
2969 | Then how could Christ have said that the time in which the world was to come to an end was unknown to Him? |
2969 | Then what meaning do you assign to the word''created''? |
2969 | Then you are a coward, and will not object to a good thrashing? |
2969 | They think I am happy,said she,"and envy my lot; but can one be happy after the loss of one''s self- respect? |
2969 | This cursed restriction is general in Turin, then? |
2969 | Very true; but what can you expect of a woman impelled by love and vanity? |
2969 | Was it for me to propose such a thing? 2969 What do you mean? |
2969 | What effect had it on you? |
2969 | What have you done with Helen? |
2969 | What is that? |
2969 | What is that? |
2969 | What will you do,said I,"if I forgive you and let you go without putting you to shame?" |
2969 | Who is, then? |
2969 | Why did you not ascertain his condition for yourself? |
2969 | Why did you not make the trial before you married? |
2969 | Why do n''t you invite the pastor and my cousin to dine with you? 2969 Why do you bear a false name?" |
2969 | Why not? 2969 Why not?" |
2969 | Why not? |
2969 | Why your mother? |
2969 | Why? |
2969 | Why? |
2969 | Will you give me writing materials before you go out? 2969 Will you kindly remember me to her?" |
2969 | Will you tell me, then, of what nature would have been the offspring of a union between a god and a mortal woman? |
2969 | You are quite sure that M. d''Urfe was not the child''s father? |
2969 | You have convulsions, have you, dearest? |
2969 | And how could the foolish theologian maintain that this was an imperfection?" |
2969 | Are you still content to serve Apollo?" |
2969 | At this she turned to the pastor with a frightened manner, and said,--"What do you say to this?" |
2969 | But you look well dressed, have you made your fortune?" |
2969 | Can God have any self- consciousness?" |
2969 | Can you lay your hands on a good cook?" |
2969 | Could you lend me ten florins? |
2969 | Did he squint?" |
2969 | Did you mention my name to her?" |
2969 | Do n''t you feel a pleasant tickling there, Helen, after what the gentleman has been saying to us?" |
2969 | Do you grant that a god possesses in a supreme degree the qualities of man?" |
2969 | Do you think that I am green enough to be taken in by this sort of thing? |
2969 | Do you think that nothingness could be created?" |
2969 | Do you think that''s a compliment to my judgment? |
2969 | Does your worship agree to that?" |
2969 | Has she a lover?" |
2969 | Have you seen the Chevalier Osorio?" |
2969 | Have you, Helen?" |
2969 | He approved, and said,--"I suppose you will not be going to complain to the Count d''Aglie?" |
2969 | How should I suppose that such a fine man was impotent? |
2969 | I am sure it will be successful?" |
2969 | I ought to have given her the preference, and thus have ended the dispute, but who can account for his whims? |
2969 | Often is vice thus found allied to virtue or masking in virtue''s guise; but what matter? |
2969 | Redegonde is all very well, and inspires me with curiosity, but what is she compared to Agatha?" |
2969 | Tell me truly, do you think I am right?" |
2969 | Then tell me if these ear- rings are real, and what was your intention in putting them in my daughter''s ears?" |
2969 | Tronchin?" |
2969 | What reasons have you for the contrary opinion?" |
2969 | Where are you going to stay at Augsburg?" |
2969 | Where do you come from?" |
2969 | Why do you call yourself Seingalt?" |
2969 | You are aware, then, that he squints?" |
2969 | You must be the Chevalier de Seingalt?" |
2969 | You understand?" |
2969 | and how does this name belong to you?" |
2969 | and you do n''t know his name, you little hussy, do n''t you? |
2969 | thus?" |
10522 | An equal, are you? |
10522 | Canst thou by searching find out God? |
10522 | How hardly shall they who have riches enter into the kingdom of God? |
10522 | Truth,they cynically said,"what_ is_ truth? |
10522 | What has become of all great and famous men, and all they desired and loved? 10522 What went ye out in the wilderness to see?" |
10522 | Amid this dreary wreck of the old civilization, which had been supposed to be eternal, what were Leo''s designs and thoughts? |
10522 | And can you wonder at the effect? |
10522 | And how can I describe his influence? |
10522 | And if he were, where are the Scripture proofs that he had precedency over the other apostles? |
10522 | And more, where do we learn in the Scriptures that any prerogative could be transmitted to successors? |
10522 | And thou, O wretched man,"turning to the fallen chamberlain,"did I not say unto thee that money is a thankless servant? |
10522 | And what was the response of the empress, who ruled in the name of her son, in view of this disobedience and defiance? |
10522 | And what were any pleasures which ended in vanity to the sublime placidity of an emancipated soul? |
10522 | Are the overseers of God''s people, in a world of shame, to be mere philosophical Gallios, indifferent to our higher interests? |
10522 | But his health at last gave way; and who can wonder? |
10522 | But the empire of the world-- to which Caesar at that time may, or may not, have aspired: who can tell? |
10522 | But who expects a person recognized as a philosopher to use a mental crutch or wear a moral mask? |
10522 | Can you call him an enemy who only sought to preserve what was his own? |
10522 | Can you deny his title to the name of Great? |
10522 | Did he feel the responsibility of his priestly office? |
10522 | Did he realize that he was raised in his social position, even in the eye of an emperor? |
10522 | Do the blessed sacraments need silver and gold, to be efficacious? |
10522 | Do you say you only destroyed your enemy? |
10522 | Do_ you_ fear a tumult when the soldiers shall see the dead body of their murdered emperor? |
10522 | Does a really great and preoccupied man care what he wears? |
10522 | For what was he placed by Providence in the highest position in the world, except to benefit the world? |
10522 | Has the Church no higher mission to fulfil than to guard the ornaments made by men''s hands, while the faithful are suffering exile and bonds? |
10522 | How can that live which is based on corruption or a falsehood? |
10522 | How could they be happy or prosperous when monsters and tyrants sat on the throne of Augustus and Trajan? |
10522 | How happened it that the humble ministers of a new and persecuted religion became princes of the earth? |
10522 | If some one had possessed himself of your provinces, as you seized those of Gratian, would not he-- instead of you-- be the enemy? |
10522 | If, then, thou conquerest them, what canst thou get from them, seeing that they have nothing at all? |
10522 | In this age of boundless prosperity, where were the great poets, where the historians, where the writers on political economy, where the moralists? |
10522 | In this mournful crisis, what did he dream of in his sad and afflicted soul? |
10522 | Indeed, when has Christianity rejected learning and refinement? |
10522 | Is He not more powerful than devils? |
10522 | Is all this to be overlooked in our estimate of human happiness? |
10522 | Is it a Christian duty to permit an avalanche of evils to overwhelm the Church on the plea of toleration? |
10522 | Is there nothing to be considered but external glories which appeal to the senses alone? |
10522 | It may not unreasonably be asked, Has not theology attempted too much? |
10522 | Now what course did Ambrose pursue? |
10522 | Said I not that wealth is a most treacherous friend? |
10522 | Shall he be permitted to disobey an imperial command? |
10522 | Shall our eyes be diverted from the operation of moral law and the inevitable consequences of its violation? |
10522 | Shall we blind ourselves to the future condition of our families and our country in our estimate of happiness? |
10522 | To whom he replied, in substance,"What is that to me? |
10522 | Was he to suffer those who poisoned all the sources of renovation which then remained to go unrebuked and unpunished? |
10522 | What cared the shopkeepers and the carpenters and the bakers whether a Commodus or a Severus reigned? |
10522 | What do you see in this fact? |
10522 | What does St. Paul say of the Romans when he was a prisoner in the precincts of the imperial palace, and at a time of no greater demoralization? |
10522 | What established facts have we as an offset to these gilded material glories? |
10522 | What genius and what fame can protect a man who mocks or defies the powers that be, whether kings or people? |
10522 | What had he done for the Church? |
10522 | What have you to fear from a corpse whose death you ordered? |
10522 | What is now to be seen,"cried he,"but conflagration, slaughter, ruin,--the universal shipwreck of society?" |
10522 | What sect can not find it? |
10522 | What should be the true judgment of mankind as to this lauded period? |
10522 | What soldier dares to fight against Omnipotence, if he believes at all in the God to whom he is as personally responsible as he is to a ruler? |
10522 | What was Leo to do as the guardian of the faith in those dreadful times? |
10522 | What were material conquests to these conquests of the soul, to this spiritual reign of the invisible principles of the kingdom of Christ? |
10522 | What would the Church of the Middle Ages have been without such aims and aspirations? |
10522 | What, then, is the reverse of the picture which Gibbon admired? |
10522 | When has such a thing happened in modern times? |
10522 | Whence came this honest, truthful, thrifty race? |
10522 | Whence this great power of bishops? |
10522 | Where are the proofs that Saint Peter was really the first bishop of Rome, even? |
10522 | Where do we find that the successors of Peter were entitled to jurisdiction over the whole Church? |
10522 | Which of these forms of civil government did God appoint? |
10522 | Who but he could be the representative of the new theocracy? |
10522 | Who but the Bishop of Rome could wear this tiara? |
10522 | Who but the Church could do this? |
10522 | Who can estimate the influence of the pulpit for fifteen hundred years in the various countries of Christendom? |
10522 | Who can estimate the influence of those formulated doctrines? |
10522 | Who can estimate the moral power of that glorious name which had awed the world for a thousand years? |
10522 | Who can grasp the range of its subjects and the dignity of its appeals? |
10522 | Who can long thrive amid exhausting studies on root dinners and ascetic severities? |
10522 | Who can predict the end of a spiritual empire which shows no signs of decay? |
10522 | Who could resist Caesar on his own ground? |
10522 | Who dared to utter manly protests in the Senate? |
10522 | Who discussed the principles of government? |
10522 | Who expects an old man, compelling attention by his wisdom, to dress like a dandy? |
10522 | Who in that age could conserve this unity unless it were a great spiritual monarch? |
10522 | Who is the lawful sovereign,--he who seeks to keep together his legitimate provinces, or he who has succeeded in wresting them away? |
10522 | Who shall deliver me from this body of death?" |
10522 | Who would venture to utter anything displeasing to the imperial masters of the world? |
10522 | Who, even in our times, would think of filling the See of London, although it is Protestant, with a man whose chief merit is in his eloquence? |
10522 | Why did he not shrink from such an office, on the grounds of unfitness? |
10522 | Why should there be a divine redemption if man could save himself? |
10522 | Why was Ambrose elevated to that great ecclesiastical post? |
10522 | Why? |
10522 | Will the wise, the virtuous, and the rich put up forever with such misrule as these cities have had, especially since the Civil War? |
10522 | Will truth enable us to make eligible matches with rich women? |
10522 | Would you take him out of the galaxy of illustrious men whom we still call Fathers and Saints? |
10522 | defend the Bastille? |
10522 | replied the usurper;"from whom have you received this rank?" |
10522 | said our Lord, with disdainful irony,--"a man clothed in soft raiment? |
2962 | And do you love her? |
2962 | And now tell me-- and take care to tell the truth-- what sort of feelings does Viar''s daughter entertain for you? |
2962 | And what proof do you want, my dear? |
2962 | And you do n''t know where you lost it? |
2962 | As it does not take much time, will you be kind enough to get me an answer to another question? |
2962 | But after refusing you my favours, could I ask this office of you with any decency? 2962 But should I be much better off then? |
2962 | But why are you getting married in such a hurry without waiting till you know him better? |
2962 | Can you tell us what they are? |
2962 | Certainly; aro comes from aroma, and ph is the initial of philosophorum:"Did you get that out of Paracelsus? |
2962 | Do you like being at Amsterdam better than Venice? |
2962 | Do you like problems? |
2962 | Do you love me? |
2962 | Do you really want the police to discover,said he,"where the pretty Englishwoman is to be found?" |
2962 | Do you think that a passionate lover ceases to love on account of a refusal which may be dictated by virtue? 2962 Does the dear lad speak French? |
2962 | Has he made a declaration in terms? |
2962 | Has she gone by herself? |
2962 | Have you ever been deceived by it? |
2962 | How can you be so hard- hearted,said I to the aunt,"as to refuse your charming niece a toy which would make her happy? |
2962 | How can you have the face to say that,said Farsetti,"when you talk in the letter of your affection?" |
2962 | How did you know I have been in Holland? |
2962 | How did you learn it, then? |
2962 | How do you know that? |
2962 | How is this, sweet lie- a- bed, not up yet? |
2962 | How long have you been in Paris? |
2962 | I got this seal from the Comte d''Aranda; how can you prove that you are a scion of that race? |
2962 | I presume you will be going to Court, where the Duke of Brunswick may be of service to you? |
2962 | I suppose your husband is a very rich man? |
2962 | I will go and urge her to come myself; in the meanwhile, M. Baret, will you pack me up a dozen pairs of stockings? |
2962 | I would obey you, mamma, but how could I exist away from you? |
2962 | If I may ask the question, what is the nature of your loss? |
2962 | In what part of Venice did you live? |
2962 | Is it possible,I said,"that you do not see how degrading your thanks are to me? |
2962 | Is she ill? |
2962 | Is she much with you in the morning? |
2962 | Is this a saint''s day? |
2962 | Mamma, dear,said she,"is not this fine gentleman the same we saw at Amsterdam, and who was taken for my papa because I am like him? |
2962 | My son? |
2962 | Never? |
2962 | Nothing else? |
2962 | On the contrary, I believe it to be infallible, though I have never been a witness of its effects; but what good is it for me to speak to you? 2962 Shall I ask where my father lost his pocket- book?" |
2962 | She is present when you go to bed? |
2962 | She knows me, does she? |
2962 | Since you know, dearest, that I worship you, how can you think me capable of revenging myself on you? 2962 So he is, sweetheart; but I may be your dear friend, may n''t I? |
2962 | So you would give yourself to another, if you thought that would save your honour? |
2962 | Tell her my secret? |
2962 | That''s not likely,I said;"and besides, we ca n''t do without it, for how am I to give you the aroph in the dark?" |
2962 | Then you are able to discover all secrets? |
2962 | Very likely, but as you were not in love, why were you in such a hurry? |
2962 | What are you doing Esther, dear? |
2962 | What cause have I to tremble? |
2962 | What does the word mean? |
2962 | What is it good for? |
2962 | What is that, papa dear? |
2962 | What is that? |
2962 | What would you do if I told you to go? |
2962 | When will he do that? |
2962 | Who is going to dine with us? |
2962 | Who is this man for whom you have such an aversion? |
2962 | Who seduced you? |
2962 | Why are you crying? |
2962 | Why fifty? |
2962 | Why not? 2962 Why should I go to Court? |
2962 | Will you kindly inform me,I said,"how you can be so foolish as to call yourself the Comte d''Aranda?" |
2962 | Would you like an omelette? |
2962 | Would you like me,I said,"to invite your mother and the rest of you to dine with me?" |
2962 | Would you like to come to Paris, too? |
2962 | You appreciate her, then? |
2962 | You are going out, are you? 2962 Your daughter, madam? |
2962 | Your eyes did not deceive you; but what would my husband say if he found me otherwise than as God has made me? |
2962 | Your mother? 2962 And admitting that whatever man does is done for his own interest, does it follow that gratitude is a folly, and virtue and vice identical? 2962 And how about my mother? |
2962 | And how could he give me the dose five or six times a day for a week? |
2962 | And is this aspirant to your hand a handsome man?" |
2962 | Are a villain and a man of honour to be weighed in the same balance? |
2962 | Are you angry that I have not gone to the Chevalier Farsetti before you?" |
2962 | As soon as we were alone she said to me,"Have you read my letter?" |
2962 | At dessert, as I was pouring champagne into her glass, I asked her how with such a fiery temperament she had managed to preserve her virtue? |
2962 | At last Esther sat down again, and asked,"Where is the pocket- book?" |
2962 | But if it were so, was it well done to render himself contemptible to escape the imputation of pride? |
2962 | But what limits are there to the credulity of a woman in her condition? |
2962 | But where shall I find such a person? |
2962 | But why have you said no more about the aroph? |
2962 | But would it have been a real proof of the truth of astrology, if Farsetti had been assassinated on a Friday? |
2962 | But, you will ask, was I rich enough to make such presents? |
2962 | Do you know its composition?" |
2962 | Do you know what effect such feelings have on the heart?" |
2962 | Do you mean to say his health prevents him from making you a mother? |
2962 | Do you realize, in short, what a very serious charge murder is?" |
2962 | Do you think he would be easy to find, or that I can go and look for him?" |
2962 | Do you think me capable of a crime?" |
2962 | Do you think that I can bear to hear you say that since your lover can not help you you do not know where to look for help?" |
2962 | Do you wish to know more about it?" |
2962 | Even if my lover were in Paris, how could he spend an entire week with me, as he would have to? |
2962 | Have I not good reason to be afraid that as I refused to take pity on your love so you would refuse to take pity on my necessity?" |
2962 | Hereupon the affair took a comic turn; the old woman got into a rage and said,"How can you be such a cheat? |
2962 | How can a man not in the agony of death feel ill beside you? |
2962 | I begged her to do so, and she asked,"Who loves me most in Amsterdam?" |
2962 | I had business of my own, and pressing business too, but who can refuse the Beloved Object anything? |
2962 | I suppose your father knew about your husband''s circumstances; how about your dowry?" |
2962 | In what way?" |
2962 | Is it not all a jest? |
2962 | Or perhaps you are on the eve of taking some important resolution? |
2962 | Possibly you have already told somebody about it-- your maid or one of your sisters?" |
2962 | What do you mean by talking of me like that?" |
2962 | What is his name? |
2962 | When I had finished,"M. Casanova;"said she, in the kindest manner possible,"what is the matter with you? |
2962 | Where are you going?" |
2962 | Where is he? |
2962 | Who is the fortunate mortal to whom you have given your heart''s treasure?" |
2962 | Why did you not alight from your journey at my house?" |
2962 | Why has he not brought me a letter from the Duc de Choiseul or the Marquise de Pompadour? |
2962 | Why?" |
2962 | Will you do me the honour of accepting one?" |
2962 | Would you like to have me for a friend?" |
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? |
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? |
2978 | And can a short delay interfere with your happiness? 2978 And have you never had one?" |
2978 | And what do you say, dear Emilie? |
2978 | And what judgment is that? |
2978 | And yet she serves to amuse your eminence? |
2978 | And you, Armelline, will you withstand my love? |
2978 | Are n''t you afraid of being discovered? |
2978 | Are n''t you afraid of getting into bad company? |
2978 | Are you Betty''s lover? |
2978 | Are you in any business? |
2978 | Are you married then? |
2978 | Are you married to the marquis? |
2978 | Are you satisfied with the other three? |
2978 | Are you still determined to cure yourself of your love for Armelline? |
2978 | As just now, for instance? |
2978 | But how could you see your sweetheart, as you are not related to her? |
2978 | But how do those who go out to get married succeed in inspiring the love of their husbands? |
2978 | But is Leonilda really happy? |
2978 | But she must have some lover? |
2978 | Ca n''t I attend on you as well as my daughter? |
2978 | Can I continue to live, dear Armelline, with no other consolation than that of kissing your fair hands? |
2978 | Can you procure me an interview with the duchess? |
2978 | Come now,said I,"do you think our amusements criminal?" |
2978 | Do you love her? |
2978 | Do you mean to say you are only going to spend five hundred guineas in six months? 2978 Do you mean you are not going to see her any more?" |
2978 | Do you think I may draw my bill at nine months? |
2978 | Do you think he will give me leave? |
2978 | Forgiveness? |
2978 | Has your daughter many foreigners staying at her house now? |
2978 | Have you any brothers or sisters? |
2978 | How about his wife? |
2978 | How and where have you seen your mistress? |
2978 | How did you come to Naples? 2978 How does he choose his bride?" |
2978 | How does he know of my existence? |
2978 | How is it that I have tried to find you out in vain for the last three months? |
2978 | How long is this expedition to take? |
2978 | How many confessors have you? |
2978 | How much do you think it will cost you? |
2978 | How''s this? |
2978 | I am sorry indeed to hear of this, but what can I do? 2978 I am sorry to see you here, but what can I do for you?" |
2978 | I have come on an affair of the highest importance,she said,"and if I fail I shall for ever lose the reputation of a diplomatist?" |
2978 | I suppose you will be able to give a full account of everything when you go back to London? |
2978 | I suppose you will not mind having our friend for a neighbor? |
2978 | I will carry your just complaint to the cardinal; will you write out your petition? |
2978 | Is it anything in the style of Sister M---- M----? |
2978 | Is it far off? |
2978 | Is it positively certain that he is incapable of begetting a child? |
2978 | Is she the Madame Slopis who travels with Aston? |
2978 | Is that to keep down the lusts of the flesh? |
2978 | It is Greek; but, of course, you know what it means? |
2978 | Mengs is here, is he? 2978 No, I have told them all that you are ill.""What does Emilie say?" |
2978 | Not even a fancy for anyone? |
2978 | Princess, will you be deaf? |
2978 | Really? |
2978 | So pretty, and yet poor? |
2978 | Then do you think you committed a sin in kissing her like that? |
2978 | Then how could you keep him for seven years? |
2978 | Then how do you think of making a living at Rome? |
2978 | Then it is my neighbour the abbe who has been foolish enough to give you this information? |
2978 | Then she will have a light to- day? |
2978 | Then there are a good many old women here? |
2978 | Then why wo n''t you make the same effort on my behalf? |
2978 | Then you are not afraid of my turning you from the path of duty? |
2978 | Then you do n''t like the princess? |
2978 | Was he received at the Spanish Court? |
2978 | What courage do you want? 2978 What do you mean?" |
2978 | What folly did I commit then? |
2978 | What is her exact age? |
2978 | What is her name, and who is her husband? |
2978 | What kind of commodities are they? |
2978 | What manner of people put their daughters in such a prison? |
2978 | What shall I do,said she,"without Emilie? |
2978 | What''s her name? |
2978 | What''s his name? |
2978 | What, with your beauty and sensibility, is there no man in Naples who has succeeded in inspiring you with desire? |
2978 | When had I the pleasure of knowing you, mademoiselle? |
2978 | When is she coming? |
2978 | Where do you come from? |
2978 | Where is your daughter? |
2978 | Where, may I ask? |
2978 | Who are you? |
2978 | Who is the judge of their prettiness? |
2978 | Who is the other diplomatist with whom you are afraid of failing? |
2978 | Who knows? 2978 Why do n''t you ask Armelline?" |
2978 | Why do you look so grave and pale? |
2978 | Why not? |
2978 | Why should I wait? |
2978 | Will you kindly give me my two hundred ounces,said I,"for, of course, Gondar told you that I was out of it?" |
2978 | Would you dare to sleep in the same bed with him? |
2978 | You will come too? 2978 You will find them ready; how could I refuse you anything?" |
2978 | Are you not your own master?" |
2978 | But how can you imagine that I really love her, when you know very well that the whole affair is only designed to cast dust in everyone''s eyes?" |
2978 | But when I had won what I coveted, did I realize that I was going over old ground? |
2978 | But who can trust to fate or chance? |
2978 | Did I complain? |
2978 | Did I think myself deceived? |
2978 | Do you know any other remedy than absence? |
2978 | Do you think that it costs me no pain? |
2978 | Do you think there is any harm in a little joking?" |
2978 | Have they any children?" |
2978 | Have you any children?" |
2978 | How have you done as to letters of introduction in all these countries of which you now know so much?" |
2978 | How many shall we be?" |
2978 | If this be so, of what use is title at all? |
2978 | Kindly tell me whether the restraint of your desires gives you much pain?" |
2978 | Shall I tell them the news?" |
2978 | Tell me, is it the custom for people of fashion to make a young girl blush the first time they see her?" |
2978 | Then you have found your pocketbook? |
2978 | They laughed all the louder, exclaiming,--"What will the mother say?" |
2978 | What could I reply to this observation, as cruel as it was reasonable? |
2978 | What has Margarita been telling you? |
2978 | What shall I do when you are gone? |
2978 | Who are they?" |
2978 | Whom are you with?" |
2978 | Why do n''t you treat me with confidence? |
2978 | Why should not fortune fall in love with such a pretty woman? |
2978 | You will allow me to send to the inn for your luggage?" |
2978 | it is the abbe, is it?" |
2978 | said Armelline,"and the Holy Father does not forbid such a luxury? |
60901 | Could people read and write there, and could they really talk? 60901 Dentist says,"came from the interpreter,"will you honourably deign to explain where trouble lies in honourable tooth?" |
60901 | Were there railways in Germania? |
60901 | Were there roads and villages in Germania? |
60901 | What is that appalling noise in the Austrian Chancery? |
60901 | Why does he rub his teeth with little brushes? |
60901 | Is it necessary to add that she was a lady? |
60901 | Meanwhile from another quarter one would hear an eager"Dearest Princess, could you manage to get some raw ham? |
60901 | Shall I buy you some, Sir Edward?" |
60901 | The_ espada_, his hand on his heart, would bow again and again, as though saying,"Are these lovely hats really for me?" |
60901 | We were all averse to shocking the peasants by eating meat openly during Lent, but what were we to do? |
60901 | What is your programme of reform?" |
60901 | What remedy do you suggest?" |
60901 | Where do you imagine that I could find them?" |
60901 | Where... where... can one buy the infernal squirts these condemned idiots vise?" |
60901 | Why? |
60901 | who was then putting on his Sunday clothes on the chance of the interview being granted? |
14577 | 29. Who was responsible for the issue? |
14577 | Am I able carefully and punctually to correct all the notes required? |
14577 | Are deposits guaranteed? |
14577 | Are the functions of government in this country increasing? |
14577 | Are the greenbacks in circulation to- day? |
14577 | At what periods in American history have large issues of paper money been emitted? |
14577 | By what means was trade accomplished before the use of money? |
14577 | By whom is a national bank chartered? |
14577 | Could a man in 1860 consistently accept both the Dred Scott decision and the doctrine of popular sovereignty? |
14577 | Describe the social life of the Western pioneer? |
14577 | Did America ever have a theocracy? |
14577 | Did Calhoun favor the Compromise of 1850? |
14577 | Did Grant favor the Tenure of Office Act? |
14577 | Did Hamilton''s measures tend to centralize power? |
14577 | Did Lee make more than one attempt to invade the North? |
14577 | Did Lincoln favor the social equality of the white and black races? |
14577 | Did Lincoln''s assassination have any effect on the reconstruction policy? |
14577 | Did Massachusetts favor the Tariff of 1816? |
14577 | Did Spain have any part in calling out the Monroe Doctrine? |
14577 | Did Thaddeus Stevens favor the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution? |
14577 | Did the Civil Service Act passed in 1883 include postmasters? |
14577 | Did the Emancipation Proclamation free all the slaves in the United States? |
14577 | Did the North favor the Force Bill of 1833? |
14577 | Did the Republican party stand for the abolition of slavery in 1860? |
14577 | Did the Revolution of 1688 have any effect on the colonies? |
14577 | Did the Whigs favor internal improvements? |
14577 | Did the Wilson- Gorman Act reduce the tariff to a revenue basis? |
14577 | Did the bank accomplish them? |
14577 | Did the members of the Constitutional Convention exceed their instructions? |
14577 | Did the rule of 1756 affect the people of the colonies? |
14577 | Did the second United States Bank accomplish the purpose for which it was formed? |
14577 | Did the working- men of England favor the South during the Civil War? |
14577 | Discuss the growth of the sentiment for internal improvements? |
14577 | Do they do so to- day? |
14577 | Does funding a debt lessen it? |
14577 | Does the Constitution of the United States prevent a State from establishing a religion? |
14577 | Does the Federal Constitution compel negro suffrage? |
14577 | Does the constitutional provision for uniform duties protect the Territories? |
14577 | Does the time spent in writing up notes justify itself by fixing in the child''s mind new and really relevant information not given in the text? |
14577 | Has a joint resolution ever been used to acquire territory other than that included in Texas? |
14577 | Has the Federal Government ever attempted to restrict the power of the press? |
14577 | Has the Republican party ever reduced the protective tariffs of the war? |
14577 | Has the United States any control over the debts of Cuba? |
14577 | Has the United States ever resorted to a tax on incomes? |
14577 | How does it compare with the area of the original thirteen States? |
14577 | How many people live to- day in the territory included in the purchase? |
14577 | How much previous work have you done in the library? |
14577 | In what particulars did Andrew Jackson accurately reflect the spirit or the ideals of the new West? |
14577 | In what ways has democracy advanced since 1789? |
14577 | Is Utah a part of the Louisiana Purchase? |
14577 | Is a cabinet provided for in the Constitution? |
14577 | Is it a secure investment? |
14577 | Is it constitutional for banks chartered by the State to emit bills of credit? |
14577 | Is it illegal to- day for a railway to give a cheaper rate to one shipper than to another? |
14577 | Is it in existence to- day? |
14577 | Is it possible for a State to repudiate its debts? |
14577 | Is it possible for a man to be defeated for the Presidency if a majority of the people vote for him? |
14577 | Is it teaching students to combine facts, opinions, and statistics, to form conclusions really their own? |
14577 | Is it true that the South lost the Civil War because of slavery? |
14577 | Is the Canadian frontier fortified? |
14577 | Is the notebook work as I am conducting it calculated to develop the habit of critical reading? |
14577 | It will be well for the teacher to inquire:"What am I doing to cultivate such an ability in my students?" |
14577 | May States emit bills of credit? |
14577 | May it issue paper money? |
14577 | Of what other books is he the author? |
14577 | Of what use are source books? |
14577 | Of what use do you think the library should be to you in the course you are just entering? |
14577 | The same thing is accomplished by reversing the process and asking such questions as,--"Who was the American Fabius"? |
14577 | To what amount? |
14577 | To what extent was the Revolution brought about by economic causes? |
14577 | Under what President was the independent treasury first established? |
14577 | Was Cromwell''s colonial policy helpful to the American colonies? |
14577 | Was a President of the United States ever impeached? |
14577 | Was impressment practiced in England? |
14577 | Was it necessary for the South to resort to the draft? |
14577 | Was the Anaconda System successful? |
14577 | Was the Sugar Act legal? |
14577 | Was the"Ohio Idea"ever strong enough to affect legislation? |
14577 | Was there any effort to amend the Articles of Confederation? |
14577 | Were the Huguenots excluded from Canada? |
14577 | Were the Writs of Assistance used in England? |
14577 | Were the claims for indirect damages in the Alabama claims allowed? |
14577 | Were they legal tender for private debts contracted before their issue? |
14577 | What States are included in the purchase? |
14577 | What advantage did the Government expect to receive in passing the act? |
14577 | What are the dates of our greatest panics? |
14577 | What are the functions of money? |
14577 | What case decided the constitutionality of the bank? |
14577 | What considerations made the secession of the West in our early history a likely possibility? |
14577 | What determines the amount of money needed in a country? |
14577 | What do you think are the purposes of the subject you are about to take up? |
14577 | What encyclopedias and works of general reference are in your library? |
14577 | What geographical reasons caused Napoleon to sell it? |
14577 | What has been used for money at various periods of our history? |
14577 | What has been your method of study in other courses of history? |
14577 | What influence did the purchase have on our retention of the territory east of the Mississippi? |
14577 | What is Bimetallism? |
14577 | What is Gresham''s Law? |
14577 | What is a United States bond? |
14577 | What is a source book? |
14577 | What is cheap money? |
14577 | What is free silver? |
14577 | What is illustrated by the attempt to found the State of Franklin? |
14577 | What is its area? |
14577 | What is its average rate of interest? |
14577 | What is meant by doing business on credit? |
14577 | What is meant by"Free Coinage"? |
14577 | What is meant by"Gratuitous Coinage"? |
14577 | What is meant by"Market Ratio"? |
14577 | What is meant by"Mint Ratio"? |
14577 | What is meant by"Standard Money"? |
14577 | What is meant by"Wildcat Banking"? |
14577 | What is the effect of large issues of paper money on prices? |
14577 | What is the effect of large issues of paper money on wages? |
14577 | What is the name of the text you are to use? |
14577 | What is the name, reputation, and position of the author? |
14577 | What is the"Aldrich Plan"? |
14577 | What on wages? |
14577 | What source books on this period of history are in the library? |
14577 | What things did the English colonies possess in common? |
14577 | What was the Currency Act of 1900? |
14577 | What was the effect on prices? |
14577 | What was the"Bland- Allison Act"? |
14577 | What was the"Crime of''73"? |
14577 | What were the chief causes? |
14577 | What were the defects in the Articles of Confederation? |
14577 | What were the objects of the first United States Bank? |
14577 | What were the results of the struggle over the admission of Missouri? |
14577 | What were the results to the colonies of the French and Indian War? |
14577 | When was the Resumption Act passed? |
14577 | When was the first National Banking Act passed? |
14577 | When was the second United States Bank chartered? |
14577 | When were greenbacks issued? |
14577 | Why can the American people be regarded as the world''s greatest colonizers? |
14577 | Why could Washington be regarded as only an Englishman living in America? |
14577 | Why does the wage- earner suffer? |
14577 | Why is silver not the standard to- day? |
14577 | Why should banking business be profitable under the act? |
14577 | Why was it not rechartered? |
14577 | Why was the second United States Bank rechartered? |
14577 | Why? |
14577 | Why? |
14577 | Why? |
14577 | Why? |
14577 | or the"Sage of Menlo Park"? |
14577 | or"The Great Compromiser"? |
38297 | Who,asks Xenophon,"could so quickly strike down opponents, separated from him by a road of many months, as the king of the Persians? |
38297 | [ 56]Why go I sorrowing under the oppression of the enemy? |
38297 | A Babylonian cries to the Persians,"Why do you sit there? |
38297 | A man of the name of Arakha, an Armenian, rose up in the city of Dubana( Dubala, Dibleh?) |
38297 | After this I sent( an army?) |
38297 | Are not we Persians ruled by a Mede, a Magian, a fellow without ears? |
38297 | But on a sudden Herophile, the sibyl of Ephesus, appeared, and descended from the height, and cried:''Ye fools, what injustice is this? |
38297 | Can a woman forget her sucking child, and have no pity on the fruit of her womb? |
38297 | Could not the most joyful expectation prevail that Jehovah''s grace would be greater henceforth than his anger in the past? |
38297 | Could there be a more impressive illustration of the saying of Solon than the fate which had overtaken Croesus? |
38297 | Have they granted me speech only to bewail our misfortunes?'' |
38297 | He said to Prexaspes:''Is this the way you have carried out my commands?'' |
38297 | Hence Darius could say in Herodotus:"Who will refuse entrance to us, the chiefs of the Persians? |
38297 | How can we sing Jehovah''s song in a strange land? |
38297 | How could this be the result of an undertaking begun on the authority of the god of Delphi? |
38297 | How did the Persians cross the Tyras( Dniester), Hypanis( Bug), Borysthenes( Dnieper), and the Tanais( Don)? |
38297 | I chose them from all their(?) |
38297 | If thou thinkest: How many were the lands which Darius ruled? |
38297 | In the Persians of Aeschylus, the chorus inquire of Xerxes,"Where his faithful eye has remained?" |
38297 | Labyzus was astonished and said: What other man are we to think that he is? |
38297 | Must not the dawn of that brilliant time be come, which the prophets had always pointed out behind the execution of the punishment? |
38297 | Of what avail was your piety; when will the gods help us? |
38297 | Ought they to despair of this because they had not been summoned to the council? |
38297 | Tears are my food day and night, while they say to me, Where is thy God? |
38297 | Tell me now, did you ever see such an archer?'' |
38297 | The pyre is already kindled when the question is asked by the interpreters, What is the meaning of the cry"Solon"? |
38297 | Was Polycrates to fight for Egypt whose naval power could not defend him against this fleet, or was he to remain neutral? |
38297 | Was it not Jehovah who made the depths of the sea to be your pathway, so that His redeemed passed through? |
38297 | Was it possible to check the outbreak of the storm of ruin in the face of the indomitable resistance of Babylon? |
38297 | Was not the fall of Babylon and the return home a sure pledge that the anger of Jehovah was appeased? |
38297 | What could the king, if victorious, take from them, when they had nothing? |
38297 | What interest had Darius in allowing the Greeks to depart home as quickly as possible? |
38297 | What reasons had the Scythians not to treat the Greeks as enemies? |
38297 | What was to become of the kingdom after his death? |
38297 | When Croesus saw the Persians plundering the city, he inquired of Cyrus:''What is all this multitude doing with so much eagerness?'' |
38297 | Whence came the water for man and beast in the waterless desert? |
38297 | Which was the legitimate heir, the eldest of the first family, or of the second?--Artabazanes or Xerxes? |
38297 | Who gives him the nations and subjugates kings to him, and makes their swords as dust, and their bows as chaff? |
38297 | Who would guarantee a happy issue to the new conflict? |
38297 | Why do you not retire? |
38297 | Why sleepest thou, O Lord? |
38297 | Will they not think that he announces the murder in order to thrust his brother from the throne? |
38297 | You know yourself-- if you have not seen, you have heard-- that guards are set; how shall we pass by them?'' |
2953 | And how did you manage to come to Venice without performing quarantine? |
2953 | And then you will come? |
2953 | And what is it? |
2953 | And why not? 2953 Art thou excited?" |
2953 | But are you cured? |
2953 | But how can you find it out? |
2953 | But how so? |
2953 | But supposing you were mistaken? |
2953 | But the certificate of baptism names the prince''s mother, and his seal--"Does he know what armorial bearings he has on that seal? |
2953 | But was the man received in society after the thrashing I gave him? |
2953 | But what shall we do for the next eight hours? |
2953 | But what specific remedies did she use to effect your cure? |
2953 | But you were not in uniform then? |
2953 | Do you believe, dear father, that the religion of Mahomet is the only one in which salvation can be secured? |
2953 | Do you doubt it? |
2953 | Do you mean God or the definition? 2953 Does he behave well at table?" |
2953 | Does he speak of his family? |
2953 | Does his excellency dismiss me from his service? |
2953 | Does she know that you are thinking of giving her to me as my wife? |
2953 | Does the papa know you? |
2953 | Dost thou deserve,she said,"Yusuf''s friendship, when thou abusest the sacred laws of hospitality by insulting his wife?" |
2953 | Even the Spanish officer? |
2953 | Have you any fine goods on board your tartan? |
2953 | How can you be an object of pity for them, and how could I deliver you from them? |
2953 | How could I be otherwise,I answered,"when thou art scorching me with an ardent fire?" |
2953 | How do you know that it is not a fact? |
2953 | How so? |
2953 | I am always the same: in what do you find me changed? |
2953 | I do not believe it,she answered;"but are they different from those I eat myself?" |
2953 | I imagine your excellency has obtained a dispensation from the mufti? |
2953 | I suppose,said the veiled beauty,"that you do not know who I am?" |
2953 | I think your wife must be handsome; is she more beautiful than Zelmi? |
2953 | I understand she has treated you cruelly, and you call that pity, do you? 2953 If God can not be matter,"I said,"then He must be a spirit?" |
2953 | In which service? |
2953 | Is he witty? |
2953 | Is it a very improper story? |
2953 | Is it true, then? |
2953 | Is onanism a crime amongst you? |
2953 | Is the lady with whom I danced known? |
2953 | May I mention our conversation to Yusuf? |
2953 | The most essential? 2953 Then I ought to have put myself under arrest?" |
2953 | Then it must be a pleasure seldom enjoyed, if it is so much talked of? |
2953 | Then we are all of us as many fools, the proveditore included? |
2953 | Then you are afraid to grieve him, if you come to us? |
2953 | Then you sentence me, monsignor, to make a public confession? |
2953 | Then you would feel my bad treatment less than the envy of the wicked? |
2953 | Then, without this letter,he said,"you never would have come to Constantinople, and you have no need of me?" |
2953 | To- morrow? 2953 Was such petty larceny a very great crime?" |
2953 | Were you not here last year? |
2953 | What are you thinking of? |
2953 | What do you mean by your misery? 2953 What gives you,"she said one day,"the strength to control yourself?" |
2953 | What has become of him? |
2953 | What must I do to obtain that result? |
2953 | What on earth have I done, and what can I do for you? 2953 What reason can that priest have to murder me?" |
2953 | What should I do, if I had no hope? 2953 Whence does that pleasure arise, if it is not from your soul? |
2953 | Where are you going? |
2953 | Where do you come from now? |
2953 | Where do you come from? |
2953 | Where? |
2953 | Why did you not keep it yourself? |
2953 | Why not now? |
2953 | Why not? |
2953 | Why should the father confessor kill him? |
2953 | Why should you wait until to- morrow? 2953 Why? |
2953 | Will you be so good as to obtain that he says so to me himself? |
2953 | Will you be so kind as to come and breakfast with me? 2953 With another, madam? |
2953 | Would you have obeyed, if you had been in my place? |
2953 | Would you have the courage,she said,"to repeat all you have just told me, and exactly in the same terms, before the proveditore- generale?" |
2953 | You can not? 2953 Your native place?" |
2953 | Your profession, if you please, sir? |
2953 | Are you then a cannibal?" |
2953 | Are you then certain that I shall not be placed under arrest?" |
2953 | But tell me, what would you do if the general should leave you in this island for the sake of the joke? |
2953 | Can you be angry with my eyes?" |
2953 | Do you not feel pleased when you give up your pipe after having smoked all the tobacco in it-- when you see that nothing is left but some ashes?" |
2953 | Do you not recollect that he wore a sword? |
2953 | For instance, does he dance well?" |
2953 | Go without knowing what fate may be in store for me? |
2953 | Has he not mentioned the matter to you?" |
2953 | Have you forgotten who you are?" |
2953 | His arms have the ducal bearings; but perhaps you are not aware that M. de la Rochefoucault is a duke and peer of the French realm?" |
2953 | How could I make up my mind to reappear in that city, in the guise of a cowardly fellow living at the expense of his mistress or his wife? |
2953 | How could I, at my age, renounce the prerogative, so pleasant to my vanity, of being reputed a fine talker? |
2953 | I answered,"you acknowledge your cruelty towards me? |
2953 | I was called back soon after, and she said to me,"What has become of your cheerfulness?" |
2953 | Is he clean and neat?" |
2953 | Is he mistaken? |
2953 | Is it not an ardent desire to inhale a portion of the being we love? |
2953 | May I hope that your visit will last long enough to enable you to renew the source of my fortune?" |
2953 | Must I believe that your early life has been unhappy?" |
2953 | Now, tell me, will you come or not?" |
2953 | Of course it is only a fable?" |
2953 | Then I can send word to the notary to transmit it to me?" |
2953 | Then came the thought, Is this to be the end of all my hopes? |
2953 | Three bells are immediately set in motion, I foresee a general gathering: what is going to happen? |
2953 | Two or three days later, she said to me,"Why did you refuse to tell your adventures in Constantinople before the general?" |
2953 | Was not the blood I was sucking from that charming wound a portion of the woman I worshipped? |
2953 | What do you intend to say?" |
2953 | What is a kiss? |
2953 | What is love? |
2953 | What on earth did you want to see her nose for? |
2953 | What would my cousin Antonio, Don Polo and his dear son, Don Lelio Caraffa, and all the patricians who knew me, have said? |
2953 | When you fill your pipe do you feel any pleasure?" |
2953 | Which of us has given that happiness?" |
2953 | Why do you not buy yourself a pair of gloves?" |
2953 | Will you,"she added, speaking to me,"be so good as to relate immediately the adventure in the same words which you have used when you told me of it?" |
2953 | Would it be possible for me not to love you, for you to feel nothing for me? |
2953 | You have never seen her since?" |
58179 | And whence came philosophy itself? |
58179 | But what are we to understand by that salvation? |
58179 | But what, we may ask, was the real Greece? |
58179 | Did he not derive his ideas from Egypt and Babylonia? |
58179 | Does it involve merely the recognition that facts may remain unchanged while our knowledge of them grows? |
58179 | Does the historian read purpose into history or does he find it there? |
58179 | Fifty years hence what will the truth about them be? |
58179 | Now what does this distinction involve? |
58179 | The man about whom Aristotle wrote, or the man about whom Professor Paul Shorey writes? |
58179 | Then what of religion itself? |
58179 | There appears to be only one such question, and that is, What have been the antecedents of any given fact? |
58179 | We may begin the history of philosophy with the Greeks, with Thales of Miletus, but the question has been repeatedly asked, Was not Thales a Semite? |
58179 | What then is this mysterious"going"if its starting- point and its end are both non- existent now? |
58179 | What were its antecedents and whence was its descent? |
58179 | What will be the final chapter of the French Revolution? |
58179 | Where will he end the history of Greece or of Rome? |
58179 | Who has written and who can write its true history? |
58179 | Who was the real Plato? |
58179 | Who, then, would be the real Plato? |
10713 | 1919? |
10713 | After we entered the war, what did you do? |
10713 | And then you went to Paris as a member of the staff, after the armistice? |
10713 | And you were there continuously how long? |
10713 | And you were there, then, until you went to Berne in February? |
10713 | Are there any translations of those of your telegrams that are in code? |
10713 | Are you through? |
10713 | At that time? |
10713 | At the conference? |
10713 | At the same time that you handed in this report, did you hand them the proposal of the Soviet Government? |
10713 | Before that letter is read, you did not see the President and had no knowledge of his attitude in regard to your report? |
10713 | Before we went into the war? |
10713 | But when would that be? |
10713 | But you did not do it? |
10713 | Did Mr. Lansing have copies while he served on the Council of Ten? |
10713 | Did Mr. Steffens go to Russia with you? |
10713 | Did any member of our delegation, any member of the council of 10, express to you any opinions about the general character of this treaty? |
10713 | Did not Mr. Lloyd George in a speech to Parliament assert that he had never received the proposal with which you returned from Russia? |
10713 | Did the others have anything similar to what is now article 10 in the treaty pending in the Senate? |
10713 | Did you attend that meeting of the commission when that report was considered by the American Commission? |
10713 | Did you ever get a reply to that letter? |
10713 | Did you get a reply to that? |
10713 | Did you make a written report of your mission? |
10713 | Did you make it public? |
10713 | Did you make some such statement as that? |
10713 | Did you read any of these minutes of the meetings of the American commission? |
10713 | Did you read the various other plans that were proposed or suggested over there for a league of nations? |
10713 | Do you have a copy of that letter? |
10713 | Do you know anything about a letter that Buckler wrote to the President in relation to his mission? |
10713 | Do you know anything about that, when it was done, or any discussions about it? |
10713 | Do you know anything about that-- perhaps Auchincloss& Miller? |
10713 | Do you know anything about whether Litvinov communicated directly with the President in reference to this Buckler mission? |
10713 | Do you know how these telegrams were received in Paris, whether favorably or unfavorably? |
10713 | Do you know what disposition was made of those records? |
10713 | Do you know what his objection was to the legislative bodies of the contracting parties having representation on the assembly? |
10713 | Do you know what the attitude of Gen Smuts was as to article 10 as proposed by the President? |
10713 | Do you know whether or not they are in the State Department-- any of these minutes or records in our State Department? |
10713 | Do you object to having that put in the record, Senator Knox? |
10713 | Do you understand why it would be any more unwieldy if Congress should appoint the delegates than if the President should? |
10713 | Do you want it read, or shall I state the substance and then put it in the record? |
10713 | Does the Senator desire this document? |
10713 | Even admitting that it is done, who is to occupy Russia? |
10713 | For what reason? |
10713 | Have you a copy of Lloyd George''s remarks in the Parliament? |
10713 | Have you a copy of his speech? |
10713 | Have you ever seen a copy of his report in the form of a letter? |
10713 | Have you it here? |
10713 | He held no official position? |
10713 | He then said,"I wonder if we could get Lansdowne to go?" |
10713 | How long were you in Russia? |
10713 | I should like to ask you this one question: I suppose your letter of resignation to Mr. Lansing was merely formal? |
10713 | If they were unable to do that, what would be the good of fighting Bolshevism? |
10713 | Is he in the country now? |
10713 | Is the American Government prepared to insist that the French, British, Italian, and Japanese Governments shall accept such an armistice proposal? |
10713 | Is there anything further that anybody desires to ask Mr. Bullitt? |
10713 | It is a part of the report? |
10713 | It was not a special commission? |
10713 | It was not accepted? |
10713 | Just to get these dates right, when did you reach Paris? |
10713 | May I reread it? |
10713 | Mr. Bullitt, what, if anything, was said with reference to the Irish question, with which you are familiar? |
10713 | Mr. Bullitt, will you take the stand and give your full name, please, to the stenographer? |
10713 | Mr. Bullitt, you put into the record or read here, I think, some extracts from the minutes of the Council of Ten? |
10713 | Mr. Bullitt, you resigned your relations with the State Department and the public service, did you not? |
10713 | Mr. Lloyd George asked who was there to overthrow the Bolsheviki? |
10713 | Of the American commission itself? |
10713 | Otherwise you had no fault to find with it? |
10713 | Prior to the war, what were you engaged in? |
10713 | So that you were practically a clearing house of information for the members of the American mission? |
10713 | Suppose you read it? |
10713 | That was one of the conditions of the proposal? |
10713 | The Council of Ten was the first body that was dealing with the treaty generally, the important body? |
10713 | The President made some public statement? |
10713 | The idea was that the political parties of the country should be represented? |
10713 | There never was another effort to secure an audience with the President for you after those first two that you say Col. House made? |
10713 | There was a cheerful willingness to do that, was there not? |
10713 | There will remain, however, the difficulties of supply, finance, and transport which we have mentioned? |
10713 | These orders came from the President? |
10713 | They were accessible to you at the time, were they? |
10713 | This is a memorandum that you sent to Col. House? |
10713 | This is a note of the conversation made at the time? |
10713 | This was a memorandum made in the line of your duty? |
10713 | Those memoranda of consultations that you had after you resigned you prefer not to publish? |
10713 | To whom did you hand that report? |
10713 | To whom was the report made? |
10713 | To whom were they sent? |
10713 | Was anything said during this conversation which you feel willing or disposed to tell us, which will be important? |
10713 | Was that letter delivered to Nansen? |
10713 | Was there any formal meeting of the peace conference, or of representatives of the great powers, to act upon this suggestion and upon your report? |
10713 | Was this brought to the attention of the President? |
10713 | Well, but the essential thing is, was it your duty to get information? |
10713 | Well, now, there were records of these meetings, were there not? |
10713 | Well, they were furnished regularly to every member of the conference? |
10713 | Were they enthusiastically in favor of it? |
10713 | Were you present at any of these meetings? |
10713 | What are you going to do in this country now? |
10713 | What are your plans, Mr. Bullitt? |
10713 | What attitude did you take toward the Nansen proposal? |
10713 | What four-- the successors of the ten? |
10713 | What is the date of that, please? |
10713 | What is the date of that? |
10713 | What time in February? |
10713 | What was your mission to Russia, and when did you go? |
10713 | What was your personal relation to the peace conference and its work? |
10713 | When did you first go to Paris, Mr. Bullitt? |
10713 | When? |
10713 | Who advised him to go? |
10713 | Who were the four at that moment? |
10713 | Who were they? |
10713 | Who would feed, equip and pay them? |
10713 | Why should these not be heard? |
10713 | Would Italy, or America, or France, do so? |
10713 | Would not this story be more interesting if we knew which member of the conference objected? |
10713 | Yes; but we gave a sort of assent before the treaty formally came out, did we not? |
10713 | You are a native and a resident of Philadelphia, are you not? |
10713 | You came back? |
10713 | You mean our agreement to recognize the British protectorate in Egypt? |
10713 | You say each delegate had a copy? |
10713 | You went abroad for them as a correspondent? |
10713 | You were in favor of the original plan? |
10713 | You were the only official representative sent? |
38209 | Why have I raised up these Mardians for such mischief? |
38209 | [ 415] Zarathrustra further inquires, whether corpses which have been carried by dogs, wolves, and panthers to a field make the field and men impure? 38209 ''Why should there not be such a man?'' 38209 ), tells us:I captured Birizchadri, the warden of the city of Madai(? |
38209 | And supposing that he was able to do this, would he have been unanimously elected king? |
38209 | And when Astyages asked,"What wild beast is this?" |
38209 | Angromainyu answered him: Wherewith wilt thou smite my creatures? |
38209 | Astyages said to him:''An excellent satrap are you; is it thus that you thank me, you and your son, for what I have done for you?'' |
38209 | But could the Athravas allow anything so unclean as a corpse to be laid on fire, the pure"son of Auramazda"? |
38209 | But what reason had Cyrus to cause the Persians to revolt? |
38209 | Could prayers of such a kind have been composed or written down in a primitive age? |
38209 | Cyrus pushed his questions further:''If such a venturesome man should appear, how might he accomplish his aim?'' |
38209 | For whom didst thou create the imperishable cow Ranyoçkereti( the Earth)? |
38209 | Had conceptions of this kind, and other later views which we find in their doctrines, influence on the restoration of the canon? |
38209 | Had the evil spirit also a creative power? |
38209 | How are we to chase away the lies, how shall I put the lies into the hand of Asha( Truthfulness)? |
38209 | How can I come to your dwelling( the dwelling of the gods), and to your song? |
38209 | If not you, who is it to be?'' |
38209 | In the battle Verethraghna hastens through the ranks and inquires with Mithra and Rashnu:"Who lies against Mithra? |
38209 | Is the rain impure which has fallen on a corpse and then runs off from it, etc.? |
38209 | Leaving out of sight for the present the question, At what period did these writings come into existence? |
38209 | May we assume that we possess these in a genuine and unaltered form in the Avesta, though they have only come down to us in fragments? |
38209 | Or was the evil first introduced after the creation of the world? |
38209 | The dominion is in the hands of the priests and prophets of the lying gods; whither shall I go for refuge?--to what land shall I turn? |
38209 | The fire looks on the hands of all who come; what does the friend bring to the friend, he who approaches to him who sits alone? |
38209 | The king was astonished at the sight of him, and asked why he had not avoided such disgrace by death? |
38209 | The main reason for this change was the necessity of giving an answer to the question, Why did not the golden age continue? |
38209 | Then Cyrus asked:''Suppose that this man should appear, would you join in the danger with him?'' |
38209 | Then the evil Daevas ran and took counsel on the summit of Arezura, and Angromainyu spoke: What will the Daevas bring thither? |
38209 | These ran to meet the fugitives, and cried out to them,''Cowards, whither would ye fly, will ye creep back into the bosoms that bore you?'' |
38209 | To do this is proper for men who possess the dominion, and when can it be done better than now, when we have so many men, and rule over all Asia?" |
38209 | What is his penalty?" |
38209 | What must be done when a woman is in labour, etc., or when any one has made himself impure by touching a corpse, or has slain a water- dog( otter)? |
38209 | When will the streams of water flow which are stronger than horses?" |
38209 | Whence then came the injurious, the evil? |
38209 | Who are the Daevas, which fight against the good creation? |
38209 | Who causes the moon to wax and wane? |
38209 | Who created the beneficent lights and the darkness? |
38209 | Who created the water and the trees of the field? |
38209 | Who created their paths for the sun and stars? |
38209 | Who formed the earth with its great blessings? |
38209 | Who is in the wind and the storms that they move so swiftly? |
38209 | Who is the first father and begetter of truth? |
38209 | Who is the truthful one, who is the liar? |
38209 | Who slew the hostile demons? |
38209 | Who sustains the earth and holds the clouds above it? |
38209 | Who were these enemies? |
38209 | With what weapons wilt thou destroy them? |
38209 | [ 204]"How,"Zarathrustra inquires of Auramazda,"how ought I to protect the creatures from the evil spirits, from the wicked Angromainyu?" |
38209 | [ 209] Finally, we read:"Who is thy true friend on the great earth; who will proclaim it? |
38209 | [ 355] Sick dogs are treated with the same remedies as rich men; and to the question of Zarathrustra--"If the dog will not take the remedies?" |
38209 | [ 358] It is not certain whether the_ udra_ of the Vendidad is the water- dog( spaniel?) |
38209 | [ 466] And if such dire anarchy did indeed prevail among the Medes, what man in such times submits to even the most righteous sentence? |
38209 | and if, long after Yima, Zarathrustra proclaimed a new and better law, why had not Auramazda revealed this law to the favoured Yima? |
38209 | one of the first officers at the court of Shapur insolently said:"Will the king of the goats pasture on our slopes? |
38209 | to whom shall I give death and destruction, for I have the power?" |
6771 | But what chances of escape are there for you, with an enemy so close at hand?" |
6771 | If the Emperor were absolute in Germany, who then would be equal to the man intrusted with the execution of his will? |
6771 | Or is it your intention to stop my progress? |
6771 | Was this the very object which Tilly had in view? |
6771 | What cared he for the detestation of the people, and the complaints of princes? |
6771 | What have you to expect, if the Emperor should make himself master of your capital? |
6771 | What would have become of the Reformation, and of the liberties of Germany, if the Bishop of Rome and the Prince of Rome had had but one interest? |
6771 | What would he gain by expelling the Emperor from his hereditary dominions, if Tilly succeeded in conquering for that Emperor the rest of Germany? |
6771 | Why, then, still burden the country with his presence? |
6771 | Will he deal with you more leniently than I? |
41263 | Oh, Land of Roses, what bulbul shall sing of thee? |
41263 | A Republic, say you? |
41263 | And is not"the tempestuous wind called Euroklydon"blowing at this very moment? |
41263 | And what is this Riviera that we feeble folk who"winter in the south"know and adore so well? |
41263 | Are the boys of Spezzia exceptionally virtuous? |
41263 | But a long description is needless, for who does not know of its cathedral and its Campo Santo, of its baptistry and its leaning tower? |
41263 | But being reminded that he had conferred that revenue on the Legion of Honor, he exclaimed,"Where was my head when I made such a grant? |
41263 | But so far as these palazzi can be seen, how far do they repay examination? |
41263 | But what other city in Spain can boast of so many learned bodies and diverse centers of intellectual activity? |
41263 | For are there not tramways nowadays even in the streets of Damascus? |
41263 | For is not his martyrdom sculptured in marble, and painted on canvas? |
41263 | For what words can paint the life and movement of the sparkling sea- front? |
41263 | Has everybody been there, or may one venture even now to paint it in words once more for the twentieth time? |
41263 | Has not a railway station penetrated the charmed heart of Stamboul? |
41263 | If Spanish interiors are always dark and depressing, what must they be when draped with black? |
41263 | In plain prose, how describe the garden of Europe? |
41263 | Is there any more sumptuous fountain in the world? |
41263 | It has passed through its baptism of fire; and who knows how soon"the dim things below"may be preparing a similar fate for a city so rashly situated? |
41263 | It is as good as Torquay; and how can cosmopolitan say better? |
41263 | It is meretricious, of course-- that goes without the saying: what else can one expect from the France of the Second Empire? |
41263 | Modern geographers may maintain( as what will they not maintain?) |
41263 | These it is needless to describe, for who does not know them? |
41263 | Was ever pearl girt round with purer emeralds? |
41263 | Was ever town more graciously set, indeed, in more gracious surroundings? |
41263 | What business have we with this relic of barbarism at the beginning of the twentieth century, in times of peace among a friendly people? |
41263 | What now remains of the magnificent temple of Serapis, towering over the city on its platform of one hundred steps? |
41263 | Where there is so much to look at and so much to describe, where to begin? |
41263 | Who shall describe aright with one pen the gnarled olives of Beaulieu and the palace- like front of the Cercle de la Méditerranée? |
41263 | Who shall say? |
41263 | Will Protestantism ever take deep root in the home of the Inquisition? |
41263 | You suggest a change of dynasty? |
41263 | how much to glide over? |
41263 | how much to insist upon? |
41263 | the luxuriant festoons of honeysuckle and mimosa that drape the trellis- work arcades of Carabacel and Cimiez? |
41263 | the manifold humors of the Jardin Public? |
41263 | the southern vivacity of the washer- women who pound their clothes with big stones in the dry bed of the pebbly Paillon? |
41263 | what to omit? |
4326 | Again, did the demand for world- power mean no more than that Germany must have extra- European territories, like Britain or France? |
4326 | And what was the outcome? |
4326 | Could fully responsible self- government be reconciled with imperial unity? |
4326 | Did the claim mean, then, that her dominions must be as extensive and populous as( say) those of Britain? |
4326 | How could representative institutions be expected to work under such conditions? |
4326 | How has it turned out? |
4326 | How were justice, peace, liberty, and equality of rights to be established in such a field? |
4326 | How were the needs of industry to be reconciled with justice to the subject peoples? |
4326 | How were their customs to be reconciled with the legal ideas of their new masters? |
4326 | How were these simple folk to be taught the habits of labour? |
4326 | If that chance should come, how will they use it? |
4326 | If they can be applied by one of the world- states, and that the greatest, why should they not be applied by the rest? |
4326 | In that case, what should happen? |
4326 | Is it too much to say that the appearance of the spirit thus expressed was a new thing in the history of European imperialism? |
4326 | Meanwhile, what had the threatened empires been doing during the years of strenuous German preparation which began in 1911? |
4326 | Now that the world has been made one by the victory of Western civilisation, in what spirit is that supremacy to be used? |
4326 | Perhaps the German government also believed it? |
4326 | She had not yet grasped( indeed, who, in any country, had?) |
4326 | That being so, since Germany need have no fear of an attack from Britain, why should not the two powers agree to reduce their naval expenditure? |
4326 | Was the world- power at which Germany was aiming a real supremacy over the whole world? |
4326 | Were they to be relations of conflict, each striving to weaken or destroy its rivals in the hope of attaining a final world- supremacy? |
4326 | What are the principles which experience has gradually worked out in the British Empire? |
4326 | What did average German opinion mean by the phrase Weltmacht, world- power, which had become one of the commonplaces of its political discussions? |
4326 | What of the Night? |
4326 | What steps did they take to guard against the danger? |
4326 | What was the reason for this sudden and insolent intervention-- made without any previous communication with France? |
4326 | What were to be their relations with one another? |
4326 | Who could have anticipated, twenty years or fifty years ago, the part which has been played by South Africa in the Great War? |
4326 | Why did this Empire appear to Treitschke to be''wholly a sham''? |
4326 | Why was it that this solution, or some solution on these lines, was not then adopted, and had no chance of being adopted? |
4326 | Why was this? |
4326 | Why were these distinctions drawn? |
4326 | X WHAT OF THE NIGHT? |
6804 | Were you not a noble? |
6804 | What need is there for discussion,exclaimed a delegate,"where all are agreed? |
6804 | ( 3800? |
6804 | (?-606 B.C. |
6804 | ? |
6804 | ASSHUR- BANI- PAL( 668- 626? |
6804 | As early as the times of Jeremiah, the permanency of physical characteristics had passed into the proverb,"Can the Ethiopian change his skin?" |
6804 | As the slave advanced, Marius shouted,"Man, do you dare to kill Caius Marius?" |
6804 | If the French people should be allowed to overturn the throne of their hereditary sovereign, who would then respect the divine rights of kings? |
6804 | Indeed, who is strong enough to rule the world? |
6804 | It is related that Caius had a dream in which the spirit of his brother seemed to address him thus:"Caius, why do you linger? |
6804 | It was begun in 214(?) |
6804 | Many thoughtful minds were hopelessly asking,"What is truth?" |
6804 | The most noted of these form what is known as the Epic of Izdubar( Nimrod? |
6804 | The state came to be known as Russia, probably from the word_ Ruotsi_( corsairs? |
6804 | and finished in 204(?) |
61384 | Are the sacrifices possible? |
61384 | Are they numerous and important enough to justify a close union among English- speaking countries? |
61384 | But why? |
61384 | How could it be otherwise? |
61384 | If the call of blood and culture, as some tercentenary orators claim, enlisted us in the war, why were we deaf to it for three years? |
61384 | Ireland? |
61384 | Is it worth while to make them? |
61384 | Japan? |
61384 | League of Nations? |
61384 | Monroe Doctrine? |
61384 | Panama Canal? |
61384 | Sea- power? |
61384 | Status of the Near East and the German colonies? |
61384 | Tariffs and shipping? |
61384 | The Pacific? |
61384 | The rôle of Cassandra may have been necessary to get people to pay attention, but when the public begins to say,"Well, what of it?" |
61384 | What are the bases of Anglo- Saxon solidarity? |
61384 | What are these interests? |
61384 | What particular interests would have to be sacrificed in order to further the common interests? |
61384 | Why? |
61384 | Will any reader of this article ever forget the awful sensation that came when he read the first bulletins of the Battle of Jutland? |
61384 | do we need to be taught that our house is not in order by having it, figuratively at least, pulled down around our ears? |
6589 | Ah, little island,he cried, as he saw the rock of Hydra stretched below him,"how long wilt thou escape me?" |
6589 | How can that desk- worm, that night- owl, direct an army from his dusky nest, even if he had the sword of Scanderbeg? |
6589 | Was there ever anything so ridiculous? |
6589 | What man of spirit could accept such a post? |
6589 | You mourn the conflict between the Crown and the national representatives,he said to the spokesman of an important society;"do I not mourn it? |
6589 | ''How,''I said,''can_ you_ be surprised who was the author of the measures that give rise to it?'' |
6589 | ''Where did you eat it?'' |
6589 | And what was the meaning of the stipulation that they should"transmit instructions to their Admirals conformable to these provisions"? |
6589 | Are these the people with whom one can make war on Napoleon? |
6589 | Is the staple produce of the Russian Empire to lose its market as contraband of war? |
6589 | Of what service, urged the French plenipotentiaries, were Strasburg and Mainz, so long as they were commanded by the guns on the opposite bank? |
6589 | On Nelson''s arrival,"up flew her ladyship, and exclaiming,''O God, is it possible?'' |
6589 | Or is an English man- of- war to allow material to pass into France, without which the repair of French vessels of war would be impossible? |
6589 | The Assembly voted him its thanks for his famous song,"What is the German''s Fatherland?" |
6589 | The populace neither read nor voted: why should it concern itself with constitutional law? |
6589 | Until I have executed this, I have no peace; and what can comfort me until I know that I have with upright will set my life at stake? |
2968 | A spy; and the Government dares to send such a fellow to me? |
2968 | Am I to leave you, then, without a single kiss? |
2968 | And how long did this state of things continue? |
2968 | And that is not against your conscience? |
2968 | And what does the confessor say? |
2968 | And you were always able to resist his attempts? |
2968 | Are you angry with me, then? |
2968 | Are you perfectly free to do what you like? |
2968 | Are you sure of her discretion? |
2968 | Are you sure that no inquisitive eye is looking upon us? |
2968 | But does not your young and handsome duchess object to your keeping a mistress? |
2968 | But has he not questioned you indirectly as to the connection between us? |
2968 | But whom have I the honour of addressing? |
2968 | But you are not afraid of me? |
2968 | But you have saved the little treasure? |
2968 | But, my lord, am I to sit down on the floor? |
2968 | Can she speak French? |
2968 | Can you give supper to anyone you like in your own rooms? 2968 Could you imagine me pursuing any other line of conduct? |
2968 | Did you know,said the Duke de Matalone,"that I had a son?" |
2968 | Do n''t you recollect me? 2968 Do not your charming apprentices follow your maxims?" |
2968 | Do you know why? |
2968 | Do you often go and see Cardinal Passionei? |
2968 | Do you really think so? |
2968 | Do you think he believed you? |
2968 | Do you think that after enjoying you she would care to enjoy me? 2968 Do you think you are so ugly, then?" |
2968 | Does she know about it? |
2968 | Has he accepted them? |
2968 | Has it? 2968 Has not the horoscope proved truthful in the principal particular? |
2968 | Have you entered holy orders, then? |
2968 | He has told you that much? 2968 How about Signora Maria?" |
2968 | How about mamma? |
2968 | How did the lady receive you, Costa? |
2968 | How much will it cost? |
2968 | How? |
2968 | I see, but it seems strange; can one be said to have a mistress whom one does not love? |
2968 | I see; but I suppose she is ugly? |
2968 | I suppose you do n''t mind stopping for the night at Piperno? |
2968 | I will do so, but could you oblige me by telling me the reason for such a high- handed action? |
2968 | Impotent? 2968 In eating or drinking?" |
2968 | In short, he is rich in claims and rich in the future; but how did he get himself made a knight of one of the French king''s orders? |
2968 | Is he very ugly, then? |
2968 | Is it quite certain? |
2968 | Is the lottery still open? |
2968 | Is your father''s garden a pretty one? |
2968 | Is your mother an elderly woman? |
2968 | It would not be delicate on his part, but what should prevent me from replying that I do n''t know what he means? |
2968 | May I come again to- morrow? 2968 More than ever; what do you mean?" |
2968 | Not a little bit? |
2968 | Pray, does not the king possess the power to make you go? |
2968 | Shall we dine together at Terracino? 2968 Slandered?" |
2968 | So you want to be a nun, do you? |
2968 | That is my name, and I have come here to ask how I can oblige you? |
2968 | Then the best people are very low here, I suppose? |
2968 | Then the earl is a rich man now? |
2968 | Then you think that I could not give you and two or three of your girls a little supper? |
2968 | Then you think that this Congress will take place? |
2968 | They are very nice,said I;"but will you allow me to send for half a dozen flasks of Orvieto from my lodging?" |
2968 | This morning? 2968 Ugly? |
2968 | Well, supposing I look out for another lodging? |
2968 | What age are you, pretty one? |
2968 | What are you doing at Rome? 2968 What can I do?" |
2968 | What did he say? |
2968 | What do they want? |
2968 | What do you ask for the three months''rent? |
2968 | What has she got to do with Galiani? |
2968 | What prince is that? |
2968 | What time would you like to have dinner? |
2968 | What''s the matter with the girls? |
2968 | What? 2968 When shall we see each other again, my angel?" |
2968 | Where are you going, madam? |
2968 | Where are you going, prince? |
2968 | Where do you live, sir? |
2968 | Where do you live? |
2968 | Where in the world are we going? |
2968 | Who asked them? |
2968 | Who is that man? |
2968 | Who is that young lady? |
2968 | Who would not weep in my place? 2968 Why are they not coming?" |
2968 | Why incredible? |
2968 | Why? 2968 Why?" |
2968 | Will my lover tell lies, too? |
2968 | Will you accept it, then, my dear Leonilda? |
2968 | Will you arrange my frill? |
2968 | Would any man suppose that a stranger would come to Naples at a time when the inhabitants are wishing themselves away? |
2968 | Yes, but if he does? |
2968 | You do n''t want a man to see you, then? |
2968 | You have ridden it, then? |
2968 | You used to sleep with him? 2968 ''Why did you let her go out without you? 2968 Are you married? |
2968 | As soon as she was gone I said to M---- M----,"Do you know that what you have shewn me has made me unhappy?" |
2968 | As soon as she was seated, she drew me to her and said,--"Must I grieve my dear one when I have loved so well? |
2968 | As soon as this disgusting fellow saw me, he began,--"You are the Chevalier de Seingalt?" |
2968 | At the slightest noise I cried,"Who goes there?" |
2968 | At this she turned to M---- M---- and said, with evident vexation,"I am not really ugly, am I?" |
2968 | But have you told your confessor of our mutual enjoyment?" |
2968 | But who was Tamburini? |
2968 | But why should the high and mighty borgello send me away from Modena?" |
2968 | Do you find yourself comfortable in your present lodging?" |
2968 | Do you remember what name my late husband used to call you when he petted you?" |
2968 | Do you see now how I was able to trust my daughter to his care?" |
2968 | For a moment I was undecided, should I remain in bed and make the best of what I had got, or go on my way to Rome immediately? |
2968 | Have you still the courage to marry her? |
2968 | Have you taken any earnest of the marriage- bed?" |
2968 | Have you told her my name, my nation, my condition, and my age?" |
2968 | He absolves me, and I am quite content:""And does the pretty boarder confess, too?" |
2968 | How could your mother allow it?" |
2968 | I wanted to give him the ten crowns, but how was I to do it? |
2968 | Next day, as I was at supper with the duke and Leonilda, she said,--"What will my mother say to- morrow evening, when she sees you?" |
2968 | Now what would you do supposing I were to make you a present of two hundred crowns to buy the garden?" |
2968 | She embraced the marchioness, and said to me in the most natural manner, as we shook hands,--"What happy chance brings you hear, dear Don Giacomo?" |
2968 | So you are going to marry my daughter, are you?" |
2968 | What do you think? |
2968 | What furniture do you want?" |
2968 | When I saw the duke he said,--"Well, Don Giacomo, you have spent all the morning with my mistress; do you still wish to marry her?" |
2968 | Whence does it arise? |
2968 | Where''s my Lord O''Callaghan?" |
2968 | Why?" |
2968 | You would not rather sleep with me than with M---- M----?" |
2968 | said she;"and when shall I send you your purchases?" |
2968 | what dower? |
2968 | you have a mistress, have you?" |
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?" |
20306 | And now? |
20306 | Been over long? |
20306 | But how about the others? |
20306 | But suppose there are two chambermaids? 20306 Did you like the German cooking on the_ Kronprinz_?" |
20306 | Have you seen any American papers lately? |
20306 | How are the Giants making out? |
20306 | How is it? |
20306 | How is she? |
20306 | Including everything? |
20306 | Is n''t that English bacon awful stuff to get down? |
20306 | Shall we see it all? |
20306 | Well, well, what next? 20306 Well, what can you expect? |
20306 | What do you think of the German railroad trains? |
20306 | What ship''d you come over in? |
20306 | Why did n''t you order it? |
20306 | Why do you always leave London at the best time of the year? |
20306 | Why wait? |
20306 | ( Or is the rattle that I hear only the rattle of the"L"trains a block away, and am I really back in New York?) |
20306 | *** Ah, Cairo dreaming in the Nile''s moon- haze-- are you to be judged thus by the narrow street that snakes into the dark of Bulak? |
20306 | ***** Did I mention food? |
20306 | Ah, Bois de Boulogne, silent now under the slumbering heavens, where your equal? |
20306 | And Budapest by the Danube-- are you to be judged by the wreckage of the Stefansplatz that has drifted on your shores? |
20306 | And do you hear with me again the twang of guitars come out the hedges of the Avenue Marigny? |
20306 | And do you smell with me the rare perfume of the wet asphalt and feel with me the wanderlust in the spirit soul of the Seine? |
20306 | And has he not seen pictures of Viennese women-- angels_ à la mode_, miracles of beauty, Loreleis_ de luxe_? |
20306 | And was that painted angel, Peppina, a mere psychic snare? |
20306 | And why should the year''s first crocus have brought him luck? |
20306 | Are its gaieties mere febrile imaginings of liquorish dreamers? |
20306 | Are you married yourself?" |
20306 | Are you young again and do memories sing in your brain? |
20306 | Are you, now far away and deep in the American winter, with me once again in memory over the seas in this warm and wonderful and fugitive world? |
20306 | Bianca? |
20306 | But how about the elevator boy? |
20306 | But how about the hall porter and the floor waiter?" |
20306 | But is it true that Vienna is the home of purity, of early retirers, of phlegmatic and virtuous souls? |
20306 | But the other class-- and the class after that-- think you_ these_ are so different? |
20306 | But what of those Viennese operas? |
20306 | But where are we going to get any chips?" |
20306 | But where, ask you, is this somewhere? |
20306 | But why need to pursue the catalogue? |
20306 | By the way, what hotel are you stopping at?" |
20306 | Can it be that the vice crusaders have been at work? |
20306 | Can it be true, he wonders, that, after all, Viennese gaiety is an illusion, a base fabrication? |
20306 | Could any man-- even a poet-- write as he did of Muriel at the Opera if there had been no Muriel? |
20306 | Could it be that he was but a"poseur,"a dealer in false words, a concocter of the non- existent? |
20306 | Did Nora never dance upon the pavement? |
20306 | Did Renée never issue forth from that dim arch- way where he waited? |
20306 | Did the eyes of dancers never gleam in his? |
20306 | Did you ever hear of a mud turtle having an accident?" |
20306 | Did you have any nobility on board?" |
20306 | Do I imply that they are free from sordidness and commercialism? |
20306 | Do I seem to rave? |
20306 | Do I treat of but a single class of Americans? |
20306 | Do they know the sorcery of the virgin morning light of Berlin as it falls upon the Siegesallee and gives life again to the marble heroes of Germany? |
20306 | Do they know the witchery of the withering Berlin night as it plays out its wild fantasia in the leaves of the Linden trees? |
20306 | Do we know the romance of your peoples or the romance of your restaurateurs? |
20306 | Do we know your Rue du Pont Neuf, with its silent melodrama under the dawning heavens, or do we know only the farce of your Montmartre? |
20306 | Do you protest that the girl of the balustrade, the girl of the Luxembourg, are very probably American girls here for visit? |
20306 | Do you sense the romance, the exotic_ diablerie_, the suggestion of Levantine mystery? |
20306 | For them, there is no-- But hark, what is that? |
20306 | Great talent? |
20306 | Had he indeed lain mouth to mouth with spring in London? |
20306 | Has an American press agent had his foul hand in the advertising of Austria''s capital? |
20306 | Have the militant moralists and the professional women hunters, in their heated yearnings to flay the transgressor, fallen foul of Vienna? |
20306 | Her children spent before their day, listening to the too- soon lecture of Time? |
20306 | How many could bear the ribald distortions of that lens- like seidel bottom and yet keep their charm? |
20306 | How many women could stand that test? |
20306 | How much was your hotel bill?" |
20306 | I bought her another Dubonnet-- what stranger would have done less? |
20306 | I wonder what an Englishman would say if you put him next to a plate of genuine, crisp,_ American_ bacon?" |
20306 | If the beer is inspected and guaranteed in Germany, why should n''t the shows be inspected and guaranteed in Paris?" |
20306 | In the Astor Club( or is it the Palm Club? |
20306 | Is Vienna''s reputation bogus, a snare for tourists, a delusion for the unsophisticated? |
20306 | Is it true that all the policemen in America are convicts? |
20306 | Is it, after all, the Los Angeles of Europe? |
20306 | Is the_ Wiener blut_, like Iowan blood, calm and sluggish? |
20306 | Let us indulge ourselves for a moment in what is known to ritualists as a responsive service, thus: Q.--What is a Supper Club? |
20306 | Or has the name been changed since spring?) |
20306 | Or is just the Johannesberger, soul of the most imaginative grape in Christendom? |
20306 | Or what she leans against or what she wears or what her lips and eyes? |
20306 | Or, despite its appearances, is it truly the gayest city in the world, redolent of romance, bristling with intrigue, polluted with perfume? |
20306 | Or-- woe is me-- am I really back again across the seas in New York, and is what I hear only the horn of the taxicab, rrrrr- ing in the street below? |
20306 | Paris when your skies are greying, how many of us know you? |
20306 | See how easy it is?" |
20306 | That some of the skyscrapers have more than twenty stories? |
20306 | The First Man--"American?" |
20306 | The girl I mean is that girl you catch sight of-- but what matters it where? |
20306 | Then came--""How much did you give the port_eer_?" |
20306 | They say they never have accidents, but is it any more than you expect? |
20306 | Was Violet but the figment of a poet''s dreams? |
20306 | Well, one day you pack your grip, put on your hat and come over to have a look-- and what do you find? |
20306 | What are my people doing in Berlin at this hour? |
20306 | What are these prowling Al- Raschids about? |
20306 | What boat did_ you_ come over in?" |
20306 | What if no more are the grisettes of Paul de Kock and Murger to fascinate the eye with wistful diableries? |
20306 | What is romance to such a soul-- even were romance, the romance of this Paris, uncurtained to him? |
20306 | What is song beside the soft melody of your smile? |
20306 | What is that strange sound that comes to me? |
20306 | What is the tune it is playing? |
20306 | What of those sensuous waltzes, those lubric bits of_ schramm- musik_ which have come from Vienna? |
20306 | What other land has such a greeting for strangers? |
20306 | When you get on a street car in Germany, what tip do you give the conductor?" |
20306 | Where are these, my people? |
20306 | Where are those super- orchestras sweating over the scores of seductive waltzes? |
20306 | Where is that far- renowned_ gemüthlichkeit_? |
20306 | Where the silken ankles and the glittering eyes, the kisses and the flutes, the beery laughter and the delirious leg shaking? |
20306 | Where, indeed, is that prodigality of flowers and spangled satin he has heard so much about? |
20306 | Which? |
20306 | While Paris( to go to Conrad)--is not Paris and her land already at Bankok, and far, far beyond? |
20306 | Why do I linger thus, you ask, over these hothouse caperings? |
20306 | Why not? |
20306 | Why should Henley, an Englishman, have called Spring"the wild, the sweet- blooded, wonderful harlot"? |
20306 | Why, indeed, I thought, should spring come to London? |
20306 | _ Tu te paye ma tête._ Who has heard of romance in an American girl? |
20306 | _ they_ are telling_ their_ wives a month later--"Berlin spirit? |
20306 | he is telling his wife a month later--"Berlin spirit? |
42707 | { 60} What then? 42707 ( 43) If a man enters suit against another, he shall make a deposit with the judge[ to cover expenses?]. 42707 2. Who shall choose other_ Schoeffen_? 42707 50:16, 17], orWhy beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother''s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?" |
42707 | And has his presumption been so boundless that he has dared to depose me from the empire, me, a great prince, who have no superior, indeed no equal? |
42707 | And how can the impure make others pure? |
42707 | Are they not made by hand of stones, timbers, straw, plaster, and lime? |
42707 | Benedict?" |
42707 | But how then could they judge of his fitness to rule? |
42707 | But if you fall short in your duty, how, it may be asked, can it be salted? |
42707 | Do you see now, emperor, the difference between the church and the empire? |
42707 | Do you see now, emperor, to what a pitch of impudence and inhumanity you have gone? |
42707 | Do you see, emperor, the difference between popes and emperors? |
42707 | For how can he rule who is himself under the rule of others? |
42707 | For how can the ignorant teach others? |
42707 | For if a mother loves and nourishes her child, how much more diligently should one nourish and love one''s spiritual brother? |
42707 | For thus it has been called, as may clearly be implied from the passage,"Can ye drink of the cup that I drink of? |
42707 | For what are our churches? |
42707 | For what difference does it make whether this coming danger is foretold to the human race by man or angel or star? |
42707 | For[ it may be said to the new claimant]:"If you were the heir, why did you go away? |
42707 | How can he protect the Christian people who is himself under the tutelage of others? |
42707 | How can the licentious make others modest? |
42707 | How far shall a guest live from the city? |
42707 | If anyone hates peace, how can he make others peaceable? |
42707 | If the archbishop asks,"Who did this?" |
42707 | May aldermen be deposed? |
42707 | May the aldermen make laws? |
42707 | Might he not turn out to be so foolish and simple as to be utterly unworthy even less honor? |
42707 | Or if anyone has soiled his hands with baseness, how can he cleanse the impurities of another? |
42707 | So, very properly, the bishops of Rome deserted the apostate Greeks-- for what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
42707 | The abbot:"Do you promise conversion of life?" |
42707 | Then Chlodovech said:"Why have you disgraced our family, by allowing yourself to be taken? |
42707 | Was there ever such audacity; was there ever such presumption? |
42707 | What can I send back that will be worthy of him who has so honored me? |
42707 | What if a man refuses to pay a fine? |
42707 | Where are the chests that contain my treasure?" |
42707 | Who can doubt that he who is exalted to the height of apostolic dignity is holy?" |
42707 | Who that knows the scriptures does not perceive the madness of this claim? |
42707 | Whose duty is it to avenge this and recover that land, if not yours? |
42707 | Why did you not stay at home and look after your inheritance?" |
42707 | Why is not my race worthy of producing an emperor, since emperors have been chosen from among the Spaniards and Isaurians and Khazars? |
42707 | Why should not men unanimously agree upon him whom the incomparable and never failing providence of God had foreordained to this office? |
42707 | You are the instigator of this business, and do you so soon repent?" |
42707 | You ask:"How was it that nothing was said about images in six councils? |
42707 | and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?" |
47780 | ''And after what manner should we use diligence?'' 47780 And what will be our reward?" |
47780 | For what purpose do you desire them? |
47780 | How have I, thy Lord, failed in aught of My duty towards_ thee_, O man? |
47780 | I ask you, on your fealty, whether, if the ship were your own, and freighted with your own merchandise, you would leave her? |
47780 | Is it thus ye come before me? |
47780 | There is no water here,they cried in dismay,"how shall we halt?" |
47780 | Were they spending their days in empty quarrels, shearing their brethren like sheep? 47780 What ails the man?" |
47780 | What calls you here, Mohammed? |
47780 | What do you mean to do? |
47780 | Who can preserve the force of that eloquence? |
47780 | Why should you surrender your city? 47780 Would you give, for your deliverance, any of the castles belonging to the barons oversea?" |
47780 | Allah has bidden me call men to Him-- Who will join me in the sacred work and become my brother?" |
47780 | And I cried out to him, and said,''what do I want with your overcoat that you bring me, when we are drowning?'' |
47780 | And do you think that our weak condition has escaped his notice?" |
47780 | But what are the arrows of the flying Tartar against the scimitars and battle- axes of my firm and invincible Janissaries?" |
47780 | Do ye indeed flee before the enemy when fighting for Allah?" |
47780 | Does not Saladin know all that goes on in our camp? |
47780 | For we are dying of hunger in this city?" |
47780 | Knowing what the end of the pursuit would mean, Abu began to lose nerve, and asked,"What if our pursuers should find our cave? |
47780 | One of these, indeed, came to King Louis, with the heart of the Sultan, all reeking with blood, in his hand, and said:"What wilt thou give me? |
47780 | Such a king as he seems born to command the whole earth; what then could we do more against so formidable an enemy?" |
47780 | The chiefs of the Meccans indeed came before him, fearing the worst; and of them he asked,"What can you expect at my hands?" |
47780 | The latter cries three times,"Who shall now defend the Holy Temple? |
47780 | The latter defied the conqueror, saying,"Thy armies are innumerable? |
47780 | Then would he ask, out of his own mouth,''Is there anyone who has a cause in hand?'' |
47780 | To this they replied:"Lady what can we do? |
47780 | To whom, then, could they look for aid? |
47780 | We are each of us losing our horses one after another, and why should we bear with them any further?" |
47780 | What then had become of those faithless remnants of the Fifth Crusade? |
47780 | Where is now the promise of Allah?" |
47780 | Who shall free the Sepulchre of the Lord?" |
47780 | Will you leave us to be thus put to confusion? |
47780 | Wilt thou hear, Sagremor, the most shameful word that ever passed the lips of Tristan? |
47780 | asked the puzzled Abu,"and what religion do you now profess?" |
47780 | my sword, what wilt thou do now? |
47780 | { 247}"Why then,"asked the king,"do you advise me to leave the ship?" |
8896 | A pamphlet of Abbé_ Sieyés_, in answer to the question,"What is the Third Estate?" |
8896 | Already a far heavier sentence had been passed, and was hanging over a man''s head: before that fell, why should he not take a little pleasure?" |
8896 | But what matters the ingratitude of men? |
8896 | But when he saw the flashing eyes of the old general, and heard him cry,"Fellow, darest thou kill_ Caius Marius_?" |
8896 | How should the duchies be disposed of? |
8896 | Later still, apparently not earlier than the ninth century B.C., the_ Chaldoeans_( of Semitic stock?) |
8896 | THE MEANING OF HISTORY.--A thoughtful student can hardly fail to propose to himself the question,"What is the meaning of history? |
8896 | Their alphabet( invented by them?) |
8896 | Then lived a famous public officer,_ Yang Chên_, who, when asked to take a bribe, and assured that no one would know it, answered,"How so? |
8896 | There a priest named_ John Ball_ harangued them on the equality of rights, from the text,-- When Adam delved, and Eve span, Who was then a gentleman? |
8896 | This is not the place to consider the question, What was the primitive religion of man? |
8896 | Was Heaven, or Shang- ti-- or the Lord-- the visible heaven, the expanse above, clothed with the attribute of personality? |
8896 | Was the principle of heredity to come back? |
8896 | What but debasement could come from the worship of Astarte and the Phoenician El? |
8896 | What might then have been the subsequent course of European history? |
8896 | What survives of all these violent and arbitrary works? |
8896 | Who would be willing to sacrifice himself to the law of honor when he knew not whether he would ever live to be held in honor? |
8896 | Why is this long drama with all that is noble and joyous in it, and with its abysses of sin and misery, enacted at all?" |
8896 | _ Anaximander_( 611-? |
8896 | |+--C. Werner(?) |
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?" |
2971 | A letter? |
2971 | And what does your father mean to do? |
2971 | And you believe this? |
2971 | Are you always obliged to have-- a girl beside you when you make love to her? |
2971 | Are you in company with a band of brigands? 2971 Are you sure?" |
2971 | As the greater rascal of the two? |
2971 | But how about La Croix? |
2971 | But supposing you were never to withdraw it? |
2971 | But what can he do to me? |
2971 | But what will the prince say? |
2971 | Ca n''t you make any conquests at the table- d''hote? |
2971 | Can you tell me where your client lives? |
2971 | Certainly, if you passed your word to the countess; but where is this letter? |
2971 | Could I do otherwise without passing in your eyes for one more a slave to sensual passion than to love? 2971 Could I not set the police on his track?" |
2971 | Could you give me the name of one? |
2971 | Did he test the matter for himself? |
2971 | Did n''t she tell you anything else? |
2971 | Did you tell him you were my brother? |
2971 | Did your union with her last long? |
2971 | Directly? |
2971 | Do you know,she said,"you quite frightened me? |
2971 | Do you think I would do such a thing for a miserable fellow like Possano? 2971 Do you want to marry me?" |
2971 | Everybody says so; indeed what else could it be? 2971 From Marseilles? |
2971 | He was an idiot; but how about Querilinthos? |
2971 | How about yourself? |
2971 | How can I find out? |
2971 | How can she be my daughter when I have never known her mother? |
2971 | How is Marcoline? |
2971 | If the lady is really your niece,said she,"may I hope that you still love me?" |
2971 | Is it worth much? |
2971 | Is she pretty or old? |
2971 | Is she very old? |
2971 | Is your uncle a Venetian? 2971 Leaving?" |
2971 | My cook? |
2971 | Perhaps you did not remark the expression, a good cook? 2971 Quite so, but did she tell you that I paid the money to her father?" |
2971 | Really? 2971 She has not made you the depositary of any other confidences?" |
2971 | Tell that to someone else; but, after all, what does it matter? 2971 The same, I suppose, that did so yesterday?" |
2971 | Then you advise me to confess openly that I am a rogue? |
2971 | Then you are a Venetian, too? |
2971 | Then you are not jealous? |
2971 | Then you have made a formal agreement with him? |
2971 | We shall have some fun at dinner,said my niece,"but what are we going to do on the felucca?" |
2971 | Well, it is strange; but how did you find out that the countess knew me? |
2971 | Were you really in love with him? |
2971 | What are you doing here, fair Irene? |
2971 | What could you do at Geneva? 2971 What did she say to you about me?" |
2971 | What did she tell you? |
2971 | What do you mean by pestering Marcoline at the theatre yesterday? |
2971 | What do you want? |
2971 | What does your mother say? |
2971 | What good would that be? 2971 What is a Protestant?" |
2971 | What is his name? 2971 What results? |
2971 | What strikes you as funny in that? |
2971 | What''s all this? 2971 What''s the bank?" |
2971 | What? 2971 Where are you going to take her?" |
2971 | Where does the fellow live? |
2971 | Where is my letter? |
2971 | Where is she? |
2971 | Who gave you this taste? |
2971 | Who is he? 2971 Who is with you?" |
2971 | Who told you about it? |
2971 | Who told you that I was here? |
2971 | Who told you that the count knew me? |
2971 | Why not? 2971 Why not?" |
2971 | Why? |
2971 | Will that do? |
2971 | Will you forgive me for not placing it in your hands sooner? |
2971 | Would you? |
2971 | You have put in on account of the bad weather, I suppose? |
2971 | You think, then, that it was a case of connivance? |
2971 | Your daughter? 2971 Yours? |
2971 | ''Then would you like to know?'' |
2971 | And how are we to find him in a town of more than a million inhabitants?" |
2971 | And what did you tell her?" |
2971 | Are you ill?" |
2971 | Are you satisfied with Annette?" |
2971 | Are you sure that he will welcome you?" |
2971 | As soon as I made my appearance she said, without any greeting,--"Are you the brother of this liar and monster who has deceived me so abominably?" |
2971 | As soon as my niece saw me, she exclaimed,--"My dear uncle, would you believe it? |
2971 | But when did you begin to have male sweethearts?" |
2971 | But why did you try to do it three times?" |
2971 | Could this be meant for me? |
2971 | Did I not tell you that we were going to be married at Geneva?" |
2971 | Did you get it from a midwife?" |
2971 | Do you know how men are made?'' |
2971 | Do you really mean it? |
2971 | Do you serve Him by profaning the religion you do not even understand? |
2971 | Do you think that you, a priest, serve God by decoying an innocent girl away from her home? |
2971 | Does she imagine that she has conceived?" |
2971 | Has my behaviour led you to suppose that you are in my way? |
2971 | Have you ever seen a woman like her? |
2971 | Have you not continually repulsed me?" |
2971 | Have you sufficient courage for that?" |
2971 | He told me to speak to M. Bono about it; and now, sir what do you say?" |
2971 | How do you serve Him? |
2971 | How is it that she is happy with me, and does not wish to leave me?" |
2971 | How long ago was it?" |
2971 | How long have you been here?" |
2971 | How was that?" |
2971 | I ask again why you left Venice, where you could say mass, and preach, and make an honest living, like many priests much better than you?" |
2971 | I get rid of you? |
2971 | I paid and dismissed the advocate, and having sent the cook out of the room I said,"Do I owe you any money, Possano?" |
2971 | I promise you no one will tell you to your face that you cheated, but how are you going to prevent them thinking so?" |
2971 | Is not that a mark of a good disposition? |
2971 | Is the sum a large one?" |
2971 | Let us suppose that the facts were as he told them, do you think they are to my honour?" |
2971 | Make him do so, Count Rinaldi; my niece will pay, will you not, Marcoline?" |
2971 | Marcoline, who did not like night travelling, was in high glee, and threw her arms around my neck, saying,--"Are we at Avignon now?" |
2971 | The first thing she asked me was,"Where is Querilinthos?" |
2971 | What a charming creature she is? |
2971 | What are you sighing at?" |
2971 | What do you want with me? |
2971 | What is he doing in England? |
2971 | What is her name?" |
2971 | What is the reason? |
2971 | What right have you to take her from me?" |
2971 | What would you have done, I should like to know, if I had given you the cold shoulder instead of helping you?" |
2971 | Where is he staying?" |
2971 | Where is he?" |
2971 | Who is your God? |
2971 | Why did you leave Venice? |
2971 | Why did you not let me learn from your own mouth that you were happy? |
2971 | Will you allow me to sit down, madam?" |
2971 | Will you be there?" |
2971 | You are joking, surely?" |
2971 | another niece? |
2971 | but what did she say of me?" |
2971 | you are going to make her pregnant? |
2971 | you have an uncle in England? |
45733 | ''Did you take notes, Mr. Webster, of Mr. Hayne''s speech?'' 45733 ''You reply in the morning?'' |
45733 | Are you going to let me be devoured by these people? |
45733 | Attack, sir; attack what? |
45733 | Dinna ye hear the pibroch? |
45733 | Do n''t you know me? |
45733 | Had you not better defer your speech? |
45733 | If there is a second battle to- morrow,he said,"what troops shall I fight it with? |
45733 | If we succeed, what will the world say? |
45733 | Was there ever,says Parton,"a public man, not at the head of a state, so beloved as he? |
45733 | What is the matter? |
45733 | What is to be done? |
45733 | Who are you? |
45733 | 39, shown by Parker''s ships?" |
45733 | A hundred years more have passed over our heads, and what do we behold? |
45733 | Blücher''s Prussians, or Grouchy''s pursuing French? |
45733 | Did he not ask himself then: what are glory and power worth, if this is the end of kingly greatness?] |
45733 | Had they been swept away and the old wrongs of the people been brought back? |
45733 | Hayne has made a speech?'' |
45733 | How does the nineteenth century compare with its predecessors? |
45733 | In 1829, the long debate on the question:"Does the Constitution make us one sovereign nation or only a league of separate states?" |
45733 | Is our signal for''close action''still flying?" |
45733 | It is an idea that sounds well in rhyme and song, but it must stand the test of practice as well; and is it capable of this? |
45733 | Looking back for a century, what do we see? |
45733 | May this large Gospel of the Christ be realized by a nation, and this nation become in spirit and fact a church? |
45733 | Shall it not in its turn be overthrown, and liberty and equality in this direction be also attained? |
45733 | Shall this third of the great tyrants of the world retain its supremacy? |
45733 | Should these haughty islanders contemn his power and defy his armies? |
45733 | Three hundred years have passed, and what is the warship of to- day? |
45733 | What are we not to lose by peace? |
45733 | What are we to gain by war? |
45733 | What brought about this great change? |
45733 | What does it mean?" |
45733 | What was it that stirred the larger patriotism that gave shape and purpose to this growing feeling of national pride and unity? |
45733 | Who ever heard such cheers, so hearty, distinct and ringing, as those which his name evoked? |
45733 | Who that ever read or heard it can forget the closing passage of that glorious speech? |
45733 | Who were they? |
45733 | [= Education, Discovery and Commerce=] In what else does the beginning of the twentieth stand far in advance of that of the nineteenth century? |
45733 | [= Great Discoveries of the Nineteenth Century=] Now what has been the record since 1800? |
45733 | [= How the Indians Live=] What, then, is the condition of the Indian to- day? |
45733 | [= Peace Propositions of the Emperor of Russia=] What else shall be said of the state of affairs at the dawn of the twentieth century? |
45733 | [= The Rights of Man=] As for the rights of the people, what had become of them? |
45733 | [= The War with the Pirates of Tripoli=] But, after all, what else could the Government do? |
1498 | What says our Lord? |
1498 | Why,said he,"lay in my path a stumbling- block? |
1498 | Ah, who are the common people? |
1498 | And all for what? |
1498 | And does not this startling conclusion seem to be confirmed by the whole history of mankind? |
1498 | And what could Henry do, with all his greatness? |
1498 | And what was the result? |
1498 | And why not? |
1498 | And yet what crimes and abominations have not been committed in the name of the Church? |
1498 | Are not popes and kings and bishops alike the creation of circumstances, good or evil inventions, as they meet the wants of society? |
1498 | Are they not MINE? |
1498 | As to the filling the vacancies of the abbeys, he further replied:"What are abbeys to YOU? |
1498 | But did he fail? |
1498 | But then, who does not seek to make converts in his way, whether enlightened or not? |
1498 | But what then? |
1498 | But where was the imprisoned baron to get the money for his ransom? |
1498 | Can we wonder it should have created French Revolutions? |
1498 | Can we wonder that a relation so unequal should have been detested by the people when they began to think? |
1498 | Conscience may be unenlightened, yet take away the power of conscience and what would become of our world? |
1498 | Could we expect Becket to sign such an agreement, to part with his powers, to betray the Church of which he was the first dignitary in England? |
1498 | Did our fathers ever dream of compromise with treacherous and hostile Indians? |
1498 | Did the Puritans understand them, with all their professions? |
1498 | Do men love truth, or readily accept it, when it conflicts with passions and interests? |
1498 | Do not men look daggers, though they dare not use them? |
1498 | Do we tolerate, in our hearts, those who differ from us? |
1498 | Do you not love me better than you did her? |
1498 | During a reign of universal lawlessness, what man would work except for a scanty and precarious support? |
1498 | For what was he placed in the most exalted post of the Church, if not to defend her in an alarming crisis? |
1498 | How can you blind yourself to the wrong which Christ suffers in me and yourself? |
1498 | How long, you ask, shall his empire last? |
1498 | How, outside the Church, could he thus have arisen? |
1498 | If it can be substantiated, on what claim rests the sovereignty of the people? |
1498 | If we had the power, would we not seek to produce conformity with our notions, like Queen Elizabeth, or Oliver Cromwell, or Archbishop Laud? |
1498 | Is a united Saracenic empire better than a divided, wrangling Christian empire? |
1498 | Is any truth popular which is arrayed against the pride of reason? |
1498 | Is it because, as men become advanced in learning and culture, they are theologically wiser than Moses and Abraham and Isaiah? |
1498 | Is it darkness or light which the world loves? |
1498 | Is it for liturgical services, or is it for pulpit eloquence? |
1498 | Is it strange that such a man should have been offered the See of Canterbury on the death of Theobald? |
1498 | It is an abominable law, but who can doubt its efficacy in cementing the power of the popes? |
1498 | Long afterwards, when she was dead, Ayesha, his young and favorite wife, thus addressed him:"Am I not better than Cadijeh? |
1498 | Now you ask:"What were his reforms, and what were his schemes of aggrandizement, for which we honor him while we denounce him?" |
1498 | Of what use can any country be to conquerors, when it can not be civilized or made to contribute to their wants? |
1498 | Of what use or value could Palestine have been to Europeans in the Middle Ages? |
1498 | Priests who had vowed obedience might consent to the repudiation of their wives, but would great temporal robbers part with their spoils? |
1498 | Should he remain at Mecca and die, before his mission was accomplished, or should he fly? |
1498 | The Crusades the great external event of the Middle Ages A semi- religious and semi- military movement What gives interest to wars? |
1498 | They are a pleasure- loving and imaginative people: why not promise the victors of thy faith a sensual bliss in Paradise? |
1498 | They were doubtless very ignorant; but would knowledge have made them any happier? |
1498 | Thy countrymen are wild, fierce, and warlike: why not incite their martial passions in defence of thy doctrines? |
1498 | Was ever before seen such arrogance and audacity in a Pope? |
1498 | Was there ever such a contradiction?--"glory in debasement, and debasement in glory,"--type of the misery and greatness of man? |
1498 | Was there ever such a mystery, so occult are its arts, so subtile its policy, so plausible its pretensions, so certain its shafts? |
1498 | Was there ever such audacity? |
1498 | We only see mistakes and follies; and who cares to dwell on the infirmities of human nature? |
1498 | Were there no conservative forces in that imposing Empire? |
1498 | What are the elements of a power so enduring and so irresistible? |
1498 | What are we to think of such a fall, such a humiliation on the part of a sovereign? |
1498 | What are we to think of such haughtiness on the part of a priest,--his subject? |
1498 | What caused the rapid eclipse of faith in the antediluvian world? |
1498 | What conflict grander and more sublime than this, in the whole history of society? |
1498 | What conflict proved more momentous in its results? |
1498 | What could he do? |
1498 | What did he leave behind? |
1498 | What gave such ascendency to the Jesuits? |
1498 | What good did it accomplish? |
1498 | What has given to it its greatness and its dignity? |
1498 | What is a man without a conscience? |
1498 | What is it for? |
1498 | What knight would arm himself for them; what gentle lady wept at their sorrows? |
1498 | What life could be more antagonistic to enlightened reason? |
1498 | What made the mediaeval popes so powerful? |
1498 | What makes the most insidious heresies so acceptable to the learned? |
1498 | What mistake more fatal to everything like self- improvement, culture, knowledge, happiness? |
1498 | What more natural than for Charlemagne to feel that he had restored the Western Empire? |
1498 | What place so sacred as Jerusalem, the scene of the passion and resurrection of our Lord? |
1498 | What readers would a Rousseau have found among the people in the time of Louis VII.? |
1498 | What state of society could be worse than that of England under the early Saxon kings? |
1498 | What was he to do? |
1498 | What was his life compared with the sale of God''s heritage? |
1498 | What were its extenuating features? |
1498 | What were the services he rendered to Europe and Christian civilization? |
1498 | What, then, is the hope of the world? |
1498 | When and where have not lies and sophistries and hypocrisies reigned? |
1498 | When has pure moral truth ever been fashionable? |
1498 | When have its advocates not been reviled, slandered, misrepresented, and persecuted, if it has interfered with the domination of prevailing interests? |
1498 | When have men parted with their privileges, except upon compulsion? |
1498 | When have the principles of religious toleration been understood? |
1498 | Whence this strange vitality? |
1498 | Whence was this right derived? |
1498 | Where do man''s labors cease? |
1498 | Where is the happiness of devouring books with no attempt to profit by them, except in the temporary pleasure of satisfying an appetite? |
1498 | Where would Turkey be to- day without the European powers, if the Sultan''s authority were to fall? |
1498 | Which one should Anselm recognize? |
1498 | Who can doubt that the influence of the Church was better than that of nobles in the Middle Ages? |
1498 | Who can measure it, or analyze it, or comprehend it? |
1498 | Who can resist the ideas of his age? |
1498 | Who can wield irresponsible power and not become arrogant, and perhaps self- indulgent? |
1498 | Who can wonder? |
1498 | Who shall settle whether spiritual or temporal power should have the ascendency in the Middle Ages? |
1498 | Why attack idols; why quarrel with his own interests; why destroy his popularity? |
1498 | Why could not Noah establish and perpetuate his doctrines among his own descendants before he was dead? |
1498 | Why did no great scholars arise even in the Church? |
1498 | Why did society constantly decline for four hundred years, with that civilization which was its boast and hope? |
1498 | Why did the grand triumphs of Protestantism stop in half a century after Luther delivered his message? |
1498 | Why is modern literature, when fashionable and popular, so antichristian in its tone and spirit? |
1498 | Why is the simple faith of the primitive Christians so obnoxious to the wise, the mighty, and the noble? |
1498 | Why not acknowledge such a fundamental truth, appealing to the intellect as well as the moral sense? |
1498 | Why not pursue a new course, and adapt thy doctrines to men as they are? |
1498 | Why should man escape the universal waste, when reason is ignored or misdirected? |
1498 | Why urge a great man to be silent on the very thing which makes him great? |
1498 | Why was Christianity itself most eagerly embraced when its light was obscured by fables and superstitions? |
1498 | Why was classic literature utterly neglected? |
1498 | Why was it commended by historians as a good institution for the times? |
1498 | Why was the Socratic philosophy unpopular? |
1498 | Why were libraries burned or destroyed? |
1498 | Why were the Epicureans so fashionable? |
1498 | Why, then, was such an unjust and unequal relation permitted to exist so long? |
1498 | Will that miracle be wrought? |
1498 | With such a people on his borders, and every day becoming more formidable, what was Charlemagne''s policy? |
1498 | Would Providence have permitted such a power to rule for a thousand years had it not been a necessity? |
1498 | Would a French Revolution have been possible under the Roman Caesars? |
6770 | And what was it then, but a subterfuge to limit a newly spreading religion by the terms of obsolete treaties? |
6770 | And would not both parties exhaust themselves in so ruinous a civil war? |
6770 | But how could the German princes forget their own purposes in furthering the plans of Henry? |
6770 | But of what avail was the voice of prudence against the seductive glitter of a crown? |
6770 | But was it his connexion with Rome which constituted a German emperor, or was it not rather Germany which was to be represented in its head? |
6770 | But with what means was it to be won? |
6770 | Could he have the weakness to listen to his fears, and to betray the cause of religion and liberty? |
6770 | Could inducements such as these fail to awaken his ambition, or such hopes to animate and inflame his resolution? |
6770 | How could one party expect from another what itself was incapable of performing? |
6770 | How much was at stake if he lost; and if he won, whom else would he destroy but his own subjects? |
6770 | Must, then, the design be sacrificed, because that which was merely accidental had changed? |
6770 | One of them, seizing him by the button of his doublet, demanded, in a tone of menace,"Ferdinand, wilt thou sign it?" |
6770 | The Protestants were now spread over the whole Empire, and how could they justly still be represented by an unbroken line of Roman Catholic emperors? |
6770 | The church had now divided; the Diet had broken into two religious parties; was the whole system of the Empire still exclusively to follow the one? |
6770 | Was it worth while to ascend a brother''s throne through guilt, and then maintain it with so little dignity, and leave it with so little renown? |
6770 | Was the right of inheritance then to be limited to the paternal house, or to be extended to blood? |
6770 | Was then a right of primogeniture to be admitted in the church, as in noble families? |
6770 | Were the Bohemian Protestants to blame, if they armed themselves in time against the enforcement of such maxims? |
6770 | Were the pretensions of one party to be favoured by a prescription from times when the claims of the other could not have come into existence? |
6770 | What could he oppose to such an enemy, if the Protestant portion of his subjects deserted him? |
6770 | What had the Empire to look for from a prince incapable even of defending his hereditary dominions against its domestic enemies? |
6770 | What now had Matthias done to justify the expectations which he had excited by the overthrow of his predecessor? |
6770 | Who would not be pardoned had he wavered in this frightful situation? |
6770 | Why, then, it may be asked, did they not operate with equal force upon the princes of the House of Austria? |
6770 | With what ease might they be introduced within the empire, if a decisive stroke should render their presence necessary? |
8217 | Will my kids go hungry? 8217 And what if not? 8217 Are they pro- American, or pro- German( read: pro federalist Europe)? 8217 Are they pro- American, or pro- German( read: pro federalist Europe)? 8217 But surely comparing the EU or NATO to the erstwhileEvil Empire"( i.e., the Soviet Union) is stretching it too far? |
8217 | For what is immigration if not the importation of ambitious indigents, certain to revitalize the EU''s rich and somnolent economies? |
8217 | In short: is there an inherent incompatibility between the order of the world( read: the church doctrine) and meritocratic( democratic) capitalism? |
8217 | Is this Bulgaria''s price? |
8217 | Transition in Context By: Dr. Sam Vaknin Also published by United Press International( UPI) Also Read Lessons in Transition Is Transition Possible? |
8217 | Was n''t Slobodan Milosevic, the Serb dictator, ousted in favor of the German- educated Zoran Djindjic? |
8217 | What do the candidate states stand to gain from their accession? |
8217 | What do the candidate states stand to gain from their accession? |
8217 | What is the extent of their commitment to the European Union, its values and its agenda? |
8217 | What is the extent of their commitment to the European Union, its values and its agenda? |
8217 | What lessons does history teach us? |
8217 | What pitfalls should we avoid and what features should we embrace? |
8217 | What''s more important- free markets, institutions, education, democracy, or capital? |
8217 | Where and with whom do they see a common, prosperous future? |
8217 | Where and with whom do they see a common, prosperous future? |
8217 | Why the curious rebuff by its ostensible prot � g � s? |
8217 | Will they be stuck with my debts? |
2976 | ''What can you do?'' 2976 And after you have been to confession will you love me as you love me now?" |
2976 | And if the father and mother refused? |
2976 | And turn Capuchin, I suppose? |
2976 | And why not to- night? |
2976 | And you told him the truth? |
2976 | Are they mad? |
2976 | Are you a little crazy? |
2976 | Are you sure of this? |
2976 | But how shall I convince you that I am actuated by love and not by complaisance? |
2976 | But what will he say if I do not go? |
2976 | But will you go another day? |
2976 | But,I remarked,"does not the Inquisition object to this dance?" |
2976 | Can you tell me why the owner objects to the stone being taken out and put in at my expense? |
2976 | Certainly,I answered,"but what shall I say to prevent his taking offence?" |
2976 | Certainly,said I,"but what can you mean by wishing you had been Raphael? |
2976 | Did he not bring you to my box? |
2976 | Do you know the niece? |
2976 | Do you only sell hats? |
2976 | Do you tell him all your sins without reserve? |
2976 | Do you think I am taken in by all that? |
2976 | Does he ask you questions? |
2976 | Does he know it? |
2976 | Does she know that we love each other? |
2976 | Does she know, that your revenue is fed solely by the purses of dupes? |
2976 | Has your case been heard yet? |
2976 | Have you had this confessor for long? |
2976 | Have you weighed it? |
2976 | Her house? |
2976 | How about his wife? |
2976 | How about the furniture and the linen? |
2976 | How can I dare to ask him? |
2976 | How did you get that angel? |
2976 | How is it that you are wearing the sling after all these months? |
2976 | How is the prince? |
2976 | How much am I to pay? |
2976 | I am glad to hear it; but what is this, you seem to be making new boots? |
2976 | I am very sorry to hear all this; but tell me what has become of Gertrude? |
2976 | I have committed no crime,I said;"what compensation am I to have when I am released from this filthy and abominable place? |
2976 | I will not follow you,I replied;"the matter can be settled here?" |
2976 | If not, I shall leave; for what can I do in a town where I can only drive, and where the Government keeps assassins in its pay? |
2976 | Indeed I will, sweetheart; but why should we talk of that now? |
2976 | Is he rich? |
2976 | Is she gallant? |
2976 | Is she pretty still? |
2976 | Is she the same with all men? |
2976 | Is the reason known? |
2976 | Is your confessor a young man? |
2976 | Like that? |
2976 | Mine? |
2976 | No remedy? |
2976 | She is like that, is she? |
2976 | Tell me what it is? |
2976 | Then he is not a hard man, as some say? |
2976 | Then she is in love, too? |
2976 | Then they ask impossibilities? |
2976 | Then whom do you think that I am descended from? |
2976 | Then you can lend the money on it? |
2976 | Then you deceived him, and told a lie? |
2976 | Then you do n''t know that you are going to a ball at her house to- night? |
2976 | Then you know this gentleman? |
2976 | Then you lied just now? |
2976 | Then, will you mend me these boots? |
2976 | Very good; but what must I do? |
2976 | Well, I certainly am in the duke''s service, but how did you find it out? |
2976 | Well, what can the Holy Inquisition want to know? |
2976 | What can you ask, and what can I offer, since I must keep myself pure for my husband? |
2976 | What could I claim? |
2976 | What do they want your excellency to do? |
2976 | What do you mean? 2976 What do you think she should do to attract customers?" |
2976 | What do you want in Spain? |
2976 | What do you want to take the cousin for? |
2976 | What have I said? |
2976 | What is he saying? |
2976 | What is his name? |
2976 | What is this? |
2976 | What kind of questions did they ask you? |
2976 | What questions were these? |
2976 | What victory? |
2976 | What? 2976 Where have I seen him?" |
2976 | Where is he? |
2976 | Where is my landlord? |
2976 | Where is this letter? |
2976 | Where shall I send it? |
2976 | Who allowed you to commit this mutilation? 2976 Who obliged you to look at it?" |
2976 | Why did n''t they meet me, then? |
2976 | Why did n''t you give him his ring? |
2976 | Why do you give me such an unjust order? |
2976 | Why do you go to confession so often? |
2976 | Why not? |
2976 | Why not? |
2976 | Why should I read them again? 2976 Why so?" |
2976 | Why unhappy? |
2976 | Why? 2976 Why?" |
2976 | Will you allow me to arrange your shirt so as to obviate it? |
2976 | Will you go and see the duchess? |
2976 | Would you like to come with me to our Lady of Atocha? |
2976 | Would you like to have my companionship? |
2976 | Wrong? 2976 You have been to confession, I suppose?" |
2976 | ''What do you want?'' |
2976 | ?" |
2976 | Are you sure I do n''t love him?" |
2976 | At last I took courage and walked in, and, on my ringing a bell, I heard a voice,"Who is there?" |
2976 | But tell me which I shall do stay or go? |
2976 | But who could help it? |
2976 | Did you come to hear me say this? |
2976 | Do n''t you think it is natural that I should desire to eat the hearts of the scoundrels who have placed me here? |
2976 | Do you recognize that purse and these cards?" |
2976 | Has my husband done so? |
2976 | How and when did you see me?" |
2976 | I also thought of getting a mistress, for what is life without love? |
2976 | I never thought it would be possible to do what you have done; but I suppose it was very difficult?" |
2976 | If it is a burden on you, it is your enemy, and if it is your enemy why do you suffer it thus lightly to gain the victory? |
2976 | If so, do you think it is necessary to apologize for the performance of duty?" |
2976 | In this way I have not to put them on, nor need I trouble myself whether they fit well or ill.""How much do you get?" |
2976 | May I hope?" |
2976 | Petersburg?" |
2976 | She is pretty enough, do n''t you think so?" |
2976 | Such were my castles in Spain; who has not built such? |
2976 | Tell me, my angel, whence comes this unexpected happiness?" |
2976 | The girl stood still and began to laugh, and I was about to turn angrily away when she said,--"I see you do not remember me?" |
2976 | There was no good in talking; I must write; but where was I to find writing materials? |
2976 | This speech had made Soderini blush, and he replied,--"Why do n''t you write a letter to the ambassador, with the arguments you have just used to me?" |
2976 | Undoubtedly, every man worthy of the name longs to be free, but who is really free in this world? |
2976 | Unhappy pride how many forms it assumes, and who is without his own peculiar form of it? |
2976 | Was it the Croce I knew? |
2976 | Was the duke an old man?" |
2976 | What is a servant who does not warn his master under such circumstances but a rascal? |
2976 | What man would expose himself, for the pleasure he enjoys, to the pains of pregnancy and the dangers of childbed? |
2976 | What will come of it?" |
2976 | You dare to tell me that you will not obey?" |
2976 | shall I be obliged to leave Vienna to- morrow?" |
2976 | you are going to Madrid with a letter from Squillace, and you dare to skew it?" |
2965 | And what do you think of Goldoni? |
2965 | And you do not think so? |
2965 | Are they French? |
2965 | Are you ill? |
2965 | Are you sure he got your letter? |
2965 | Are you thinking,said he,"of some more than human passage?" |
2965 | Are you weeping? |
2965 | But do not these French turns increase the beauty of your language? |
2965 | But his plays give satisfaction? |
2965 | But how if the rubbing makes the sheath fall off? |
2965 | But in your amorous combats with another nun, do n''t you feel as if you would like her to change into a man? |
2965 | But is what you have told me about your daughter known to the visitors here? |
2965 | But tell me how he can belong to the Forty and the Fifty? |
2965 | Can you ask me? 2965 Celebrated?" |
2965 | Did he use violence towards you, then? |
2965 | Did you tell him the name of the seducer? |
2965 | Did you tell your confessor the state you were in? |
2965 | Do I look worthy of contempt? |
2965 | Do not weep so, dear sister, and tell me how you expect to be delivered here without the lay- sister being aware of it? |
2965 | Do you know him? |
2965 | Do you know,said he,"the Marquis Albergati Capacelli, senator of Bologna, and Count Paradisi?" |
2965 | Do you remember any of your version of the Radamiste? |
2965 | Do you think that the bed and the fine linen will deliver you from the dreams you fear? |
2965 | Do you want me to take off my chemise? |
2965 | Does n''t your brother know anything about it? |
2965 | Even under The Leads? |
2965 | Everybody knows it; why should I hide it? 2965 Had he no appetite?" |
2965 | Had you no fear of consequences? |
2965 | Has he succeeded? |
2965 | Have you a copy of your answers? |
2965 | Have you come to speak to me, or for me to speak to you? |
2965 | Have you got it with you? 2965 Have you made many sonnets?" |
2965 | He has been canonised, then? 2965 He is an actor, I think you said?" |
2965 | How a fool? 2965 How can I love you more than I do? |
2965 | How can I? 2965 How did you become amorous of a fellow like that?" |
2965 | How do you mean? |
2965 | I hope you have the wit to laugh at the abbess''s silly excommunications? |
2965 | I thought you were gone? |
2965 | I want him to say fifteen masses for her, if you will let me? |
2965 | In company, dearest? 2965 Is he a handsome man?" |
2965 | Is your daughter pretty? |
2965 | No,said he;"would you like to see your room?" |
2965 | Possibly, but is he a rich or handsome man? |
2965 | Quite so; but would you tell me whether you allow your daughter to have a lover? |
2965 | Read it? 2965 Read your works? |
2965 | Tell me truly,said I,"amidst our kisses, amidst these ecstacies which we call child- like, do you not feel a desire for something more?" |
2965 | That is not quite true; how about your stomach, for instance? |
2965 | That is strange; how about your nature and the impulse of the senses? |
2965 | That is very fine; otherwise, I suppose, your daughter would take pity on her amorous papa? |
2965 | The Abbe Lazzarini, author of the tragedy,''Ulisse il giovine''? 2965 The first? |
2965 | Then we must let her die? |
2965 | Then will you consent to receive pleasure in return for that which you give me? |
2965 | Then you do not repent having made me a happy man? |
2965 | Then you have long hair? |
2965 | Very good; but supposing you succeed in destroying superstition, what are you going to put in its place? |
2965 | We are very grateful,said the elder of the two sisters,"but how are these pretty balls used?" |
2965 | What Italian poet do you like best? |
2965 | What are you saying? 2965 What did the priest say?" |
2965 | What did they give you to come here? |
2965 | What do you mean, then? 2965 What do you think of Gilbert, sir?" |
2965 | What does this packet contain, darling? |
2965 | What have you decided on doing? |
2965 | What have you done with the child? |
2965 | What made you think that I had anything to do with M. de Coudert? |
2965 | What news have you? |
2965 | What part of France do you come from? |
2965 | What passage is that? |
2965 | What reception has been accorded to your innovation? |
2965 | What use would that be? 2965 What would you do, then, if mine and yours were the same?" |
2965 | When you put the child at the hospital door, were you recognized? |
2965 | Where does he make that ridiculous remark? |
2965 | Where does she come from? |
2965 | Where is the child? |
2965 | Where''s that from? |
2965 | Which is that? |
2965 | Who wrote the note? |
2965 | Why are you not in your own bed, dearest? |
2965 | Why cursed? |
2965 | Why does he call himself poet to the Duke of Parma? |
2965 | Why has he gone? |
2965 | Why not? 2965 Why the night, dearest, while we have the day before us? |
2965 | Why was I not let in by the door? |
2965 | Why wretched? 2965 Why,"said I, in Venetian,"have you not a light? |
2965 | Why? |
2965 | Will you stake the value of this bill on a card, without knowing its value? |
2965 | Would you be kind enough to escort me? |
2965 | Would you mind telling me why? |
2965 | You are always moderate in your enjoyment, then? |
2965 | You are not so comfortable there? |
2965 | You do not love me, then? |
2965 | You have learn them by heart, then, have you? |
2965 | You know the others, though? |
2965 | You will, of course, see that the funeral is properly carried out? |
2965 | You wish, then, to see the people sovereign? |
2965 | And how about the lay- sister?" |
2965 | Are you not a Venetian? |
2965 | Are you not the nun I saw this morning?" |
2965 | But I suppose the long hair is only put in to please you?" |
2965 | But how is my friend Crebillon your master, may I ask?" |
2965 | But now tell me why you did not want me to see the portrait before you were in bed?" |
2965 | But what is that?" |
2965 | Can you tell me the name of the gentleman who kept the bank?" |
2965 | Did you read it?" |
2965 | Do you love me still?" |
2965 | Do you understand what I mean?" |
2965 | Has she abandoned herself to some fatal passion, of which the result has been pregnancy? |
2965 | He came up to me and said,"How do you do?" |
2965 | How can you laugh?" |
2965 | How could I refuse? |
2965 | How could you have forgotten it? |
2965 | How shall I make myself worthy of giving you my portrait?" |
2965 | I found my fair nun in bed, and asked her,"How do you feel to- day, madam?" |
2965 | I suppose the Marquis Albergati is a man of letters?" |
2965 | If I deliver the race of man from a wild beast which is devouring it, am I to be asked what I intend to put in its place?" |
2965 | May I ask you to what branch of literature you have devoted yourself?" |
2965 | Of course you are fond of poetry?" |
2965 | So all the others have only come here for amusement''s sake?" |
2965 | The nun slept, as I thought; but even if her sleep was feigned, should I be angry with her for the stratagem? |
2965 | The philosophers and the mystics may perhaps laugh at me, but what do I care? |
2965 | Then he did not ask you to give him any more assignations?" |
2965 | What shall I do in four or five months, when my condition becomes past doubt?" |
2965 | When I had finished she said,"But is your M---- M---- really so like me, that you mistook me for her?" |
2965 | Where do you find an enslaved and yet a happy people?" |
2965 | Why did n''t you use one last night? |
2965 | Will you be my wife? |
2965 | Will you trust in me? |
2965 | Would there be anything foolish in coming to see me?" |
2965 | are you happy?" |
2965 | it is you who have had me followed, is it?" |
2965 | ought she not to have had the two louis?" |
2952 | A chaplain? |
2952 | And his eminence has given it? |
2952 | And if the person to be arrested happened to be under the protection of the cardinal-- what then? |
2952 | And if the spirit came gliding along the grass and hissed at you? |
2952 | And who examined him? |
2952 | Are all these goods here? |
2952 | Are you certain,I enquired,"that we are not suspected?" |
2952 | Are you not afraid such a supper will hurt you? |
2952 | Are you satisfied,I said to Don Sancio,"that Bellino is a woman?" |
2952 | Are you truly ill? |
2952 | But after all,I asked,"have I any beard?" |
2952 | But are you sure he is a''castrato''? |
2952 | But she believes them to be written by your eminence? |
2952 | But the cardinal might have refused? |
2952 | But,exclaimed the advocate,"can you not guess the Englishman exists only in our friend''s imagination? |
2952 | By- the- by, abbe,she said, a minute after,"have you read my sonnet?" |
2952 | Dearest,she said,"are you satisfied now? |
2952 | Do you intend to sail from Naples or from Venice? |
2952 | Do you know the secret, or do you not? 2952 Do you love me very much?" |
2952 | Do you not see that beautiful serpent with the blazing skin, which lifts its head and seems to worship us? |
2952 | Do you think,I asked,"that coquettes are happier?" |
2952 | Do you want money? |
2952 | Fear nothing, my life; my sister is kind, she loves me, she pities me; do you not love me, my dear Angelique? 2952 Has anyone seen you enter the house?" |
2952 | Has he become jealous? |
2952 | Have you got any money? |
2952 | Have you received money likewise? |
2952 | How do you know it? |
2952 | How many are there in your company? |
2952 | I should be sorry if it should turn out so, but was I to expose my own concerns? |
2952 | If you loved me truly,I said,"how could you let me sleep with your sisters, out of spite at your resistance?" |
2952 | Is she not a charming girl? |
2952 | Is this your lordship''s first visit to this house? 2952 May I hope, madam, that you will allow me to pay you my respects?" |
2952 | Must I cease my visits at once, and without cause? |
2952 | Must I deliver the letter at once? |
2952 | My poor girl,I said at last,"when daylight comes, and that will not be long, for it is past midnight, what do you intend to do?" |
2952 | No,he replied,"I have not; but would you feel disposed to lend me your poetical pen, always under the seal of secrecy?" |
2952 | No; and if we had been seen, what of it? 2952 Of course you have a lover?" |
2952 | On what subject can I advise you? |
2952 | Shall we go and take a walk together? |
2952 | Tell me, wonderful being, bewitching woman, what would you have done if, instead of your pretty serpent, you had seen your husband and your mother? |
2952 | Then you have deceived the Pope? |
2952 | Time? |
2952 | Truly loving? 2952 What are you saying, dearest? |
2952 | What do you mean? 2952 What do you think,"he enquired,"of the sonnet?" |
2952 | What do you want so late? |
2952 | What do you want to augment gold for? 2952 What has become,"I said,"of that dreadful monstrosity?" |
2952 | What have you done with your passport? |
2952 | What is the matter? |
2952 | What kind of execution? |
2952 | What sorrow? |
2952 | Where shall I go? |
2952 | Which way? |
2952 | Why and how are you a fugitive? |
2952 | Why do you not ask hospitality in the convents of your order? |
2952 | Why do you suppose that I want to conceal my age? |
2952 | Why not? 2952 Why should I? |
2952 | Why? |
2952 | Will she receive me? |
2952 | Will she see me? |
2952 | Will there be a third person? |
2952 | Will you not take supper with me? |
2952 | Willingly; but tell me, reverend abbe, whether you would feel disposed to sell me your secret? |
2952 | Would her ladyship be so good as to tell me in what I have appeared to her to be a mere glutton? 2952 Yes; but what should I do if she took it into her head to compose some new stanzas for me?" |
2952 | And if you truly loved me, tell me how you could contrive to defer your happiness and mine so long? |
2952 | Are you joking?" |
2952 | Are you not of my opinion?" |
2952 | Because a few thorns are to be found in a basket full of roses, is the existence of those beautiful flowers to be denied? |
2952 | But as M. Vais calls upon you, tell me whether you have informed him of my having spent a few days in Ancona?" |
2952 | But is it quite certain that I did not make a mistake?" |
2952 | But to whom can he recommend me in Constantinople? |
2952 | But what has become of your lover?" |
2952 | But who would have thought of disapproving? |
2952 | But, pray where is the man who is always suffering from a rheum? |
2952 | Can you tell me what is the expense of the augmentation?" |
2952 | Countess Marcolini is here; does your lordship know her? |
2952 | Did you not threaten me this very day in your carriage? |
2952 | Do we consider as a dirty excrescence the hair of which we take so much care, and which is of the same nature as the beard? |
2952 | Do you doubt having possessed me wholly, entirely?" |
2952 | Do you not know that, in moments of such rapture, lovers see and feel nothing but love? |
2952 | Do you speak French?" |
2952 | Do you suppose I would have given it to you without the agreement we entered into? |
2952 | Do you, then, confess that I was not mistaken when I guessed that you were a charming woman? |
2952 | Does an hypochondriac affection, which causes sadness and lowness in all those who suffer from it, render you cheerful?" |
2952 | Have you any acquaintances?" |
2952 | Have you any money?" |
2952 | Have you been a student?" |
2952 | Have you found me truly loving?" |
2952 | How can you, intelligent as you are, flatter yourself that, finding me to be a man, you could all at once cease to love me? |
2952 | How much would you want?" |
2952 | How was I to suppose that I was in a hospital? |
2952 | I loved you; but was it not natural that I should suppose your inclination for me only a passing caprice? |
2952 | I only bowed low to the marchioness, and a moment after Cardinal Acquaviva said to me, kindly,"You are astonished at your adventure being known?" |
2952 | I was forced to make room for him, and exclaimed"Heavens, where am I?" |
2952 | Is it any business to transact in Rome?" |
2952 | She was beautiful, young, full of wit and talent; she was fond of literary pursuits, and very powerful in Rome; what more was necessary? |
2952 | Suddenly I feel two hands upon my shoulders, and the voice of the keeper exclaims,"What are you about?" |
2952 | Tell me, now, whether you will accept my proposal? |
2952 | The Neapolitan, addressing himself to me, said,"Am I to have the honour of sleeping with the reverend gentleman?" |
2952 | The new officer, approaching me very politely, said to me,--"To what chance, reverend sir, am I indebted for the honour of having you in my custody?" |
2952 | This sort of treatment easily led me to believe that I was not in any kind of hostelry; but where was I? |
2952 | True, I can write it with either hand; and what else do I want to know?" |
2952 | Was I to blush at the sight of the good man I had at first deceived? |
2952 | Was it self- conceit or modesty, vice or virtue? |
2952 | Well, why should I put on a mask before my readers? |
2952 | What am I to admire?" |
2952 | What could I do at such a fearful moment? |
2952 | What is your answer?" |
2952 | What shall I do?" |
2952 | When I got home again, I went to bed; but how could I sleep? |
2952 | When do you wish to go?" |
2952 | When we meet in Naples--""But why not now?" |
2952 | Where is the heart of steel which is not softened by the tears, by the prayers of a pretty and unfortunate woman? |
2952 | Where is the lover who would have objected to so attractive a proposal? |
2952 | Which do you prefer?" |
2952 | Will you give me some supper, as the landlord refuses to do so?" |
2952 | Will you write them at once?" |
2952 | Would he have done so if he had admitted the possibility of the beautiful marchioness feeling anything for me? |
2952 | Would the charms which you now see in me cease to exist then? |
2952 | You are sighing, my son?" |
2952 | You have not yet presented yourself to kiss the foot of our Holy Father?" |
2952 | You would certainly never find me compliant; and how am I to know that you would not threaten me with death?" |
2952 | am I your first love? |
2952 | but are you likewise known at the Tour- du- Grec, for I should not like to lose my time?" |
2952 | do you really think so? |
2952 | how can I love her?" |
2952 | idol of my heart, have I not told you so? |
2952 | now, monsignor? |
2952 | said I,"are you not afraid?" |
2952 | where art thou, my dear serpent? |
2952 | why am I not entirely your own? |
6417 | Is this reasonable? |
6417 | What has it been hitherto in the political order? 6417 What is Europe?" |
6417 | What is the Third Estate? |
6417 | ( 4) How far might the pope, as universally acknowledged head of the Church, interfere in the internal affairs of particular states? |
6417 | But why did this great institution exist? |
6417 | How might this or that royal family obtain wider territories and richer towns? |
6417 | In other words, what are the great distinguishing achievements of modern times? |
6417 | In the first place, how would the Assembly be assured of National freedom from the intrigues and armed force of the court? |
6417 | In the second place, what direction would the reforms of the Assembly take? |
6417 | Meanwhile, the answer to the other question which we propounded above,"What direction would the reforms of the Assembly take?" |
6417 | On what basis should the new be erected? |
6417 | Scotland] In the eighteenth century, what was the British monarchy? |
6417 | Should Dupleix, wily diplomat as he was, be allowed to make India a French empire? |
6417 | The"old régime"was for old needs; did it satisfy new requirements? |
6417 | What are the duties of Christians toward those who govern them, and what in particular are our duties towards Napoleon I, our emperor? |
6417 | What does it desire? |
6417 | What must we think of those who are wanting in their duties towards our emperor? |
6417 | What was the good of being a clergyman or a noble, if one had no privileges and was obliged to pay taxes like the rest? |
6417 | What was the weak king to do under the circumstances? |
6417 | What would the king do under these circumstances? |
6417 | Why are we subject to all these duties toward our emperor? |
6417 | Why not stir up all the European peoples against their monarchs? |
6417 | Why was it loved, venerated, and well served? |
6417 | [ Sidenote: Government of the Holy Roman Empire] What was the nature of this slight tie that nominally held the Germanies together? |
6417 | exclaimed the emotional tsar:"Where is it, if it is not you and I?" |
6417 | they asked, or,"Is that rational?" |
10531 | What says our Lord? |
10531 | Why,said he,"lay in my path a stumbling- block? |
10531 | Ah, who are the common people? |
10531 | And all for what? |
10531 | And does not this startling conclusion seem to be confirmed by the whole history of mankind? |
10531 | And what could Henry do, with all his greatness? |
10531 | And what was the result? |
10531 | And why not? |
10531 | And yet, of what crimes and abominations has not this government been, accused? |
10531 | Are not popes and kings and bishops alike the creation of circumstances, good or evil inventions, as they meet the wants of society? |
10531 | Are they not_ mine_? |
10531 | As to the filling the vacancies of the abbeys, he further replied:"What are abbeys to_ you_? |
10531 | But did he fail? |
10531 | But then, who does not seek to make converts in his way, whether enlightened or not? |
10531 | But what then? |
10531 | But where was the imprisoned baron to get the money for his ransom? |
10531 | Can we wonder it should have created French Revolutions? |
10531 | Can we wonder that a relation so unequal should have been detested by the people when they began to think? |
10531 | Conscience may be unenlightened, yet take away the power of conscience and what would become of our world? |
10531 | Could we expect Becket to sign such an agreement, to part with his powers, to betray the Church of which he was the first dignitary in England? |
10531 | Did our fathers ever dream of compromise with treacherous and hostile Indians? |
10531 | Did the Puritans understand them, with all their professions? |
10531 | Do men love truth, or readily accept it, when it conflicts with passions and interests? |
10531 | Do not men look daggers, though they dare not use them? |
10531 | Do we tolerate, in our hearts, those who differ from us? |
10531 | Do you not love me better than you did her? |
10531 | During a reign of universal lawlessness, what man would work except for a scanty and precarious support? |
10531 | For what was he placed in the most exalted post of the Church, if not to defend her in an alarming crisis?'' |
10531 | How can you blind yourself to the wrong which Christ suffers in me and yourself? |
10531 | How long, you ask, shall his empire last? |
10531 | How, outside the Church, could he thus have arisen? |
10531 | If it can be substantiated, on what claim rests the sovereignty of the people? |
10531 | If we had the power, would we not seek to produce conformity with our notions, like Queen Elizabeth, or Oliver Cromwell, or Archbishop Laud? |
10531 | Is a united Saracenic empire better than a divided, wrangling Christian empire? |
10531 | Is any truth popular which is arrayed against the pride of reason? |
10531 | Is it because, as men become advanced in learning and culture, they are theologically wiser than Moses and Abraham and Isaiah? |
10531 | Is it darkness or light which the world loves? |
10531 | Is it for liturgical services, or is it for pulpit eloquence? |
10531 | Is it strange that such a man should have been offered the See of Canterbury on the death of Theobald? |
10531 | It is an abominable law, but who can doubt its efficacy in cementing the power of the popes? |
10531 | Long afterwards, when she was dead, Ayésha, his young and favorite wife, thus addressed him:"Am I not better than Cadijeh? |
10531 | Now you ask:"What were his reforms, and what were his schemes of aggrandizement, for which we honor him while we denounce him?" |
10531 | Of what use can any country be to conquerors, when it can not be civilized or made to contribute to their wants? |
10531 | Of what use or value could Palestine have been to Europeans in the Middle Ages? |
10531 | Priests who had vowed obedience might consent to the repudiation of their wives, but would great temporal robbers part with their spoils? |
10531 | Should he remain at Mecca and die, before his mission was accomplished, or should he fly? |
10531 | The Crusades the great external event of the Middle Ages A semi- religious and semi- military movement What gives interest to wars? |
10531 | They are a pleasure- loving and imaginative people: why not promise the victors of thy faith a sensual bliss in Paradise? |
10531 | They were doubtless very ignorant; but would knowledge have made them any happier? |
10531 | Thy countrymen are wild, fierce, and warlike: why not incite their martial passions in defence of thy doctrines? |
10531 | Was ever before seen such arrogance and audacity in a priest? |
10531 | Was there ever such a contradiction?--"glory in debasement, and debasement in glory,"--type of the misery and greatness of man? |
10531 | Was there ever such a mystery, so occult are its arts, so subtile its policy, so plausible its pretensions, so certain its shafts? |
10531 | Was there ever such audacity? |
10531 | We only see mistakes and follies; and who cares to dwell on the infirmities of human nature? |
10531 | Were there no conservative forces in that imposing Empire? |
10531 | What are the elements of a power so enduring and so irresistible? |
10531 | What are we to think of such a fall, such a humiliation on the part of a sovereign? |
10531 | What are we to think of such haughtiness on the part of a priest,--his subject? |
10531 | What caused the rapid eclipse of faith in the antediluvian world? |
10531 | What conflict grander and more sublime than this, in the whole history of society? |
10531 | What conflict proved more momentous in its results? |
10531 | What could he do? |
10531 | What did he leave behind? |
10531 | What gave such ascendency to the Jesuits? |
10531 | What good did it accomplish? |
10531 | What has given to it its greatness and its dignity? |
10531 | What is a man without a conscience? |
10531 | What is it for? |
10531 | What knight would arm himself for them; what gentle lady wept at their sorrows? |
10531 | What life could be more antagonistic to enlightened reason? |
10531 | What made the mediaeval popes so powerful? |
10531 | What makes the most insidious heresies so acceptable to the learned? |
10531 | What mistake more fatal to everything like self- improvement, culture, knowledge, happiness? |
10531 | What more natural than for Charlemagne to feel that he had restored the Western Empire? |
10531 | What place so sacred as Jerusalem, the scene of the passion and resurrection of our Lord? |
10531 | What readers would a Rousseau have found among the people in the time of Louis VII.? |
10531 | What state of society could be worse than that of England under the early Saxon kings? |
10531 | What was he to do? |
10531 | What was his life compared with the sale of God''s heritage? |
10531 | What were its extenuating features? |
10531 | What were the services he rendered to Europe and Christian civilization? |
10531 | What, then, is the hope of the world? |
10531 | When and where have not lies and sophistries and hypocrisies reigned? |
10531 | When has pure moral truth ever been fashionable? |
10531 | When have its advocates not been reviled, slandered, misrepresented, and persecuted, if it has interfered with the domination of prevailing interests? |
10531 | When have men parted with their privileges, except upon compulsion? |
10531 | When have the principles of religious toleration been understood? |
10531 | Whence this strange vitality? |
10531 | Whence was this right derived? |
10531 | Where do man''s labors cease? |
10531 | Where is the happiness of devouring books with no attempt to profit by them, except in the temporary pleasure of satisfying an appetite? |
10531 | Where would Turkey be to- day without the European powers, if the Sultan''s authority were to fall? |
10531 | Which one should Anselm recognize? |
10531 | Who can doubt that the influence of the Church was better than that of nobles in the Middle Ages? |
10531 | Who can measure it, or analyze it, or comprehend it? |
10531 | Who can resist the ideas of his age? |
10531 | Who can wield irresponsible power and not become arrogant, and perhaps self- indulgent? |
10531 | Who can wonder? |
10531 | Who shall settle whether spiritual or temporal power should have the ascendency in the Middle Ages? |
10531 | Why attack idols; why quarrel with his own interests; why destroy his popularity? |
10531 | Why could not Noah establish and perpetuate his doctrines among his own descendants before he was dead? |
10531 | Why did no great scholars arise, even in the Church? |
10531 | Why did society constantly decline for four hundred years, with that civilization which was its boast and hope? |
10531 | Why did the grand triumphs of Protestantism stop in half a century after Luther delivered his message? |
10531 | Why is modern literature, when fashionable and popular, so antichristian in its tone and spirit? |
10531 | Why is the simple faith of the primitive Christians so obnoxious to the wise, the mighty, and the noble? |
10531 | Why not acknowledge such a fundamental truth, appealing to the intellect as well as the moral sense? |
10531 | Why not pursue a new course, and adapt thy doctrines to men as they are? |
10531 | Why should man escape the universal waste, when reason is ignored or misdirected? |
10531 | Why urge a great man to be silent on the very thing which makes him great? |
10531 | Why was Christianity itself most eagerly embraced when its light was obscured by fables and superstitions? |
10531 | Why was classic literature utterly neglected? |
10531 | Why was it commended by historians as a good institution for the times? |
10531 | Why was the Socratic philosophy unpopular? |
10531 | Why were libraries burned or destroyed? |
10531 | Why were the Epicureans so fashionable? |
10531 | Why, then, was such an unjust and unequal relation permitted to exist so long? |
10531 | Will that miracle be wrought? |
10531 | With such a people on his borders, and every day becoming more formidable, what was Charlemagne''s policy? |
10531 | Would Providence have permitted such a power to rule for a thousand years had it not been a necessity? |
10531 | Would a French Revolution have been possible under the Roman Caesars? |
52942 | And how is Father Argüelles getting on? |
52942 | Any of it left? |
52942 | Besides,he says, getting into dangerously deep water for a country vicar,"how can you expect the King to be well? |
52942 | Can we burn any sign to restore him? |
52942 | How much and in what form is the Church charm to be given; at what hour; on what parts of the body? |
52942 | How now,said Captain Salablanca to Lord Grey,"do you think we are in the King''s service for the wretched four ducats a month we earn? |
52942 | Is he a relative of the Queen? 52942 Is there any other charm?" |
52942 | Of what was it made? |
52942 | Then,said the lords,"didst thou not hear him say that he would come with a pike on his shoulder to fight against such heretics?" |
52942 | Was it a man or a woman who administered the charm? |
52942 | Was it the Queen? |
52942 | What is the proof of witchcraft? 52942 What parts?" |
52942 | What queen was it that caused the malady? |
52942 | When was it given? |
52942 | When? |
52942 | Who gave it? |
52942 | Who ordered it? |
52942 | Who was it,he asked,"that had caused the King''s malady?" |
52942 | Who was the witch? 52942 Why did she do it?" |
52942 | Why did you send the woman to frighten the King? |
52942 | ''Do you not see, sir,''said the other,''that Mora is only flourishing about waiting for sundown?'' |
52942 | Brave they were, but, said they, of what use is bravery against foes who will not fight with us hand to hand in the only way we wot of? |
52942 | Had anybody seen or heard anything of the young Earl of Essex, the Queen''s last new pet? |
52942 | Had the witch any children?" |
52942 | Has anything been given since? |
52942 | Has it been repeated? |
52942 | How are the organs affected cleansed by the charm? |
52942 | How can he ask the Devil anything that the Church does not deal with in its exorcising ceremonies? |
52942 | In what way does it act so as to make the King do things contrary to his own will? |
52942 | Is the Queen included in its operation?" |
52942 | The Queen spends 300,000 ducats( a year?) |
52942 | The letter is dated the 27th of May, and is from General Norris to Captain George( Burton? |
52942 | The ordinary( daily?) |
52942 | Was it administered internally, or externally? |
52942 | Were they mining, or was Drake sending up some heavy{ 65} guns? |
52942 | What compact was made with the Devil when the witchery was effected? |
52942 | What countryman is he?" |
52942 | What is the good, he says, of all their professed desire to heal the King whilst they refuse to carry out the directions sent them? |
52942 | What was her name, condition, and residence? |
52942 | Who got the corpse and prepared the conjuration? |
52942 | Who handed the chocolate to the King? |
52942 | Who ordered the charm, and why? |
52942 | foure of the ten Dutch Companies and sixe of their men- of- warre for the sea from the Hollanders? |
52942 | what does it matter to me what they are called? |
52942 | { 306} Who administered it? |
48276 | Do you not hear the prisoners moaning? 48276 Does God rule the world?" |
48276 | Shall hateful tyrants, mischief breeding, With hireling host, a ruffian band, While peace and liberty lie bleeding, Affright and desolate the land? 48276 This will be a good book for the young, and all those who have not the opportunity to consult larger works, will it not?" |
48276 | What constitutes a state? 48276 Where have you obtained the facts contained in this volume?" |
48276 | A parish priest was only permitted to dine at the second table, after his superiors(?) |
48276 | And how did Joseph accomplish so much in so short a time? |
48276 | But if, as Luther claimed, she had through apostasy lost her authority, then, it may be asked, From whence did Luther receive his authority? |
48276 | But it may be asked, whence came they? |
48276 | But what agency for conveying intelligence can ever excel that which is instantaneous? |
48276 | By what terrible magic was this change wrought so swiftly: that three millions of people should be taught to abhor the country they once loved? |
48276 | He waved his broad- brimmed hat for silence, and then exclaimed:"What would ye, my friends? |
48276 | If Rome had been in error in this case, where was her infallibility? |
48276 | Is it for nothing that Spain has been made a hideous skeleton among the nations-- a warning spectacle to the world? |
48276 | It may be asked, Why did not the human mind, in this era, free itself from its trammels, claim its true freedom and concede it to every one? |
48276 | May we not also consider him an instrument in the hands of God for the execution of His purposes? |
48276 | Might not some of her other teachings be equally false? |
48276 | Now the question arises, who built these mounds in the Mississippi valley, and these pyramids in Mexico? |
48276 | Shall we compare it with the contemporary barbarism of the other portions of Europe? |
48276 | Some of the states were large, others small: ought the small ones to have equal voice in the government with the large ones? |
48276 | Some of their officers even asked in amazement,"was it true that God and the elements were going to fight against them?" |
48276 | They came to ask those profound questions that human reason, unaided, can never answer:"What am I? |
48276 | They eagerly asked"What is to be done?" |
48276 | They wished to follow the example of the United States, but how could this be accomplished? |
48276 | To{ 114} what race belong the relics found in Massachusetts, Illinois and Iowa? |
48276 | What can I know?" |
48276 | What was it that produced this barrenness, this intellectual degradation in Constantinople? |
48276 | When will free- born Americans learn to act thus nobly? |
48276 | Whence came the men who wrought these mighty changes? |
48276 | Where am I? |
48276 | Where shall we find their equals at that time in so- called Christian countries? |
48276 | Who does not perceive that the statesmanship of Pitt was one of the great instrumentalities for the execution of the divine purposes? |
48276 | Who does not see a divine providence-- a marvelous wisdom in all this? |
48276 | Who does not see a marvelous wisdom in all this? |
48276 | Who does not see in all this the traces of a purer religion, which centuries of apostasy and degradation had not been able to entirely destroy? |
48276 | Who does not see the hand of Providence in her retribution, as well as in the fate of Herculaneum and Pompeii? |
48276 | Who will attempt to deny that God, through him, spake words pregnant with a meaning that men at that age did not understand? |
48276 | Why did not France succeed in establishing a free government? |
48276 | Why was it then that such a marvelous change should take place in the minds of the American people, during the next twelve years? |
48276 | { 203} But while mankind had progressed in science they had remained stationary in religion; and how could it be otherwise? |
45567 | ''Why, how does this relation affect her?'' 45567 A''igh wind, sir? |
45567 | And if he did, would I need hear his suit? 45567 And where is Polperro, pray?" |
45567 | Are you ill? |
45567 | Do in winter? 45567 Do you own a house?" |
45567 | Elsa, dearest, what are your wishes? |
45567 | Fiend,he shrieked,"where is the parchment? |
45567 | Fiend,he shrieked,"where is the parchment? |
45567 | Fool, tenfold fool, dost thou call on my archenemy to adjure me? 45567 Fool,"replied the astonished artist,"who are you that thus accosts me on the highroad?" |
45567 | In this room,she continued,"I would have the portrait painted, and as a setting can you not paint a portion of the room itself?" |
45567 | Own a house? |
45567 | The road to Tongue? 45567 Who shall describe the uproar and anger with which one was greeted as one stood in the midst of the nests? |
45567 | Wie viel? |
45567 | Will you let me see the book, please? |
45567 | And who could be impervious to the charm of the English village? |
45567 | Are you ready, lady, for the sitting?" |
45567 | But why had this maiden so affected him? |
45567 | But, after all, is not Rouen best known to the world because of its connection with the strange figure of Jeanne d''Arc? |
45567 | Help themselves? |
45567 | Her face bore a listless and far- away expression-- was it natural, or only assumed for artistic effect? |
45567 | Here again a memory of Wordsworth is awakened, for did he not celebrate this valley in his series of"Sonnets to the Duddon?" |
45567 | How can the poor devils who live in the foetid hovels which dot the Duchy of Cornwall''help themselves?'' |
45567 | Is it any wonder that the oft- trapped Englishman considers France a motorist''s paradise? |
45567 | Shall he book us and our car for the boat? |
45567 | She then appealed to her mother:"Will you permit the rash boy to leave in such a passion? |
45567 | Show their gratitude? |
45567 | Show their gratitude? |
45567 | Sick with terror and yet determined even to death, Friedrich answered:"And knowest thou not? |
45567 | This love in a day has become my life and what is mere breath without life? |
45567 | To our half- serious remark that a lift would save visitors some hard work he replies with a shrug,"A lift in Mont St. Michel? |
45567 | What have they to be grateful for-- these squalid, dependent, but always necessary outcasts of our civilization?" |
45567 | What wilt thou?" |
45567 | Who, though he had made a score of pilgrimages thither, could not find new beauties in this enchanted region? |
45567 | Why give farther pain to the poor artist, who is already in deepest distress?" |
45567 | Wot would you call a wind that piles up the waves so you ca n''t see yonder lighthouse, that''s two hundred and fifty feet tall? |
45567 | XIV ODD CORNERS OF LAKELAND Who could ever weary of English Lakeland? |
26960 | ''Now do you see the yard- arm-- and understand the thing?'' 26960 ''What is it makes the vessel roll? |
26960 | Ah, Captain Skinner, it is you, eh? 26960 An''with two others in er''launch? |
26960 | And if I refuse? |
26960 | And you were wounded? |
26960 | Are you all well? |
26960 | But, hello--he continued,"what sail is that?" |
26960 | Ca n''t I go, too? |
26960 | Can I not go by? |
26960 | Captain Paul,asked the Judge,"are you, in conscience, satisfied that you used no more force than was necessary to preserve discipline on your ship?" |
26960 | Courage? |
26960 | Did you ever see a harder crew than this? 26960 Did you ever see such a coward?" |
26960 | Do I understand that a Spaniard has frightened you all? 26960 Does Captain Semmes surrender his ship?" |
26960 | He ees een the soup, eh? |
26960 | Help me haul up this boat, will yer? 26960 How am I to know that this particular ship is to go free?" |
26960 | How many of your bushwhackers have I killed? |
26960 | How''s this? |
26960 | Is it not so? 26960 Is this not my vessel?" |
26960 | May I come aboard? |
26960 | May I return with this boat and crew in order to rescue the drowning? |
26960 | Pray, my bold seaman,said he, turning to the Welsh captain,"what is this?" |
26960 | Surrender? |
26960 | Then what was it? |
26960 | To- day? |
26960 | What can I do? |
26960 | What is this? |
26960 | What mean you by this, sir? |
26960 | What means this confusion? |
26960 | What means this, sirrah? |
26960 | What regiment and where stationed, pray? |
26960 | What shall I do? |
26960 | What ship is that? |
26960 | What ship is that? |
26960 | What ship is that? |
26960 | What the deuce is the matter anyway? |
26960 | What? |
26960 | Where''yer papers, and where''yer bound to? |
26960 | Who are you, you lubbers? |
26960 | Who are you? |
26960 | Who are you? |
26960 | Who goes there? 26960 Who goes there?" |
26960 | Will she come out and fight? 26960 Will she come out?" |
26960 | Will you obey my orders? |
26960 | Yer did n''t remove me to''er cursed man- o''-warsman, did yer? 26960 You remember me?" |
26960 | _ Fell o''er the sea- end with Raleigh, to- day!_Where''s Rixey of Hampton; Smith of Rexhill? |
26960 | ( Who is there?) |
26960 | A cry came from the black body,"What ship is that?" |
26960 | A typical sea- dog: a brave fighter,-- Then, why not give three times three for John Paul Jones? |
26960 | A voice came back,--also in English,"And what ship may you be?" |
26960 | About eight in the morning a boat was seen approaching, and to the hail,--"Who goes there?" |
26960 | Ahoy!_"Well, sea- dogs, where''s Thompson of Yarmouthport dock? |
26960 | And now, Mr. Lafitte, it is high time that you led a decent life, for are you not a hero? |
26960 | And this was the sentiment of all, for who does not love a voyage after gold and treasure? |
26960 | And thus Mr. Fortunatus Wright was sought for, and was asked:"Will you take charge of a privateer for the British merchants of Leghorn? |
26960 | And was not good fortune always with him? |
26960 | And well might they cheer, for had they not won one of the pluckiest sea- fights of all history? |
26960 | And were they not right? |
26960 | And what of the Englishmen? |
26960 | And what of the youthful and danger- loving Drake? |
26960 | And what were they to do, now that they had been placed on deck? |
26960 | And, forthwith, what do you think that he did,--?" |
26960 | Are you ready? |
26960 | As he did so, the first Lieutenant of the_ Serapis_ came up from below, and, looking at Captain Pearson, asked,"Has the enemy struck, sir?" |
26960 | As they neared the merchantman a hail came through the blackness:"Qui est la?" |
26960 | Besides,--it wo n''t hurt you!__ Give a tiger and three times three!_ THE VANISHED SAILORS Say, sailors, what''s happened to young Bill Jones? |
26960 | But can a man of action keep still? |
26960 | But can a pirate remain happy when not pirating? |
26960 | But go easy like, will yer? |
26960 | But how about the_ Glorioso_? |
26960 | But how about those jealous courtiers? |
26960 | But is not this the proper way to rear a sea- dog? |
26960 | But the crew grew mutinous,--for had they not come out for plunder? |
26960 | But then,--is this not life? |
26960 | But was he not their own countryman? |
26960 | But was his name not Fortunatus? |
26960 | But what could one man do against many? |
26960 | But what is Barrataria? |
26960 | But what was that? |
26960 | But who-- forsooth-- will hear of this in Europe? |
26960 | But, were they hostile, or friendly? |
26960 | Can you do it?" |
26960 | Come, let us dine together?" |
26960 | Could it not have been the_ Duke_, after all? |
26960 | Did n''t it? |
26960 | Did not Wellington say,"The battle of Waterloo was won upon the foot- ball grounds of Eton and Harrow?" |
26960 | Did you ever hear of anything more atrocious? |
26960 | Did you ever hear of such a fight with no man ever being slaughtered? |
26960 | Do n''t you? |
26960 | Do you think that you, yourself, could write as well as did this pirate? |
26960 | Do you think that_ you_ could be as patriotic as Sir Walter Raleigh? |
26960 | Do you want to see me do it?" |
26960 | Have you ever seen a school of pollock chasing a school of smaller fry? |
26960 | Have you ever seen them jump and splash, and thud upon the surface of the water? |
26960 | He laughed,--but what was that? |
26960 | Here is a brave fellow, but would you care to have his reputation, Monsieur?" |
26960 | How many sailors have you got?'' |
26960 | How would you care to be Governor of the Bahamas?" |
26960 | Instead of doing him honor, they imprisoned him; and was he not the noblest patriot of them all? |
26960 | Is it any wonder that the gallant seaman was popular with his followers? |
26960 | Is it not so to- day? |
26960 | JEAN BART THE SCOURGE OF THE DUTCH( 1650- 1702)"''What means that canvas, Skipper? |
26960 | Jones of Yarmouth; the bright- cheeked boy? |
26960 | Jones who could handle a boat like a man, Jones, who would grapple a smack like a toy? |
26960 | Joseph?" |
26960 | Just stepped into one of the jolly- boats and peacefully drifted ashore on a dark night? |
26960 | Lafitte?" |
26960 | Let us see how he fared? |
26960 | Now how is that for a swashbuckling privateer? |
26960 | Now, do n''t you think that this fellow was a doughty sea rover? |
26960 | Or had we let her escape from us with the treasure aboard, what would you have said then?" |
26960 | Or, do you prefer to rot in a beastly English prison- ship?" |
26960 | Particularly if_ you_ were treated as_ he_ was treated? |
26960 | Perhaps a guard would be sent after him? |
26960 | Perhaps-- even now-- men had discovered his absence and were hurrying to intercept him? |
26960 | Pray, when, sir, did the rules of war allow glass to be used as ammunition?" |
26960 | Prithee, kind sir, can you tell me where the crew from my vessel have gone to?" |
26960 | ROBERT SURCOUF THE"SEA HOUND"FROM ST. MALO( 1773- 1827)_ Parlez- vous Français?_ Yes, Monsieur, I can speak like a native,--sure. |
26960 | Shall that name be tarnished by defeat? |
26960 | Shall we try to take her by surprise and thus acquire both gain and glory? |
26960 | Shall_ he_ quaff of our golden vintage, shall_ he_ ride in the royal bus? |
26960 | Shall_ he_ sit in the ranks with us? |
26960 | Their crews were undoubtedly undisciplined and ill- used to shooting, else how could they have done so badly with the_ Boscawen_? |
26960 | There''re cannon near her bow, And the bugler''s bloomin''clarion, it shrills a how- de- row?'' |
26960 | This patriotic leader of the rough- and- ready rovers of the sea? |
26960 | Thus ended the magnificent(?) |
26960 | WOODES ROGERS THE BRISTOL MARINER(?-1736)"If you want to win a lass, or a sea fight; do n''t cajole. |
26960 | Walker turned to his officers and asked,"Gentlemen, shall we fight her?" |
26960 | Want a pilot fer the Ganges?" |
26960 | Was ever captain in a worse fix?" |
26960 | Was it Zeno, or were these more galleons of the Genoese? |
26960 | We have but twenty- four guns to her thirty- two, but are we to be awed by this show of force? |
26960 | What did this mean for him? |
26960 | What did we tell you?" |
26960 | What do you think of this? |
26960 | What hangs upon the breeze? |
26960 | What looms upon our starboard bow? |
26960 | What say you to that?" |
26960 | What say you to this fight? |
26960 | What say you, men?" |
26960 | What ship is that?" |
26960 | What sounds are these I hear? |
26960 | What vessel is this?" |
26960 | What was his end? |
26960 | What was that? |
26960 | When they had collected there, he said, with feeling:"I suppose each one of you is more than equal to one Englishman? |
26960 | Where, yes, where was Zeno? |
26960 | Who remembers the names of any of these titled nobles who held commissions from his Majesty, the King of France? |
26960 | Who was this Venetian soldier, who, covered with the marks of battle, lay in his last sleep? |
26960 | Who''d coasted and traded from London to Ryde, Huggins and Muggins, all seamen of worth, Who could jibe and could sail, sir, when combers were wide? |
26960 | Who-- this hero of war''s alarms? |
26960 | Why, where''s your courage?" |
26960 | Will she continue to be? |
26960 | Will you accept? |
26960 | Will you chase these rascally Frenchmen? |
26960 | Will you chastise these sea- robbers?" |
26960 | Will you cripple their operations? |
26960 | Will you join me?" |
26960 | Will you therefore take your morning meal with me, to- morrow, in my own cabin, aboard my ship? |
26960 | Would Captain Walker advance? |
26960 | Would n''t you have done so if you had been a Frenchman? |
26960 | Would not the men of Wall Street love such a fellow in these piping times of peace? |
26960 | Would you not take a commission?" |
26960 | Yer did n''t see that I got th''cat- o''-nine- tails on my back, did yer? |
26960 | You seem to prefer them to the whites, so why not, pray? |
26960 | _ Tenez!_ He had the money, at any rate, so why should he care? |
26960 | _ That ill- born cuss?_ Par donc! |
46471 | What are they made of? 46471 A powerful Navy we have always regarded as our proper and natural means of defence, but who shall tell us now what sort of Navy to build?... 46471 And what of India, in view of thedevastating doctrine"of the Opposition leader? |
46471 | And would Ulster accept the decision? |
46471 | But how if they had stood aside? |
46471 | But was there any law left in the House? |
46471 | Could Britain, fighting one of the most chivalrous wars the world had ever seen, not rely on her children to rally to her honour? |
46471 | Did Sir Edward Grey''s speech mean that the Bill would be suspended till after a new Parliament had decided whether it was to be enforced? |
46471 | Did the country mean to allow the Forces of the Crown to be used to coerce men who asked only that they might remain with it? |
46471 | Did they think it was to be all on one side? |
46471 | Every one wanted social reform, but were they not really burdening the weak? |
46471 | From the freedom and self- government which they enjoy under Austria- Hungary? |
46471 | Granted that the Church had deservedly lost much of her earlier position, why should she be disestablished and disendowed? |
46471 | Having made a conciliatory offer to the Ulstermen, would the Government, have engineered a plot for their provocation? |
46471 | He had said that circumstances made it inconvenient to fulfil this pledge, but was his new pledge stronger? |
46471 | How can England maintain that she drew the sword because we violated Belgian neutrality? |
46471 | How could the British statesman, whose past is well known, speak at all of Belgian neutrality? |
46471 | If Disestablishment meant dismemberment, why were the Welsh members to settle it alone? |
46471 | If it would, it could really solve the defence question, but would it? |
46471 | If such crazy methods were adopted, how could the Imperial Parliament be relieved? |
46471 | If the Home Rule Bill was wise and just, why amend it, and why was the Commons not to know how it would be amended? |
46471 | If they went on now there would be bloodshed in Ulster, and an appeal to the people must follow, and then how would the people regard them? |
46471 | In the first place, what would be the attitude of the Chamber? |
46471 | Is not this merely another way of saying that the individual makes adaptive responses to environmental stimuli?" |
46471 | Meanwhile, did Ministers still propose to adhere to the impossible time- limit and the even more impossible scheme of voting by counties? |
46471 | Suppose a Nationalist Army taking the same course as the Ulster Volunteers, would not the Government be compelled to take similar steps? |
46471 | Suppose acute labour troubles and a stoppage of food, transport, and fuel, were the troops to follow their sympathies? |
46471 | The Government seemed to expect that the Opposition would make the Bill workable, but was not this undignified on their part? |
46471 | Then, was not the Government''s proposal more favourable? |
46471 | They were responsible for the peace of the British Empire; who would dare to break it up? |
46471 | Was it really believed that there was a plot to provoke Ulster? |
46471 | Were Ulster brought in as a new Poland, what hope was there for a united Ireland? |
46471 | Were Ulster totally excluded, would the Opposition guarantee Ireland and Great Britain against civil conflict? |
46471 | Were the grants intended to relieve rates or to extend municipal activity? |
46471 | What are they worth? |
46471 | What good would Disestablishment do? |
46471 | What good, he asked, would Disendowment do to any one? |
46471 | What of the provocation from the other side? |
46471 | What was the motive power behind them? |
46471 | What was to prevent the continued community of action of the four dioceses with the Church of England? |
46471 | What, he asked, did the First Sea Lord now mean? |
46471 | Where was Mr. Harrell''s chief, Sir John Ross of Bladensburg, who had proved himself thoroughly incompetent during the strikes of 1913? |
46471 | Why not a trial? |
46471 | Why should there not be an autumn session to carry a new Licensing Bill? |
46471 | Will you?" |
46471 | Would it cease if women got the vote, or be carried into politics? |
46471 | Would not the pious founders have been shocked to learn that their gifts were being used to support a married clergy? |
46471 | Would the Chancellor repeat his Ipswich speech now? |
46471 | Would the Government agree that Ulster should stay out until Parliament otherwise ordered? |
46471 | Would the Irish proposal( to increase the"transferred sum") be abandoned as well as the English? |
46471 | Would the Unionists, in that case, acquiesce in the passing unmutilated of the Government of Ireland Bill? |
46471 | Would there be plural voting on the Referendum? |
46471 | and what indication would it afford by the choice of its officers? |
2977 | ''What have I done? 2977 All the better; are you afraid?" |
2977 | And before that time you never accorded him any favours? |
2977 | And if they refuse to pay? |
2977 | And when you are convinced, will you cease to love him? |
2977 | And who is to answer for his constancy? |
2977 | Are you ill? |
2977 | Are you ready to go, my dear Betty? |
2977 | But how can you spare the time? |
2977 | But how can you suspect a man of whom you know nothing? |
2977 | But what is her father? |
2977 | But you have given him something? |
2977 | By whose authority do you ask me for my papers? |
2977 | Can you reckon on the Englishman forgiving you? |
2977 | Did he take you from a father, a lover, or a brother? |
2977 | Did you know how long I should remain in prison? |
2977 | Do you fear pursuit? |
2977 | Do you think of making any stay? |
2977 | Do you think you would recognize her if you saw her again? |
2977 | Does Nina know that you are her mother? |
2977 | Has Sophie grown tall? |
2977 | Has he sold the lady''s horse? |
2977 | Has she changed? 2977 Have these orders been given for my especial benefit?" |
2977 | Have you had any note for me? |
2977 | How about lights? |
2977 | How about the cleanliness of my cell? |
2977 | How can I shew my gratitude to you? |
2977 | How can you know all this? |
2977 | How can you think that adventurer loves you? 2977 How did the Conte de Ricla fall in love with her?" |
2977 | How did you come to nurse me? |
2977 | How do you mean? |
2977 | How famous? |
2977 | I feel it to my sorrow, my lord, but must I leave Madrid? |
2977 | I hope you can speak French madam? |
2977 | I suppose he will follow the carriage? |
2977 | I will prove my assertions this evening; but tell me how long you have known him? |
2977 | Is he rich? |
2977 | Is he young? |
2977 | Is it possible that fate has treated you harshly? 2977 Is it possible that you are amongst the despairing?" |
2977 | Is she by herself? |
2977 | Is that a prophecy? |
2977 | Madam,said the tradesman,"if you do not like the lace, leave it; will you keep the stuffs?" |
2977 | May I amuse myself by making architectural plans with the pencil? |
2977 | More unhappy? 2977 No, dear friend, ought I not to love your society? |
2977 | Not even the reward you gave me? |
2977 | Ought I to return to Aix immediately? |
2977 | Quite so; but kindly tell me, count, what is to be my status or employment an board your ship? |
2977 | Really? 2977 Shall I write to Nina? |
2977 | Since when? |
2977 | Since when? |
2977 | The door will be open, then? |
2977 | Then how did the girl come here? |
2977 | Then will you be good enough to order some paper to be bought for me? |
2977 | Then you do n''t love him? |
2977 | Then you have been drinking with them? |
2977 | Then you never gave her twenty- five thousand doubloons? |
2977 | Then you think I have not told you the strict truth? |
2977 | To transfer me? |
2977 | Twenty- five thousand doubloons? |
2977 | Very good; then I should abandon you here, and what would you do then? 2977 Was Miss Nancy Steyne there when you left?" |
2977 | Was she pretty when you knew her? |
2977 | Well, I may be,I said,"but what makes you ask that question?" |
2977 | What are these reasons? |
2977 | What are they doing now? |
2977 | What are you doing here, my dear Casanova? |
2977 | What can I do for you? |
2977 | What can be the matter? |
2977 | What can this imprisonment have to do with my last night''s adventure? |
2977 | What do they say about my assassination? |
2977 | What do you mean by''preserver''? |
2977 | What fate is that? |
2977 | What has become of the valet de place? |
2977 | What have you been doing to offend your ambassador? |
2977 | What have you done with your crystals? |
2977 | What is his history? |
2977 | What is that, sir? |
2977 | What is the matter? |
2977 | What is your sister doing? 2977 What risk do I run? |
2977 | What shall we do to avoid assassination, or the dread of it? |
2977 | What shall we do? |
2977 | What sort of a man is her companion? |
2977 | What''s that? |
2977 | Where are we going? |
2977 | Where are you going to take me? |
2977 | Where did you know her? |
2977 | Where does she live? |
2977 | Where has he gone? |
2977 | Where''s the slashed postillion? |
2977 | Who paid you? |
2977 | Why mercy? 2977 Why not? |
2977 | Why not? |
2977 | Why should it be necessary to choose a monk? |
2977 | Why should you hesitate to say so? 2977 Why so?" |
2977 | Will you let me write a letter? |
2977 | Would it have been wise to follow the landlord''s advice? 2977 Would it not be better to go on now?" |
2977 | Would you like us to go on to Acquapendente? |
2977 | Would you not hate a man who loved you only to traffic in your charms? |
2977 | You have heard the truth about me; but what should prevent you writing what you like to England? 2977 You like travelling?" |
2977 | You said he would be ill; have you poisoned him? |
2977 | You will convince me of that? |
2977 | Your wife, sir? |
2977 | Are you her mother?" |
2977 | Are you strong enough to follow this counsel? |
2977 | But is she at Montpellier? |
2977 | But was it known that I was imprisoned in the tower?" |
2977 | But was virtue the cause of all this interest? |
2977 | Do you imagine this monster capable of any feelings of gratitude? |
2977 | Has she aged?" |
2977 | Has she had any sickness? |
2977 | Have you presented him with a child?" |
2977 | How long ago is it since you have seen her?" |
2977 | However, he says he must be paid, so will you kindly oblige me? |
2977 | I asked,"the hangman, perhaps?" |
2977 | If he loved you, would he have left you penniless in this fashion? |
2977 | Is it possible that you can be unhappy with such a letter of commendation as nature has given you?" |
2977 | Is selfishness, then, the universal motor of our actions? |
2977 | Is she still at Barcelona?" |
2977 | Is this true? |
2977 | Now you are truly useless to yourselves, and the rest of the world; what is it you need? |
2977 | Shall I go to her or shall I write? |
2977 | Spaniards, when will the impulse come? |
2977 | Tell me, did you have a pleasant journey from Vienna to Lyons?" |
2977 | The husband persisted in his untimely visits, and one day Acton said, dryly,--"Do you want a thousand guineas? |
2977 | Their judgment, I believe, will be in favour of my veracity, and, indeed, why should I not be veracious? |
2977 | Was it devotion to a young and innocent girl that made me willing to undertake so difficult and so delicate a task? |
2977 | What do you mean?" |
2977 | What do you think she did to elude the law, and at the same time avenge herself?" |
2977 | What hazard do I run?" |
2977 | What more can I do for your cursed law, which has cost me two crowns already? |
2977 | What would have become of me without you?" |
2977 | What would you do, if I were inclined to play the brutal lover? |
2977 | Where did my hat come from?" |
2977 | Who told you such a story?" |
2977 | Will she be ready at five o''clock?" |
2977 | Will writing be allowed here?" |
2977 | Will you please give me the order to leave in writing?" |
2977 | You have been with her ten years?" |
2977 | You here? |
2977 | he loves you, who would not? |
2977 | said she to the abbe,"you did not tell him whose house it is?" |
2977 | when will you shake off that fatal lethargy? |
2977 | you do not love him, and yet you make use of him in the way you do?" |
2977 | your father loved you?" |
2964 | And Madame said nothing? |
2964 | Are the baths far from here? |
2964 | Are you going to bring your housekeeper with you? |
2964 | Are you sorry it was so? |
2964 | But I suppose you overlook all these failings? |
2964 | But how about his reverend highness the abbot? |
2964 | But what can have made you feel so generously towards me? |
2964 | Certainly not, but I supposed you played the part of waiter? |
2964 | Certainly; how has he failed in politeness? |
2964 | Defend myself? 2964 Did she ask where the other waiter was?" |
2964 | Do you belong to the household? |
2964 | Do you think it possible? |
2964 | Do you usually catch that complaint by speaking, booby? |
2964 | Does he want you to weep really? |
2964 | Does the packet belong to me? |
2964 | Have you any books? |
2964 | Have you been long at this inn? |
2964 | Have you considered that the publicity of such an action would render me the most unfortunate of women? 2964 Have you told anyone about it?" |
2964 | He has to ask leave of the moon, has he, before discharging so sweet a duty? |
2964 | How is it,said I,"that he did not attain mature age?" |
2964 | How is that question to be answered? |
2964 | How so? |
2964 | How will you convince me I have lost? |
2964 | How? |
2964 | I hope you will be good enough to order your man to be polite to me? |
2964 | In what respect do you think me timid? |
2964 | Is she your servant or your mistress? |
2964 | It is true, then? 2964 It was made beforehand, was it?" |
2964 | Laughed? 2964 No, you are too pretty, and I do n''t look like a fossil, certainly; but after all, what matter does it make?" |
2964 | Oh, you do ask him, though you sent him about his business? |
2964 | On what point? |
2964 | Really? 2964 Sent him about his business?" |
2964 | Speak; what do you wish to know? |
2964 | Tell me, sweetheart,said she on the way,"does not your pretty housekeeper sleep with you?" |
2964 | The piece is not yet done,said my housekeeper,"we have three scenes more:""What are they?" |
2964 | Then Morat has been razed to the ground? |
2964 | Then you will sup here, ladies? |
2964 | To whom, sir? |
2964 | Very good; but what shall I do when I find papers on the ground, as that letter was? |
2964 | We shall see; but will you give me your address? |
2964 | What are their names? |
2964 | What are you laughing at? |
2964 | What are you waiting for? |
2964 | What are your wages? |
2964 | What can I do for you, madam? |
2964 | What did you tell her? |
2964 | What do I hear? 2964 What do you think of his advice, dearest?" |
2964 | What does St. Augustine say? |
2964 | What does madam require? |
2964 | What has he done to you? |
2964 | What have you been doing this morning, my dear niece? |
2964 | What is he doing here? 2964 What is his name?" |
2964 | What is that? |
2964 | What is that? |
2964 | What judgment could I pass on you? |
2964 | What robbed me? 2964 What stupidity are you referring to?" |
2964 | What? |
2964 | What? |
2964 | Where are they going? |
2964 | Where do they come from? |
2964 | Where do you come from? 2964 Where is your room?" |
2964 | Which of you two,said he to me,"is the most taken in?" |
2964 | Who came with you from England? |
2964 | Who can have told the monster that you were going to visit me at that hour? |
2964 | Why not? 2964 Why, dearest?" |
2964 | Why? |
2964 | Will you come with me,said the Ambassador to M.----,"we can talk the matter over at our ease? |
2964 | Will you give Madame an account of our scheme? |
2964 | Would you like to come and see it to- morrow? |
2964 | Yes, and I should like to tell you what it was; but before I do so I must ask you if you know what the venereal disease is? |
2964 | Yes, of course, for otherwise I should not have committed a theft, should I? |
2964 | You are quite well so far, I think? |
2964 | You confess, then, that you are the waiter at the''Sword''? |
2964 | You did not care to follow your father''s profession, then? |
2964 | You do not believe that? |
2964 | You do not think, then,said I,"that the memory is an essential part of the soul?" |
2964 | You have ruffles of the same kind, I suppose? |
2964 | You know the lady? |
2964 | You mean, Madame Dubois, that you would very much like to go back to Lausanne? |
2964 | You will not be coming to Bale, then? 2964 And could you forgive me all these defects? |
2964 | And how can she imagine that a servant would do it as well as you? |
2964 | And if I were to meet the abbot on the way, how could I help returning with him? |
2964 | And now are you sufficiently generous to employ your authority as master to enjoin on your man the most absolute secrecy? |
2964 | And now do you mind telling me whether there be any foundation of truth in the whole story?" |
2964 | As her husband was close by, I said,--"Who is your nurse?" |
2964 | As she said nothing I proceeded to convince her of my infected state, but she turned away her head, and said,--"''Have you been waiting for me long? |
2964 | As soon as he saw me he said,--"Well, well, did you profit by the interview I got you?" |
2964 | But I suppose you had to tell him all?" |
2964 | But how am I to stick to it that she has peppered me, when I have never spoken to her?" |
2964 | But if we were in the dark, how was I to know it was she I had to do with? |
2964 | But tell me, how can you have actually spent them with her without noticing, in spite of the dark, the difference between her and me? |
2964 | But tell me, was it an accident or design that made M. de Chavigni take my husband and leave us together?" |
2964 | But what could I do when I got there? |
2964 | But what were his qualifications? |
2964 | But you do n''t think that there are only romances in English, do you? |
2964 | Can you return me what you have taken? |
2964 | Did you read it?" |
2964 | Did you untie her shoe?" |
2964 | Do you think I have a heart of stone?" |
2964 | Do you think you can manage it?" |
2964 | Do you understand English?" |
2964 | Has the lady really got the what d''you call it?" |
2964 | His punishment will be severe, for who would have thought he could have presumed so far? |
2964 | How had she ascertained our arrangements? |
2964 | How had she managed it? |
2964 | How old are you?" |
2964 | How should I not?" |
2964 | How was that? |
2964 | How? |
2964 | Is she aware that I know all?" |
2964 | Is she in your room now?" |
2964 | Next day, after a somewhat silent breakfast, she said,--"You will take me with you, wo n''t you?" |
2964 | Noble Henriette, dear Henriette, whom I had loved so well; where was she now? |
2964 | She does know of your love?" |
2964 | She may try to strike a bargain over the sum I am to ask for my cure; if so, shall I be content with three hundred francs?" |
2964 | Should I go to Einsiedel, too? |
2964 | We are right to seek for the definitions of things, but when we have them to hand in the words; why should we go farther? |
2964 | Were you laughing at that?" |
2964 | What if I were to pluck up my heart and beg them to let me sup in their company? |
2964 | What kind of a figure should I cut among the monks? |
2964 | What the devil can you have done? |
2964 | What unforeseen accident prevented your coming?" |
2964 | What''s your name?" |
2964 | What, then, is beauty? |
2964 | When? |
2964 | Whence does that magic art take its source? |
2964 | Where are you going?" |
2964 | Who could have instructed her in the arts of deceit? |
2964 | Who told you her name?" |
2964 | Why did you say that?" |
2964 | Why do we take the face as an index of a woman''s beauty, and why do we forgive her when the covered parts are not in harmony with her features? |
2964 | Why do you interest yourself so much in my affairs? |
2964 | Why do you take me for such a lover of the romantic, pray?" |
2964 | Would it not be much more reasonable and sensible to veil the face, and to have the rest of the body naked? |
2964 | Would you agree?" |
2964 | You dare to love me?" |
2964 | You would not have come, then, if you had not known me?" |
2964 | game like that at this time of year?" |
2964 | said I,"is not M. de Voltaire good- natured, polite, and affable to you who have been kind enough to act in his plays with him?" |
2964 | that monster''s letter? |
2964 | what are you saying? |
2964 | why is n''t there a waiter''s part in the play?" |
2964 | you would punish me for your faults, would you? |
43601 | Do you call this the body and blood of Christ? |
43601 | How can the blind lead the blind? |
43601 | How didst thou dare to come in, not having on the wedding garment? |
43601 | Master Teulo,said they,"had you a large sum to pay to the King for your son''s elevation?" |
43601 | Then what did you pay? |
43601 | What shall I say? 43601 What shall we do?" |
43601 | _ The Preachers_: Do you believe that Christ received His flesh off the flesh of Mary, by the operation of the Holy Ghost? 43601 After a pause she said,And you-- all-- are you ready to give your lives?" |
43601 | Also, we asked in a friendly manner how he was getting on in the prison, and whether he was cold or sick? |
43601 | And what became of Aymon? |
43601 | As they were led past Francis of Waldeck, one of them, Heinrich Graess, exclaimed in Latin,"Has not the prince power to release the captive?" |
43601 | At Dulmen the people crowded round him asking,"Is this the king who took to himself so many wives?" |
43601 | Besides, did not the President Hoym acknowledge his fears that some attempt would be made upon the life of Louis the XVIII.? |
43601 | But that he had been to Paris; that he had met the Cardinal Archbishop, he admitted; but on what ground? |
43601 | But why did ye suffer without me?" |
43601 | But_ why_ should they be supposed to require Christian blood? |
43601 | Conrad Moser, who had offered to open to the magistrate, was rebuked by the saint, who cried out to him:"What, will you give admission to the devil?" |
43601 | De simoniâ quid dicam? |
43601 | Did he despise the authority of the great doctor? |
43601 | Do you think I do not know your antecedents? |
43601 | Grossulani said,"But I ask what act of simony do you lay to my charge?" |
43601 | Have we ever received any news about the expedition from the French papers? |
43601 | Have we not had signal instances of that interposition in this country? |
43601 | He exclaimed,"Is not this enough?" |
43601 | He went before the Governor, and said to him,''Is this justice you do? |
43601 | How are we to explain the conduct of Kaltofen? |
43601 | How can you justify such a proceeding?" |
43601 | How dare you maltreat this one who has given edifying instruction to his fellow citizens? |
43601 | How the open, honest marriage to be perverted into clandestine union? |
43601 | How was this inveterate custom to be broken through? |
43601 | Liprand answered,"Do you answer me, What is the lightest form of simony?" |
43601 | Must nothing be done without your authorisation?" |
43601 | My sheep-- whom I have pledged myself to save?" |
43601 | O Christ, Thou art expelled this city, and how dost Thou leave us desolate? |
43601 | O holy Peter, didst thou once overcome Simon? |
43601 | Say now, for what end was the sun created?" |
43601 | Shall our unbelief avail more than the word, command and ordinance of God?" |
43601 | Shall we be crushed? |
43601 | The Milanese contemporary historian, Arnulf, exclaims,"Who has bewitched you, ye foolish Milanese? |
43601 | The other stranger tried to check him, and said,"What are you saying? |
43601 | Then the tipsy man shouted out,"That is all right, but will Boyer consent to it?" |
43601 | Thou art not tolerated here, and how can we live without Thee? |
43601 | To whom have I given anything? |
43601 | Was he greater than St. Ambrose? |
43601 | Were they resisting God or the devil? |
43601 | What could have induced Kaltofen to deliberately charge a comrade in arms with participation in the crime, if he were guiltless? |
43601 | What volumes were they? |
43601 | When would the expected delivery come out of the west? |
43601 | Who could doubt that his last words were true? |
43601 | Why does he issue this prohibition at the present moment, or why does he issue it at all? |
43601 | Why is it extraordinary that a beneficent Providence should interpose to save the life of a just prince? |
43601 | Wilt thou try to rob me of my sheep that was lost? |
43601 | You talk of virtue, you gibbet- bird? |
43601 | You who are guilty of so many crimes and impieties? |
43601 | [ 30][ 30]"Quis clericorum propriis et paternis rebus solummodo non studebat? |
43601 | _ The King_:"What was permitted to the patriarchs in the Old Testament, why should it be denied to us? |
43601 | _ The Preachers_:"How have you regarded marriage, and what is your belief thereupon?" |
43601 | _ The Preachers_:"How that? |
43601 | _ The Preachers_:"Now if we or you were blind, would the sun fail to execute its office for which it was created?" |
43601 | _ The Preachers_:"Why have you so wildly treated this same estate, against God''s word and common order, and taken one wife after another? |
43601 | and now dost thou permit him to have the mastery? |
43601 | cried Margaret turning to her favourite disciple,"will you not do this? |
43601 | qui non esset uxoratus vel concubinarius? |
43601 | why,"she wrote in one of her epistles,"did my Heavenly Father choose_ that_ from all eternity in His providence for me? |
43601 | will you withdraw your hand from the work of God, now the hour approaches? |
43601 | you dare to charge the murder on Turks or Christians?'' |
42824 | ''Did he offend the priest?'' 42824 ''Have you made no trial of the powers of your wood?'' |
42824 | ''What was in it?'' 42824 ''What was she afraid of?'' |
42824 | I will not, because what would my labour profit me? 42824 Knowest thou?" |
42824 | ''Now, master,''quoth the wife,''ere that I go, What will ye dine? |
42824 | ''Sir,''said Sir Epinogris,''is that the rule of your arrant knights, for to make a knight to just whether he will or not?'' |
42824 | ''Why should I not prove adventures,''said Sir Launcelot,''as for that cause came I hither?''" |
42824 | 108(? |
42824 | 1:--"Well, there be guests to meat now; how shall we do for music?" |
42824 | And first, what sort of houses did they live in? |
42824 | Canst thou aught weten[210] us the way where that wight dwelleth?''" |
42824 | Did the broken heart find repose? |
42824 | Did the wild spirit grow tame? |
42824 | Hold ye then me, or elles our convent, To pray for you is insufficient? |
42824 | How shall the world be served? |
42824 | How was her cell furnished? |
42824 | May we not also infer that there were superior orders, as knight- minstrels, over whom was the king- minstrel? |
42824 | No man having less than this, or his wife or daughter, shall wear any fur of martrons( martin''s?) |
42824 | Of what house be ye by your father kin? |
42824 | One askede hym onys resun why He hadde delyte in mynstralsy? |
42824 | Or did the one pine away and die like a flower in a dungeon, and the other beat itself to death against the bars of its self- made cage? |
42824 | Out of the gospel he the wordes caught, And this figure he added yet thereto, That if gold rusté what should iren do? |
42824 | Presently the joint of a man''s finger is exhibited to us, the largest of three; I kiss it; and then I ask whose relics were these? |
42824 | Said Sir Tristram,''Yonder lieth a fair knight, what is best to do?'' |
42824 | Saide this wife;''how fare ye heartily?'' |
42824 | Silly[118] old man, that lives in hidden cell, Bidding his beades all day for his trespas, Tidings of war and worldly trouble tell? |
42824 | Sir Tor asks the dwarf who is his guide,"''Know ye any lodging?'' |
42824 | The Apostle? |
42824 | The Queen has just arrived at the gate of the city; through the open door may be seen a bishop(? |
42824 | The frere answered,''O Thomas, dost thou so? |
42824 | The king asked,"Thou harper, how durst thou be so bold to sing this song before me?" |
42824 | The question,"What do you bring us?" |
42824 | These folk prayed[207] hym first fro whence he came? |
42824 | Upon which the monks said,''What didst thou ask of the Lord?'' |
42824 | Was it some frail woman, with all the affections of her heart and the hopes of her earthly life shattered, who sought the refuge of this living tomb? |
42824 | What need have you diverse friars to seche? |
42824 | What needeth him that hath a perfect leech[50] To seeken other leches in the town? |
42824 | What wonder is? |
42824 | When, in our endeavour to realise the life of these secular clergymen of the Middle Ages, we come to inquire, What sort of houses did they live in? |
42824 | Whether shall I call you my Lord Dan John, Or Dan Thomas, or elles Dan Albon? |
42824 | Who has not, at some time, been deeply impressed by the solemn stillness, the holy calm, of an empty church? |
42824 | Why should he study, and make himselven wood, Upon a book in cloister alway to pore, Or swinkin with his handis, and labour, As Austin bid? |
42824 | Yet, after all, why should the merchant be"a rather common- looking man,"and the alderman a"portly citizen"? |
42824 | [ 146] In the"Ancren Riewle,"p. 129, we read,"Who can with more facility commit sin than the false recluse?" |
42824 | [ 215] Surely he should have excepted St. Thomas''s shrine? |
42824 | [ 43] The good man also said he had not seen the friar"this fourteen nights:"--Did a limitour go round once a fortnight? |
42824 | a Carthusian); another in a black cloak and hood over a white frock(? |
42824 | a hermit); another in a white scapular and hood(? |
42824 | asks the Ploughman--"''Kondest thou aught a cor- saint[209] that men calle Truthe? |
42824 | how were these furnished? |
42824 | or was it some enthusiast, with the over- excited religious sensibility, of which we have instances enough in these days? |
42824 | was it some man of strong passions, wild and fierce in his crimes, as wild and fierce in his penitence? |
42824 | what kind of men were they? |
42824 | what manner of world is this? |
42824 | what sort of life did their occupants lead? |
42824 | where is she?'' |
42824 | who may trust this world?'' |
39559 | England is far from entering into my calculations,he said in 1862, in a familiar conversation,"and do you know when I ceased to count her? |
39559 | However, have they really freed Constantinople from all danger on that side? |
39559 | Supposing that Russia decides to construct vessels in the Sea of Asoph, will war be declared to hinder it? |
39559 | What degree of confidence can we on our side accord to those open to such suspicions? |
39559 | [ 149] Did the former chiefs of the ex- ambassador of France to the court of Berlin judge otherwise of it? 39559 Could it be the Italian sympathies with which we have credited him that awakened his susceptibilities? 39559 Did I do well or badly in obeying? 39559 Did Prince Gortchakof partake in the same measure of the illusions of his master? 39559 Did he not say one day, word for word,that all the great cities ought to be destroyed and razed to the ground, as the eternal homes of revolution?" |
39559 | Do these two extracts, Mr. Editor, authorize the belief that I was the confidant and the counselor of the Italian envoy? |
39559 | Do they not confirm, on the contrary, from point to point the sincerity of my correspondence? |
39559 | Do you remember the_ Lied_ of Heine:_ O Bund, o chien tu n''es pas sain_, etc.? |
39559 | Does he think to reproach me for having endeavored to keep myself informed as to what was passing, and for having instructed my government exactly? |
39559 | Does it not all depend on the manner in which nature has ripened our lives? |
39559 | Does it wish to exchange its old Dessauer march for the song of a Professor Arndt on the_ German fatherland_? |
39559 | FOOTNOTES:[ 146] We have said:"How could he undertake to present to M. de Bismarck the_ demands of the cabinet of the Tuileries_?" |
39559 | For just seven months, I have been either absent from Berlin or ill; who then can have made the observation on my negligence? |
39559 | In what has M. Klaczko sought, where has he seen that I labored for the accord between Italy and Prussia? |
39559 | Is it not puerile, however, to measure the destinies of nations by the life, more or less long, of this or that sovereign? |
39559 | Is it not taken from life? |
39559 | Moreover, had he not too"vanquished Europe,"three years previously, in the memorable campaign of Poland? |
39559 | Of what utility, of what help are then those small States, without a will, without strength, without an army? |
39559 | Petersburg?" |
39559 | Should he not have told us before making such a grave assertion? |
39559 | Should not the czar retain Galicia as a recompense for his assistance? |
39559 | This enthusiasm for the customs and genius of the"Scythians,"this love for the"bear- skin and caviare,"was it very sincere? |
39559 | Varnhagen is vain and_ méchant_, but who is not? |
39559 | Was firmness wanting, or was too much of it shown? |
39559 | Was his conduct in every particular irreproachable; was it even provident to the end? |
39559 | Was it not in truth to erase with a single stroke a past of ten years, to lose all the fruit of the Crimean war? |
39559 | Was it the same in the last conflagration? |
39559 | Was that nothing, the dismemberment of the Danish monarchy, the country of the future empress? |
39559 | Was the port of Kiel, the key of the Baltic, delivered into the hands of the Germans, nothing? |
39559 | Was the vassalage of Queen Olga nothing? |
39559 | What is there astonishing in it? |
39559 | What of that? |
39559 | Where is the man who, in a similar situation, would not cause scandal, rightly or wrongly? |
39559 | Who knows, however, whether, in the mind of M. Drouyn de Lhuys, this second signature was not destined to avenge somewhat the first? |
39559 | Who would have thought it? |
39559 | Why did it not see that in treating separately with M. de Bismarck it only made the game for the conqueror? |
39559 | Why did it not try to provoke a concerted action of the Powers in view of an overturning so menacing for the balance of the states? |
39559 | Why did the cabinet of the Tuileries not appreciate the solution offered by the Russian chancellor? |
39559 | Why it is written on a map?" |
39559 | Why not confess it? |
39559 | Why should it not take Belgium, and_ destroy there a nest of demagogy_? |
39559 | Will it demand as the price of its consent, Holland, Jutland, or the German territories of Austria? |
39559 | Will, or can, the Emperor Napoleon make this promise? |
39559 | Would M. Benedetti perhaps find that this is an anecdotal incident, incompatible with the dignity of history? |
39559 | Would M. Benedetti seek to persuade that by this advice he had wished to hinder the_ connubio_? |
39559 | Would he not procure some positive assurance from the side of the Principalities? |
39559 | [ 15]"No,"was the reply,"I have not that expectation;_ but, if I had, would I answer you differently_?" |
39559 | [ 40]"Why, then, should not representative institutions be accorded at the same time to the kingdom of Poland and to the empire of Russia?" |
39559 | the frontier of the Vistula, or the provinces of the Baltic? |
2961 | Am I to let myself be robbed, then? |
2961 | Am I to take that speech as a declaration of love? |
2961 | And how would you have proceeded if you had gone to work in the hour of the Moon? |
2961 | And now, that you may be at your ease with me, I should like to know in what manner I can be of service to you? |
2961 | And what is his crime? |
2961 | And will you tell it me? |
2961 | And you think me silly enough to tell my aunt of what we have been talking? 2961 Are you going to the ambassador''s?" |
2961 | Are you sorry? |
2961 | Are you sure of that? |
2961 | Are you sure of that? |
2961 | Are you vexed with me? |
2961 | But supposing your father''s choice is not pleasing to you, or supposing you love another? |
2961 | But what was the nature of his offence? 2961 But would you, mademoiselle, like to go?" |
2961 | But,said I,"will the clerks of the Mint trust me with such a sum?" |
2961 | Can I believe you? |
2961 | Can you ask him when you like? |
2961 | Confess that such was the case? |
2961 | Could I do otherwise? 2961 Did n''t I say so? |
2961 | Did they? 2961 Do you think it is worth the trouble?" |
2961 | Do you think that Paracelsus obtained the hypostasis? |
2961 | Does M. du Vernai take me for a fool or a knave? 2961 Does he know the inmost secrets of my soul?" |
2961 | Does he make sheep''s eyes at you? |
2961 | Does high birth go bail for breaches of the law in your country? |
2961 | Does it strike you, M. Casanova,said Esther, with a laugh,"that you and that little girl are as like each other as two peas?" |
2961 | Does she find that pay? |
2961 | Does she take good care of you? |
2961 | Eh? 2961 Everybody knows it, then?" |
2961 | Had you no idea what I shewed you was like till just now? |
2961 | Has she a lover? |
2961 | Have I the necessary talents? |
2961 | Have you a carriage? |
2961 | Have you accepted her offer? |
2961 | How do you like him? |
2961 | How is it that you do n''t frighten me now? |
2961 | How much do you owe? |
2961 | How old are you now? |
2961 | How spoiled? |
2961 | I am delighted to hear it; where is he? |
2961 | I ca n''t believe it,said one of these ladies, ogling the count, while his face seemed to say,"Would you like to try?" |
2961 | I, sir? |
2961 | Is Tiretta the guilty party, madam? |
2961 | Is he a lawyer? |
2961 | Is mademoiselle about to marry, then? |
2961 | Just so,said Esther, with a wicked smile,"but you admit a likeness, do n''t you?" |
2961 | M. Casanova, had you any adventures on your journey from the Hague to Amsterdam? |
2961 | May I ask if you have ever been in the service? |
2961 | May I take a bath? |
2961 | May I tell you, do you think? |
2961 | My aunt does n''t think so"You have not seen him yet? |
2961 | Of course, why not? 2961 Really? |
2961 | Really? 2961 Really?" |
2961 | Respect, you say; but must one not always be lacking in respect to women when one wants to come to the point? |
2961 | Shall I tell you the key? |
2961 | That''s a new thing, is it? |
2961 | Then I may kiss your hand? |
2961 | Then you are not in love with anyone? |
2961 | There will be no question of such a thing in this instance, sir; and, after all, what is marrying beneath one? 2961 Very true, but do you know how to make the poison, and that the thing is impossible without the aid of a salamander?" |
2961 | Was I wrong? |
2961 | Well,said the aunt,"what do you think of your husband?" |
2961 | What do you mean by in pawn? |
2961 | What do you mean by particular? 2961 What do you think of him?" |
2961 | What has gained my friend so fine a title, madam? |
2961 | What has he done to be worthy of so generous a pardon? |
2961 | What has that got to do with it, aunt? |
2961 | What is that? |
2961 | What is that? |
2961 | What is the reason? |
2961 | What were you doing behind Madame--? |
2961 | What''s that? |
2961 | What, then, is that death, madam? |
2961 | When will you bring him? 2961 Where is he?" |
2961 | Who told you that I was meditating a duel? |
2961 | Who would not do so? 2961 Whose messenger are you?" |
2961 | Why did n''t you give me time to do so? 2961 Why did n''t you shew your passport?" |
2961 | Why do you think so? |
2961 | Why do you think the child is my daughter? 2961 Why have you such a poor opinion of him?" |
2961 | Why not to- day? |
2961 | Why not? |
2961 | Why should you kiss my hand? |
2961 | Why so? 2961 Why so? |
2961 | Why? 2961 Wo n''t you, my dear?" |
2961 | Would you like me to stay, then? |
2961 | Would you like some sweets, my dear? |
2961 | Would you like to see the governor? |
2961 | You are curious, are you? |
2961 | You do n''t deny the fact, then? |
2961 | You have been sleeping out, have you, master profligate? |
2961 | You know that my intended husband will soon arrive? |
2961 | You know the ingredients, I suppose? |
2961 | You know, then, that I have a familiar? 2961 You think so? |
2961 | You were agreeably surprised, then, to see your daughter? |
2961 | You were not afraid of being in the way? |
2961 | You will be a trio, then; and how do you think you will get on together? |
2961 | You would not have thought it of me, to see me? |
2961 | Your name, sir? |
2961 | And after Arael?" |
2961 | And what has become of my friend?" |
2961 | But did you notice that the Lambertini was angry with you, too? |
2961 | But how is it that you have got so quiet?" |
2961 | But tell me if I may hope for your love?" |
2961 | But who are you, sir,"said I, turning to the worthy old man,"who are good enough to become surety for me without knowing me?" |
2961 | Casanova?" |
2961 | Come open the door, why have you shut yourself up, you little prude? |
2961 | Did I ever tell her anything on the other occasions?" |
2961 | Do you know the theory of the planetary hours?" |
2961 | Do you mean by''other occasions,''that I have been circumstanced like this before?" |
2961 | Do you understand me, superintendent? |
2961 | Have you ever seen a countenance as disgusting as my aunt''s? |
2961 | Have you your pedigree?" |
2961 | However, you are reasoning on false premises; you are ignorant of his real crime, yet how should you guess it?" |
2961 | I have caught you, have n''t I?" |
2961 | I saw at once that they were talking about a lottery, but why were they disputing? |
2961 | I will give you a louis for the day''s work; will that be enough?" |
2961 | Is n''t it better not to be monstrous?" |
2961 | Is that the rest of the lesson?" |
2961 | Judge of my surprise when, two minutes afterwards, I heard this question:"But what has''Sixtimes''got to do with sleeping with Madame Lambertini?" |
2961 | May I ask if you are a business man?" |
2961 | Now, sir, am I to send a courier to the Duc de Gesvres?" |
2961 | Pels?" |
2961 | Sixtimes?" |
2961 | So what can you make of me? |
2961 | Take a hundred louis from the box, and put in my word of honour instead; do n''t you think that is worth a hundred Louis?" |
2961 | Tell him my story? |
2961 | Tell me plainly whether I am to consent to this marriage or no?" |
2961 | The marchioness sat down on her sofa, and making me to do the like she asked me if I was acquainted with the talismans of the Count de Treves? |
2961 | The niece opened her door and apologized for the disorder of her dress, but what costume could have suited her better? |
2961 | The postillion cracked his whip and the sentry called out,"Who goes there?" |
2961 | Then, turning to me, he said,"Tell me, M. Casanova, who this woman is?" |
2961 | There is no need, you know, to say anything about this to my sister:""I, aunt? |
2961 | This is dreadful; do I hear you aright?" |
2961 | Tiretta is young and a perfect gentleman, he is handsome and at bottom a good fellow; could not a marriage be arranged?" |
2961 | Was it because their hearts were hardened? |
2961 | What does it all mean?" |
2961 | What should I do when I got there? |
2961 | What, then, was the reason? |
2961 | When I returned to the table where she was seated she scanned my features attentively, and said, with much emotion,"Can it be done, my dear friend? |
2961 | Will you be offended if I do?" |
2961 | Will you be vexed if you find the root of your family also?" |
2961 | Will you meet me? |
2961 | You are fond of gaming, I suppose?" |
2961 | You said that I offered you marriage because you took liberties with me?" |
2961 | again? |
2961 | for where does desire stop short? |
2961 | said he,"she has had the courage to tell you all?" |
2961 | the money is stolen?" |
2961 | then what have you to be sorry about? |
2961 | what? |
2961 | you ca n''t mean it? |
754 | Is it worth while,so they ask,"to work and slave for the benefit of creatures who have not yet passed beyond the stage of the earliest cave men?" |
754 | There,he would say, pointing to a bend of the river,"there, my boy, do you see those trees? |
754 | This is very well as far as it goes,said the next critic,"but how about the Puritans? |
754 | Are not the social changes of the nineteenth century of greater importance than the career of an ill- balanced woman who had better be forgotten? |
754 | But there can be no union without a strong leadership, and who was to be this leader? |
754 | But was it a time of darkness and stagnation merely? |
754 | But was there a way out? |
754 | But what could they do? |
754 | But what does the word really mean? |
754 | But what was one to do? |
754 | But what will they think of those short four thousand years during which we have kept a written record of our actions and of our thoughts? |
754 | But what? |
754 | But who cared? |
754 | But who was to be commander- in- chief? |
754 | Could they change the existing order of things and do away with a system of rivalry which so often sacrificed human happiness to profits? |
754 | Did anybody object? |
754 | Do n''t you see how these surroundings must have influenced a man in everything he did and said and thought? |
754 | From one blunder to another, until one gasps and exclaims"but why in the name of High Heaven did not the people object?" |
754 | He was vain( who would not be under the circumstances?) |
754 | How about the Church, the second great power in the world? |
754 | How could they realise the threatened danger? |
754 | Indeed, and why not? |
754 | The Serbians remembered their ancient glory as who would not? |
754 | The question then became where was this money to be found? |
754 | To JIMMIE"What is the use of a book without pictures?" |
754 | Upon this subject, the Abbe Sieyes then wrote a famous pamphlet,"To what does the Third Estate Amount?" |
754 | What did you find? |
754 | Where could he find this gold? |
754 | Where did the stars come from? |
754 | Where do we come from? |
754 | Which side should a dutiful subject and an equally dutiful Christian take? |
754 | Whither are we bound? |
754 | Who are we? |
754 | Who made the noise of the thunder which frightened him so terribly? |
754 | Who was he, himself, a strange little creature surrounded on all sides by death and sickness and yet happy and full of laughter? |
754 | Why defend something which meant nothing to them but a temporary boarding house in which they were tolerated as long as they paid their bills? |
754 | Why did I leave out such countries as Ireland and Bulgaria and Siam while I dragged in such other countries as Holland and Iceland and Switzerland? |
754 | Why is he so curious about the insides of fishes and the insides of insects? |
754 | Why not do it now? |
754 | Why not indeed? |
754 | Why should he not be contented with our Latin- Arabic translation which has satisfied our faithful people for so many hundred years? |
754 | Why should they work and exert themselves? |
754 | Why should we ever read fairy stories, when the truth of history is so much more interesting and entertaining? |
754 | Would he please come and teach them? |
754 | Would it not be a good idea to consult the representatives of the people? |
754 | You desired proof of this? |
754 | You may ask why I tell you this story in such great detail? |
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?" |
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? |
566 | Is it not,said he,"as if this people would make a God of me? |
566 | What should I have done with this madman? |
566 | -- if from Protestants they borrowed the weapons against Protestants? |
566 | --"And how is that to be done?" |
566 | And what was it then, but a subterfuge to limit a newly spreading religion by the terms of obsolete treaties? |
566 | And would not both parties exhaust themselves in so ruinous a civil war? |
566 | But how could he consider an agreement valid, which was extorted from his sovereign, and based upon treason? |
566 | But how could the German princes forget their own purposes in furthering the plans of Henry? |
566 | But how was this union to be renewed? |
566 | But if it was thus dangerous to be the secret depositary of such a commission, how much more so to execute it? |
566 | But of what avail was the voice of prudence against the seductive glitter of a crown? |
566 | But was it his connexion with Rome which constituted a German emperor, or was it not rather Germany which was to be represented in its head? |
566 | But what chances of escape are there for you, with an enemy so close at hand?" |
566 | But with what means was it to be won? |
566 | Could he have the weakness to listen to his fears, and to betray the cause of religion and liberty? |
566 | Could inducements such as these fail to awaken his ambition, or such hopes to animate and inflame his resolution? |
566 | How could one party expect from another what itself was incapable of performing? |
566 | How much was at stake if he lost; and if he won, whom else would he destroy but his own subjects? |
566 | If the Emperor were absolute in Germany, who then would be equal to the man intrusted with the execution of his will? |
566 | Must, then, the design be sacrificed, because that which was merely accidental had changed? |
566 | One of them, seizing him by the button of his doublet, demanded, in a tone of menace,"Ferdinand, wilt thou sign it?" |
566 | Or is it your intention to stop my progress? |
566 | The Protestants were now spread over the whole Empire, and how could they justly still be represented by an unbroken line of Roman Catholic emperors? |
566 | The church had now divided; the Diet had broken into two religious parties; was the whole system of the Empire still exclusively to follow the one? |
566 | Was it worth while to ascend a brother''s throne through guilt, and then maintain it with so little dignity, and leave it with so little renown? |
566 | Was the right of inheritance then to be limited to the paternal house, or to be extended to blood? |
566 | Was then a right of primogeniture to be admitted in the church, as in noble families? |
566 | Was this the very object which Tilly had in view? |
566 | Were the Bohemian Protestants to blame, if they armed themselves in time against the enforcement of such maxims? |
566 | Were the pretensions of one party to be favoured by a prescription from times when the claims of the other could not have come into existence? |
566 | What cared he for the detestation of the people, and the complaints of princes? |
566 | What could he oppose to such an enemy, if the Protestant portion of his subjects deserted him? |
566 | What had the Empire to look for from a prince incapable even of defending his hereditary dominions against its domestic enemies? |
566 | What have you to expect, if the Emperor should make himself master of your capital? |
566 | What now had Matthias done to justify the expectations which he had excited by the overthrow of his predecessor? |
566 | What would have become of the Reformation, and of the liberties of Germany, if the Bishop of Rome and the Prince of Rome had had but one interest? |
566 | What would he gain by expelling the Emperor from his hereditary dominions, if Tilly succeeded in conquering for that Emperor the rest of Germany? |
566 | Who could condemn the Roman Catholics, if they laughed at the audacity with which the Reformers had presumed to announce the only true belief? |
566 | Who would any longer devote his services to so ungrateful a master? |
566 | Who would not be pardoned had he wavered in this frightful situation? |
566 | Why, then, it may be asked, did they not operate with equal force upon the princes of the House of Austria? |
566 | Why, then, still burden the country with his presence? |
566 | Will he deal with you more leniently than I? |
566 | With what ease might they be introduced within the empire, if a decisive stroke should render their presence necessary? |
566 | and whence were to be derived the necessary means for continuing the war? |
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?" |
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?'' |
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? |
40960 | Was it for an old sin, Varuna,we read in a prayer,"that thou wishest to destroy thy friend, who praises thee? |
40960 | [ 794] Tradition tells us that at this synod the question was put to every Bhikshu:What is the doctrine of Buddha?" |
40960 | And of consciousness, what? |
40960 | Are the judges in any matter of law between rich and poor raised above the desire of gain? |
40960 | Are the plans formed in the councils of other princes known to thee and thy counsellors? |
40960 | Are there no limits to this accumulation of sorrows?" |
40960 | Are thy fortresses well provided with corn, water, weapons, and archers? |
40960 | Are thy resolutions kept secret? |
40960 | Art thou acquainted with that which they would undertake? |
40960 | Art thou certain that thy officers are on thy side, if sent into foreign lands, and if none knows the commission given to another? |
40960 | Art thou well equipped with horses and female elephants? |
40960 | But why should the elder branch make way for the younger? |
40960 | By whom and in what way was the Veda revealed? |
40960 | Can we fix the time at which the Aryas immigrated into India and occupied the valley of the Indus? |
40960 | Canst thou overcome sleep? |
40960 | Could he who had reached the summit of wisdom and virtue have been without supernatural powers? |
40960 | Could it excite any great shock when these playthings were set aside? |
40960 | Did it not deny, in the Sankhya doctrine, the authority of the Veda, the existence of the gods, and the Brahmanic world- soul? |
40960 | Did not a man by these means approach the holy nature of Brahman-- did he not thus draw into himself Brahman and its power? |
40960 | Did not the ethical aim of the Brahmans consist in the elevation of the_ Ego_ by meditation, in the annihilation of the body by asceticism? |
40960 | Do other princes know thy aims? |
40960 | Do thy servants and troops receive pay at the proper time? |
40960 | Does he employ distinguished servants in great matters, men of lower degree in smaller affairs, and the lowest in the least important? |
40960 | Dost thou bestow thy wealth on Brahmans, Kshatriyas, needy strangers? |
40960 | Dost thou despise the counsel of women, and conceal from them thy secrets? |
40960 | Dost thou divide thy time properly between recreation, state business, and religious duties? |
40960 | Dost thou honour those who are bold and skilful? |
40960 | Dost thou sacrifice wealth to virtue, or virtue to wealth, or both to favouritism, covetousness, and sensuality? |
40960 | Dost thou seek to obtain land and wealth by all honest means? |
40960 | Dost thou take counsel with thyself and with others also? |
40960 | Dost thou think at the end of the night on the way to become prosperous? |
40960 | Dost thou think lightly of enemies who, though weak and expelled from their country, may easily return? |
40960 | Dost thou wake at the right time? |
40960 | Had not the Sankhya, the doctrine of Kapila, called in question the merit of the sacrifice and the customs of purification? |
40960 | Had not the philosophy of the Brahmans already passed from scholasticism to heterodoxy? |
40960 | Hast thou store of young milch- cows? |
40960 | He asked himself what was the value of pleasure, youth, and joy if they were subject to sickness, age, and death? |
40960 | How can the soul, the intellectual capacity, be checked in this? |
40960 | How could it be a pure act to shed blood?--how could sacrifices and ceremonies be of sufficient force? |
40960 | How could the conquerors mix with the conquered?--how could their pride stoop to any union with the despised servants? |
40960 | How could the traditional punishments of transgressions and offences continue in existence? |
40960 | How could these contradictions be removed? |
40960 | How were the undeniable contradictions, the opposition between various passages, to be removed? |
40960 | Is an accused chief set at liberty through bribery? |
40960 | Is he a man of judgment who knows how to deliver a message in the words in which it is given to him? |
40960 | Is the forest, where the royal elephants are kept, well chosen? |
40960 | Is there then no means of escaping this world, which is born, changes, and dies, and again grows up? |
40960 | Is thine envoy a well- instructed, active man, able to answer any question on the moment? |
40960 | Is thy expenditure less than thy income? |
40960 | Of sensation what is the cause? |
40960 | On what, then, were the Brahman householders to live, who possessed nothing, and were without land sufficient for their support? |
40960 | Or do thine own counsellors contemn thee, and the people, oppressed by excessive punishments? |
40960 | Or need the Brahmans write the history of their own order? |
40960 | Ought the Brahmans to inquire into the laws of nature? |
40960 | The gods said: How can we form creatures? |
40960 | The nucleus of his argument is: Whence do men come? |
40960 | Was it not this devotion, this mortification, this concentration, which annihilated the unholy part in men? |
40960 | Was the nucleus of the system, the doctrine of the world- soul, so firmly established as the Brahmans maintained? |
40960 | Was there really no mercy on earth or in heaven, no grace, no means of release from these never- ending torments? |
40960 | Was this arrangement of castes and the observance of their duties absolutely irrevocable? |
40960 | Were the words or the sense of the poems decisive? |
40960 | What is the cause of birth? |
40960 | What is the cause of desire? |
40960 | What is the cause of existence? |
40960 | What is the cause of the senses? |
40960 | What is the cause of this attachment? |
40960 | What is the cause of this? |
40960 | What saint was qualified to decide? |
40960 | What was the element of existence and continuance in this alternation of growth and decay? |
40960 | Where do men go in death? |
40960 | Which school taught the correct doctrine? |
40960 | Which was the true ritual, the form pleasing to the gods and therefore efficacious? |
40960 | Which were the decisive passages in the Veda, and what was their true explanation? |
40960 | Who knows, who can declare, whence has sprung this creation?--the gods are subsequent to this, who then knows whence it arose? |
40960 | Who of the seers of old has seen the limits of his power? |
40960 | Who would not look up with reverence to the purer incarnation of the world- soul, the holier spirit, which dwelt in the Brahmans? |
40960 | Who would venture to injure a Brahman, by whose sacrifice the gods live and the world exists? |
40960 | Who, then, was the author and lord of these mighty pulses of life, and this order, which seemed to exist of themselves? |
40960 | Why should the Brahmans trouble themselves with the deeds of ancient kings and heroes? |
40960 | Would ye rather end life on a sick- bed in pain? |
40960 | [ 132] Can we ascend beyond this point? |
40960 | [ 445] What is the cause of contact? |
40960 | as M. Müller supposes, write sutras to facilitate the understanding of the Brahmanas, if the latter were not in existence in writing? |
40960 | or lavish it on thy friends? |
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? |
9929 | To whom shall we go now for orders, Your Majesty? |
9929 | What is there for us to do? |
9929 | What means this? |
9929 | Why hast thou brought out the holy icon? |
9929 | Would you like,says the tender- hearted lady to her daughter,"would you like to have news of Rennes? |
9929 | Ah, you will go to Panama, will you? |
9929 | An inconsistent, treacherous man? |
9929 | And this, then, is the end of Sweden, and its bad neighborhood on these shores, where it has tyrannously sat on our skirts so long? |
9929 | Could Frederick the Great have saved it had he been_ par impossible_ Louis XIV''s successor? |
9929 | Could this be the far- famed Mississippi, or was it not rather old Avernus? |
9929 | Could this be true? |
9929 | Had anyone ever before seen a czar of Moscow quit Holy Russia to wander in the kingdoms of foreigners? |
9929 | Had not Pulcheria, daughter of an emperor, reigned at Constantinople in the name of her brother, the incapable Theodosius? |
9929 | Had she not contracted a nominal marriage with the brave Marcian, who was her sword against the barbarians? |
9929 | I have not my Louisa now; to whom now shall I run for advice or help?" |
9929 | In other words, what was the cause of the consummate failure, the unexampled collapse, of the French monarchy? |
9929 | Is there not something extremely romantic in the characters of the men of that epoch? |
9929 | It is toward that cause, that great"Why?" |
9929 | Lights were soon obtained, and then--"Where is the charter?" |
9929 | Louisiana had been named from a king: was it not in keeping that those lakes should be called after ministers? |
9929 | Now what did the emissaries of Sophia propose to them? |
9929 | Of what importance to him was the ruin of many thousand innocent families? |
9929 | Question by the Court:"Ann Putnam, who hurts you?" |
9929 | Question by the Court:"What do you say, Goodman Procter, to these things?" |
9929 | Shall we regain our rights?" |
9929 | Sophia could only save herself by seizing the throne-- but who would help her to take it? |
9929 | The Prince only asked what he now thought of predestination? |
9929 | The next Sunday after this accusation Parris preached from the verse,"Have I not chosen you twelve, and one is a devil?" |
9929 | The person answered:"What is that to you? |
9929 | The streltsi? |
9929 | They undertook that deputies[ others than some of those present?] |
9929 | Under an unknown sky, at the extremity of the world, on the shores of the"ocean sea,"what dangers might he not encounter? |
9929 | Was it a dream-- a wild delirium of the mind? |
9929 | Was it to be the son of the Miloslavski, or the son of the Narychkine? |
9929 | What could Andros do? |
9929 | What did it mean? |
9929 | What is it you wait for? |
9929 | What meant this very unparliamentary conduct, or was it a gust of wind which had startled all? |
9929 | What then was Peter to do? |
9929 | What was to become of the poor czarevni, of the blood of kings? |
9929 | Where was the charter? |
9929 | Who knew what adventures might befall him among the_ niemtsi_ and the_ bousourmanes_? |
9929 | Who should succeed Feodor? |
9929 | Who should succeed him? |
9929 | Who was first to be attacked? |
9929 | Why not act?" |
9929 | and why I was not at home saying my prayers till the dead- cart came for me? |
9929 | how do you do? |
9929 | what is the matter?" |
44703 | And why do you come into this land, and what are you going to do? |
44703 | Do you think,said the sensible grammarian,"I am going to enter into disputes with a man who commands thirty legions?" |
44703 | Does not your law command you,he said,"to submit to injury, and to renounce your worldly goods? |
44703 | Have you no wish, then,said Hastings,"to submit yourselves to King Charles, who offers you land and honours on condition of fealty and service?" |
44703 | Is it a prisoner you have brought us? |
44703 | When do you think you shall die? |
44703 | You have three or four cardinals,he says,"of learning and faith; but what are these three or four in so vast a crowd of infidels and reprobates? |
44703 | All men equal before the dread tribunal of the imperial judge? |
44703 | And in a third, how did the golden ring of sovereignty lose its controlling power, and republics take their rise? |
44703 | And who can pretend to be qualified for so great a work? |
44703 | And who could hesitate? |
44703 | But of the two loudest of these declaimers, John, who said,--"What earthly power to interrogatory Can tax the free breath of a Christian king?" |
44703 | But what was the use of all his genius? |
44703 | But when church and aristocracy were thus protected from the tyranny of the king, were the interests of the great mass of the people neglected? |
44703 | But who are you, who speak our language so well?" |
44703 | But who were the electors? |
44703 | Could he not go a step further, and convert a King of the Franks into an Emperor of the West? |
44703 | Could the gratitude of Church or State be too generous to the man who preserved both from the sword of the destroyer? |
44703 | Did the Senate receive a milder treatment? |
44703 | Else why do we find the faith of one generation the ridicule and laughing- stock of the next? |
44703 | Had he any patriotic pride in keeping the soil of Italy undivided? |
44703 | Had he no relentings at the visible approach of the end? |
44703 | He had already asked Pope Zachariah,"who had the best right to the name of king?--he who had merely the title, or he who had the power?" |
44703 | His friends said to him,"Why did n''t you answer the emperor''s objections?" |
44703 | How did aristocracy in one age concentrate into kingship in another? |
44703 | How did knighthood rise into the heroic regions of chivalry, and then sink in a succeeding period into the domain of burlesque? |
44703 | How did the reverence of Europe settle at one time on the sword of Edward the Third, and at another on the periwig of Louis the Fourteenth? |
44703 | How was it possible for any two scribes, or even for the same scribe, to produce so undeniable a fac- simile of his work? |
44703 | How was this done? |
44703 | How was this great change worked on the English mind? |
44703 | How, indeed, could the Church deprive itself of the organization which it saw so powerful and so successful in civil affairs? |
44703 | How, indeed, even without this incident, could the Papacy have retained its power? |
44703 | If the law guaranteed him the plough he held, the cart he drove, the spade he plied, why not the house he occupied, the little field he cultivated? |
44703 | If these were the habits of the rich, how were the poor treated? |
44703 | Inspired by the good cheer, the guests said,"Why do n''t you buy the empire? |
44703 | Is he a churchman? |
44703 | Is there no hope for Rome or for mankind? |
44703 | Is there to be a perpetual succession of monster after monster, with no cessation in the dreadful line? |
44703 | It might have been degrading to acknowledge the superiority of the son of Pepin-- but who could offer resistance to the successor of Augustus? |
44703 | Pardon, did I say? |
44703 | Tell me, my soul, can this be death? |
44703 | The count replied,"Did you never hear of Hastings the famous pirate, who had so many ships upon the sea, and did such evil to this realm?" |
44703 | Was Albinus still to live, and approach so near the throne as to have the rank of Cæsar? |
44703 | Was he to go to the grave untouched by all the calamities he had brought upon mankind? |
44703 | Was there no outcry from outraged piety?--no burst of indignation against the perpetrator of so foul a wrong? |
44703 | We had taken Canada: are they going to take New York? |
44703 | We turned them out of India: were they going to turn us out of America? |
44703 | Were people to be debarred from social meetings and merry- makings at Christmas, and junketings at fairs, by act of Parliament? |
44703 | Were the nobilissimi, the patricii, the egregii, to lose their salaries? |
44703 | Were they to have no cakes and ale because their elders were so prodigiously virtuous? |
44703 | What could be more enchanting than the position of their monastic homes? |
44703 | What is this absorbs me quite, Steals my senses, shuts my sight, Drowns my spirits, draws my breath? |
44703 | What more could the Church require? |
44703 | What should we call the present century, for instance? |
44703 | What was the effect upon the populace of these extraordinary shows? |
44703 | What was the use of going on? |
44703 | What were they doing at Rome during the thirty- three years of our Saviour''s sojourn upon earth? |
44703 | What, then, was to become of the warrior''s holding when he died? |
44703 | When there was any deficiency, was the emperor to suffer? |
44703 | Where is the fiery Henry of England, with his pen or sword? |
44703 | Where, indeed, could any element of security be found? |
44703 | Who was there in the Forty- Five, or Forty- Six, or for many years after that date, to write such charming verses? |
44703 | Who was to guide them in their future voyage? |
44703 | Who were those soldiers? |
44703 | Why, indeed, should not the first of those authorities exert his more than human powers in the production of the other? |
44703 | Would it not be possible to win over the cardinals to make your majesty his successor?" |
44703 | no more summary executions, nor forfeitures of fortunes, nor banishments to the Danube? |
44703 | sly: a Presbyterian? |
44703 | sour: A smart free- thinker? |
44703 | the blood he had shed, the multitudes he had beguiled? |
44703 | then he''s fond of power: A Quaker? |
44703 | to purity of life? |
44703 | to reform of abuses? |
44703 | what crime have they committed? |
44703 | where is thy sting?" |
44703 | where is thy victory? |
4370 | What do you think should be done? 4370 Why do you and your men remain here? |
4370 | Why,he said to his men,"do we delay? |
4370 | [ 241] And did he not today also protect that meager band whom he guarded in the midst of countless pagans? 4370 ( Lucan 1.8,9) What madness was this, my countrymen, what fierce orgy of slaughter... to give to hated nations the spectacle of Roman bloodshed? 4370 1- 20; Jean Flori,Faut- il réhabiliter Pierre l''Ermite?" |
4370 | About these the poet correctly says: Quis furor, o cives, quae tanta licentia ferri, Gentibus invisis proprium praebere cruorem? |
4370 | Again questioning me, the image of the Savior repeated,''Now do you know whom you see?'' |
4370 | And do you, in your insanity, think that Christian presumption will obscure my power?" |
4370 | And how could pleasure enter where the fear of death was ceaselessly present? |
4370 | And if the leaders were already becoming hard pressed to pay such price, what could he do who, for all his previous wealth, was now all but a pauper? |
4370 | But why exercise the license of allegory, piecing words together, when historical truth prevents us from going astray in belief? |
4370 | Did n''t we say earlier that the enemy was struck with blindness, and overcome with astonishment at the swords which threatened them? |
4370 | Do n''t you see that the Franks have taken the city, and are now triumphantly seizing great booty?" |
4370 | Every nation borrows the name as an honorific title; do we not see the Bretons, the English, the Ligurians call men"Frank"if they behave well? |
4370 | Every nation borrows the name as an honorific title; do we not see the Bretons, the English, the Ligurians call men"Frank"if they behave well? |
4370 | For what greater blindness is there than to make war on the sons of God? |
4370 | Good God, what could you have denied to such devotion when you saw them, or rather made them burn in such agony? |
4370 | Her son replied,"What is that?" |
4370 | If Peter is originally"stone,"which designates something solid, what do you mean by thinking of flight? |
4370 | In his usual manner, as though pious and humble, he replied to him:"Do n''t you know me?" |
4370 | See how we now have obtained control of three towers; why do you watch the doubtful outcome of this affair from a distance? |
4370 | Since you can compel distant kings to tremble, why harm wretched foreigners? |
4370 | Smiling, Kherboga said to them,"Will they depopulate the East with with these shining, powerful arms? |
4370 | Therefore, O most gracious one, from now on why should they call upon you, when your own people will expect such a death?" |
4370 | To them the prince said,"Why do you pursue my people, the people of Christ? |
4370 | Was n''t it the French? |
4370 | Was n''t it the French? |
4370 | What can I say then about intentions, which are so hidden most of the time that they can scarcely be discerned by the acuity of the inner man? |
4370 | What good would it have done him to run, when he was unwilling to understand in which direction to go? |
4370 | What is more blameful than to fail to acknowledge God, to glory in one''s own ignorance, and to war against the faithful? |
4370 | What more can I say? |
4370 | What more should I say? |
4370 | What more? |
4370 | What more? |
4370 | What prayer did he utter from the depths of his heart when the trumpets of battle sounded? |
4370 | What shall I say finally about those who, on this same expedition, were sanctified in various places by becoming martyrs? |
4370 | What shall we say about those who have taken up the journey, trusting in their naked poverty, who seem to have nothing more than their bodies to lose? |
4370 | What sort of veneration might we think it deserves? |
4370 | When he heard what she had to say, he looked at her with anger in his eyes and said,"Why do you weave these old wives''tales? |
4370 | When the mob is carried away by the promise of bloodshed, who can find anyone who is unmoved? |
4370 | When the walls of Nicea fell, and the city of Antioch was captured, what good was produced? |
4370 | Who can count the masters of one, two, three, or four castles? |
4370 | Who can count the virgins and the weak, trembling old men? |
4370 | Who can tell of the boys, the old men, who were stirred to go to war? |
4370 | Who could judge adequately how much sensitivity was in the hearts of all these men whose hopes were placed only in You? |
4370 | Why are knights sung of in battle? |
4370 | Why do I delay? |
4370 | Why do you carry out such an arduous task so slowly? |
4370 | Why do you follow this plan, Peter? |
4370 | Why do you forget the meaning of your name? |
4370 | Why do you remember immoderate eating? |
4370 | Why would God seek unless to propose the things that should be done according to eternal providence? |
4370 | Will the far reaches of the Caucasus submit to these men? |
4370 | Will the unarmed Franks be able to take away from us the lands which the Amazons once held, and which our ancestors once claimed?" |
4370 | [ 137] Spikes of cactus, perhaps, or making flour? |
4370 | [ 66] abortivis? |
8442 | ( 2) As to the second question: What kind of cohesion was there between the western or the eastern sets of these vague and petty governments? |
8442 | ( 3) Now to the third point: What had survived of the old order in either half of this anarchy? |
8442 | A few thousand squires and merchants backing a few more thousand enthusiasts, changed utterly the mass of England?" |
8442 | A true answer to the question:"What was the Reformation?" |
8442 | An answer to the other question:"What was the Reformation?" |
8442 | And_ why_ did Britain fail in that great ordeal? |
8442 | Could any point have less to do with the fundamentals of the Faith? |
8442 | Could anything better prove the truth that mere irritation against the external organization of the Church was the power at work? |
8442 | EUROPE AND THE FAITH I WHAT WAS THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | He will ask what, then, did really happen? |
8442 | How came it? |
8442 | How came there to be also nations exterior to the Empire; old nations like Ireland, new nations like Poland? |
8442 | I turn, therefore, next to answer the question:"What happened in Britain?" |
8442 | II WHAT WAS THE CHURCH IN THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | III WHAT WAS THE"FALL"OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | My next task must, therefore, be an attempt to answer the question,"What was the Church in the Roman Empire?" |
8442 | Now how did Britain go, and why was the loss of Britain of such capital importance? |
8442 | Now what is the meaning of that word_ Rex_? |
8442 | Now why did not this man, this_ Rex_, in Italy or Gaul or Spain, simply remain in the position of local Roman Governor? |
8442 | On the coasts, and up the estuaries of the navigable rivers? |
8442 | Put yourself into the shoes of a sixteenth century Englishman in the midst of the Reformation, and what do you perceive? |
8442 | Shall I give an example? |
8442 | So far I have attempted to answer the question,"What Was the Roman Empire?" |
8442 | THE BEGINNING OF THE NATIONS V. WHAT HAPPENED IN BRITAIN? |
8442 | The Catholic may well ask:"How it is I can not understand the story as told by these Protestant writers? |
8442 | The historian answers the question,"_ What_ was?" |
8442 | The validity of the whole scheme depends upon our answer to the question,"What was the fall of the Roman Empire?" |
8442 | Then why was there a fight? |
8442 | This is perhaps the greatest of all historical questions, after the original question:"What was the Church in the Empire of Rome?" |
8442 | This process is commonly called"The Fall of the Roman Empire;"what was that"fall?" |
8442 | To the question,"_ Why_ was it?" |
8442 | V WHAT HAPPENED IN BRITAIN? |
8442 | VIII WHAT WAS THE REFORMATION? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE CHURCH IN THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE REFORMATION? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE"FALL"OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | Well, then, how did Britain break away? |
8442 | Well, then, what was this body of doctrine held by common tradition and present everywhere in the first years of the third century? |
8442 | What are the tests of this war? |
8442 | What do they tell us? |
8442 | What does that mean? |
8442 | What had survived in the eastern part of Britain? |
8442 | What of the Midlands? |
8442 | What really happened in this great transformation? |
8442 | What was the Roman Empire? |
8442 | What was the origin from which we sprang? |
8442 | What was the process of that decline? |
8442 | What would he find? |
8442 | What, then, were the supposed barbaric successes? |
8442 | When we said that"the Slav"failed us, what did we mean? |
8442 | When we say that Vienna was the tool of Berlin, that Madrid should be ashamed, what do we mean? |
8442 | Where lay the roots of so singular a contempt for our old order, chivalry and morals, as Berlin then displayed? |
8442 | Who shall explain the position of the Papacy, the question of Ireland, the aloofness of old Spain? |
8442 | Why did Prussia arise? |
8442 | Why does it not make sense?" |
8442 | Why these two camps? |
8442 | Why? |
8442 | Why? |
8442 | Why? |
8442 | Would Ferreolus have been a_ Christian_? |
8442 | Would he have been in danger of unpopularity where_ Christians_ were unpopular? |
8442 | Would he have counted with any single man of the whole Empire as one of the_ Christian_ body? |
8442 | Would the officials of the Roman Empire have called him a_ Christian_? |
8442 | Would_ Christians_ have received him among themselves as part of their strict and still somewhat secret society? |
8442 | this large national movement to be interpreted as the work of such minorities? |
33367 | And if we_ are_ but''ten minutes''walk from Italy''--a phrase so often repeated-- what of it? |
33367 | And it was from here that they were carried off? |
33367 | And who art thou? |
33367 | Are the axle- trees, the nave, the spokes, the tires, the felloes, and the splinter- bars in good condition? |
33367 | Are there any of them left? |
33367 | Are we to call the place Menton or Mentone? |
33367 | But that will be too far, will it not? |
33367 | But who are those ladies above? |
33367 | But who carried them off? |
33367 | By the artist? |
33367 | Could n''t you imagine two? |
33367 | Did you expect carved handles and steel blades? |
33367 | Do the donkeys come up all these stairs? |
33367 | Do with it? |
33367 | Do you mean to tell me that_ this_ was one of their homes also? |
33367 | Do you notice that many of these roofs are flat, with benches, and pots of flowers? |
33367 | Do you see that blue line of coast? |
33367 | Do you see that narrow track cut in the face of the rock? |
33367 | Envy? |
33367 | Excuse me,said Inness;"but I think you did not mention the origin of that monopoly?" |
33367 | Have you a carriage? |
33367 | Have you heard the legend of the Mentone lemons? |
33367 | He? 33367 How could they climb up there, to begin with?" |
33367 | How does it strike you? 33367 How much of the imperishable M. do you possess, Miss Trescott?" |
33367 | I suppose they had wives and sisters, did they not? |
33367 | I trust, Miss Trescott, you have not often been exposed to inclement weather? |
33367 | I wonder how many girls have thrown themselves off that rock? |
33367 | I wonder what induced these people to build their houses upon such a crag as this, when they had the whole sunny coast to choose from? |
33367 | Indeed? |
33367 | Is it asphodel? 33367 Is it damp?" |
33367 | Is it palmy? |
33367 | Is it possibles? |
33367 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
33367 | Is that tropical too? |
33367 | Is this a school? |
33367 | It''s a poetical sort of agriculture, is n''t it? 33367 No; what is it? |
33367 | Not_ coquina_? |
33367 | Shall we go now, aunt? |
33367 | Story? 33367 Surely you_ see_ it?" |
33367 | The Troglodytes? |
33367 | The poor old ancient gods and goddesses of the coast? |
33367 | The road goes through? |
33367 | The same Lascaris who lived in the old castle at Mentone? |
33367 | Then we do not see the Trophy as it was? |
33367 | They-- whoever they were-- lived here? |
33367 | To Nice? |
33367 | To whom, then, did it belong? |
33367 | Were they those interesting Greek Lascaris? |
33367 | What are you doing, sir? |
33367 | What can that be? |
33367 | What did you expect? |
33367 | What do those eagles at the corners represent? |
33367 | What do you suppose is in her mind? |
33367 | What is he doing? |
33367 | What is it about the shade? |
33367 | What is that? |
33367 | What is your idea of them? |
33367 | What ruin is that on the top of the hill? |
33367 | What_ is_ the Riviera? |
33367 | Where, then, do I come in? |
33367 | Who? |
33367 | Who? |
33367 | Why could it not go on and on forever? 33367 Why did they want frescos away out here in this primitive little village to which no road led, hardly even a donkey path?" |
33367 | Why do you care so much for that marble figure? |
33367 | Why do you say''nothing but''? |
33367 | _ What_ can be more false than a false rug? |
33367 | ''Oh, Mr. M.,''I said,''where_ did_ you learn Greek?'' |
33367 | ''Thamus?'' |
33367 | ( What vehicles are these?) |
33367 | ), to gaze upon the features of some of our Presidents-- for instance, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln? |
33367 | *****"I suppose,"said Inness, one morning,"that you are not all going away from Mentone without even_ seeing_ Mon-- Monaco?" |
33367 | 5000 according to Mariette? |
33367 | Adventurous travellers as they are, does the charm lie in the word"distant"? |
33367 | And now, she could not but feel-- there was something in his manner that forced her to see-- In short, had not Mr. Verney noticed it? |
33367 | At last you meet a man, and you ask him something or other beginning with''Purtorn''--""What in the world do you mean?" |
33367 | But is Cairo worth this? |
33367 | But what are five or six days of kamsin amid four winter months whose average temperature is 58 ° Fahrenheit? |
33367 | But what does one find in the year of grace 1890? |
33367 | But who can be reasonable in the land of Aladdin''s Lamp? |
33367 | Could she be referring to them? |
33367 | Do you find it so? |
33367 | I say"ashamed,"for why should one be haunted by Venice in Greece? |
33367 | I wonder how much a grove would cost?" |
33367 | Inness:"Or, with French accent, and the n''s half gone, Try the Parisian syllables-- Men- ton?" |
33367 | It is probable that they are Kufic, and one would hardly demand, I suppose, that an English guide should read black- letter? |
33367 | It may be asked, What is the shape of a mosque-- its exterior? |
33367 | Lloyd:"Shall we go quietly on, Miss Severin?" |
33367 | Lloyd?" |
33367 | Miss Read, will you not let me place you in the same position, just for an instant?" |
33367 | Mrs. Trescott said,"Dry? |
33367 | Of course you all remember_ Doctor Antonio_?" |
33367 | Shadeless? |
33367 | Shall we give our own Plain English vowels to thee, fair Mentone?" |
33367 | She had met some Americans the year before; they were charming; they were from Brazil; perhaps we knew them? |
33367 | Should we go back? |
33367 | The Mercury of John of Bologna; the younger gods of Olympus-- will these do for comparisons? |
33367 | Then, more soberly, I added:"Mr. Lloyd told you this, I suppose? |
33367 | To mention( with due respect) typical names only, what would be the vision of Mr. Herbert Spencer, or of Prince Bismarck? |
33367 | Was Janet, then, beautiful? |
33367 | We are nothing if not dignified, are we, Miss Elaine?" |
33367 | We began to talk about the Mask, and then diverged to Kaspar Hauser, finally ending with Eleazer Williams, of"Have we a Bourbon among us?" |
33367 | What could have given the name to Roman punch?" |
33367 | What do you mean?'' |
33367 | What is it like? |
33367 | What is this situation? |
33367 | What was the result? |
33367 | What would be the effect of breathing always this fragrant air? |
33367 | What, then, is this beauty? |
33367 | What_ should_ she do? |
33367 | When we were at a safe distance--"I suppose you know, Miss Trescott, that Ventimiglia was the principal home of your Lascaris?" |
33367 | Why could she not have been Aglaia, Daphne, or Artemidora? |
33367 | Why must there always come that last good- bye?" |
33367 | With the Parthenon to look forward to, why should the lion of St. Mark, sculptured on Corfu façades, be a thing to greet with joy? |
33367 | Would an atmosphere perfumed by these Eastern woods clarify and rarefy our denser Occidental minds? |
33367 | Would any woman be justified in causing such widespread despair as that? |
33367 | Would he advise her? |
33367 | Would it give a richer life, would it tinge the cheek with warmer hues? |
33367 | You are with him a great deal, are you not?" |
33367 | [ Illustration: THE MONASTERY OF L''ANNUNZIATA]"Was that piety or curiosity?" |
33367 | [ Illustration: THE PROFESSOR DISCOURSES] Baker:"Or shall we yield thee back thy patrimony, The lost Italian sweetness of Mentone?" |
33367 | of General Booth, Tolstoï, or Miss Yonge? |
33367 | of the Archbishop of Canterbury, or of Ibsen? |
40864 | Art thou better than No- Ammon( Thebes) that was situate by the Nile? 40864 But if,"continued the other,"Sardanapalus made you satrap of all Babylonia, what would you give me then?" |
40864 | Did I not bring you up from Egypt? |
40864 | From the Edomite thou shalt not turn away; he is thy brother? |
40864 | To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices to me? |
40864 | Who is this,exclaims Jeremiah,"that cometh up as the Nile, whose waters are moved as the rivers? |
40864 | Why do you mock me? |
40864 | [ 115]What could have been done more to my vineyard, that I have not done to it? |
40864 | [ 434]What does Jehovah require of thee? |
40864 | [ 94]What shall I do to thee, Ephraim? |
40864 | 317,_ supr._ p. 15), and go down to Gath( p. 18); are ye better than these kingdoms, or is your land greater? |
40864 | Arbaces replied;"how is he likely to nominate me, and pass over many better men?" |
40864 | At Nipur I have founded and built a temple in honour of Anu(? |
40864 | Belesys continued:"But if you were made king of the whole empire which Sardanapalus now possesses, what would you do?" |
40864 | But had Israel been grateful for this?--had he made any return?--had he kept the covenant which Jehovah had made with him, and his law? |
40864 | But how can he, the pure and holy God, grant protection and defence, if his people live an impure and unholy life? |
40864 | But if this be so, how are we to explain their earlier resistance, and the thirteen years''struggle of Tyre against Babylon? |
40864 | But what caused Media to be at war with the distant land of Lydia? |
40864 | But what reason was there for the pursuit, when the Cimmerians had voluntarily abandoned the land which the Scoloti desired? |
40864 | But why have I seen them dismayed and turned back, and their mighty ones are beaten down, and are fled apace and look not back? |
40864 | Could such isolated communities withstand the sovereigns who had conquered the Cimmerians, and checked the Medes? |
40864 | Croesus further inquired, whom Solon considered the happiest man after Tellus? |
40864 | Did I not destroy the Amorites before you, who were tall as cedars, and strong as oaks? |
40864 | Did I not raise up prophets from your sons, and Nazarites from your young men? |
40864 | Do men hunt the horse on the rocks, and plough the stone with oxen, that ye may turn justice into poison, and the fruit of righteousness into hemlock? |
40864 | Had Cyaxares, when at war with Lydia, already recovered the dominion which Phraortes had established for the Medes over all Asia? |
40864 | Had he not by Moses commanded and established the true worship? |
40864 | Had he not done great things for his people? |
40864 | Had he not led them out of Egypt and given them this beautiful land for a possession? |
40864 | Had not Jehovah again delivered Jerusalem as in the day when Sennacherib oppressed the city? |
40864 | Have the gods of the nations whom my fathers overthrew saved them-- Gozan, and Haran, and Rezeph, and the sons of Eden and Telassar? |
40864 | He( Hezekiah) was overcome with fear before my power, and the Urbi(?) |
40864 | Here he said to him:"What would you give me, Arbaces, for the good news, if I told you that Sardanapalus had made you viceroy over Cilicia?" |
40864 | How could a stranger be king in Israel when no strangers were to be admitted into the people? |
40864 | How could this supra- terrestrial power, before which all that is earthly is dust and mire, dwell in a frail image made by human hands? |
40864 | How will ye thrust back a single captain, one of the least of the servants of my master? |
40864 | Is the Kinziru of Bit Amukan the Chinzirus of the canon? |
40864 | Is this the city which was called the garland of beauty, the joy of the whole earth? |
40864 | Is this your joyous city, whose antiquity is of ancient days? |
40864 | It narrates the carrying away of the people of Elam, like the cylinder, and then continues:"After this(?) |
40864 | May the enemy never triumph, and may men(?) |
40864 | Must he not visit these wrong- doers with a heavy penalty? |
40864 | Shall I destroy thee? |
40864 | Shall I not, as I have done to Samaria and her idols, so do to Jerusalem and her idols? |
40864 | Shall the axe boast against him that heweth therewith; or shall the saw magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
40864 | Shalt thou reign because thou contendest with houses of cedar? |
40864 | Take us again to thee, Jehovah; is it right that thou shouldest utterly throw us away and be so wroth with us? |
40864 | The Semitic(?) |
40864 | To whom shall he teach knowledge? |
40864 | Was it not advisable to create for the new kingdom of Babylon an empire which should form an adequate counterpoise to the power of the Medes? |
40864 | Was this the way to fulfil the commands of the just and holy God? |
40864 | Were Lydia and Media neighbouring countries after Nineveh fell, or before? |
40864 | What can the holy and just Lord in heaven care for offerings of food, frankincense, and drink? |
40864 | What could have induced the Scoloti to undertake such a pursuit a good hundred years later? |
40864 | What made them miss the way, and come into Media instead of Cappadocia? |
40864 | What would Egypt win by the fall of Assyria, if Babylon took her place in Syria and became the neighbour of Egypt? |
40864 | Where is the king of Hamath, and the king of Arpad, and the kings of Sepharvaim, Hena, and Iva? |
40864 | Wherefore are they happy that deal very treacherously? |
40864 | Wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes? |
40864 | Who hath required of you to tread my courts? |
40864 | Who hath taken this counsel against Tyre, the crowning city, whose merchants are princes, whose traffickers are the honourable of the earth? |
40864 | Why should ye be stricken any more, and revolt any more? |
40864 | Why, Jehovah, didst thou not slay me in the womb, that I should see labour and sorrow, and consume my days with shame? |
40864 | Will not the people suddenly rise up and demand usury from thee? |
40864 | [ 109] What mean ye to beat my people in pieces, saith Jehovah, and grind the faces of the poor? |
40864 | [ 225] In the next year, when Urza of Ararat conspired with Ullusun of Van, and Ullusun with Dayaukka, the overseer of Van(? |
40864 | [ 282] What aileth thee now that thou art wholly gone up to the house- tops, thou that art full of stirs, a tumultuous city, a joyous city? |
40864 | [ 605] Shall they slay the nations continually without punishment? |
40864 | [ 627] Why is my pain perpetual, and my wound incurable? |
40864 | [ 628] Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper? |
40864 | [ 71] King Zachariah, and then Shallum: the third is the opponent of Menahem who sought to maintain himself in Tipsach( Taanach?). |
40864 | how shall I deal with thee? |
40864 | said Arbaces;"if Sardanapalus were to hear this, you and I would perish miserably; how comes it into your mind to talk such nonsense?" |
40864 | so Amos represents Jehovah as saying;"Did I not lead you forty years in the wilderness, to possess the land of the Amorites? |
40864 | whom shall he make to understand doctrine?--them that are weaned from the milk, and removed from the mother''s breast? |
40864 | will not the nations plunder thee, whom thou hast plundered? |
9460 | ''Tam, what''s happent to my Alick?'' 9460 An do reic thu na''h''uainn fhathast, Coignasgailean?" |
9460 | And does the war prosper for my friends the English? |
9460 | Cha neil fios again''m lieil thusa air son tavigse thoirtorra, Cnocnangraisheag? |
9460 | Do you also know that the last of the German officials depart by the 5 A.M. train, not caring to remain here after the troops are gone? |
9460 | Fat for? |
9460 | Five thousand? |
9460 | In Heaven''s name how many sheep have you, man? |
9460 | Let me hope,continued the Mayor,"that you are going along with them, or at all events will ride away with Messieurs the officers?" |
9460 | Monsieur, you are aware that the Germans are going to- morrow morning? |
9460 | Of course I am,replied the old gentleman;"who the devil else should I be?" |
9460 | Sir,said Her Majesty,"you have been persistent in wishing to speak with me personally; here I am; what have you to say?" |
9460 | Twenty thousand, sir? |
9460 | Two thousand, then? |
9460 | What? |
9460 | Whence does he come? |
9460 | Where does Cabul lie in relation to Kashmir? |
9460 | Where is the Kingwoon Menghyi? |
9460 | Why does he come? |
9460 | You may have some 1500 sheep, probably, sir? |
9460 | ''And where do you think of taking her ladyship, Geordie?'' |
9460 | ''Geordie,''said his Grace,''with whom will you be going yourself?'' |
9460 | Afterwards he asked,''Has any one seen my regiment?'' |
9460 | Aifter aboot ten meenits mair o''this wark, she shot at me ower her shouther the obsairve,''Is n''t it an obstinate wretch?'' |
9460 | And what if she were willing to come out and make lonely George Martell as happy a man as was that lucky old Mac? |
9460 | Art Thou not God the Lord unto us who are called after Thy name? |
9460 | Art Thou not the Lord who directest the wars of the whole world, who breakest the bow, who splinterest the spear, and burnest the chariots with fire? |
9460 | Bourbaki turned from the man of verbiage to Bazaine and asked,"Marshal, what do you wish me to do?" |
9460 | But Jessie Dunbar and her"Dinna ye hear it?" |
9460 | But she cam nae speed wi''him; an''at last she says, says she,''Geordie, I can make nothing of him: what in the world is to be done?'' |
9460 | But she could not well come alone; could George suggest any method of_ chaperonage_ on the voyage? |
9460 | But the bridecake was upon him as the Philistines upon Samson; and the question was, what the devil to do with it? |
9460 | But where to find a Mrs. Martell? |
9460 | But, then, what means were within my power? |
9460 | Cnocnangraisheag asks Coignasgailean,"Have you sold your lambs?" |
9460 | Dost Thou take pleasure in our destruction? |
9460 | Here, Jenyns, did n''t you see me at the guns?" |
9460 | I ups till her, maks my boo, an''says I, unco canny an''respectfu'',''My leddy, ye''ll likely be for the watter the day?'' |
9460 | It is a grim joke that reply which tickles the Fusiliers into laughter:"And what the devil are we here for but to get our heads taken off?" |
9460 | Lord, who are we, that we dare to stand before Thee as soldiers, and that our enemies yield and fly before us? |
9460 | Need I prolong the story? |
9460 | Noo, I speer this at yer leddyship-- respectfu''but direck; div ye admit yersel clean bestit-- fairly lickit wi''that fush, Spey fush though it be? |
9460 | Oh, what shall I do? |
9460 | One''s ear seemed to assure one that_ Madame Angot_ had been laid under contribution to tickle the ears of a Mandalay audience, yet how could this be? |
9460 | Presently the King spoke in a distinct, deliberate voice--"Who is he?" |
9460 | Seeing him approach composedly from the rear Lord George exclaimed:"Halloa, Lord Cardigan, were n''t you there?" |
9460 | The captain enters the room and_ pro formâ_ asks whether there are"any complaints?" |
9460 | The cautious reply is,"I do n''t know; are you inclined to give me an offer?" |
9460 | Then a question occurred to me, and I ventured to ask,"Are you Lord Saltoun?" |
9460 | Was he induced to throw himself into the midst of events by one of the monomanias which are engendered by periods of storm and revolution? |
9460 | Was he simply an intriguer, plying his trade? |
9460 | We both agreed that evacuation of the Hagen was imperative; but then, how to get out? |
9460 | What if Laura Davidson-- now some three- and- twenty-- were still single? |
9460 | What if she were pretty and nice? |
9460 | What needs it to become diffuse as to the terrible sights which that steep and the plateau above it presented on this beautiful summer evening? |
9460 | What shall we have? |
9460 | What was St. Meuse to me that for her I should mow my hirsute glories? |
9460 | Which was the swifter, the more brilliant, and the more decisive-- the campaign of 1866, or the campaign of 1806? |
9460 | Why do n''t they make a battue of them?" |
9460 | Why on earth were they not shot?" |
9460 | Why should M. le Maire have conceived this desire to balk my natural curiosity? |
9460 | Would it harm the British soldier, think you, if in his kit there was a_ Gebetbuch für Soldaten_? |
9460 | he once exclaimed at Versailles, after one of Prince Frederick Charles''s victories in the Loire country--"What the devil do we want with prisoners? |
9460 | rejoined Bourbaki;"have you never seen him at the Tuileries?" |
9460 | to which, according to one version of the story, Cardigan replied:"Was n''t I, though? |
9460 | with whom can we treat? |
29637 | Among our ancient texts,says M. J. Bédier, referring to French mediæval literature,"which ought we to publish? |
29637 | Is it possible to do work in the provinces? |
29637 | ( 1) Who were the persons invested with authority? |
29637 | ( 1)_ General Organisation._--What object should historical instruction aim at? |
29637 | ( 2) Did he believe what he said? |
29637 | ( 2) What were the official rules? |
29637 | ( 2)_ Choice of Subjects._--What proportion should be observed between home and foreign history? |
29637 | ( 3) Was he justified in believing whatever he did believe? |
29637 | ( 3)_ Order._--In what order should the subjects be attacked? |
29637 | ( 4)_ Methods of Instruction._--Should the pupil be given general formulæ first or particular images? |
29637 | (_ a_) Is the fact stated manifestly prejudicial to the effect which the author wished to produce? |
29637 | (_ c_) Was the fact stated_ indifferent_ to the author, so that he had no temptation to misrepresent it? |
29637 | A general question then presents itself: How are we to criticise an anonymous statement? |
29637 | Again, in virtue of their very detachability, the slips, or loose leaves, are liable to go astray; and when a slip is lost how is it to be replaced? |
29637 | And, consequently, what principles ought to guide the choice of subjects and methods? |
29637 | And, if it come to the worst, what does it matter if there is a certain amount of work wasted? |
29637 | Are there no contradictions, no gaps in the sequence of ideas? |
29637 | Are there not still collections of documents of which it would be hard to justify the separate existence? |
29637 | Are these authors thought any the less of on this account? |
29637 | Are they of any more importance when we know the authors''names? |
29637 | Are we to admit it after examination of the documents, or are we to pass on and shelve the question? |
29637 | Are we to choose the economic or the political organisation of the groups, or their intellectual condition? |
29637 | Before we argue from silence we should ask: Might not this fact have failed to be recorded in any of the documents we possess? |
29637 | Besides, is not research, in the present condition of its material aids, difficult enough whatever the experience of the researcher? |
29637 | But do we not see historical writings whose authors have more or less seriously violated the rules? |
29637 | But how is it to be had? |
29637 | But how was it to be replaced? |
29637 | But, it will be asked, are we not already staggering under the weight of documents?... |
29637 | Can exercises be organised in which the pupil may do original work on the facts? |
29637 | Can not tact supply the place of knowledge?" |
29637 | Could not the centralisation of documents, with its evident advantages for researchers, be carried still further? |
29637 | Do we possess documents of different classes or of one single class? |
29637 | Do we possess several traditions of different bias, or a single tradition? |
29637 | Does it appear that the author had sufficient data to work upon? |
29637 | Does it not occur to you that the advice you give me resembles that of a man who should wish to marry his friend to a shrew? |
29637 | Does our knowledge come originally from direct observation, from written tradition, or from oral tradition? |
29637 | Does the book breathe one and the same spirit from cover to cover? |
29637 | General knowledge? |
29637 | Has it deteriorated since? |
29637 | Have these copies been made directly from the originals? |
29637 | How are documents to be treated with a view to historical work? |
29637 | How are facts to be localised? |
29637 | How are images of historical facts to be produced in the pupils''minds? |
29637 | How are the episodes of an event to be chosen? |
29637 | How are they to be grouped to make history? |
29637 | How are we to choose? |
29637 | How are we to construct a formula for an event? |
29637 | How are we to make our imagination of facts of this kind harmonise with the reality? |
29637 | How are we to organise into a common whole, items of knowledge which differ so widely in point of precision? |
29637 | How are we to proceed in order to construct the best possible text? |
29637 | How are we to represent to ourselves these elements of difference for which we have no model? |
29637 | How could we study the institutions or the evolution of France if we ignored the conquest of Gaul by Cæsar and the invasion of the Barbarians? |
29637 | How do they differ from the materials of other sciences? |
29637 | How do we ascertain, in respect of the past, what part of it it is possible, what part of it it is important, to know? |
29637 | How is it to be turned to account, unless it be first understood? |
29637 | How is it to be verified that the pupil has understood the terms and assimilated the facts? |
29637 | How is the interconnection of facts and the process of evolution to be made intelligible? |
29637 | How is this conflict to be decided? |
29637 | How should school- books be compiled, with a view to giving the pupil practice in original work? |
29637 | How, then, is it possible to imagine facts without their being wholly imaginary? |
29637 | In putting forward a statement has the author been led to distort it unconsciously by the circumstance that he was answering a question? |
29637 | In respect of each class of men concerned in the government we shall ask: How were they recruited? |
29637 | In the exposition of each period, should the chronological, geographical, or logical order be followed? |
29637 | In the ocean of universal history what facts is he to choose for collection? |
29637 | In what cases? |
29637 | In what does it consist? |
29637 | In what order? |
29637 | In what species of activity did they differ? |
29637 | In what, then, does the technical_ apprenticeship_ of the scholar or the historian consist? |
29637 | Indeed, what questions have not been asked? |
29637 | Is it a good thing in itself that some workers should, voluntarily or not, confine themselves to the researches of critical scholarship? |
29637 | Is it always the most conscientious writer who enjoys the highest consideration? |
29637 | Is it any wonder that it was not solved at a stroke? |
29637 | Is it now in the same state as when it was produced? |
29637 | Is it to the man who possesses scientific culture? |
29637 | Is it to the mass who have no scientific culture? |
29637 | Is not the House of Fame, as the poet tells us, a more wonderful and quaintly wrought habitation than_ Domus Dedali_ itself? |
29637 | Is our information vague or precise, detailed or summary, literary or positive, official or confidential? |
29637 | Is the style uniform throughout the document? |
29637 | Is there any need to prove the capital importance of Heuristic? |
29637 | Knowing what the author of the document has said, we ask( 1) What did he mean? |
29637 | Lastly, where are the existing catalogues to be consulted? |
29637 | Of what larger group did it form a part? |
29637 | On what scheme? |
29637 | Or should it be expounded in a single continuous course, beginning with the commencement of study, as in France? |
29637 | Ought history to stop at this point? |
29637 | Ought the instruction to be spread over the whole duration of the classes, or should it be concentrated in a special class? |
29637 | Pedagogic capacity? |
29637 | Should formulæ be learnt by heart? |
29637 | Should it be given in one- hour or two- hour classes? |
29637 | Should the professor give a complete course, or should he select a few questions and leave the pupil to study the others by himself? |
29637 | Should the professor state the formulæ himself or require the pupil to search for them? |
29637 | Should the teacher begin by describing conditions or by narrating events? |
29637 | Should we profit by the opportunities afforded by legends to arouse the critical spirit? |
29637 | Technical knowledge and the capacity of doing original research( as at the École des chartes and the École des hautes études)? |
29637 | That is, what reason have we for assuming that the characteristic discovered in these cases will occur in the remaining thousands of cases? |
29637 | The first questions, then, which we ask when we are confronted with a document is: Where does it come from? |
29637 | To what extent ought words and formulæ to be quoted? |
29637 | To what extent should concrete, abstract, and technical terms be used? |
29637 | Was he accurate, or the reverse, in his use of the data he had? |
29637 | Was the author in one of those situations which cause a man to make mistakes? |
29637 | We have therefore to ask the question: In this period and in this group of men was it customary to commit to writing facts of this kind? |
29637 | We have, in such a case, several documents, several statements-- have we the same number of observations? |
29637 | We have, then, to ask: How was a given group sub- divided? |
29637 | We must accurately determine the nature and extent of the group, asking: Of what men was it composed? |
29637 | We next put to ourselves the general question: Was the author in the habit of altering his sources, and in what manner? |
29637 | Were the events they proposed to relate recent, so that all the witnesses of them were not yet dead? |
29637 | What are historical facts? |
29637 | What are the liberties which it is legitimate to take in reproducing autograph texts? |
29637 | What are we to do with an improbable or miraculous fact? |
29637 | What are we to understand by a tribe, an army, an industry, a market, a revolution? |
29637 | What are we to understand by the group of those who speak Greek, the Christian group, the group of modern science? |
29637 | What bond united them? |
29637 | What facts ought it to enable him to understand? |
29637 | What habits had they in common? |
29637 | What influence can it have upon his conduct? |
29637 | What instruments of study should the pupil have? |
29637 | What is a document? |
29637 | What is the way to make comprehensible the character of events and customs? |
29637 | What is their form and their nature? |
29637 | What meaning are we to attach to this term? |
29637 | What place should be assigned to proper names and dates? |
29637 | What qualifications? |
29637 | What right have we to generalise? |
29637 | What services can it render to the culture of the pupil? |
29637 | What style of language is to be employed? |
29637 | What use can we make of it if we can not read it? |
29637 | What use is to be made of chronological tables? |
29637 | What use is to be made of comparison? |
29637 | What use is to be made of engravings? |
29637 | What use is to be made of narratives and descriptions? |
29637 | What was the mode of application( procedure)? |
29637 | What was their content( rules of law)? |
29637 | What was their form( custom, orders, law, precedent)? |
29637 | What was their official authority? |
29637 | What were their real powers? |
29637 | What, pray, is the criterion of utility in these matters? |
29637 | Where are the_ problems_ in history, and what schoolboy is ever trained to gain by independent effort an insight into the interconnection of events?" |
29637 | Which great models? |
29637 | Who are the persons that in our own day have discovered, published, and annotated the greatest number of documents? |
29637 | Why should he hurry? |
29637 | Why should not things go in these matters as they do in life, where it is not necessarily the best men that get on best? |
29637 | [ 108] Would it not be preferable that workers in the field of history should specialise? |
29637 | [ 180] But how are the questions to be chosen in a science so different from the others? |
29637 | [ 248] Now that most of what we objected to has been abolished, what is the use of reviving old controversies? |
29637 | [ 53] What exactly are we to understand by this"incommunicable knowledge,"of which we speak? |
29637 | and the examples of a custom? |
29637 | between ancient and contemporary history? |
29637 | between institutions or usages, and events? |
29637 | between the evolution of material usages, intellectual history, social life, political life? |
29637 | between the special branches of history( art, religion, customs, economics) and general history? |
29637 | between the study of particular incidents, of biography, of dramatic episodes, and the study of the interconnection of events and general evolutions? |
29637 | of authors''texts? |
29637 | of geographical sketches? |
29637 | of historical novels? |
29637 | of imaginary scenes? |
29637 | of reproductions and restorations? |
29637 | of statistical and graphic tables? |
29637 | of synchronical tables? |
29637 | or should it begin with the periods and the countries which are nearest to us so as to proceed from the better known to the less known? |
29637 | or should we avoid legends? |
29637 | that the cases chosen resemble the average? |
29637 | the conditions of customs? |
29637 | the motives of actions? |
29637 | what is its date? |
29637 | who is the author of it? |
8507 | And shall the audacious traitor brave The presence where our banners wave? |
8507 | And, anyway, who are you, Signor Colombo, to set yourself up to know more than all the world beside? 8507 And, besides, if the signor should succeed in sailing down around the earth to this peculiar region, how does he propose to get back again? |
8507 | Are you yet to learn,he said,"who Colonel Clive is, and in what station God has placed him?" |
8507 | But if the unknown waters bring us to the riches of Cathay? |
8507 | Hell was there,said one superstition,"Have n''t you seen the flames at sunset- time?" |
8507 | Knowest thou,he said,"De Argentine, Yon knight who marshals thus their line?" |
8507 | We have discovered much by daring adventure, why not more? |
8507 | What will gold be to thee, man, with a cannibal drinking thy blood? |
8507 | Where do you get your gold? |
8507 | Wherefore,demanded the incensed bailiff,"Hast thou disobeyed my orders, and failed in thy respect to the emperor? |
8507 | Will you stay with me, Diego? |
8507 | ''and who is that one,''said the king,''for whose sake you make all travelers welcome?'' |
8507 | 24. Who should go? |
8507 | And Fraser, flower of chivalry? |
8507 | And the round earth, the round earth--_is_ it round? |
8507 | And what of England and of her ability to resist this formidable attack? |
8507 | Are you not aware that the holy fathers of the church have condemned this belief? |
8507 | As the policy of the parent dawned upon him, first came incredulous questioning,"What does this mean?" |
8507 | At ten the admiral, peer into the darkness, saw a light-- was it one of those phantom lights reported to dance over these waters? |
8507 | At the last moment had the hearts of the patriots failed? |
8507 | But do n''t you see how busy we are with this war? |
8507 | But what means this? |
8507 | Did the near approach of the red- coats deprive them of their courage? |
8507 | Do dirks unsheathed suit bridal cheer? |
8507 | Give up? |
8507 | Has the impossible come to pass? |
8507 | Have the rebels dared to fire upon the king''s troops? |
8507 | Have they not been on gibbet bound, Their quarters flung to hawk and hound, And hold we here a cold debate To yield more victims to their fate? |
8507 | He went to him, and fiercely asked why he neglected to pay obedience to the orders of Hermann Gessler? |
8507 | How could the men build shelter in the midst of a northern winter? |
8507 | How could they go on in the face of this message from heaven? |
8507 | I will keep my promise; but,"added he,"tell me what needed you with that second arrow which you have, I see, secreted in your girdle? |
8507 | Meantime, what of those left in the ship these four dreary weeks? |
8507 | Monsters? |
8507 | Nor must his word, till dying day, Be nought but quarter, hang, and slay?" |
8507 | Or are these naked brands A seemly show for churchman''s sight, When he comes summoned to unite Betrothed hearts and hands?" |
8507 | Or what may their short swords avail,''Gainst barbed horse and shirt of mail? |
8507 | Should nothing on this holy day be done in his honor by those whom he had so greatly favored? |
8507 | Spread out earth''s holiest record here, Of days and deeds to reverence dear; A zeal like this, what pious legends tell? |
8507 | Two o''clock-- what is it? |
8507 | Was it lightning from heaven that struck down every man in their first rank? |
8507 | Was it the earthquake''s shock that left those long lines of dead heaped like grass before the mower''s scythe? |
8507 | Was not the life of Athole shed To soothe the tyrant''s sickened bed? |
8507 | Was the devil steering them for hell? |
8507 | We, whose names are underwritten, the loyal subjects of our dread sovereign lord, King James--"have fled over seas from English persecution? |
8507 | What arm of strength e''er wrought such power As waits to crown that feeble hour? |
8507 | What could those women and children do there? |
8507 | What lay beyond? |
8507 | What means that musketry? |
8507 | What shall we do? |
8507 | What shall we do? |
8507 | What tongue of joy e''er woke such prayer As bursts in desolation there? |
8507 | What would become of the Idea if he should get passed over to that energetic institution? |
8507 | Where Somerville, the kind and free? |
8507 | Where are all your men?'' |
8507 | Where''s Nigel Bruce? |
8507 | Where, then, should they go? |
8507 | Why hast thou dared to pass before the sacred badge of thy sovereign without the evidence of homage required of thee?" |
8507 | Will his ship sail up- hill?" |
8507 | Will you contradict the fathers? |
8507 | Would they not feel their children tread With clanging chains above their head? |
8507 | Yet how should they get there? |
8507 | You think the earth is round, and inhabited on the other side? |
8507 | and De la Haye, And valiant Seaton-- where are they? |
8507 | can the English leopard''s mood Never be gorged with Northern blood? |
8507 | devils? |
8507 | said the good woman in great surprise;''and wherefore are you thus alone? |
8507 | said the neighbors;"the world is n''t round-- can''t you_ see_ it is flat? |
8507 | says the prior,"no success? |
21859 | But what if I want more? |
21859 | Do you not hear,he said,"that we were overcome by guns? |
21859 | In what respect was my answer other than respectful? 21859 Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall"[missing a"."?] |
21859 | What contumacy, then, was there in my answer? 21859 When was it you ever heard, most gracious Emperor, that in a question of faith laymen should be judges of a bishop? |
21859 | Why, then, are you thus disturbed? 21859 ''[ 369] What meaneth this that he saith,''But although we?'' 21859 ***** Does it give any sanction to Protestantism and its adherents? 21859 5. Who''s to Blame? 21859 AND WHAT SAY JOVINIAN AND HIS COMPANIONS? 21859 Aerius was an Arian; does this mend matters? 21859 Ambrose is not here; he is above; do you wish to see him?'' 21859 And how does the fact of their living in the fourth century prove there were Protestants in the first? 21859 And what is meant by its being a matter of history? 21859 And, to say truth, what heresy hath ever burst forth, but under the name of some certain man, in some certain place, and at some certain time? 21859 Are there any traces of Luther before Luther? 21859 But now supposing the question is asked, are Ambrose, Leo, and Gregory right? 21859 But what is meant by the words_ barbarous_ and_ civilized_, as applied to political bodies? 21859 But why? 21859 By what channels, then, had the divine philosophy descended down from the Great Teacher through three centuries of persecution? 21859 CHAPTER V. AND WHAT DO THE APOSTOLICAL CANONS SAY? 21859 Can imagination invent a more intolerable punishment upon pride? 21859 Do they seek my gold? 21859 Does he require our lands? 21859 Does the Emperor wish to tax us? 21859 First, can a civilized state become barbarian in course of years? 21859 First, let him consider what is conveyed in the very idea of Ecclesiastical Canons? 21859 For can any strain have more of influence than the confession of the Holy Trinity, which is proclaimed day by day by the voice of the whole people? 21859 For how is it possible, in much speaking, to escape sin? |
21859 | For the devil said,''Jesus, Son of the living Son, why hast Thou come to torment us before the time?'' |
21859 | Granting that Catholicism be a corruption, is it possible that it should be a corruption springing up everywhere at once? |
21859 | Here then is room for endless doubt; for why may they not deceive us in cases in which we can not detect the deception? |
21859 | How could it be otherwise with those who may be called the outlaws of the human race? |
21859 | How is it we see them in such distress when the hand is laid on them? |
21859 | If Aerius is an authority against bishops, or against set fasts, why is he not an authority against the Creed of St. Athanasius? |
21859 | If so, what does it do for them, and whence is it supplied? |
21859 | If that time can not be pointed out, is not"the Religion of Protestants"a matter, not of past historical fact, but of modern private judgment? |
21859 | If the Church system be not Apostolic, it must, some time or other, have been introduced, and then comes the question, when? |
21859 | Is a man to be allowed to say what he will, and bring no reasons for it? |
21859 | Is it not possible that an error has got the place of the truth, and has destroyed all the evidence but what witnesses on its side? |
21859 | Is it possible to conceive, under such circumstances, that there would be no anachronisms or other means of detection? |
21859 | Is none better than some? |
21859 | Is there any agreement at all between him and Luther here? |
21859 | Is there any family likeness in it to Protestantism? |
21859 | Is there anything to show that what they call the religion of the Bible was ever professed by any persons, Christians, Jews, or heathen? |
21859 | It is certain they_ often_ act irregularly; is there any consistency_ at all_ in their operations, any law to which these varieties may be referred? |
21859 | May they not be taken as a fair portrait, as far as they go, of the doctrines and customs of Primitive Christianity? |
21859 | Might we not as cogently argue that no martyrdoms took place then, because no martyrdoms take place now? |
21859 | Nam si singulas disciplinas percipere magnum est, quanto majus omnes? |
21859 | Nay, he had undergone banishment for not submitting to the Arians;--but why enlarge on it? |
21859 | No sooner is a slave enfranchised, than he aspires to the principal employments; and who is to oppose his pretensions? |
21859 | Now you may ask me, what were Christians doing in Europe all this while? |
21859 | Now you may say,"What can we require more than this? |
21859 | Now, have the writers in question any leaning or tenderness for the theology of Luther and Calvin? |
21859 | Now, is it possible to trace this attribute of barbarism among the Turks? |
21859 | On the whole, then, are we not in the following dilemma? |
21859 | Or, again, do we wish to fix upon what_ can_ be detected in their creed of a positive character, and distinct from their protests? |
21859 | PARLEZ- VOUS FRANÃ � AIS? |
21859 | Primum cur? |
21859 | Protestants answer,"Where were you this morning before you washed your face?" |
21859 | QUICK AND DEAD? |
21859 | Shall he refuse his own vineyard, and we surrender the Church of Christ? |
21859 | Shall we side with the first age of Christianity, or with the last? |
21859 | She was a power pre- eminently military; yet what is her history but the most remarkable instance of a political development and progress? |
21859 | Such was the influence of Sogdiana on the Huns; is it wonderful that it exerted some influence on the Turks, when they in turn got possession of it? |
21859 | The Bishop made answer by an interpreter:"What will you do to me?" |
21859 | The Sultan asked again:"But what if I require your whole forces?" |
21859 | Their power then came to an end; what was the consequence of their fall? |
21859 | Then,"_ profane_:"--"''Profane novelties of words''( quoth he); what is_ profane_? |
21859 | They took fire to their aid; fire is one of the elements; what is man that he should resist their shock?" |
21859 | This being the case, imperfect as is the condition of barbarous states, still what is there to overthrow them? |
21859 | WHAT DOES ST. AMBROSE SAY ABOUT IT? |
21859 | WHAT DOES ST. AMBROSE SAY ABOUT IT? |
21859 | WHAT SAY JOVINIAN AND HIS COMPANIONS? |
21859 | WHAT SAY THE APOSTOLICAL CANONS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS THE HISTORY OF APOLLINARIS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS THE HISTORY OF APOLLINARIS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS VINCENT OF LERINS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS VINCENT OF LERINS? |
21859 | Was it like the Wesleyans? |
21859 | Well, then, if they thus differ from the Church of the Fathers, how can they fancy that the early Church was Protestant? |
21859 | What are Aerius and Jovinian to me as individuals? |
21859 | What can be the reason of this? |
21859 | What could be made of them? |
21859 | What could be said to such a people? |
21859 | What importeth this_ avoid_? |
21859 | What indeed can do him higher honour than to style him a son of the Church? |
21859 | What indeed have the shepherds of the desert, in the most ambitious effort of their civilization, to do with the cultivation of the soil? |
21859 | What is meant by this deposit? |
21859 | What is meant by_ avoid_? |
21859 | What is meant by_ keep the deposit_? |
21859 | What is this but to say in one word that we find them barbarians? |
21859 | What limit is to be assigned to this disorder? |
21859 | What madness shall tempt the South to undergo extreme risks without the prospect or chance of a return? |
21859 | What room is here for fraud? |
21859 | What stronger testimony can we have of a past fact? |
21859 | What then? |
21859 | What was his answer? |
21859 | What was his treatment of such? |
21859 | What was the first consequence of this? |
21859 | What was the necessary consequence? |
21859 | What was to be the end? |
21859 | What would pleasure them but blasphemies against Him? |
21859 | When we ask,"Where was your Church before Luther?" |
21859 | Where, then, is primitive Protestantism to be found? |
21859 | Which among modern religious bodies was it like? |
21859 | Which of these parties is the rather correct? |
21859 | Who at first sight does not dislike the thoughts of gentlemen and clergymen depending for their maintenance and their reputation on their flocks? |
21859 | Who ever before cruel Novatian affirmed God to be merciless, in that He had rather the death of a sinner than that he should return and live? |
21859 | Who ever before his monstrous disciple Celestius denied all mankind to be bound with the guilt of Adam''s transgression? |
21859 | Who ever before sacrilegious Arius durst rend in pieces the Unity of Trinity? |
21859 | Who ever before wicked Sabellius durst confound the Trinity of Unity? |
21859 | Who ever set up any heresy, but first divided himself from the consent of the universality and antiquity of the Catholic Church? |
21859 | Who indeed was his superior in acumen, in long practice, in view of doctrine? |
21859 | Why should protesters in century four be more entitled to a hearing than protesters in century three? |
21859 | Will any one show that those monarchs can be fairly called specimens of the nation, any more than Zingis was the specimen of the Tartars? |
21859 | Would you take to prison or to death? |
21859 | Yet their repeated protests and efforts were all about what? |
21859 | Yet what, I say, was the reception which the cowardly suppliants had given to their avengers and protectors? |
21859 | You will ask perhaps how he gained this immense power; did he inherit it? |
21859 | and concerning the six days of the Pascha, why do they order us to take nothing at all but bread, salt, and water?... |
21859 | and how has he been the enduring enemy of the Turk, if he acquiesced in the Turk''s long course of victories? |
21859 | and secondly, can a barbarian state ever become civilized? |
21859 | and what is to be done with the great principle,"Unity, not Uniformity,"if Canons are to be recognized, which command uniformity as well as unity? |
21859 | and what room was there for private judgment, if they had to obey the bidding of certain fallible men? |
21859 | did they take refuge in the mountains or deserts? |
21859 | did you fear that I would desert the Church, and, for fear of my life, abandon you? |
21859 | do I see my wife I just now buried?" |
21859 | is it his own Christianity? |
21859 | is it not wonderful that the victim of it was able to live as many as nine months under such a visitation? |
21859 | rather has it not been an injury, as causing hatred and dissension? |
21859 | shall we accept it or not? |
21859 | shall we give up our knowledge of times past altogether, or endure to gain a knowledge which we think we have already-- the knowledge of divine truth? |
21859 | shall we relapse into scepticism upon all subjects, or sacrifice our deep- rooted prejudices? |
21859 | shall we retreat, or shall we advance? |
21859 | they asked;"was he not an old man, five hundred years of age? |
21859 | was it like any Protestant denomination at all? |
21859 | was it like the Scotch Kirk? |
21859 | was it like the Society of Friends? |
21859 | were they driven out of Sogdiana again? |
21859 | were they massacred? |
21859 | were they reduced to slavery? |
21859 | what answer is to be given? |
21859 | what suspicion of imposture? |
21859 | why did he not rather say,''But although I?'' |
21859 | yet what and where are they without the Koran? |
42224 | If we had so much stone, what could one do with it? |
42224 | Let thy face be cheerful as long as thou livest; hast any one come out of the coffin after having once entered it? |
42224 | What bringeth her heart to me, pray? 42224 Which is the true, and which the false?" |
42224 | Which is the true? |
42224 | Why from hands and from feet take the rings, pray, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou from my breast the jewels, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou from my neck the necklace, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou from my waist my gemmed- girdle, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou the great crown from my head, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou the rings from my ears, O porter? |
42224 | Why take from my body my cincture, O porter? |
42224 | ''Great father Amon, I have known thee well, And can the father thus forget his son? |
42224 | ''Hast thou tried the wool of a young sheep?'' |
42224 | ( 3)_ Men._"Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the Gods? |
42224 | ( But what) shall I answer the city, the people, and the elders?" |
42224 | :"Am I now come up without the Lord against this place to destroy it? |
42224 | A definite time the god Shamash had appointed: The ruler of the darkness(?) |
42224 | After Ishtar, the goddess, had( been thus afflicted)(?) |
42224 | After working out an outline of their political development, suppose it should be asked, But how did these people dress? |
42224 | Am I now come up without the Lord against this place to destroy it? |
42224 | And I-- have I not brought Thee many victims, And filled Thy temple with the captive folk? |
42224 | And for Thy presence built a dwelling place That shall endure for countless years to come? |
42224 | As soon as dawn began to appear,( Five or six lines wanting) The weak(?) |
42224 | As soon as the mistress of the gods arrived She lifted up the great jewels(?) |
42224 | Behold he said to me,"For what cause hast thou come hither? |
42224 | But Rab- shakeh said unto them, Hath my master sent me to thy master, and to thee, to speak these words? |
42224 | But if we look at the matter more closely, do we not see other, deeper reasons? |
42224 | But what has Egypt to offer the modern man? |
42224 | Consider, is he not toiling on the river? |
42224 | Does it interest any but specialists and archaeologists? |
42224 | Does not the face grow pale, of him who beholds thy countenance; Does not the eye fear, which looks upon thee?" |
42224 | Every carpenter carrying tools,--is he more at rest than the laborer? |
42224 | For where was Chufu[1] now-- the king who had cemented that mountain of stone with the sweat of his subjects? |
42224 | Has a matter come to pass in the palace? |
42224 | Has the king of the two lands, Sehetepabra, gone to heaven? |
42224 | Hath any of the gods of the nations delivered at all his land out of the hand of the king of Assyria? |
42224 | Have I done aught without Thy high behest, Or moved or staid against Thy sovereign will? |
42224 | Have I ever opened his door, or leaped over his fence? |
42224 | Have I in any deed forgotten Thee? |
42224 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set where were they?" |
42224 | Her wise ladies answered her, Yea, she returned answer to herself,"Have they not found, Have they not divided the spoils? |
42224 | How are they to be explained? |
42224 | How can we account for the frequent despoiling of her proud cities during her later years? |
42224 | How then wilt thou turn away the face of one captain of the least of my master''s servants, and put thy trust on Egypt for chariots and for horsemen? |
42224 | How was that lintel- stone raised? |
42224 | How were these capitals lifted? |
42224 | I opened(?) |
42224 | I provided a rudder(?) |
42224 | In heaven who is supreme? |
42224 | In heaven, who is supreme? |
42224 | It is some envious jealousy from seeing me; does he think that I am like some steer among the cows, whom the bull overthrows? |
42224 | Like a reed that is broken she( bent to the ground)(?). |
42224 | Ninib openeth his mouth and speaketh, He speaks to the warrior Bel:"Who but Ea doeth( this) thing? |
42224 | Now on whom dost thou trust, that thou rebellest against me? |
42224 | O Judah, what shall I do unto thee? |
42224 | On earth, who is supreme? |
42224 | On earth, who is supreme? |
42224 | One day the hurricane( raged), Violently it blew, the waters( covered?) |
42224 | Six_ sars_ of bitumen I spread on the outside(?). |
42224 | The question arises consequently, how did the idea of a future existence, of a soul apart from the body, have its origin among men? |
42224 | The question naturally arises: Who makes these discoveries, and under what circumstances are the secrets of the tombs revealed? |
42224 | The ruler of the darkness(?) |
42224 | They chose new gods; Then was war in the gates: Was there a shield or spear seen Among forty thousand in Israel? |
42224 | This I did-- When were such things done in former time? |
42224 | This law, this fiend- destroying law of Zarathustra, by what greatness, goodness, and fairness is it great, good, and fair above all other utterances? |
42224 | What did not this mother do? |
42224 | What did the war- loving, blood- thirsting Assyrians leave for future ages? |
42224 | What effect did the worship of these gods have upon his life? |
42224 | What is the sum of the cats, mice, ears and grains?" |
42224 | What more noble forms could have ushered the people into the temple of their gods? |
42224 | What part did the citizen take in the worship of his national gods? |
42224 | What then were the points of advantage for Thebes, lying 400 miles farther south? |
42224 | What trouble? |
42224 | When Allatu these tidings received( from the porter), Like a tamarisk cut she( bowed herself down)(?). |
42224 | Where are the gods of Hamath, and of Arpad? |
42224 | Where are those stately ruins which, even in the middle ages, extended over a space estimated at half a day''s journey in every direction? |
42224 | Where is the Memphis of Herodotus and Strabo? |
42224 | Which is the fifth place where the Earth feels sorest grief?" |
42224 | Which is the first place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Which is the first place where the Earth feels sorest grief?" |
42224 | Which is the fourth place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Which is the second place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Which is the second place where the Earth feels sorest grief?" |
42224 | Which is the third place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Whilst Asshur and Ishtar support me, who can prevail against me? |
42224 | Who could describe them all? |
42224 | Who is like thee, glorious in holiness, Fearful in praises, doing wonders? |
42224 | Who is the first that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy?" |
42224 | Who shall give unto my tongue authority to utter unto the young men the counsels from of old? |
42224 | Why tarry the wheels of his chariots?" |
42224 | Will God forget what he has ordained, and how shall that be known?" |
42224 | With this one forsooth( shall I share my dwelling?) |
42224 | _ Women._ Gilead abode beyond Jordan--_ Men._ And Dan, why did he remain in ships? |
42224 | _ Women._ Through the window she looked forth, and cried, The mother of Sisera, through the lattice,"Why is his chariot so long coming? |
42224 | _ Women._ Why satest thou among the sheepfolds, To hear the pipings for the flocks? |
42224 | hath he not sent me to the men which sit on the wall? |
42224 | have they delivered Samaria out of mine hand? |
42224 | he covered(?) |
42224 | or who vouchsafeth unto me to declare the counsels received from on high? |
42224 | where are the gods of Sepharvaim, Hena, and Ivah? |
1499 | Canst thou by searching find out God? |
1499 | Canst thou by searching find out Him? 1499 What is man that Thou art mindful of him?" |
1499 | What sought they thus afar? 1499 Ah, what indeed is reality; what is the higher good; what is that which perishes never; what is that which assimilates man to Deity? 1499 And although it is supposed that the inductive method of Bacon has led to the noblest discoveries of modern times, is this strictly true? 1499 And do all men worship these forms of beauty which the imagination creates? 1499 And is any love worthy to be called love, if it does not inspire emotions which prompt to self- sacrifice, labor, and lofty ends? 1499 And is love, among mortals generally, based on such a foundation? 1499 And what man ever had such a sublimity of aspect and figure as the creations of Michael Angelo? 1499 And what then? 1499 And who, since Paul, has rendered greater service to humanity than Luther? 1499 And why? 1499 And will you, ye boasted intellectual guides of the people, extinguish reason in this world in reference to the most momentous interests? 1499 Are all her struggles in behalf of liberty in vain? 1499 Are not flowers and shrubs which beautify the lawn as desirable as beans and turnips and cabbages? 1499 Are not most of the sciences which are based upon it progressive? 1499 Are they inhabited by intelligent and immortal beings? 1499 Are we really swinging back to Paganism? 1499 Bright jewels of the mine? 1499 But around what centre do they revolve? 1499 But has America no higher destiny than to repeat the old experiments, and improve upon them, and become rich and powerful? 1499 But how could this El Dorado be reached? 1499 But is it a failure? 1499 But where were the men capable of framing a constitution for the republic? 1499 But who can interpret them? 1499 Can any woman, or any man, seen exactly as they are, incite a love which is kindred to worship? 1499 Can anybody doubt the marvellous progress of Protestant nations in consequence of the translation and circulation of the Scriptures? 1499 Can not a country grow materially to a certain point, under the most adverse influences, in a religious and moral point of view? 1499 Can peasants and women, or even merchants and nobles? 1499 Can she lay hold of forces that the Old World never had, such as will prevent the uniform doom of nations? 1499 Can such a man be stigmatized asthe meanest of mankind"? |
1499 | Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?" |
1499 | Creation involves a creator; and can the order and harmony seen in Nature''s laws exist without Supreme intelligence and power? |
1499 | Did not the Romans have nearly all we have, materially, except our modern scientific inventions? |
1499 | Do not our cities elect such rulers as the demagogues point out? |
1499 | Do not the few rule, even in a Congregational church? |
1499 | Do we not plant our grounds with the acacia, the oak, the cedar, the elm, as well as with the apple, the pear, and the cherry? |
1499 | Does San Francisco or New York send its greatest men to Congress? |
1499 | Does this fidelity to an official and professional duty, even if he were harsh, make him"the meanest of mankind"? |
1499 | Grant that Essex had bestowed favors, and was an accomplished and interesting man,--was Bacon to ignore his official duties? |
1499 | Has she no higher and nobler mission? |
1499 | Has she no other mission than to add to perishable glories? |
1499 | Have not material forces and glories been developed and exhibited, whatever the religion and morals of the fallen nations? |
1499 | Have not your grand councils given contradictory decisions? |
1499 | Have the spots upon the career of Bacon hidden the brightness of his general beneficence? |
1499 | Have we yet learned the ultimate principles of political economy, or of geology, or of government, or even of art? |
1499 | Have you considered what a mighty crime you thus commit against God, against man? |
1499 | How are these things to be reconciled and explained? |
1499 | How could he have written sonnets without an inspiration, unless he felt sentiments higher than we associate with either boys or girls? |
1499 | How could the inexperienced citizens of Florence comprehend the complicated relations of governments? |
1499 | How often did he excuse him to his royal mistress, at the risk of incurring her displeasure? |
1499 | I ask myself, Why should America be an exception to the uniform fate of nations, as history has demonstrated? |
1499 | If so, how ignominious are all politicians who flatter the people and solicit their votes? |
1499 | In what consisted the real glory of the country we are never weary of quoting,--the land of Phidias and Pericles and Demosthenes? |
1499 | Is America to become like Europe and Asia in all essential elements of life? |
1499 | Is he the meanest of men because he had great faults? |
1499 | Is induction, great as it is, especially in the explorations of Nature and science, always certain? |
1499 | Is it an improvement to give up a simple life and lofty religious enthusiasm for materialistic enjoyments and epicurean display? |
1499 | Is it not by deduction that we ascend from Nature herself to the God of Nature? |
1499 | Is it not natural to be obsequious to those who have offices to bestow? |
1499 | Is not the rose or tulip as great an addition to even a poor man''s cottage as his bed of onions or patch of potatoes? |
1499 | Is not this science worthy of some regard? |
1499 | Is she to teach the world nothing new in education and philanthropy and government? |
1499 | Is that the meanest or the most uncommon thing in this world? |
1499 | Is that which is most useful always the most valuable,--that, I mean, which gives the highest pleasure? |
1499 | Is the time to be hailed when all religions will be considered by the philosopher as equally false and equally useful? |
1499 | Is there an imagination so lofty that will not be oppressed with the discoveries that even the telescope has made? |
1499 | Is there nothing before us, then, but the triumphs of material life, to end as mournfully as the materialism of antiquity? |
1499 | Knowest thou the ordinances of Heaven? |
1499 | Now what inspired so strange a purpose? |
1499 | Of what are they composed? |
1499 | Or is it what we fancy in the object of our adoration, what exists already in our own minds,--the archetypes of eternal ideas of beauty and grace? |
1499 | Some may boldly say,"Why not? |
1499 | Suppose she had become his wife, might he not have been disenchanted, and his veneration been succeeded by a bitter disappointment? |
1499 | The great question of all time pressed upon his mind with peculiar force,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
1499 | The wealth of seas,--the spoils of war? |
1499 | This trait is not commendable, but is it the meanest thing we see? |
1499 | Unless something new is born here which has a peculiar power to save, wherein will America ultimately differ from other parts of Christendom? |
1499 | Was it not a good time to die and consummate his protests? |
1499 | We admit that Bacon was a sinner; but was he a sinner above all others who cast stones at Jerusalem? |
1499 | What are the great realities,--machinery, new breeds of horses, carpets, diamonds, mirrors, gas? |
1499 | What conservative power has been strong enough to arrest the ruin of the nations of antiquity? |
1499 | What could austerities do for HIM? |
1499 | What gave beauty and placidity to Descartes and Leibnitz and Kant? |
1499 | What had he more to gain? |
1499 | What has Voltaire or Hume or Froude told the world, essentially, that it did not know before? |
1499 | What has made France rich since the Revolution? |
1499 | What is more certain than deduction when the principles from which it reasons are indisputably established? |
1499 | What is the explanation of this singular phenomenon? |
1499 | What is the marketable value of friendship or of love? |
1499 | What is the material profit of a first love? |
1499 | What is the scale to measure even mortal happiness? |
1499 | What is the secret of such a wonderful success? |
1499 | What made"The Pilgrim''s Progress"the most popular book ever published in England? |
1499 | What makes the dinner of herbs sometimes more refreshing than the stalled ox? |
1499 | What mortal woman ever expressed the ethereal beauty depicted in a Madonna of Raphael or Murillo? |
1499 | What other guide has a man but his reason? |
1499 | What philosophical teachings led to the machinery of the mines of California, or to that of the mills of Lowell? |
1499 | What raised Plato to the highest pinnacle of intellectual life? |
1499 | What remains of Nineveh, of Babylon, of Thebes, of Tyre, of Carthage,--those great centres of wealth and power? |
1499 | What remains of Roman greatness even, except in laws and literature and renovated statues? |
1499 | What was life to him, diseased, infirm, and old? |
1499 | What was the spirit of the truths HE taught? |
1499 | What were realities to Anselm, Bernard, and Bonaventura? |
1499 | What would Gregory I. say to the verdicts of Gregory VII.? |
1499 | When Florence is deliberating about the choice of an ambassador to Rome, he playfully, yet still arrogantly, exclaims:"If I remain behind, who goes? |
1499 | Where has civilization shown any striking triumphs, except in inventions to abridge the labors of mankind and make men comfortable and rich? |
1499 | Where was he to get money except from the contributions of Christendom? |
1499 | Which is worse, the physical arm of the beast, or the maniac soul of a lying prophet? |
1499 | Who but the Church can do this? |
1499 | Who can deny them? |
1499 | Who can improve on the sagacity and worldly wisdom of the Proverbs of Solomon? |
1499 | Who can love this perishable form, unless one sees in it some traits which belong to superior and immortal natures? |
1499 | Who could adequately pay him for his services; who could estimate the value of his gift? |
1499 | Who could smile or joke or eat or sleep or have any pleasure, if he thought seriously there would be no cessation or release from endless pains? |
1499 | Who devised the cathedrals of the Middle Ages? |
1499 | Who does not admire the church architecture of the Middle Ages? |
1499 | Who does not criticise his neighbor''s house, its proportions, its general effect, its adaptation to the uses designed? |
1499 | Who does not stop to admire a beautiful window, or porch, or portico? |
1499 | Who does not value them? |
1499 | Who ever tires in gazing at a locomotive as it whirls along with the power of destiny? |
1499 | Who ever was satisfied in contemplating the diversified wonders of those venerable structures? |
1499 | Who first sang the odes which Homer incorporated with the Iliad? |
1499 | Who first turned up the earth with a plough? |
1499 | Who first used the weaver''s shuttle? |
1499 | Who gave the keel to ships? |
1499 | Who gave the lyre to primeval ages, or the blacksmith''s forge, or the letters of the alphabet, or the arch in architecture, or glass for windows? |
1499 | Who invented chimneys? |
1499 | Who invented the mariner''s compass? |
1499 | Who is not astonished at the triumphs of the engineer, the wonders of an ocean- steamer, the marvellous tunnels under lofty mountains? |
1499 | Who solved the first problem of geometry? |
1499 | Who was the first that raised bread by yeast? |
1499 | Who will not value them so long as our mortal bodies are to be cared for? |
1499 | Who would call Webster the meanest of mankind because he had an absurd desire to live like an English country gentleman? |
1499 | Who, then, and what, is God? |
1499 | Whom shall we believe? |
1499 | Why could he not see the perfections he adored shining in other women, who perhaps had a higher claim to them? |
1499 | Why could not Galileo have been as great in martyrdom as Savonarola? |
1499 | Why could not those races retain their primitive revelation? |
1499 | Why did Christianity itself become corrupted in four centuries? |
1499 | Why did Copernicus escape persecution? |
1499 | Why did he not accept the penalty of intellectual freedom, and die, if die he must? |
1499 | Why did he suffer himself to be conquered by priests he despised? |
1499 | Why did not civilization and Christianity save the Roman world? |
1499 | Why did not the Middle Ages preserve the evangelical doctrines of Augustine and Jerome and Chrysostom and Ambrose? |
1499 | Why did so bold and witty and proud a man betray his cause? |
1499 | Why did the Jesuits become unpopular and lose their influence? |
1499 | Why did the Jewish nation steadily retrograde after David? |
1499 | Why did the descendants of Noah become almost idolaters before he was dead? |
1499 | Why did the fervor of the Puritans burn out in England in one hundred years? |
1499 | Why did the great Persian Empire become as effeminate as the empires it had supplanted? |
1499 | Why did the light of the glorious Reformation of Luther nearly go out in the German cities and universities? |
1499 | Why did they lose their popularity? |
1499 | Why have the doctrines of the Pilgrim Fathers become unfashionable in those parts of New England where they seemed to have taken the deepest root? |
1499 | Why should not Protestants of every shade cherish and defend this sacred right? |
1499 | Why should not good institutions be perverted here, as in all other countries and ages of the world? |
1499 | Why speak of life or death to me, Whose days are but a span? |
1499 | Why till recently was Germany so poor? |
1499 | Why were the antediluvians swept away? |
1499 | Why were they so distrusted and hated? |
1499 | Will he abjure the doctrines on which his fame rests? |
1499 | Will he recant? |
1499 | Will he subscribe himself an imposter? |
1499 | Yea, the popes themselves, your infallible guides,--have they not at different times rendered different decisions? |
1499 | and if I go, who remains behind?" |
1499 | or are they affections, friendships, generous impulses, inspiring thoughts? |
2972 | ''Are you crazy? 2972 ''But are you quite sure that the young count will like me and that I shall like the count?'' |
2972 | ''Do you know that girl?'' 2972 ''Shall I shew her in? |
2972 | ''True, and it is possible that I did not know him, but why did you tell a lie when I asked you,Do you know that girl?"'' |
2972 | ''What answer did you give him, dear grandfather?'' 2972 ''Who are the people,''said I,''who desire a companion? |
2972 | ''Who is he? 2972 ''Why can not I return in this frigate? |
2972 | ''You will allow me to go and speak to her? 2972 A mystery, is it? |
2972 | Against what? 2972 And do you think that I can do all that?" |
2972 | And how am I to help you, my dear mother? |
2972 | And supposing he were a worthless fellow? |
2972 | And what will you do if she is not here? |
2972 | And what would you do if you had some money? |
2972 | And you did n''t see me? |
2972 | And you have punished her for doing so? |
2972 | And you speak to his brother? |
2972 | Are we to wait till I am cured for the consummation of our marriage? |
2972 | Are you ill? |
2972 | Are you separated from your husband? |
2972 | But I may dine with you, surely? |
2972 | But how did she know Querini? |
2972 | But how is it that I am your image? |
2972 | But you can find out in a moment whether she is here or not? |
2972 | But you can write that down without wounding her, can you not? 2972 But, dearest, are you not ashamed of these foolish scruples?" |
2972 | Can I have them here? |
2972 | Can I imprison the rascal? |
2972 | Can you doubt it, Pauline? |
2972 | Certainly, but you will allow me to pay for the extra horse? |
2972 | Certainly,said he;"but as you are going on to London, how shall I come back?" |
2972 | Certainly; but what is to become of your servant? |
2972 | Clearly, for you can not have two fathers, can you? |
2972 | Cornelis? |
2972 | Could you trouble yourself to take your meals with me? 2972 Do you keep a girl, my lord?" |
2972 | Do you know the real cause? |
2972 | Do you know what it is to be a mother? |
2972 | Do you think that your sufferings are due to your love for me? |
2972 | Have you got it about you? |
2972 | Have you seen the king? |
2972 | Her name is Sophie, is it? 2972 How about escaping from justice?" |
2972 | How can you ask me such a question? 2972 How could that be?" |
2972 | How do you mean? |
2972 | How if you were poor? |
2972 | How is my sister Sophie? |
2972 | How is that? |
2972 | How is that? |
2972 | How much is your time worth, sir? |
2972 | How much will you give me at dessert? |
2972 | How was that? |
2972 | How? |
2972 | I can not refuse you anything, dearest Pauline, but what then? |
2972 | I do n''t know, dearest, but tell me, did you ever ask your learned Italian master that same question? |
2972 | I like the idea,I answered,"but how shall I find such a house?" |
2972 | I respect your secret; but tell me if you would object to my begging her to return to Venice with her uncle? |
2972 | I suppose you think I shall have no applications? |
2972 | I, sir? 2972 Is he at London?" |
2972 | Is he not dishonoured by the execution of his relative? |
2972 | Is that truly so? |
2972 | Is this formality necessary, my lady? |
2972 | May I ask to whom I have the honour of speaking? |
2972 | May I ask you what country you come from? |
2972 | May I see it? |
2972 | My dear M. Casanova, how is it that the oracle has deceived us? 2972 Of course they have got back the seventy thousand pounds?" |
2972 | One day I put on a lace kerchief I had bought from him, and asked my maid,''What has become of the girl who sold me this kerchief?'' |
2972 | Ought I to apologize? |
2972 | Really? 2972 Shall I open yours?" |
2972 | Shall I send her away? 2972 She is doubly pretty, is she?" |
2972 | Supposing you made a mistake? |
2972 | Then I am not your daughter? |
2972 | Then shall we stay here? |
2972 | Then tell me of what sort of love is that with which I am happy enough to have inspired you? |
2972 | Then to whom? |
2972 | Then what is its essence? |
2972 | Then you do n''t like night travelling? |
2972 | Then you require a fresh one every day? |
2972 | Three times? |
2972 | Unbecoming? |
2972 | Very good; but as you like to be questioned, may I ask you why you were not presented by your own ambassador? |
2972 | Was he a Jesuit? |
2972 | Well, what is it? |
2972 | Were you at war with us, then? |
2972 | What are all these manuscripts? |
2972 | What are you going to write? |
2972 | What are you laughing at, my worthy woman? |
2972 | What are you laughing at, sweetheart? |
2972 | What are you thinking of, dearest? |
2972 | What can I do for you? 2972 What can I do to shew my gratitude?" |
2972 | What did he say? |
2972 | What did you do with the girl he eloped with? |
2972 | What do you mean? |
2972 | What do you think of highway robbers, then? |
2972 | What does that reflection relate to, my dear daughter? |
2972 | What has he done? |
2972 | What is she going to take in the morning? |
2972 | What is that to you? 2972 What is that, my lord?" |
2972 | What is the matter, my pretty maid? 2972 What shall I ride post? |
2972 | What were these expressions? |
2972 | What, he never turned? |
2972 | When do you make these three ablutions? |
2972 | When? |
2972 | Where have you been? |
2972 | Where is Marcoline? |
2972 | Where is he? |
2972 | Where is your room? |
2972 | Where shall I find her? |
2972 | Who has taught you this maxim? |
2972 | Who introduced you? |
2972 | Who is to assure me that these bills will be honoured? |
2972 | Why do you weep, then, at her fate? |
2972 | Why not, my lady? 2972 Why not?" |
2972 | Why should n''t I? |
2972 | Will you sleep all the time? |
2972 | Will your ladyship allow me to present my valuable letter in person? |
2972 | Would you do me the honour of testing the skill of my cook? |
2972 | Would you like to go, Marcoline? |
2972 | Yes, what would you have said if I had come down in petticoats this morning? 2972 Yes, yes; but I am to dress like a postillion, am I not?" |
2972 | Yes; who is she? |
2972 | You Portuguese? 2972 You are a wonderful woman, but why do you not provide a substitute for him?" |
2972 | You are not going to stay with me, then? |
2972 | You are right; but how can you like Camoens so much if you do not know Portuguese? |
2972 | You are very praiseworthy, but in the other ways you are happy? |
2972 | You have not been joking, have you? |
2972 | You paid in gold,said she;"I suppose you had no bank notes about you?" |
2972 | You saw him, did you? |
2972 | Your man? |
2972 | And now I come to think of it, how was it that there was not a word about your wife in the letter you gave me when we started? |
2972 | Are you ashamed of your fine eyes? |
2972 | Are you stopping here for long?" |
2972 | But are you sure of persuading me?" |
2972 | But how did you get hold of her? |
2972 | But how was I to find a woman who should be the equal of those women I had loved before? |
2972 | But let me ask you one question, how are you sure of your income of fifty crowns a month? |
2972 | But what do you call obscenities, if Ariosto is not obscene?" |
2972 | By the way, did you see my uncle?" |
2972 | Casanova?" |
2972 | Casanova?" |
2972 | Did he look, at me?" |
2972 | Did he tell you that she would not let him have anything to do with her, and that she used to box his ears?" |
2972 | Do n''t you think I was right?" |
2972 | Do you always wear those dreadful breeches?" |
2972 | Do you not remember me?" |
2972 | Do you prefer any particular route?" |
2972 | Do you think that you will not love me so well after having possessed me?" |
2972 | Do you understand that?" |
2972 | Does she want me to choke her?" |
2972 | Have you finished your edition of the Decameron?" |
2972 | How did she fall into your hands?" |
2972 | How is it that you are not living with your husband?" |
2972 | How long have you had her?" |
2972 | I hope she will dine with us?" |
2972 | I suppose you know the delightful Miss Sophie too, Chevalier?" |
2972 | Is Marcoline your wife, or have you any intention of marrying her?" |
2972 | Is that enough for you?" |
2972 | Perhaps you noticed that the lady smiled?" |
2972 | Querini, who was greatly astonished, thanked her and said,--"What have I done to deserve this honour?" |
2972 | Querini?" |
2972 | She fled to her bed, saying saucily,"You are frightened of me, I think?" |
2972 | Still a maid?" |
2972 | The result was satisfactory; who does not know the effect of a kiss given at the proper time? |
2972 | Was it not he who was in continual attendance?" |
2972 | We shall speak Venetian, shall we not?" |
2972 | What answer could I make to such arguments, based as they were on the national manners? |
2972 | What are you laughing at?" |
2972 | What became of your lover, and what did your relations do when they found out your flight?" |
2972 | What could they do? |
2972 | What do you propose to do?" |
2972 | What do you say, abbe?" |
2972 | What do you say?" |
2972 | What do you think of such conduct?" |
2972 | What do you think?" |
2972 | What does the abbe think of that?" |
2972 | What has he learnt in the last six years?" |
2972 | What have you done?" |
2972 | What name did she give you?" |
2972 | What would you do in such a case?" |
2972 | When I saw him I cried,--"Rome or Paris, which is it to be?" |
2972 | When I went to Madame du Rumain''s, the porter said,--"Sir, everybody is still asleep, but who are you? |
2972 | When Sophie had gone I made her sit beside me, and taking her hand I kissed it rapturously, saying,"Are you married, Pauline?" |
2972 | When?" |
2972 | Where were you yesterday?" |
2972 | Who can have given you such a bad lesson?" |
2972 | Why did he marry me? |
2972 | Will you let me come upstairs?" |
2972 | Will, there be any difficulty is that?" |
2972 | You know her, then?" |
2972 | You thought you would get me hanged at Lyons, did you?" |
2972 | You will tell my father and mother about me? |
2972 | said M. Querini,"and why do you kiss my hand now?" |
2956 | Am I not then always the same? |
2956 | An abbe jealous? |
2956 | And dresses? |
2956 | And how can that happiness be felt? |
2956 | And how much must I ask from M. Lani? 2956 And you call these''Savoyards''? |
2956 | And you say that it is done by getting rid of prejudices? 2956 And''figurante''at the opera?" |
2956 | Are any such persons likely to be here at present? |
2956 | Are the Parmesans satisfied with being the subjects of a Spanish prince? |
2956 | Are your husband''s parents still alive? |
2956 | But from whom do we wish to receive that honour? |
2956 | But how did she manage to render it so fashionable? |
2956 | But if you never saw her thighs, how do you know that she does not wear silk tights? |
2956 | But suppose that I should intend, like you, to ask her in marriage? |
2956 | But why do they not wear lower heels? |
2956 | But you wo n''t do anything to me? |
2956 | But, tell me, lovely madcap, what will be the end of this extravaganza? 2956 But,"remarked the officer,"is it credible that he was at the battle of Arbela?" |
2956 | But,said M. Dandolo,"you spent the night with the person who is represented as your wife?" |
2956 | Did you hurt yourself, sir? |
2956 | Did you intend undressing yourself? |
2956 | Do you call this a bed, my child? |
2956 | Do you hope to see him on his return from the country? |
2956 | Do you love me? |
2956 | Do you not know that Don Philip has arrived, and that his wife, Madame de France, is on the road? |
2956 | Do you sleep with your clothes on? |
2956 | Do you think that your prose is better when you compose it from your own poetry? |
2956 | Does Madame Paris approve our plan? |
2956 | For whom is this table? |
2956 | Has he accepted your wages? |
2956 | Has the prince paid her expenses? |
2956 | Have I not told you that you would be called when your services were required? |
2956 | Have all the clocks been destroyed? |
2956 | Have you any peculiar talent? |
2956 | He could not have danced in a better one, for his style is perfect, and what can you want above perfection? |
2956 | How can one become a philosopher? |
2956 | How do you know that you are interested? |
2956 | How have you contrived,I said to him one day,"such as you are, to deceive De la Haye?" |
2956 | How is it that those reports do not grieve M. de Bragadin, who has certainly greater affection for me than you have? |
2956 | How is that? |
2956 | How so? |
2956 | I beg your pardon, but I saw...."What? 2956 I have reduced you to despair?" |
2956 | I see it; what of it? |
2956 | I should like to know who is my master, you or the gentleman? |
2956 | I suppose that in Cesena you were afraid of being caught by the officer whom you had left in Rome? |
2956 | I think I must see him,I said,"but where?" |
2956 | I wish it myself, dearest, but who can be sure of the future? 2956 Indeed, my divine Vesian? |
2956 | Indeed, sir, you are Italian? |
2956 | Is it better than anywhere else? |
2956 | Is it not the same thing? |
2956 | Is it true that the verses which, like parasites, steal into a funeral oration, must be sadly out of place? |
2956 | Is that a fault? |
2956 | Is there no other dealer in snuff? |
2956 | Is there not a meridian everywhere? |
2956 | Is this all you have, my dear countrywoman? |
2956 | Is your father still alive? |
2956 | Madame Querini in Fontainebleau? |
2956 | Must one think a long while? |
2956 | My dear,said Henriette to me,"do you wish me to engage that master?" |
2956 | No, madam; but...."But what? |
2956 | Not the right one, sir? 2956 On madam or on me?" |
2956 | Perhaps he may know you? |
2956 | Pray tell me, sir, what her honour has to do with her health? |
2956 | Satisfied? 2956 Shall we go away to- morrow, dearest?" |
2956 | Sir, shall I send for someone speaking French? |
2956 | Sir,I once said to a gentleman,"how is your wife?" |
2956 | Sir,said Silvia to the artist,"could you paint the likeness of my daughter without seeing her?" |
2956 | Surname or nickname; but are there any philosophers at the court of France? |
2956 | The only one? 2956 Then it is never over?" |
2956 | Then it was not owing to a feeling of self- love? |
2956 | Then nature must be the philosopher''s principal study? |
2956 | Then people say that I am married? |
2956 | Then where is the advantage for me? |
2956 | Then why did you come here and get my daughter with child? |
2956 | To your misery? 2956 Was she a virgin?" |
2956 | What are you laughing at? |
2956 | What can I say about the Italians,she answered,"I know only one? |
2956 | What can I think of? 2956 What country does he belong to?" |
2956 | What did you eat yesterday? |
2956 | What did you give her in order to seduce her? |
2956 | What do they mean, darling-- those crazy fools-- by saying that happiness is not lasting, and how do they understand that word? 2956 What do you mean by down there?" |
2956 | What do you mean? 2956 What does your father say of her departure?" |
2956 | What does your husband do? |
2956 | What have you got to tell me? |
2956 | What is it, my dear friend? |
2956 | What is it? |
2956 | What is pleasure? 2956 What is the matter here?" |
2956 | What is the matter with you? |
2956 | What is the matter, madam? |
2956 | What is there to prevent us from satisfying such natural desires? 2956 What news?" |
2956 | What objection could the abbess make? |
2956 | What philosopher, in your opinion, has committed the smallest quantity of errors? |
2956 | What then? |
2956 | What was his family name? |
2956 | Where can I enquire about you? |
2956 | Who are you? |
2956 | Who is she, this Henriette? |
2956 | Who told you so? |
2956 | Why do you laugh? |
2956 | Why is it called a bed of justice? |
2956 | Why not? 2956 Why scarce?" |
2956 | Why,said my friend,"do you not say Monsieur et madame?" |
2956 | Why? |
2956 | Will there be many guests? |
2956 | Yes, I am, but would you oblige me by telling me how you have found it out? |
2956 | Yet he was in error sometimes? |
2956 | You are in love with her? |
2956 | You are my best, my only friend; I demand nothing, I impose no task upon you, but can you refuse me? |
2956 | You are smiling? |
2956 | You do not know anybody here? |
2956 | You here? 2956 Your name?" |
2956 | ''But what fault do you find in him, madam?'' |
2956 | A young man came up, and she said to him,"Well, I told you he would arrive to- day?" |
2956 | A young marquise, who had the reputation of being a great wit, said to me in the most serious tone,"It is truly an antique?" |
2956 | All that is called a regulation but do you know why? |
2956 | And after treating me to a long dissection on politeness, he concluded by saying, with a smile,"I suppose you are an Italian?" |
2956 | And the two''Savoyards'', how did you swallow them?" |
2956 | And truly, under the new circumstances, how were we to arrange for our lodgings in Reggio? |
2956 | Any children?" |
2956 | Are not such verses considered a blemish in Italian prose?" |
2956 | Are you afraid of such a dreadful misfortune here?" |
2956 | Are you dependent on anyone?" |
2956 | Are you free? |
2956 | Are you not of my opinion, M. de la Haye?" |
2956 | Are you satisfied?" |
2956 | At that name, a fine- looking man came forward with respectful inclination, and said,"Your majesty?" |
2956 | Besides, how do you know that I am the father of the child?" |
2956 | Besides, what was there in them that could be revealed? |
2956 | But had she attached its full meaning to the word"forget?" |
2956 | But how could he possibly have supposed himself faulty in anything when everyone around him repeated constantly that he was the best of kings? |
2956 | But is it not strange that a poor little female dress should command more respect than the garb of an officer?" |
2956 | But shall he find a situation for my brother? |
2956 | But what would that revelation have come to? |
2956 | But why is she satisfied? |
2956 | But why, do not you gain her love?" |
2956 | But you, signor maestro, what do you think?" |
2956 | But, my dear cousin, tell me why my mother has not come with you?" |
2956 | But, sir, how shall I find a teacher? |
2956 | But, sir, what sort of linen do you require?" |
2956 | Can I be otherwise than delighted, my love, if you are pleased?" |
2956 | Can such manners suit us? |
2956 | Do you drink the cup? |
2956 | Do you imagine that a man who gets an honest girl with child in a house of which he is an inmate does not transgress the laws of society?" |
2956 | Do you not think that you ought to let M. d''Antoine know where we are going?" |
2956 | Do you think, however, that in that case you would succeed in gaining her affection?" |
2956 | Do you wish to deny it to make him draw his sword?" |
2956 | Does not Agamemnon say, in Homer, that in such a case man must necessarily be guilty of meanness? |
2956 | Foolishly translating an Italian idiom, I asked her, with an air of deep interest, whether she had well''decharge''? |
2956 | Has he never danced in a different style?" |
2956 | Her enormous size astonished me, and, like a fool, I said to the gentleman:"Who is that fat sow?" |
2956 | How could I give way without consulting you? |
2956 | How is it that I wish to prove it by kissing you?" |
2956 | However, until I am at the opera, until I have met with my elderly lover, who will give me the means to support myself?" |
2956 | I am certain that all those men hate me, but what do I care? |
2956 | I felt no inclination for the girl, but what can we refuse to a friend? |
2956 | I pray you, do you not find it....""I find nothing particular; and you?" |
2956 | I said to him,"am I fortunate enough to see you? |
2956 | I said to myself, my heart beating, and my eyes swimming with tears of emotion,"what is this treasure I have in my possession?" |
2956 | Is it less obnoxious? |
2956 | Is she young?" |
2956 | It has done you good? |
2956 | May I hope, sir, that you will be good enough to deliver it to her?" |
2956 | Nevertheless, the thoughtless young creature went up straight to him and said,"Are you the rhinoceros, sir?" |
2956 | Ought I not to have guessed that his curiosity would sooner or later prove injurious to us? |
2956 | Samson?" |
2956 | She then asked this question:"What disease is that woman suffering from?" |
2956 | The three words which the hierophant said to the initiated? |
2956 | The young girl, full of wonder at my plan, began to laugh heartily, and said,"But can an opera dancer be extemporized like a minister of state? |
2956 | Then I can go with my sister- in- law?" |
2956 | Then what do they mean by that word lasting? |
2956 | Then what was my position during all the time that I possessed my beautiful and witty Henriette? |
2956 | Then what was she? |
2956 | What are you saying? |
2956 | What do you think of that? |
2956 | What is meant by prejudices?" |
2956 | What shall I ask?" |
2956 | Where do you wish me to take you?" |
2956 | Where is the Italian who is pleased with the effrontery and the insolence of the hotel- waiters in Italy? |
2956 | Where is the man who will not debase himself if he be in want? |
2956 | Which gods must the worthy tavern- keeper worship? |
2956 | Who is he?" |
2956 | Why did I introduce that fatal Dubois here? |
2956 | Why did I tarry so long in Parma? |
2956 | Why do you never attack your proselyte? |
2956 | Why do you not visit her? |
2956 | Why do you postpone your marriage with her? |
2956 | Why, did we not fight side by side at the battle of Arbela?" |
2956 | Why? |
2956 | Will you have some breakfast?" |
2956 | Will you try to find me a respectable maid by to- morrow? |
2956 | Would you like a good bavaroise, or a decanter of orgeat?" |
2956 | Would you like to go to Milan?" |
2956 | You suppose some great lord will keep me?" |
2956 | You wish to go every evening to the opera?" |
2956 | but what does it matter? |
2956 | do not say so; ought I to reproach you because you thought me so virtuous? |
2956 | happy times of the house of Farnese, whither have you departed? |
2956 | said the count,"is it the pomatum the history of which I know?" |
2956 | said the disgusting Messaline;"are you such a novice?" |
2956 | she said, with a sigh;"how shall I live?" |
2956 | too much beloved one?" |
2956 | who taught you to address me that question?" |
2956 | why have I ever seen him?" |
2956 | would my''badauds''of Parisians believe that such a beautiful mansion can be found forty leagues distant from the metropolis? |
10532 | Canst thou by searching find out God? |
10532 | Canst thou by searching find out Him? 10532 What is man that Thou art mindful of him?" |
10532 | What sought they thus afar? 10532 Ah, what indeed is reality; what is the higher good; what is that which perishes never; what is that which assimilates man to Deity? 10532 And although it is supposed that the inductive method of Bacon has led to the noblest discoveries of modern times, is this strictly true? 10532 And do all men worship these forms of beauty which the imagination creates? 10532 And is any love worthy to be called love, if it does not inspire emotions which prompt to self- sacrifice, labor, and lofty ends? 10532 And is love, among mortals generally, based on such a foundation? 10532 And what man ever had such a sublimity of aspect and figure as the creations of Michael Angelo? 10532 And what then? 10532 And who, since Paul, has rendered greater service to humanity than Luther? 10532 And why? 10532 And will you, ye boasted intellectual guides of the people, extinguish reason in this world in reference to the most momentous interests? 10532 Are all her struggles in behalf of liberty in vain? 10532 Are not flowers and shrubs which beautify the lawn as desirable as beans and turnips and cabbages? 10532 Are not most of the sciences which are based upon it progressive? 10532 Are they inhabited by intelligent and immortal beings? 10532 Are we really swinging back to Paganism? 10532 Bright jewels of the mine? 10532 But around what centre do they revolve? 10532 But has America no higher destiny than to repeat the old experiments, and improve upon them, and become rich and powerful? 10532 But how could this El Dorado be reached? 10532 But is it a failure? 10532 But where were the men capable of framing a constitution for the republic? 10532 But who can interpret them? 10532 Can any woman, or any man, seen exactly as they are, incite a love which is kindred to worship? 10532 Can anybody doubt the marvellous progress of Protestant nations in consequence of the translation and circulation of the Scriptures? 10532 Can not a country grow materially to a certain point, under the most adverse influences, in a religious and moral point of view? 10532 Can peasants and women, or even merchants and nobles? 10532 Can she lay hold of forces that the Old World never had, such as will prevent the uniform doom of nations? 10532 Can such a man be stigmatized asthe meanest of mankind"? |
10532 | Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?" |
10532 | Creation involves a creator; and can the order and harmony seen in Nature''s laws exist without Supreme intelligence and power? |
10532 | Did not the Romans have nearly all we have, materially, except our modern scientific inventions? |
10532 | Do not our cities elect such rulers as the demagogues point out? |
10532 | Do not the few rule, even in a Congregational church? |
10532 | Do we not plant our grounds with the acacia, the oak, the cedar, the elm, as well as with the apple, the pear, and the cherry? |
10532 | Does San Francisco or New York send its greatest men to Congress? |
10532 | Does this fidelity to an official and professional duty, even if he were harsh, make him"the meanest of mankind"? |
10532 | Grant that Essex had bestowed favors, and was an accomplished and interesting man,--was Bacon to ignore his official duties? |
10532 | Has she no higher and nobler mission? |
10532 | Has she no other mission than to add to perishable glories? |
10532 | Have not material forces and glories been developed and exhibited, whatever the religion and morals of the fallen nations? |
10532 | Have not your grand councils given contradictory decisions? |
10532 | Have the spots upon the career of Bacon hidden the brightness of his general beneficence? |
10532 | Have we yet learned the ultimate principles of political economy, or of geology, or of government, or even of art? |
10532 | Have you considered what a mighty crime you thus commit against God, against man? |
10532 | How are these things to be reconciled and explained? |
10532 | How could he have written sonnets without an inspiration, unless he felt sentiments higher than we associate with either boys or girls? |
10532 | How could the inexperienced citizens of Florence comprehend the complicated relations of governments? |
10532 | How often did he excuse him to his royal mistress, at the risk of incurring her displeasure? |
10532 | I ask myself, Why should America be an exception to the uniform fate of nations, as history has demonstrated? |
10532 | If so, how ignominious are all politicians who flatter the people and solicit their votes? |
10532 | In what consisted the real glory of the country we are never weary of quoting,--the land of Phidias and Pericles and Demosthenes? |
10532 | Is America to become like Europe and Asia in all essential elements of life? |
10532 | Is he the meanest of men because he had great faults? |
10532 | Is induction, great as it is, especially in the explorations of Nature and science, always certain? |
10532 | Is it an improvement to give up a simple life and lofty religious enthusiasm for materialistic enjoyments and epicurean display? |
10532 | Is it not by deduction that we ascend from Nature herself to the God of Nature? |
10532 | Is it not natural to be obsequious to those who have offices to bestow? |
10532 | Is not the rose or tulip as great an addition to even a poor man''s cottage as his bed of onions or patch of potatoes? |
10532 | Is not this science worthy of some regard? |
10532 | Is she to teach the world nothing new in education and philanthropy and government? |
10532 | Is that the meanest or the most uncommon thing in this world? |
10532 | Is that which is most useful always the most valuable,--that, I mean, which gives the highest pleasure? |
10532 | Is the time to be hailed when all religions will be considered by the philosopher as equally false and equally useful? |
10532 | Is there an imagination so lofty that will not be oppressed with the discoveries that even the telescope has made? |
10532 | Is there nothing before us, then, but the triumphs of material life, to end as mournfully as the materialism of antiquity? |
10532 | Knowest thou the ordinances of Heaven? |
10532 | Now what inspired so strange a purpose? |
10532 | Of what are they composed? |
10532 | Or is it what we fancy in the object of our adoration, what exists already in our own minds,--the archetypes of eternal ideas of beauty and grace? |
10532 | Some may boldly say,"Why not? |
10532 | Suppose she had become his wife, might he not have been disenchanted, and his veneration been succeeded by a bitter disappointment? |
10532 | The great question of all time pressed upon his mind with peculiar force,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
10532 | The wealth of seas,--the spoils of war? |
10532 | This trait is not commendable, but is it the meanest thing we see? |
10532 | Unless something new is born here which has a peculiar power to save, wherein will America ultimately differ from other parts of Christendom? |
10532 | Was it not a good time to die and consummate his protests? |
10532 | We admit that Bacon was a sinner; but was he a sinner above all others who cast stones at Jerusalem? |
10532 | What are the great realities,--machinery, new breeds of horses, carpets, diamonds, mirrors, gas? |
10532 | What conservative power has been strong enough to arrest the ruin of the nations of antiquity? |
10532 | What could austerities do for_ him_? |
10532 | What gave beauty and placidity to Descartes and Leibnitz and Kant? |
10532 | What had he more to gain? |
10532 | What has Voltaire or Hume or Froude told the world, essentially, that it did not know before? |
10532 | What has made France rich since the Revolution? |
10532 | What is more certain than deduction when the principles from which it reasons are indisputably established? |
10532 | What is the explanation of this singular phenomenon? |
10532 | What is the marketable value of friendship or of love? |
10532 | What is the material profit of a first love? |
10532 | What is the scale to measure even mortal happiness? |
10532 | What is the secret of such a wonderful success? |
10532 | What made"The Pilgrim''s Progress"the most popular book ever published in England? |
10532 | What makes the dinner of herbs sometimes more refreshing than the stalled ox? |
10532 | What mortal woman ever expressed the ethereal beauty depicted in a Madonna of Raphael or Murillo? |
10532 | What other guide has a man but his reason? |
10532 | What philosophical teachings led to the machinery of the mines of California, or to that of the mills of Lowell? |
10532 | What raised Plato to the highest pinnacle of intellectual life? |
10532 | What remains of Nineveh, of Babylon, of Thebes, of Tyre, of Carthage,--those great centres of wealth and power? |
10532 | What remains of Roman greatness even, except in laws and literature and renovated statues? |
10532 | What was life to him, diseased, infirm, and old? |
10532 | What was the spirit of the truths_ he_ taught? |
10532 | What were realities to Anselm, Bernard, and Bonaventura? |
10532 | What would Gregory I. say to the verdicts of Gregory VII.? |
10532 | When Florence is deliberating about the choice of an ambassador to Rome, he playfully, yet still arrogantly, exclaims:"If I remain behind, who goes? |
10532 | Where has civilization shown any striking triumphs, except in inventions to abridge the labors of mankind and make men comfortable and rich? |
10532 | Where was he to get money except from the contributions of Christendom? |
10532 | Which is worse, the physical arm of the beast, or the maniac soul of a lying prophet? |
10532 | Who but the Church can do this? |
10532 | Who can deny them? |
10532 | Who can improve on the sagacity and worldly wisdom of the Proverbs of Solomon? |
10532 | Who can love this perishable form, unless one sees in it some traits which belong to superior and immortal natures? |
10532 | Who could adequately pay him for his services; who could estimate the value of his gift? |
10532 | Who could smile or joke or eat or sleep or have any pleasure, if he thought seriously there would be no cessation or release from endless pains? |
10532 | Who devised the cathedrals of the Middle Ages? |
10532 | Who does not admire the church architecture of the Middle Ages? |
10532 | Who does not criticise his neighbor''s house, its proportions, its general effect, its adaptation to the uses designed? |
10532 | Who does not stop to admire a beautiful window, or porch, or portico? |
10532 | Who does not value them? |
10532 | Who ever tires in gazing at a locomotive as it whirls along with the power of destiny? |
10532 | Who ever was satisfied in contemplating the diversified wonders of those venerable structures? |
10532 | Who first sang the odes which Homer incorporated with the Iliad? |
10532 | Who first turned up the earth with a plough? |
10532 | Who first used the weaver''s shuttle? |
10532 | Who gave the keel to ships? |
10532 | Who gave the lyre to primeval ages, or the blacksmith''s forge, or the letters of the alphabet, or the arch in architecture, or glass for windows? |
10532 | Who invented chimneys? |
10532 | Who invented the mariner''s compass? |
10532 | Who is not astonished at the triumphs of the engineer, the wonders of an ocean- steamer, the marvellous tunnels under lofty mountains? |
10532 | Who solved the first problem of geometry? |
10532 | Who was the first that raised bread by yeast? |
10532 | Who will not value them so long as our mortal bodies are to be cared for? |
10532 | Who would call Webster the meanest of mankind because he had an absurd desire to live like an English country gentleman? |
10532 | Who, then, and what, is God? |
10532 | Whom shall we believe? |
10532 | Why could he not see the perfections he adored shining in other women, who perhaps had a higher claim to them? |
10532 | Why could not Galileo have been as great in martyrdom as Savonarola? |
10532 | Why could not those races retain their primitive revelation? |
10532 | Why did Christianity itself become corrupted in four centuries? |
10532 | Why did Copernicus escape persecution? |
10532 | Why did he not accept the penalty of intellectual freedom, and die, if die he must? |
10532 | Why did he suffer himself to be conquered by priests he despised? |
10532 | Why did not civilization and Christianity save the Roman world? |
10532 | Why did not the Middle Ages preserve the evangelical doctrines of Augustine and Jerome and Chrysostom and Ambrose? |
10532 | Why did so bold and witty and proud a man betray his cause? |
10532 | Why did the Jesuits become unpopular and lose their influence? |
10532 | Why did the Jewish nation steadily retrograde after David? |
10532 | Why did the descendants of Noah become almost idolaters before he was dead? |
10532 | Why did the fervor of the Puritans burn out in England in one hundred years? |
10532 | Why did the great Persian Empire become as effeminate as the empires it had supplanted? |
10532 | Why did the light of the glorious Reformation of Luther nearly go out in the German cities and universities? |
10532 | Why did they lose their popularity? |
10532 | Why have the doctrines of the Pilgrim Fathers become unfashionable in those parts of New England where they seemed to have taken the deepest root? |
10532 | Why should not Protestants of every shade cherish and defend this sacred right? |
10532 | Why should not good institutions be perverted here, as in all other countries and ages of the world? |
10532 | Why speak of life or death to me, Whose days are but a span? |
10532 | Why till recently was Germany so poor? |
10532 | Why were the antediluvians swept away? |
10532 | Why were they so distrusted and hated? |
10532 | Will he abjure the doctrines on which his fame rests? |
10532 | Will he recant? |
10532 | Will he subscribe himself an imposter? |
10532 | Yea, the popes themselves, your infallible guides,--have they not at different times rendered different decisions? |
10532 | and if I go, who remains behind?" |
10532 | or are they affections, friendships, generous impulses, inspiring thoughts? |
2970 | All by yourself? |
2970 | And a kiss now? |
2970 | And also that you love me? |
2970 | And ca n''t I settle anything with you, my dear? |
2970 | And how about Zenobia? |
2970 | And if he turns out to be a man of means? |
2970 | And if you had been reading by yourself? |
2970 | And is it not the case that no bodies move in an upward direction unless they are impelled? |
2970 | And prove it in every way? |
2970 | And she would n''t take it? 2970 And that makes you happy, does it?" |
2970 | And what did you do? 2970 And what is your name?" |
2970 | And when did you leave Venice? |
2970 | And when you have no strength left? |
2970 | And where is Cesarino? |
2970 | And will you do so? |
2970 | And will you help me to succeed? |
2970 | And will you love me? |
2970 | And you, too, for I suppose you will have the dress? |
2970 | Are n''t you going out any more to- day? |
2970 | Are those the shoes and buckles you are going to wear? 2970 Are we to have supper, then?" |
2970 | Are you alone? |
2970 | Are you happy? |
2970 | But do you think she will take it as a joke? |
2970 | But how could she hope to do that by extolling your charms above those of the other ladies? 2970 But how did you recognize me, dearest?" |
2970 | But how shall we be dressed? |
2970 | But of course you think that art is the better? |
2970 | But she has had one, of course? |
2970 | But what costume have you given us? |
2970 | But what is this, my dear countess, it is n''t snuff? |
2970 | But when a woman skews her shape well? |
2970 | But you will shut the door, at least? |
2970 | Can you prove it? |
2970 | Could not we come, too? |
2970 | Dare you return to your father? |
2970 | Dearest, can you doubt it? |
2970 | Did n''t you see that the gentleman had spilt a cup of coffee over his handsome breeches? |
2970 | Do I look like that? 2970 Do you believe I love you?" |
2970 | Do you know how much money you gave each of us? |
2970 | Do you know, my dear Hebe, that you want more books? |
2970 | Do you live at any distance? |
2970 | Do you not think me worthy of becoming your wife? |
2970 | Do you really want to? |
2970 | Do you think he ever will? |
2970 | Do you think it would bring you ill luck? |
2970 | Do you think so? 2970 Do you think,"said she,"that I shall be happy when you have left me all alone?" |
2970 | For the dress you mean? |
2970 | Had Hebe a temple at Corinth? 2970 Has there been any talk of the masqued ball or of the mysterious masquers?" |
2970 | Hate you? 2970 Have I not already said that I would tell you just as we are going?" |
2970 | How could one love a woman who is at the disposal of a low, ugly fellow? 2970 How did I give them you?" |
2970 | How do you know? |
2970 | How do you mean, dressed as a beggar? |
2970 | How do you mean? |
2970 | How is fortune treating you? |
2970 | I am delighted to see you again,said I;"are you still living with your husband?" |
2970 | I recognized him directly,replied the banker,"but who are the others?" |
2970 | I suppose Irene has a lover? |
2970 | I? 2970 Is it more beautiful?" |
2970 | Is it possible? 2970 Is she a Milanese girl?" |
2970 | Is she young? |
2970 | It has been one of great pleasure to me, has it not to you? |
2970 | It is a seducer, then? |
2970 | Managed? 2970 May I rise in your presence?" |
2970 | May I tell you so a hundred times? |
2970 | My slightest wishes? |
2970 | Not the pretty girl who waited on us, and whose arms you have possibly left an hour or, two ago? |
2970 | Of me? |
2970 | Perhaps you are going incognito? |
2970 | Pray where was that young lady educated? |
2970 | Really? |
2970 | Sardini stupid? 2970 So much the better,"said Clementine;"what did he play for, when he knew that he could not pay his debts if he incurred any? |
2970 | That is easily said and easily done, but have I sufficient talent? 2970 That may be, but do you think I shall care?" |
2970 | That''s curious; why so? |
2970 | Then why are you going to marry him? |
2970 | Then why do you say it will please me more? |
2970 | Then you are satisfied with me? |
2970 | Then you have never been in love? |
2970 | Then you think that nobody has recognized me? |
2970 | Was she really asleep,said I to myself,"when I was outraging her so shamefully?" |
2970 | We must make up our minds,said the lieutenant,"shall we go to the ball or go home?" |
2970 | Well, master tailor,said I,"so you are going to marry this charming girl?" |
2970 | What are you going to do with this chemise? |
2970 | What are you saying? 2970 What do they say?" |
2970 | What do you mean by that? |
2970 | What do you mean by''plastered''? 2970 What does it contain?" |
2970 | What for? |
2970 | What friend is that? |
2970 | What have I done, pray? |
2970 | What is that? |
2970 | What is the matter with you, dearest? 2970 What is your name?" |
2970 | What lesson? |
2970 | What will my wife say? |
2970 | What would you have done with this blood? |
2970 | When? |
2970 | Where did the breeches hurt you? |
2970 | Where does this club meet? |
2970 | Who am I? |
2970 | Who are they? |
2970 | Who are you, pray? |
2970 | Who can they be? |
2970 | Who told you to come and see this young lady? |
2970 | Why not to- morrow? |
2970 | Why not? 2970 Why not? |
2970 | Why should we not let him enjoy a victory which would make us both happier? |
2970 | Why so, if you please? |
2970 | Why so? 2970 Will you be at the theatre coffee- house at three o''clock to- morrow?" |
2970 | With you? 2970 Would you like something that has never been worn?" |
2970 | Would you like to be dressed like a man? |
2970 | Would you like to go on playing? |
2970 | Would you like to look on? |
2970 | Would you like to take me away with you? |
2970 | Would you settle in Milan? |
2970 | Yes, to a tailor, and we are going to be married before the end of the carnival:"Is he rich or handsome? |
2970 | You a monster? |
2970 | You are engaged, are you? |
2970 | You are the Pierrot who broke the bank? |
2970 | You did not recognize me in the least? |
2970 | You had n''t sufficient courage? |
2970 | You have been losing, then? |
2970 | You have enjoyed yourselves, then? |
2970 | You make me happy, but does not your heart also tell you that you should prove your love? |
2970 | You shall have the ticket without fail, but why should I not bring it? |
2970 | You think it a treasure, then? |
2970 | You wish to see us unhappy, do you? |
2970 | You wo n''t leave us surely? |
2970 | Your heart is empty? |
2970 | And, how could she know that I preferred you?" |
2970 | Are not all bodies inclined to obey the laws of gravitation unless they are held back by a superior force?" |
2970 | Are we to go fifteen miles to Milan only to dine and come back again? |
2970 | Are you afraid of your husband noticing the loss of your maidenhead?" |
2970 | Are you coming to see us this evening?" |
2970 | Are you persuaded?" |
2970 | As soon as I had got back my breath the sorceress said,"You laugh, do you? |
2970 | But how is it that she attacked you and not my brother- in- law?" |
2970 | But what are you swallowing?" |
2970 | But what numbers will you have?" |
2970 | But what shall I do if you have left me with child?" |
2970 | But why does he put off the wedding?" |
2970 | But you will say they were brother- in- law and sister- in- law? |
2970 | Could any lover foresee such an incident? |
2970 | Do you advise me to accept his offer?" |
2970 | Do you know them? |
2970 | Do you not?" |
2970 | Do you see?" |
2970 | Do you think I really believed you capable of taking such a step, when we barely knew each other?" |
2970 | Does that satisfy you?" |
2970 | Does the countess like it?" |
2970 | Has Ricciardetto displeased you?" |
2970 | Have you no other stockings? |
2970 | How can one resist a pretty girl who implores with a kiss? |
2970 | How can you advise me to tell a lie? |
2970 | How could I, as free as the air, a perfect master of my movements, of my own free will put my happiness away from me? |
2970 | How should I despise one who loved me? |
2970 | I added,"I know the Prince Triulzi, at Venice; I suppose he is of your family?" |
2970 | I did not know whether I had gone too far or not far enough; but what did it matter? |
2970 | I felt curious to know what she was laughing at, and said,--"May I ask you, fair countess, why you laugh thus to yourself?" |
2970 | I hope you will not punish me too severely?" |
2970 | I love your intellect to distraction, Clementine, but tell me, do you think it possible to love the intellect without loving that which contains it?" |
2970 | I was puzzled, for what could a Capuchin have to say to me? |
2970 | If I hated you, should I see you at all? |
2970 | If Irene had struck me in dancing the''forlana'', why should not I have pleased her in spite of my superiority in age? |
2970 | Is it happiness, is it unhappiness? |
2970 | Is it possible that you are not in love with her?" |
2970 | It is nothing very important, is it?" |
2970 | It is really mine, then?" |
2970 | It would be amusing if he took me at my word, would it not?" |
2970 | Love itself is a kind of curiosity, if it be lawful to put curiosity in the rank of the passions; but you have not that feeling about me?" |
2970 | Must we, then, prepare to part?" |
2970 | Of course I will come; but before we part may I ask one kiss?" |
2970 | Shall I have your carriage housed?" |
2970 | Shall a man touch hot coals and escape the burning? |
2970 | She told me that Sardini was at Milan, very old and ill."Have you been to see him?" |
2970 | Should I be afraid for my poor properties when these living treasures were confined to me so frankly? |
2970 | Tell me how you could disprove my argument?" |
2970 | That will make people talk; but what care we? |
2970 | The marquis laughed heartily at her confusion, and she said,--"Is it possible that a man of your years has not yet learnt to respect a woman?" |
2970 | Then what was it? |
2970 | To whom does it belong, M. de Seingalt? |
2970 | Well, what did she say?" |
2970 | Well, what do you think of the costume?" |
2970 | What is it you want of me? |
2970 | What is the rent?" |
2970 | What reply could I make? |
2970 | When are you going to marry her?" |
2970 | Where are your gloves?" |
2970 | Where shall I find an actor to dance with me?" |
2970 | Where will you find a worthy companion to the Orlando Furioso? |
2970 | Where?" |
2970 | Whom am I to thank? |
2970 | Will that please you, fair Hebe?" |
2970 | Will you give me your hand to kiss?" |
2970 | You are laughing?" |
2970 | You do n''t like it? |
2970 | You have not yet met a man worthy of your regard?" |
2970 | You know who he is?" |
2970 | You will not speak of me to anyone, or say either that you know me or do not know me?" |
2970 | You would certainly be marrying beneath your station, but you would not be the less happy for that, would you?" |
2970 | do you not see what a state I am in?" |
2970 | how can I refuse you anything? |
2970 | is this beautiful dress really mine? |
2970 | my dear countess?" |
2970 | what do I see? |
2970 | what is to become of me, then?" |
2970 | what will become of me? |
2970 | why am I not worthy of aspiring to such a position?" |
2970 | you do n''t want the ladies''dresses treated like the coats and trousers?" |
44245 | ''Have you many lions here?'' 44245 ''How long has he been here?'' |
44245 | ''How long have they been here?'' 44245 ''What am I to do?'' |
44245 | ''What is the altar for in the passage?'' 44245 ''Whither?'' |
44245 | ''Why are they called lions?'' 44245 ''Why are they here?'' |
44245 | And may I further ask your-- I mean you-- where you are at home? |
44245 | And the worthy pastor assists in supporting these poor orphans? |
44245 | And you incline strongly to the latter? |
44245 | But suppose she is looking in another direction? |
44245 | But suppose she were to say No? |
44245 | But-- suppose he may have the necessary qualification? |
44245 | Cats? |
44245 | Cats? |
44245 | Certainly, do you want him? |
44245 | Excuse me, how am I to do the raptures? |
44245 | Have you seen Dada? 44245 How are we to obtain one at once conversant with the condition of the diocese, and not a partizan?" |
44245 | How can he without a von before his name? |
44245 | How shall I dare to face the man who dealt so generously by me? |
44245 | I do-- how could you discover that? 44245 Is it to show the Duke of Kingston he can not live without her? |
44245 | Is the Reverend Pastor at home? |
44245 | Is the fair, or, at least, the fat Miss Chudleigh with you still? 44245 Is this the house of the priest, Peter Nielsen?" |
44245 | Modelled it!--modelled the moon!--in what? |
44245 | Must I squeeze it? 44245 My dear colleague, what is the matter with you? |
44245 | Of what else could I speak? |
44245 | Shall I say nothing about the wax moon? |
44245 | Suppose he be a nobleman, or something even higher, in disguise? |
44245 | What Minna? |
44245 | What does that matter? 44245 What has brought you to Hanover, dear Professor?" |
44245 | What is needed for the construction of the machine? |
44245 | What is the matter? 44245 What shall I say, when he reproaches me? |
44245 | What will the daughter do with it? |
44245 | What, in disguise? 44245 Where are the ladies?" |
44245 | Who are you? |
44245 | Who are your accomplices? |
44245 | ''What do you want?'' |
44245 | ''What,''said he,''oysters?''" |
44245 | About how much pressure to the square- foot should I apply?" |
44245 | Are we to continue this farce? |
44245 | Besides, Königsmark had been merely created a countess, and who would crave to be a countess when she might be Queen? |
44245 | But had the last word in telegraphy been spoken, when it was invented? |
44245 | But how is it that in Gamain''s petition none of this occurs? |
44245 | But then-- did not the end sometimes justify the means? |
44245 | But what was M. Lacroix''s object in revivifying the base charge? |
44245 | But, who were these inventors, Benoît and Biat- Chrétien? |
44245 | But-- how could the murderer suppose he would leave the house open and unprotected at eight o''clock? |
44245 | Do you mean, in sober earnest, to invite Minna Witte to be your wife?" |
44245 | Fessler wrote another, entitled,"Who is the Emperor?" |
44245 | Had his mistress intimated her intention of supping abroad? |
44245 | Has the daughter no husband, a man of intelligence, to stay her hand?" |
44245 | Have you any?" |
44245 | His acquaintance, Von Eybel, had written a book or tract, which had made a great stir, entitled,"Who is the Pope?" |
44245 | How came he to escape?" |
44245 | How can that be? |
44245 | How can''st thou ask me to accept as thy surety, One whom thou believest my people to have rejected and crucified? |
44245 | If anyone was, why did he not answer the appeal? |
44245 | If it did not answer in conveying messages across so narrow a strip of water, was it likely to be utilized for Transatlantic telegraphy? |
44245 | Is her husband an astronomer?" |
44245 | Is that a fit letter for such as you to write to a lady?" |
44245 | Is this story true? |
44245 | Monsters who thus treat their chosen servants, how will they deal with the rest of men?" |
44245 | Once Volkmar said slyly to her,"What would your august father say if he knew you were here?" |
44245 | So I understand that there are three parties?" |
44245 | That is poetical, is it not? |
44245 | The Duke opened his eyes and gasped,"What is the matter with me? |
44245 | The Prince said to her,''Do you sincerely believe that you can be helped and are helped?'' |
44245 | The necklace was indeed discovered seriously injured; but what had become of her bracelets, brooches, rings, her other necklets, her earrings? |
44245 | Then he showed me the works I had noticed, and said,''What do you say to my skill? |
44245 | To what end did the friars live? |
44245 | Touch sadly on your forlorn condition, your unloved heart-- are you paying attention, or thinking of the moon?" |
44245 | Travelling incognito? |
44245 | Was it designed to cause the authorities to relax their efforts to probe the mystery, and perhaps to abandon them altogether? |
44245 | Was it necessary that this should be done in his presence, and he set to count money, so as not to observe what was going on? |
44245 | Was it possible that Mr. Bathurst had committed suicide? |
44245 | Was it possible that this had reference to the disposal of the jewelry? |
44245 | Was it such a decided advance on it? |
44245 | Was it true that he was not a gentleman by birth? |
44245 | Was she called upon to reject them? |
44245 | Was she in the rooms at Bath? |
44245 | Was there a savour of simony in offering a present to the man in whose hands the choice of a chief pastor lay? |
44245 | What am I to do? |
44245 | What answer can I make to my Surety for having lost the money entrusted to me?" |
44245 | What are his evidences, his crowd of witnesses, his documents that he has collected? |
44245 | What can I do with them? |
44245 | What could induce him to lay hands on an envoy? |
44245 | What happened during that time? |
44245 | What if again tempest should fall on thee, and wreck and ruin be thy lot, where should I look for my money? |
44245 | What is his name?" |
44245 | What is their name?" |
44245 | What occurred during that hour? |
44245 | What profit was there in it? |
44245 | What proof is there of his active preoccupations and fresh researches? |
44245 | What was Moses on Pisgah, viewing the Promised Land, what was Simeon Stylites braving storm and cold, to this spectacle? |
44245 | What was that Latin he said as he went away?" |
44245 | What was the meaning of these two appearances, the smoke and the flame? |
44245 | What was to be done? |
44245 | What was to be done? |
44245 | Whither are you going?" |
44245 | Who are you to poke yourself in between married folk?" |
44245 | Who could suppose that a solitary prisoner, without means, without the opportunity of making confederates, could menace the safety of the Empire? |
44245 | Who had heard him? |
44245 | Who inserted this, and for what purpose? |
44245 | Who was in the house at the time? |
44245 | Who was this Peter Nielsen? |
44245 | Who will have the moon then?" |
44245 | Why should not experience and a charming face on her side, and near seventy years on his, produce a title?" |
44245 | Why should not this force be used as a means for the conveyance of messages? |
44245 | Why this change? |
44245 | Why were not the papers hidden after Gamain was gone? |
44245 | Will the reader believe that it was written in good faith? |
44245 | Wolff, knowing his incapacity to do such a thing, asked him boldly,''Who is the author of this poem?'' |
44245 | Would they be capable of modelling such a globe? |
44245 | You are-- what do you say, seen, touched, breathed on the moon? |
44245 | You take me?" |
44245 | You understand me?" |
44245 | You understand me?" |
44245 | and Olaf Petersen, has he sent?" |
44245 | and a favourite, when, by playing her cards well, she might become a legitimate wife? |
44245 | but by birth-- what?" |
44245 | is that her name?" |
44245 | not knowing, moreover, how much time he would have for effecting his purpose? |
44245 | or Queen Marie Antoinette attempt to poison Durey also, if they desired to make away with all those who knew the secret of the iron locker? |
44245 | spoke the housekeeper, nudging him,"What is the meaning of all this? |
44245 | what is that?" |
44245 | what will become of that model? |
45786 | A fellow- countryman of Napoleon''s, then? 45786 A minister?" |
45786 | Anarchists? 45786 And now?" |
45786 | And who may you be? |
45786 | Another attempt? |
45786 | But what do you suggest, then? |
45786 | But where are your pistols and your poniards? |
45786 | Come and help me, ca n''t you? |
45786 | Could you tell me if the King of Spain is expected here to- day? |
45786 | Do n''t you know him by sight? |
45786 | Do n''t you speak French? |
45786 | Do you know the tune of the_ Maschich_? |
45786 | Do you remember the day when we went to the Grande Chartreuse? |
45786 | Have n''t you heard? 45786 Have you nothing else to give us?" |
45786 | How do you mean? |
45786 | I do n''t order them for myself, but for the good of the house; if the restaurant did n''t make a profit out of me, where would it be? |
45786 | Oh,he replied,"does it belong to you? |
45786 | Or of_ Viens, Poupoule_? |
45786 | Perhaps the King does not care for the bed provided for His Majesty''s use? 45786 Really? |
45786 | Really? |
45786 | She''s nice, is n''t she? |
45786 | Sir? |
45786 | Suppose it is Nicholas? |
45786 | Those are my orders: am I the King or am I not? |
45786 | To George? |
45786 | Was there anything wrong with the heating arrangements? |
45786 | What crime? |
45786 | Where is she? |
45786 | Who is that? |
45786 | Whom am I going to meet next, I wonder? |
45786 | Why have n''t I a gun? |
45786 | Why not, Sir? |
45786 | Why should you not go to his church? 45786 Why, what are you afraid of, Ma''am?" |
45786 | Will Your Majesty deign to accept the expression of my most respectful and distinguished sentiments? 45786 Your carpet?" |
45786 | _ No, signora._"Have you any children? |
45786 | ***** Why had fate decreed that the Empress should go to Geneva? |
45786 | An empress? |
45786 | And Sabadon''s voice was filled with all the pangs of homesickness:"Have you never been to Pinsaquel? |
45786 | And she continued,"George, this is M. Paoli: you remember him, do n''t you?" |
45786 | And that he had the amiable habit of buying anything that took his fancy, but neglecting to pay the bill? |
45786 | And the King? |
45786 | And the governor of Paris?" |
45786 | And the prime minister? |
45786 | And what do you think I did? |
45786 | And why had he asked with so much interest if"they were biting this year"? |
45786 | And your family? |
45786 | And, when the King, not knowing what to think, and feeling perhaps a trifle disappointed, confessed his surprise at her shyness:"What can you expect?" |
45786 | Are they biting this year?" |
45786 | Are you one of the company, monsieur le Chah?" |
45786 | At a time when every apartment in the château was thrown open for the visit of our imperial guests, why did this one alone remain closed? |
45786 | At last, catching sight of a servant:"Countess Sztaray?" |
45786 | Before moving away, she said:"I believe you are commissioned to''look after''me?" |
45786 | Bismarck was the necessary instrument; but how was he to be persuaded? |
45786 | But what reply was it possible to send to such letters as the following( I have kept a few specimens)? |
45786 | Come, M. Paoli, what are you thinking of? |
45786 | Did he not like the room? |
45786 | Do n''t you make that here?" |
45786 | Do n''t you think so?" |
45786 | Do you catch cold easily?" |
45786 | Do you know me?" |
45786 | Do you see? |
45786 | E---- persisted in addressing the Queen as"Your Majesty,"the latter interrupted her and said:"Why''Your Majesty''? |
45786 | Every evening, when she returned to the Foreign Office after a day of drives and visits in different parts of Paris, her first words were:"My wire?" |
45786 | Flabbergasts you, eh?" |
45786 | Had he found it uncomfortable? |
45786 | Had she already received a presentiment of what the year held in store for her? |
45786 | Had the Empress received a presentiment of her tragic end, which a gipsy at Wiesbaden, and a fortune- teller at Corfu had foretold her in the past? |
45786 | He also insisted upon our giving him full details about the persons who were to receive him:"What is M. Loubet like? |
45786 | He has not just now been nominated mayor of La Porta?" |
45786 | He was delighted and, giving her his hand:"You wo n''t refuse to say How- do- you- do to me, I hope?" |
45786 | Heavens, what have I done?" |
45786 | How could I discover the man? |
45786 | How could the King of Kings, an excellency, a majesty, find pleasure in the awful torments of that poor rabbit? |
45786 | How did he come to have all the necessary qualities to perform it, as he did, with equally remarkable facility, ease and tact? |
45786 | How did the King come to know the singer? |
45786 | How do you do, M. Sabadon? |
45786 | How is it that you still allow horse- carriages? |
45786 | How was I to look after her? |
45786 | How was he brought to take up this important and difficult duty? |
45786 | I took out my revolver and shouted:"Who goes there?" |
45786 | In fact--""Pardon me-- is it true that yesterday you arrested some suspected anarchists?" |
45786 | In what did these measures consist? |
45786 | Is n''t he splendid?" |
45786 | Keeping well, I hope? |
45786 | Loubet?" |
45786 | Meanwhile, may I respectfully remind Your Royal Highness that, on the last journey, you promised me the young princes''photograph?" |
45786 | Must I confess it? |
45786 | One day, for instance, he asked me, point- blank:"Do you know how many gendarmes there are in France?" |
45786 | Paoli?" |
45786 | Paoli?" |
45786 | Shall I ever forget that audience? |
45786 | Should I recall the incident of the gloves? |
45786 | That''s very Parisian, is n''t it?" |
45786 | The Empress, losing patience, called a porter:"You see that gentleman in black?" |
45786 | The Queen''s shyness? |
45786 | The last act had begun when I saw my inspector return alone and looking very sheepish:"Well,"I asked,"what did she say?" |
45786 | Then, when the King had disappeared, Sabadon turned to the astounded policeman:"What do you say to that, my son? |
45786 | Thereupon the lady looked at us in dismay, flung herself against the window, tapped at it, called out:"What have I done? |
45786 | Was it a dream, a fairy- tale? |
45786 | Was it not a striking irony of fate that thus awarded the conqueror''s pillow to the first promoter of peaceful arbitration? |
45786 | Was this due to excessive egotism or supreme indifference? |
45786 | Were the royal pair asleep? |
45786 | What are they?" |
45786 | What do you think of him? |
45786 | What gave rise to this absolutely gratuitous conviction on the part of public opinion? |
45786 | What happened? |
45786 | What other state can say as much to- day? |
45786 | What were we to do? |
45786 | What would you have them do to a poor woman? |
45786 | When, at last, the walk through the maze of passages and cloisters was finished, the Queen hesitated and then asked:"And the chartreuse? |
45786 | Whenever he had to select a new aide- de- camp, he always began by asking two questions:"Do you play the piano? |
45786 | Who can tell? |
45786 | Who knows? |
45786 | Who was"Philippe"? |
45786 | Who would think of hurting us?" |
45786 | Why did she select the town of Louis XIV in which to accomplish this important and solemn act of her life? |
45786 | Would the King of Spain think that they were there on his account and would he not be offended when he discovered his mistake? |
45786 | Would the Tsar go to Paris? |
45786 | You do n''t imagine you''re going to stand in the King''s road, do you?" |
45786 | [ Illustration: PRINCESS CLEMENTINE]"Do you think so, Paoli? |
45786 | [ Illustration: QUEEN WILHELMINA] Why was it going to Aix? |
61959 | Ah, yes,she answered,"an American, was he not?" |
61959 | And what do you call me? |
61959 | Are you going to Vienna? |
61959 | Are you going to Washington? |
61959 | Besides, if you call Washington a scoundrel, how are you going to describe Webster? |
61959 | But did you never sit down? |
61959 | But does not that raise or threaten to raise a political issue? |
61959 | But how? |
61959 | But if you tell him what I say? |
61959 | But who will undertake that? |
61959 | But why do n''t you sit down? |
61959 | But why? |
61959 | But will you not advise Phillips to stay away, or at least to be moderate? |
61959 | Certainly not the last,I said,"and as for the others, are you not taking a rhetorical view, a platform view? |
61959 | Danger? 61959 Dear me, what is that?" |
61959 | Did his American nationality hinder him? |
61959 | Do you think he ought to have given money to encourage disorder? |
61959 | Do you think they will let you alone then? |
61959 | Have you written your account? |
61959 | How much did I tell the King? 61959 In your own case also?" |
61959 | Is he English or American? |
61959 | Is he in danger? |
61959 | Is that Smalley''s letter? 61959 Oh, do you think I might?" |
61959 | Oh, sir,said Captain Lambton,"do n''t you know the castle is full of people whom the Duke does n''t know and the Duchess never sees?" |
61959 | Oh, you think that now, but when the gout comes what do you think then? |
61959 | Remember? 61959 Then what did you mean?" |
61959 | Then why do you do it? |
61959 | Then why do you do it? |
61959 | Was n''t it kind of His Royal Highness to give it to me? |
61959 | Well, how then? |
61959 | Well, what did you do? |
61959 | Were you in Sedan during the battle? |
61959 | Were you taken prisoner? |
61959 | What do you mean by driven out? |
61959 | What do you mean by encouraging disorder? 61959 What do you suppose I am here for? |
61959 | What is it? |
61959 | Who is that? |
61959 | Why have I never seen him? 61959 Why? |
61959 | Will you come and see me at my house this evening, and we will have a talk? 61959 Will you sit down at once and begin?" |
61959 | Will you take an order for me? |
61959 | Yes, but how do you know? |
61959 | You were released? |
61959 | A comfortable fortune to leave? |
61959 | After all, what did he say or do? |
61959 | Again the question:"Who are you?" |
61959 | As we went upstairs I said to him:"Do you mean that after all that champagne you are going to answer thirty or forty letters when you get home?" |
61959 | At any moment a shot might be fired, and then what? |
61959 | But Jefferson''s phrase about government by newspapers applies, or part of it applies, to the Senate, or shall I say to part of the Senate? |
61959 | But are they Americans, or are they of the true American type? |
61959 | But what cared he? |
61959 | But what do you call our money?" |
61959 | But what was I to do? |
61959 | Could you send me a copy as a curiosity?" |
61959 | Dana?'' |
61959 | Did he find a Tavern Club in New York? |
61959 | Do n''t you think the negro knows? |
61959 | Do they interest you?" |
61959 | Do you really doubt that a war between{ 110} the Slave Power and the North, be the result what it may, must end in Freedom?" |
61959 | Do you think he has a dining jacket?" |
61959 | Early Victorian, mid- Victorian, or merely Victorian-- are these labels now used by way of compliment or even of mere description? |
61959 | Garrison''s exploits are less legendary, but are they much more substantial? |
61959 | Have you ever known me to adopt an opinion because somebody else had adopted it?" |
61959 | Hay?" |
61959 | He himself believed that he was, but he was a pupil of Montaigne, and Montaigne''s motto,"Que sçais- je?" |
61959 | He seemed a little sceptical and asked:"Will you come?" |
61959 | He turned on me sharply, with a questioning look of keen eyes under heavy eyebrows:"Are you a friend of Smith- Barry?" |
61959 | He:"Who is that?" |
61959 | How are they to live together in amity? |
61959 | How can you bear malice against a writer with so much sweetness of nature as Mr. Howells? |
61959 | How could I? |
61959 | How could they do otherwise? |
61959 | How did he do it? |
61959 | How many Huxleys are there in the world that you should suppose I could forget this one?" |
61959 | How was he to know it was not heart disease, to which he believed himself subject? |
61959 | Hypnotism? |
61959 | I asked first:"Is your dispatch ready?" |
61959 | I said to myself:"All this may be true of Chicago, but of what else is it true?" |
61959 | In the presence of new- found gold, what are boundaries or titles or international relations? |
61959 | In these circumstances, with four hundred candidates for four presentations, what is an unhappy Ambassadress to do? |
61959 | Is not, or was not, Boston the Home of Culture? |
61959 | Looking about him for an officer, he saw me and said,"Who are you?" |
61959 | May I see it?" |
61959 | Mills?" |
61959 | Mr. Mills hardly glanced at it, took up his pen to sign, stopped, and said to the lawyer:"I suppose it is all right?" |
61959 | Nobody asked but everybody looked another question:"Then why buy?" |
61959 | Not perhaps the white flower of a blameless life, but was there ever one? |
61959 | Of how many lawyers can anything like that be said? |
61959 | On the other hand, were the Canadian members impartial? |
61959 | Perhaps a better Saint than Captain, but in Rome''s long catalogue of the canonized how many first- rate names are there? |
61959 | Presently we came to a rather bare, scantily furnished, unhandsome room, and Lady Sibyl asked:"But what is this?" |
61959 | Said Governor Andrew:"Mr. Phillips, what do you wish me to do?" |
61959 | She asked:"Who is that?" |
61959 | Still he declined, saying there were cases he could not leave, and when he was pressed further the great man burst out:"But why do you want me? |
61959 | Still he said:"Do you expect me to print this to- morrow in_ The Daily News_?" |
61959 | The Convention was summoned to consider"How shall American slavery be abolished?" |
61959 | The half- omnipotence of Webster we defied; who heeds this pedlar''s empty speech? |
61959 | They were busy with the law; what was a prophet to them? |
61959 | What can I do for you?" |
61959 | What great soldier ever refrained? |
61959 | What has become of those historic streets which the great men of more than one great generation trod? |
61959 | What have they to gain by shooting me?" |
61959 | What is an Ambassador for if not to give effect to these good intentions? |
61959 | What is the Indian Civil Service; or rather, what was it? |
61959 | What need be added except that the statement is not a compliment but a testimony? |
61959 | What was Phillips''s comment? |
61959 | What was the result? |
61959 | What would the flag mean to bankrupt gamblers who saw once more the hope of riches? |
61959 | When I mentioned Huxley''s name, Emerson said,"Yes, how could I forget him?" |
61959 | When White sat down to write he said to me:"I suppose I am to condense as much as possible?" |
61959 | When an enemy''s capital lay at the victor''s mercy, why should he not enter it? |
61959 | When he went to Mashonaland, in 1891, he borrowed £ 5000 from a good and staunch friend whom I should like to name-- well, why should I not? |
61959 | Where is the old Boston we all loved? |
61959 | Who are the American authors most popular in England? |
61959 | Who can be wise always? |
61959 | Who likes a man who is always wise? |
61959 | Why should the churches of France and of New England array against themselves the two finest minds of those two communities, centuries apart? |
61959 | Why should they read him if he wrote a language to them unknown? |
61959 | Without a word of preface he said:"You wrote me a letter?" |
61959 | Would it be wonderful if a boy who had undergone all this for four years should consider that he had earned the right to relaxation in after days? |
61959 | Would you mind leaving it for me?" |
61959 | You think that a fanciful suggestion? |
61959 | You were not the least disposed to ask with Lowell,"What is so rare as a day in June?" |
61959 | { 253} CHAPTER XXVII"CIVIL WAR?" |
13955 | A beard? |
13955 | A what? |
13955 | Am I not? |
13955 | And he turned out to be a lion? 13955 And our going to the Rothschilds''place near Boulogne,"he continued,"where the porter refused to let us enter the park?" |
13955 | And then? |
13955 | And would half past two be agreeable to you? |
13955 | And yours? |
13955 | Are they so unbecoming? |
13955 | Are you married? |
13955 | But may I beg one thing? |
13955 | But this one,I urged, tearfully;"could there not be extenuating circumstances? |
13955 | But,I replied,"how can I?" |
13955 | Can you guess what he said to me? |
13955 | Can you read my poetry? |
13955 | Could you not arrange that I might make his bust? 13955 Did he confess that he wrote the_ bordereau_?" |
13955 | Did you hear that lady sing? |
13955 | Did you ring, sir? |
13955 | Did your Majesty ever hear about Moltke''s visit to some grand- ducal court? 13955 Do n''t you remember,"he said,"you called me''the_ Hair_ Apparent''on account of my long locks?" |
13955 | Do n''t you think that dancing would be pleasanter? |
13955 | Do you feed him yourself? |
13955 | Do you know that he is the greatest traitor that has ever lived? 13955 Do you know who it is?" |
13955 | Do you mean to say,I cried,"that he did not know that he was suspected of high treason?" |
13955 | Do you recollect my dining with you in Paris, and your singing those exquisite songs? |
13955 | Do you remember,he said,"the guitar, and those delightful songs you sang--''Beware?'' |
13955 | Do you still sing Massenet? |
13955 | Do you think so? |
13955 | Do you think that if an injustice has been done it will create a great indignation in other countries and will affect the coming Exposition? |
13955 | Do you think the Queen would like to have me write something[ quite jocosely] equally mezzo- soprano? |
13955 | Do you think,he said,"you could add this little cadenza at the end?" |
13955 | Do you, really? |
13955 | Have you any of Massenet''s songs? |
13955 | Have you learned Danish yet? |
13955 | How can they refuse? |
13955 | How can we ever find out? |
13955 | How did you tame the bear? |
13955 | How do you think I could ever forget? |
13955 | How is that? |
13955 | How old do you think he is? |
13955 | How so? |
13955 | How would next Thursday be? |
13955 | How,said I"did your Majesty discover them?" |
13955 | I asked him which he thought would be the wheel- horse? |
13955 | I thought every one had a shield of some sort? |
13955 | If such is the case,I said,"what would you advise me to do?" |
13955 | In spite of the lack of commas? |
13955 | Is he a farmer? |
13955 | Is it a boy or a girl? |
13955 | Is that so? 13955 Is that so?" |
13955 | It sounds,I said,"so full of strength and power and straight to the point, with no accessories, does n''t it?" |
13955 | May I''dare''to ask you to accept one from me? |
13955 | Now, madame,turning to me,"shall we talk of the weather?" |
13955 | Of course you played at the tables? |
13955 | Oh, your Majesty,I said,"how could I have been so rude?" |
13955 | Really? 13955 Really?" |
13955 | Really? |
13955 | She was very unlucky,the King laughed,"and got things mixed up, and once began her conversation with a lady by asking,''Have you any children?''" |
13955 | So long ago? 13955 So long ago?" |
13955 | That? 13955 The lion is here in your back parlor, and you have the face to keep boarders?" |
13955 | Then the lion is waiting for us? |
13955 | Then what does he want with a barn? |
13955 | Then,I said, pretending to be offended,"I sing like a fool?" |
13955 | Was he not condemned only on his handwriting? |
13955 | Was it not something about his being the best horse in his stable? |
13955 | Was that your Majesty''s motor? |
13955 | Washing me? |
13955 | Well, America''s a pretty good place, ai n''t it? 13955 Well,"said the King, as we sat down to the table,"what have you been doing?" |
13955 | What am I to do? |
13955 | What did he answer to that? |
13955 | What did he say when he was accused? |
13955 | What did you answer to that? |
13955 | What did you think of her singing? |
13955 | What do you call_ burn_? |
13955 | What do you mean? |
13955 | What do you think it was called? |
13955 | What is a_ bordereau_? |
13955 | What is it they want? |
13955 | What is the matter? |
13955 | What voice has the Queen? 13955 What would your Highness like best,"I asked him,"an official dinner followed by a reception, or a little dinner with a dance?" |
13955 | What? |
13955 | Who but a chosen few have the luck to scoop up a live Chinaman? |
13955 | Who could, if not you? |
13955 | Who discovered it? |
13955 | Who is that gentleman? |
13955 | Who would your Majesty care to meet? |
13955 | Why did the generals want to condemn him, if he was not guilty? |
13955 | Why not? |
13955 | Why should the ladies object to the sleeves? |
13955 | Why, that is--He interrupted,"Have you ever noticed that G minor is much easier to sing than P sharp?" |
13955 | Why? |
13955 | Why? |
13955 | Will he bite me if I pat him? |
13955 | Will you kindly tell me whether I am awake or asleep? 13955 Will you not sing? |
13955 | Would your Majesty like to have some? |
13955 | Yes, that was it...''and has a daughter,''was n''t it? |
13955 | You mean''the daughter''? |
13955 | You mean, your Highness, these delicious truffles? |
13955 | You think you can talk along a wire in the air over that distance? |
13955 | ( Can one ever have enough?) |
13955 | ( Did you ever know one who was not?) |
13955 | --meaning, without clothes; to which the Princess replied:"But why do you wonder? |
13955 | A few moments after he said quite casually to the host,"Would you mind if we had coffee in the other_ salon_?" |
13955 | A good sight better than over here-- that is what I think,"and, pointing to the Duke Sermoneta said,"Is that gent American, too?" |
13955 | A supper for two thousand guests sounds rather formidable, does it not? |
13955 | After a little while the King said,"What shall I sing for you?" |
13955 | After we had finished tea was served, and then he said,"Have you heard my''Rigoletto''?" |
13955 | Am I not a greatly privileged person? |
13955 | And then he would sit down at the piano, saying with a smile,"Do you play this?" |
13955 | Are you Garibaldi?" |
13955 | But I wonder if all you wrote was true?" |
13955 | But can one imagine a Borgia needing a chapel or a Borgia ever praying? |
13955 | But what can he do with the babies''socks? |
13955 | But you surely do not understand that?" |
13955 | Can I not change it for an''A''?" |
13955 | Can anything be more simple? |
13955 | Can one imagine anything more tragic? |
13955 | Carnegie?" |
13955 | Clever, is n''t it? |
13955 | Dear L.,--Just as I was going to get a little rest, who should come to Stockholm but the Prince of Naples? |
13955 | Dear L.,--You ask,"What are you doing?" |
13955 | Did I accept? |
13955 | Did n''t I look bored?" |
13955 | Did no one else hear it?" |
13955 | Did they not read like fairy tales? |
13955 | Did you ever know him?" |
13955 | Did you know that he married the daughter of the King of England?" |
13955 | Did you not?" |
13955 | Did you?" |
13955 | Do n''t you think that has a sad note in it? |
13955 | Do you know them all?" |
13955 | Do you know what I did?" |
13955 | Do you know who I am?" |
13955 | Do you not think that the Great Sarah is magnificent in''_ L''Aiglon_''?" |
13955 | Do you remember Countess de Trobriand? |
13955 | Do you remember?" |
13955 | Do you wonder that I was somewhat bewildered? |
13955 | Do you?" |
13955 | Do you?" |
13955 | Does it not sound silly? |
13955 | Does there exist in the world a more complete and lovely woman? |
13955 | Everything is eaten from the same plate-- indeed, why should the plate be changed, since everything tastes and looks alike? |
13955 | Gentlemen(?) |
13955 | Has it been there since two hundred years B.C.?" |
13955 | Have you been there lately?" |
13955 | Have you quite given up singing?" |
13955 | He did not wait for my assurance that I did not notice any difference, but said, suddenly,"When do you go to Monza?" |
13955 | He had the music of"_ Comment disaient ils?_"in the same book and begged me to sing it. |
13955 | He hesitated a moment, and then said,"Signora, will you tell me which of the ladies there is the_ Regina_?" |
13955 | He kept saying,''Why am I to do this?'' |
13955 | He replied by asking,"Have you ever heard a nightingale, ma''m?" |
13955 | He said,"Do you remember our excursion in my little boat when you, the Princess Mathilde, and Marquis Callifet did me the honor to come with me?" |
13955 | He said,"Will you accept this?" |
13955 | He wanted to tell me the family history of a gentleman opposite us, and began by saying:"Do you see that gentleman? |
13955 | He was very enthusiastic about his Majesty( who is not?). |
13955 | He, after a long pause, said,"Was you in the hotel parlor last night?" |
13955 | Her first question was,"Did the Queen have on the sleeves?" |
13955 | His Majesty was most affable, and said, smilingly, to Nina:"Are we really going to lose you? |
13955 | How about Hamlet''s grave? |
13955 | How can a person surpass himself? |
13955 | How can any lady have a reception- day where people of all countries, all politics, and all societies meet? |
13955 | How could it be too long?" |
13955 | How could she bear to be so near her old home? |
13955 | How did you first notice it?" |
13955 | How in the world should we ever get over this obstacle? |
13955 | How is Countess Raben?" |
13955 | How prepare for_ les détails_? |
13955 | How should I?" |
13955 | How would''turkey to an ambassadress''s stomach''or''jumped potatoes''sound?" |
13955 | I am sure you will say what every one else says--"Why do n''t his parents give him a good spanking?" |
13955 | I call that coquetting with the gallery, do n''t you? |
13955 | I never heard anything to equal him, and Monsieur Maurel is equally fine, is he not?" |
13955 | I sang the"Rossignol"and Liszt''s"_ Que disaient ils?_"to Sgambati''s accompaniment. |
13955 | I saw tears in the Queen''s eyes, which she quickly wiped away; and, turning to the man, she asked,"Can he do any tricks?" |
13955 | I screamed back,"_ Que dites vous_?" |
13955 | I thought, and asked,"Do you know what a beard is?" |
13955 | I wanted to bring it, and was going to ask you to sign it, but--""But you could not find anything handsome enough,_ hein_?" |
13955 | I went into a shop while the brilliant_ cortège_ was passing and, feigning ignorance, asked the woman at the counter:"What is this procession?" |
13955 | If Worth sends a corsage with the fashionable cut-- what do they do? |
13955 | In the_ entr''acte_ Monsieur de W. and I talked over the play, and, unfortunately, I said,"Did Hamlet ever exist?" |
13955 | Is that not true?" |
13955 | Is this original? |
13955 | Jump, run, and be tied up in bags and climb poles? |
13955 | Longfellow?" |
13955 | Mr. John Hay, who sat next to me, remarked, ironically,"Why do they not write their menu in plain English?" |
13955 | Mrs. Grieg sang charmingly( Grieg''s songs, of course); and Liszt, with his hands folded in front of him, was lost in thought-- or was he asleep? |
13955 | My dear Aunt,--Did you receive the newspaper cuttings I sent you describing the home- coming of Frederick and Nina? |
13955 | My dear Aunt,--Is your heart melted with pity, or does it burst with national pride, and do you disregard such trifles as heat and exhaustion? |
13955 | Naar kommer din husfru?_"which in English means,"Listen thou. |
13955 | One ca n''t imagine bigamy going much further than that, can one? |
13955 | Or was he a Lohengrin who had come in a swan- drawn skiff down the Tiber to save some Italian Elsa? |
13955 | Our good Schlözer would say"_ Que faire? |
13955 | Pasi looked aghast( Could the royal board be so fattening?) |
13955 | People rushing in from the supper- room asked,"What is the matter?" |
13955 | Poor Zola has been condemned to pay a fine of-- how much do you think? |
13955 | She asked him,"How did you come to Denmark?" |
13955 | She said,"Which of these gents is your husband?" |
13955 | She was to say,"Are you married, madame?" |
13955 | Soprano or contralto?" |
13955 | Surely there is no humbug about that? |
13955 | That is not enough, is it? |
13955 | The Princess fixed a pair of earnest eyes on him, and said, in hushed tones,"And what became of the child?" |
13955 | The Queen came up to me directly after dinner, saying:"What_ were_ you and the King talking about? |
13955 | The Queen said,"You will stay to luncheon, will you not?" |
13955 | The Senator did not notice this little detail, for when dinner was announced he said to J.,"Will you please take that young lady in to dinner?" |
13955 | The Senator was not in the least surprised, and merely answered:"Is that so? |
13955 | The first thing the King said to me at luncheon was,"Did you hear this morning?" |
13955 | The lady hastened to answer,"Yes, your Majesty, I have seven?" |
13955 | They slid down to"L."Then Mrs. Dahlgren said,"Has Mrs._ Lindencrone_ anything to say on the Metamorphosis of Negative Matter?" |
13955 | They suit your voice, but would they mine? |
13955 | To what use is it to exist, to have existed, Or to exist in time to come? |
13955 | Was it not''Beware,''or something like that?" |
13955 | Was it the Negative, or the Metamorphosis, or the Matter? |
13955 | Was this the way that they were going to amuse themselves on this hot day? |
13955 | We received a note from General Burnside( Senator from Rhode Island):"Will you come to my codfish dinner on Thursday next?" |
13955 | Were soiling their clothes, perspiring, and suffering tortures in their tight boots the delightful, reposeful feast they had been invited to? |
13955 | What could he mean? |
13955 | What do you think it was? |
13955 | What do you think of your adorable Hamlet now?" |
13955 | What had I said? |
13955 | What must it have been in its prime? |
13955 | What must people think of him? |
13955 | What they talked about most was their many reminiscences, and almost each of their phrases commenced,"_ Vous rappelez vous_?" |
13955 | What was it? |
13955 | When I tell you that there is a lion roaming over your house you stand there quietly and tell me that he is hungry?" |
13955 | When he sees a lady(?) |
13955 | When is thy wife coming?" |
13955 | When it is hard enough to handle it is put into large round wooden forms and allowed to remain untouched-- for how long do you think? |
13955 | When may we have the honor of expecting you?" |
13955 | When the white truffles were served( they were temptingly buried in a nest of butter) the Prince said,"How can you eat those things?" |
13955 | Where else but in America are mistakes so quickly and nicely remedied? |
13955 | Which duets of mine do you sing?" |
13955 | Who could refuse such a tempting invitation? |
13955 | Who ever heard of a seller saying that his rum was as bad as that?" |
13955 | Who in his senses would prefer a sour lemon to a juicy orange? |
13955 | Who was your teacher?" |
13955 | Why are they ashamed of themselves? |
13955 | Why did you not send me word that you were coming? |
13955 | Why do captivating and fascinating creatures, such as he was, ever grow old? |
13955 | Why do they call themselves by the graceful name of"cuspidor"--suggestive of castanets and Andalusian wiles? |
13955 | Why do they want to burn eight barns? |
13955 | Why have the bother to choose your doctor or your priest when all that is done for you? |
13955 | Why not this spring? |
13955 | Why such foolish masquerading? |
13955 | Why was I not dressed in my best? |
13955 | Will that be as good? |
13955 | Will you come to- morrow? |
13955 | Will you show him to me?" |
13955 | Would it interest you to know how these_ intimes_ amuse themselves? |
13955 | Would you allow me to accompany you, if you would like to go?" |
13955 | Would you, really...?" |
13955 | You ask me,"What kind of a cook have you?" |
13955 | You know what Bismarck said about him?" |
13955 | You would not have a grandfather sing, would you?" |
13955 | You''re a minister, ai n''t yer?" |
13955 | _ Esprit_(_ de corps_) The corps is there, but where is the_ esprit_? |
13955 | and then,"Have you any children?" |
13955 | he said,"do you think I can be in the house with a roaring lion and not notice anything?" |
13955 | later, being on more familiar terms,"Would you have been offended if I had refused to drink with you?" |
13955 | of Denmark, who said to him:"Where did you learn to play the violin? |
28329 | A Dutchman? |
28329 | A Frenchman? |
28329 | A fool, eh? 28329 An hour?" |
28329 | And did n''t he? |
28329 | And have you great lava- beds covering whole valleys as we have here? |
28329 | And this is Miss Marit in print? |
28329 | And what sort of horses had they in California? |
28329 | Any sharks in it? |
28329 | Are you an Englishman? |
28329 | Are you going to be married to him? |
28329 | Are you hurt, sir? 28329 But do n''t they ever hang fire and burst their heads?" |
28329 | But if he stops up both nostrils, how is he going to breathe? |
28329 | But what about the pastor, Zöega? 28329 But,"said I,"if he does n''t intend to hang somebody, why should he rave about hemp all night?" |
28329 | But,said I,"the horse- race takes place to- morrow, does it not?" |
28329 | Can you understand it? |
28329 | Dangerous? |
28329 | Did n''t you see me rolling over on the ground laughing at it? 28329 Did you come all the way in a cariole?" |
28329 | Do n''t they bite? |
28329 | Do these horses ever eat cats or porcupines, or swallow heavy brooms with crooked handles? |
28329 | Do you believe in spirits, Zöega? |
28329 | Eh? |
28329 | Have you a lover? |
28329 | Have you his book? |
28329 | Have you read my order? |
28329 | How are we to do it? |
28329 | How do you do, sir? |
28329 | How long will it be? |
28329 | Is it equal to the Geysers of California? |
28329 | Is that possible, sir? |
28329 | Just arrived, sir? |
28329 | Mercantile? |
28329 | Mine? 28329 Nor kick?" |
28329 | Nor lie down on the way? |
28329 | Now, Zöega,said I,"how do you make it out that this came from the Skjaldbraid Jokul?" |
28329 | Now,said the emperor, turning to the others,"has this order been read to you?" |
28329 | Oh yes, sir; and do n''t you? 28329 Oh, what am I to do? |
28329 | Oh, you are an Englishman? |
28329 | Pray,said the Frenchman to the_ maître d''hotel_,"of what species of cat do you make ragouts in Algiers?" |
28329 | Sea- sick? |
28329 | Sir,said the old pilot, who observed the contortions of mirth by which I was moved,"vil you have some schnapps? |
28329 | Sir? |
28329 | Tell me, Zöega, are their breeches strong? |
28329 | That''s a jolly idea,said the lively sportsman;"how the deuce are we to travel without pack- horses?" |
28329 | Then I suppose they subsist on train- oil as well as codfish? |
28329 | Then you must have lived in the South? |
28329 | Three hours? |
28329 | Two hours? |
28329 | Was it Pliny Miles? |
28329 | Was it the Brúará? |
28329 | Well, sir,said he,"what success? |
28329 | Well,said I,"what do you think of Edinburg?" |
28329 | What do you think of the Strokhr, sir? |
28329 | What does he run away for? |
28329 | What does it say? |
28329 | What is your name,_ skën Jumfru_? |
28329 | What is_ your_ name? |
28329 | What''s that, Zöega? |
28329 | What''s this, Zöega? |
28329 | Where are you going? |
28329 | Would you like to go there, Zöega? |
28329 | You speak English, I believe, sir? |
28329 | Your name is Miss Marit? |
28329 | ***** Do n''t believe it, eh? |
28329 | After all, what is the difference between a finely- dressed savage and a finely- dressed Parisian? |
28329 | All they wanted to know was, were they free or not? |
28329 | Am I to report to his most potent majesty that, without striking one blow in his defense, you ran like sheep? |
28329 | And should all the Geysers blow up together and boil me on the spot, what would people generally think of it? |
28329 | And what can be more imposing than a Russian grandee? |
28329 | And who ever saw such houses for people to live in? |
28329 | And why should not I my humble experiences of the tchai of Moscow? |
28329 | And why should they be otherwise than contented-- if such a thing as contentment can exist upon earth? |
28329 | And yet, is it not better that men should believe in something rather than in nothing? |
28329 | Are the Poles any better satisfied now than they were then? |
28329 | Are you quite sure that fellow wo n''t kick when he tries to blow his nose?" |
28329 | Are-- you-- an-- Englishman?" |
28329 | At this he grasped both my hands, and looking straight in my face with a kind of ecstatic expression, said,"Oh, is it possible? |
28329 | But perhaps I did n''t believe it was a prize? |
28329 | But the question now arises, is it to end before it assumes a substantial form? |
28329 | But where is it that lovely woman will not make herself still more captivating? |
28329 | But why prolong the dreadful scene? |
28329 | But will every emperor be equally humane? |
28329 | But, after all, does the one pay any better than the other in the long run? |
28329 | By Anthony Trollope, Author of"Can You Forgive Her?" |
28329 | California? |
28329 | Can any thing be more picturesque? |
28329 | Can he do it? |
28329 | Can it be possible that you are a Finn?" |
28329 | Can the emperor grant it to a dependency, and withhold it from the body of his people? |
28329 | Can there ever be snow- storms and scathing frosts in such a land of tropical luxuriance? |
28329 | Could it all be real-- the glittering fires, the gayly- costumed crowds, the illuminated barge, the voluptuous strains of music? |
28329 | Did I speak French? |
28329 | Did he contemplate buying some Russian hemp for that purpose especially? |
28329 | Did he erupt?" |
28329 | Did my eyes deceive me? |
28329 | Do I look like a man who labors under a chronic destitution of dogs, pigs, skillets, and tongs? |
28329 | Do n''t you see it?" |
28329 | Do they really read my books in California? |
28329 | Do you dispute it? |
28329 | Do you say your prayers regularly?" |
28329 | Does he compare with your California Geysers?" |
28329 | Does he possess the moral courage to do it? |
28329 | Doubtless it is a very good thing to pay a decent regard to the Sabbath, but can any body tell me where we are commanded to look gloomy? |
28329 | Even a large oyster- shell might have afforded some assistance; but who ever heard of oyster- shells in the Gulf of Finland? |
28329 | Evening, did I say? |
28329 | For what, after all, do these coronation halls and gewgaws amount to? |
28329 | France-- where is her future? |
28329 | Great Alexander, I thought to myself, who would be a Czar of Russia, and have to make his living at the expense of all this sort of tom- foolery? |
28329 | Have I not been to thee tender and true? |
28329 | How can a country, under such circumstances, be expected to take a high rank among the enlightened nations of the earth? |
28329 | How can a man be expected to get along with a three- story wife unless he floors her occasionally? |
28329 | How do you like it? |
28329 | How do you think this is done? |
28329 | How many of my friends knew where I was? |
28329 | How thick was the shell of the earth at this particular spot? |
28329 | How was it possible, I asked, that millions and billions of tons of lava could be vomited forth from the crater of any mountain within sight? |
28329 | I asked a man where could I get some cigars? |
28329 | I ca n''t stand that, I must have one STRAX-- directly-- forstöede?" |
28329 | I exclaimed, in the best Norsk I could muster,"is the_ Jomfru_ going with me?" |
28329 | I knew it from the very beginning, but what could I do? |
28329 | I say, Stoord, where''s my fishing- rod? |
28329 | I stopped my cariole within a few paces and asked him"what luck?" |
28329 | I went in and spoke German--_vie gaetz?_ You are aware, perhaps, that I excel in that language. |
28329 | I wonder if he sleeps well, or enjoys Herzain''s essays on Russian aristocracy? |
28329 | If free, why were they forced to labor for other people; and if not free, was there any prospect that they ever would be? |
28329 | If the people kill all the calves, as appeared to be the case, in the name of wonder, where do the cows come from? |
28329 | In what was it that I, an embassador from Washoe, a citizen of California, a resident of Oakland, could thus be drawn toward this hideous wretch? |
28329 | Is it mud, clay, or water; or is it all a bog? |
28329 | Is it not a little marvelous what hardships people will encounter for pleasure? |
28329 | Is it to be a mere chimera gotten up to entertain and delude the world? |
28329 | Is n''t it glorious? |
28329 | It was an inglorious thing to do, no doubt, but which of you, my friends, would not have done the same thing? |
28329 | Let''s go see the Agent?" |
28329 | Might it not be some gorgeous freak of the emperor, such as the sultan in the Arabian Nights enjoyed at the expense of the poor traveler? |
28329 | My next thought was, in what terms would this sad affair be noticed in the columns of the Sacramento_ Union_? |
28329 | Need we hesitate, then, profane scoffers as we may be, when such precedents lie before us? |
28329 | Never heard of the Geysers of California?" |
28329 | No harm in that, is there? |
28329 | Now, was there ever such a vehicle for a full- grown man to travel in? |
28329 | O most potent Alexander, Czar of all the Russias, is this the only way you have of paying your servants? |
28329 | O say, Brusa, will thou ever again be guilty of this disreputable conduct? |
28329 | Of what avail was it that I had killed whales and chased grizzly bears? |
28329 | Of what material can such a man''s brain be composed, if he be gifted with brain at all? |
28329 | Oh, then, Monsieur is a gentleman of fortune, just traveling for pleasure? |
28329 | Oh, will you fly with me?" |
28329 | Or German? |
28329 | Or suppose the ground were to give way and swallow me up, what difference would it make in the price of consols or the temperature of the ocean? |
28329 | Pray what business may Monsieur be engaged in? |
28329 | Pray where does Monsieur come from? |
28329 | Should my horse stumble on a stray spike of lava, what possible chance of escape would there be? |
28329 | So gifted by nature, what might not such a youth achieve in an appropriate sphere of action? |
28329 | Suppose I should miss the road and get lost in some awful wilderness? |
28329 | Suppose a shark should seize me by the leg-- or a sudden and violent cramp should take possession of me? |
28329 | Suppose the whole thing should burst up of a sudden? |
28329 | Suppose, my young friend, you and I go to work and help the steamer along a little? |
28329 | Tell me, ye who deal in metaphysics, what is it? |
28329 | That little thing the Geysers?" |
28329 | The States of Germany-- what future have they? |
28329 | The emperor asked,"Can you read?" |
28329 | The emperor sometimes responds,"Is he?" |
28329 | The great gold country? |
28329 | The next question was, how long were these people going to enjoy themselves at my expense? |
28329 | The question now occurred to me, Would I not be justified by the law of nations in breaking the blockade? |
28329 | Then the everlasting day-- when would it end? |
28329 | This has been tried for nearly half a century-- ever since 1815--and what has it resulted in? |
28329 | Under other circumstances, indeed, there is no telling-- but why talk of other circumstances? |
28329 | Voices? |
28329 | Was I any the happier? |
28329 | Was I to be blockaded from my clothes all the rest of the afternoon? |
28329 | Was I to go alone? |
28329 | Was he going to hang himself? |
28329 | Was it a wild Oriental dream? |
28329 | Was it possible I bore any resemblance to this learned man? |
28329 | Was it possible he was going to force his horse into it? |
28329 | Was it what I expected? |
28329 | Well might he say to his own son upon his dying bed,"Poor Alexander, my beloved son, where lie the ills of unhappy Russia?" |
28329 | Were the cowardly villains afraid to murder me, and was this their plan of getting it done, and at the same time getting rid of the body? |
28329 | What are we to do? |
28329 | What became of her? |
28329 | What can I do, monsieur, unless you assist me?" |
28329 | What could I do but eat it? |
28329 | What could it be? |
28329 | What could it be? |
28329 | What could the girl mean? |
28329 | What could these good people have supposed I wanted with articles of this kind on my travels? |
28329 | What do you think of yourself now? |
28329 | What future, then, does this humane young sovereign propose to himself and his country? |
28329 | What harm is there, after all, in discarding those artificial trappings which disfigure the human form divine? |
28329 | What in the world is to be done? |
28329 | What is the use of having wives and children if they do n''t relieve us of our heavy work? |
28329 | What nation in Europe possesses a future at all, much less such a future as that which lies before us? |
28329 | What potent spell was there about this fellow to attract me? |
28329 | What sort of a notice would my editorial friends give of the curious manner in which I had disappeared? |
28329 | What the deuce was to be done? |
28329 | What was the object? |
28329 | What was to be done? |
28329 | What was to be done? |
28329 | What was to be done? |
28329 | What would be thought of half a dozen of these street acrobats rolling down Broadway or the Fifth Avenue? |
28329 | What would become of my sketches of Iceland in the event of such a catastrophe as that? |
28329 | What would the Emperor Alexander say when he heard that a citizen of California had been murdered in this cold- blooded manner? |
28329 | What would the ladies do then? |
28329 | What, after all, does the emancipation of the serfs amount to? |
28329 | What, then, does the education of the masses amount to? |
28329 | When was it to end? |
28329 | Where are you, Friday? |
28329 | Where could it have been? |
28329 | Where could this terrible flood have come from? |
28329 | Where the dooce are our berths? |
28329 | Where the dooce is our American friend? |
28329 | Where they dig gold out of the ground? |
28329 | Where was the result? |
28329 | Where''s Bowser? |
28329 | Where''s my trunk? |
28329 | Whither was I going? |
28329 | Who can blame me for paying tribute to Miss Marit''s kindness and hospitality? |
28329 | Who is to judge of the weather or the distance between the inns? |
28329 | Who is truly king upon earth, when there is"an everlasting King at whose breath the earth shall tremble?" |
28329 | Who was to take charge of the cariole? |
28329 | Who will save me?" |
28329 | Who would not suffer a life of martyrdom, and be turned into a picture or an image on such terms? |
28329 | Who''s here? |
28329 | Why not, on the same principle, accustom himself to being stabbed every night till he can quietly endure to be run through with a bayonet? |
28329 | Will he do it? |
28329 | Will you save me? |
28329 | Wilt thou ever do it again? |
28329 | Would I like to see it? |
28329 | Would it not be better to kiss and make it up, and try, if possible, to get along peaceably through the world? |
28329 | Would it not be regarded by the editor as an unprovoked disaster inflicted upon society? |
28329 | Would n''t you like to travel in Russia? |
28329 | Wretches, what have you to say for yourselves?" |
28329 | You will be there? |
28329 | _ Dom._ If Monsieur pleases, we will take a drosky and visit some of the gardens? |
28329 | _ Dom._ Is that a large city? |
28329 | _ Dom._ May I be so bold as to ask what part of England does Monsieur come from? |
28329 | _ Lady Reader._ But who was the heroine? |
28329 | did you''appen to see my overalls? |
28329 | have I not fed thee and cherished thee with parental care? |
28329 | is this the way you do honor to your imperial master? |
28329 | my friend,"said I,"if you''ll get me a horse and cariole in half an hour, I''ll give you two marks extra-- forstöe?" |
28329 | said I,"you do n''t say so?" |
28329 | verstehen sie? |
28329 | verstehen sie?_""Gott i m Himmel!" |
28329 | what are those women doing now? |
28329 | what were they doing now? |
28329 | where is the country that can equal California? |
28329 | who would ever have thought it?" |
28329 | you say, human voices? |
39701 | A curse upon him? 39701 And Enzio--?" |
39701 | And Jaqueline, the lady''s maid? |
39701 | And did the spirited damsel smile upon thy suit? |
39701 | And dost thou encourage them in evil speaking of their mistress, by listening to their idle tales? |
39701 | And had the superlative beauty of the Red King''s ward no influence? |
39701 | And hast thou not heard of the siege of St. Michael''s Mount? |
39701 | And hast thou then doubted the affection of Adela? |
39701 | And have these gases been able to effect the desirable changes? |
39701 | And how long have you dwelt at the castle? |
39701 | And how looks the candidate for our favor; is he fair and wise? |
39701 | And how would''st thou purpose that I should bind them to their allegiance? |
39701 | And if I say, draw thy sword for the good Prince Edward, wilt follow me? |
39701 | And if he were retainer of the outlaw? |
39701 | And if reason determined thy return, wherefore comest thou alone? |
39701 | And were not the establishment of Christian powers in Asia a worthy purpose? |
39701 | And were these pirates Infidels? |
39701 | And what became of thy father? |
39701 | And what do men say? |
39701 | And what dost thou consider the chief agent in the universe? |
39701 | And what farther chanced to the Saxon? |
39701 | And what is the name of the fair creature with the golden locks? |
39701 | And what kind hand tended thy illness? |
39701 | And what said the Atheling to thy visionary scheme? |
39701 | And what wouldst thou, sir knight? |
39701 | And where am I? |
39701 | And where is your mother? |
39701 | And wherefore comes not Robert with thee? |
39701 | And wherefore comest thou hither? 39701 And wherefore didst thou commit to a dying man the precious jewel which I saw in thy hand?" |
39701 | And who art thou, my pretty page? |
39701 | And who art thou, pert boy? |
39701 | And who art thou, that darest to cross the purpose of D''Essai? 39701 And why did Jaqueline leave the castle?" |
39701 | And why fatal? |
39701 | And your father? |
39701 | Are not the Tartars of the same race as the Turks? |
39701 | Are there not some who say, that Gog and Magog are the heresies which vex the church? |
39701 | Art thou the bearer of good tidings? |
39701 | Art vexed that my ear loved not the sound of thy lute, peevish child? |
39701 | Aye, verily,replied the Jew, fiercely,"but how does the Lord repay vengeance? |
39701 | But by what fatal mischance came I hither? 39701 But by what means hath she discovered herself to thee in this strange land?" |
39701 | But do not the people of God always triumph in the battles with the Infidels? |
39701 | But doth the exile''s heart serenely dwell in sunshine there? |
39701 | But since your grace on foreign coasts, Among your foes unkind, Must go to hazard life and limb, Why should I stay behind? 39701 But thou didst start and turn pale when the White Knight disclosed the features of Plantagenet?" |
39701 | But wherefore the monkish habit? 39701 But wherefore wouldst thou to England?" |
39701 | By what means were these wonderful works produced? |
39701 | By what title claimest_ thou_ allegiance to that fallen house? |
39701 | Canst judge if it be a metal? |
39701 | Canst tell me aught of the movements of the rebel barons, or the fate of my brave knights? |
39701 | Certes,said Petronilla,"and were it not a fitting time and place to hold the festival of our Court of Love? |
39701 | Could he speak with Adam Henrid? |
39701 | Despair not,replied the noble Melech,"for what saith the proverb? |
39701 | Did I not tell thee it would thwart his dearest wish? |
39701 | Did he rejoin the christian army? |
39701 | Did not his peers deem him worthy a principality in Palestine? |
39701 | Did not the vows of knighthood alone forbid thee to abandon the holy cause? |
39701 | Did wife and children draw my husband from the paths of glory and the cause of God? |
39701 | Didst not mark the battle- axe of the rude seneschal? 39701 Do not the people love her gracious majesty, my royal mother?" |
39701 | Do you like letter- reading? 39701 Does thy realm of England abound in such comely damsels?" |
39701 | Dost reject my gift, or hath some sudden illness seized thee? |
39701 | Hast come to bring a blessing to the habitation of Hardrager? |
39701 | Hast ever been in London? |
39701 | Hast heard aught of the Countess of Huntingdon? |
39701 | Hast thou brought the metal I gave thee? |
39701 | Heaven bless thee for thy news,said Adela, in a transport of joy;"and Robert?" |
39701 | How is this? 39701 How is this?" |
39701 | How knowest thou this? |
39701 | How leagued with thy foes? |
39701 | How so? |
39701 | How? |
39701 | I feared me some mischance had occasioned it,said Adela,"but seeing thee well, I am happy-- yet wherefore art thou come?" |
39701 | I know that I am wrong,said Eva,"but why does not his Holiness take the cross himself, if he considers it such a pious work?" |
39701 | In truth, I marked such a youth,said Adela, blushing,"but wherefore frequents he not the court?" |
39701 | Is the count, then, in Rouen? |
39701 | Is there aught,said she,"of interest to thyself or others in which I can aid thee?" |
39701 | Is this thine habitation? |
39701 | Lives there not one of all the princely house? |
39701 | Might he gain a moment''s audience of the Lady de Clifford? |
39701 | Miserable man,exclaimed Adela,"hast thou betrayed the army of the Lord?" |
39701 | Part we so soon, sir knight? |
39701 | Rememberest thou, my sister,said he,"the valiant Plantagenet, who so gallantly bore off the honors of our tournament?" |
39701 | Seest thou not a troop of horse, winding along the brow of the hill? 39701 They exact, then, toll and custom?" |
39701 | Thinkest thou the English curtel axe no better weapon than a Gascon''s spear? |
39701 | Thou hast a turn for adventure, pretty page, and I''ll warrant me, ready tongue, but how dost thou think to gain speech with Prince Edward? |
39701 | Thou lovest Sir Henry, then? |
39701 | Turn thy eyes to the stars, emblems of unchanging faith, and tell me truly, wilt thou be to Edwin a guardian Fylgia in weal or woe? |
39701 | Was not your father, the great Leicester, dragged a public spectacle, by the hair of the head through the streets of Evesham? |
39701 | What dazzling vision is this? |
39701 | What dost thou now observe? |
39701 | What is thy name? |
39701 | What is''t we live for? 39701 What of my lord?" |
39701 | What of my queen? 39701 What priestly scheme hast thou in hand?" |
39701 | What saith the proverb? |
39701 | What thing so good which not some harm may bring? 39701 What whisper ye?" |
39701 | Whence hast thou the dove, and what is his errand? |
39701 | Where could Henry find balls of silk? 39701 Where hast thou known Count Richard?" |
39701 | Where is the petulant Peyrol? |
39701 | Where is the traitor? 39701 Who brought you hither?" |
39701 | Who but the squire to my Lord de Mortimer? 39701 Who has put this foolish conceit into thy young head? |
39701 | Whom have we here? |
39701 | Whose page art thou? |
39701 | Why do you weep? |
39701 | Why grieves my Rose, my sweetest Rose? |
39701 | Wouldst ought with me? |
39701 | Alphonso advancing took up the crucible, saying,"What seest thou, my sister?" |
39701 | Am I to be subject to nurses, dosed with physic, and soothed with lullabys, like a muling child? |
39701 | And I said, whose tomb is this? |
39701 | And all the conquests which them high did rear Be they all dead, or shall again appear? |
39701 | And did he not find thee needy, and hath he not enriched thee? |
39701 | And did he not find thee wandering in error, and hath he not guided thee into the truth? |
39701 | And who was the fair inmate?" |
39701 | Answer me positively, are not these things my right?" |
39701 | As they took their solitary way between the camp and the walls of Acre, Salaman ventured to inquire,"Whither goest thou, Elsiebede?" |
39701 | But by what means had she been conveyed from the retreat where she had so long dwelt content with his love, and happy in the caresses of her children? |
39701 | But how learnedst thou these things?" |
39701 | But must I leave thee here alone and unprotected?" |
39701 | But wherefore didst thou detain thy unworthy Beauclerk, is there not kingdom or duchy for him?" |
39701 | By what power is our Earth carried around the Sun?" |
39701 | By what right dost thou interfere between me and my bride?" |
39701 | Can Christian lore, can patriot''s zeal, Can love of blessed charity? |
39701 | Can piety the discord heal, Or stanch the death- feud''s enmity? |
39701 | Canst thou point me to the home of this fair damsel?" |
39701 | Comes he direct from the Holy Land?" |
39701 | Could a permanent christian kingdom be founded in Palestine? |
39701 | Did he not commission the sword to cut off the Canaanites, the Midianites, the Assyrians, and those who vexed his people in every age? |
39701 | Did not he find thee an orphan, and hath he not taken care of thee? |
39701 | Doth not the heart seek happiness as the flower seeks the light? |
39701 | Dwells she in the trembling tent of age? |
39701 | E''en to be happy is a dangerous thing?" |
39701 | For what saith the proverb? |
39701 | For whose pleasure and privacy was the labyrinth contrived? |
39701 | Had her indignant father returned from the Holy Land, and immured her in the dungeons of Clifford castle to hide her shame? |
39701 | Had she made her couch in the cold, dark grave? |
39701 | Has he no song for the ear of his lady?" |
39701 | Has the Jew resolved to do penance for his sins?" |
39701 | Has the Saviour, for my sins, denied me at last the sight of his holy sepulchre?" |
39701 | Has the same blow that still keeps the blood dancing in the brain of thy brother, paralyzed thy hand?" |
39701 | Hast news of my chancellor?" |
39701 | Hast thou Sir Isumbras seen? |
39701 | Have I then been the dupe, as well as the prey of my designing brothers?" |
39701 | Have they discovered the long- sought principle? |
39701 | How canst thou sustain such assertions?" |
39701 | How couldst thou listen to such vain parlance?" |
39701 | How have they sped in their encounters with the Infidels?" |
39701 | How is this?" |
39701 | How meanest thou, silly child?" |
39701 | I would fain learn something of this strange people,"said Adela;"do they observe the rites of our church?" |
39701 | Is it not by the hand of man he brings retribution upon the guilty? |
39701 | Is it not so?" |
39701 | Is there no gift in the power of Adela which Ingulfus would accept?" |
39701 | Knowest thou not he is leagued with thy father''s foes? |
39701 | Knowest thou not the proverb? |
39701 | Life, what had it been to him? |
39701 | Longsword, shamest thou the blood of the Plantagenet by counselling with women and leeches? |
39701 | Loves he aught else? |
39701 | One of his knights, fit follower of such a master, inquired as he rejoined his troop,"What has my lord Guy de Montfort done?" |
39701 | Or had some other hand dared to blot out the life so dear to him? |
39701 | Remains there none of Lord Walter''s kin to offer welcome or charity in our lady''s name?" |
39701 | Rememberest thou not the words of the confessor, that the pomps and vanities of the world lead the soul astray?" |
39701 | Shall I then leave her under the power of the tyrant? |
39701 | Shall our beautiful Palermo be defiled by strangers? |
39701 | Should Damascus become an appanage of Jerusalem, a fief of the French crown, or a German principality? |
39701 | Tears shone in Berengaria''s eyes, and she added,"Why wilt thou misunderstand me? |
39701 | The philosopher remained silent for a moment, and then answered,"knowest thou the effect of the measures thou proposest?" |
39701 | Then the heralds rang out a shrill note upon the trumpets, expressive of the demand,"What shall be done with the false- hearted knave?" |
39701 | Then turning calmly to the knights,"Reginald,"said he,"I have granted thee many favors, what is thy object now? |
39701 | There was a battle-- there was a defeat-- there was a prisoner-- The Vicar of Christ, showed he mercy? |
39701 | Was it Woden the storm- throned, that thus with relentless fury pursued the Viking''s progeny,--despoilers of the Saxon race? |
39701 | Was she a wanderer and an outcast, with a bleeding heart and a blighted name? |
39701 | Was this tortuous path the road to a mortal habitation? |
39701 | What gambols art thou playing again in thy sleep? |
39701 | What hand had planted the rare exotic adjacent to the hawthorn and the sloe? |
39701 | What has this sceptre brought me? |
39701 | Where are thy guards, thy royal escort?--where thy maiden train, thy counsellors of state? |
39701 | Where be the battles, where the shield and spear? |
39701 | Where be the bold achievements done by some? |
39701 | Where is the antique glory now become, That while some wo nt in woman to appear? |
39701 | Where is the archbishop?" |
39701 | Which shall I choose for her, the yoke, or honor? |
39701 | Whom would she first delight to honor?" |
39701 | Why dost thou hesitate?" |
39701 | Why must I die without discovering the sublime agencies?" |
39701 | With instinctive fear, she clung tremblingly to the arm of her resolute dependent, whispering,"Whither dost thou lead me? |
39701 | Yet whence--""Is it not a miracle,"interrupted the philosopher, laughing,"more real than thy fancied transubstantiation?" |
39701 | and why under such convoy?" |
39701 | inquired Edward,"that hast so dexterously redeemed thy prince, and whither dost thou conduct me?" |
39701 | knave, where got''st thou the bauble? |
39701 | knows he of thy purpose?" |
39701 | of England?" |
39701 | of Joanna? |
39701 | oh canst thou not forgive?" |
39701 | or has the angel Azrael drawn around her silent couch the curtain of perpetual night?" |
39701 | said Eleanora,"and how hast thou wandered into this wild?" |
39701 | said he to Eva, lifting the boy tenderly from his knees,"why has the banished outlaw sought thy fair lips to plead his cause? |
39701 | said the philosopher, in an accent of despair,"why art thou so brief? |
39701 | shouted he, starting from his seat,"dost thou think to win my favor by bringing me the head of thy murdered lord? |
39701 | where is Becket, why comes not my friend and counsellor?" |
3821 | ''Dog,''cries Totila''s page,''wilt thou strike thy lord?'' |
3821 | ''Perjured boy, madman, betrayer of your race-- do you not see that the Roman plan is as always to destroy Goths by Goths? |
3821 | ''What then will you leave us?'' |
3821 | ''Why are you killing your kinsmen? |
3821 | ''Why do you tell us,''is said,''of nothing but the marriages, successions, wars, characters, of a few Royal Races? |
3821 | ( 1) Did they all go? |
3821 | ( 3) But were there not more causes than mere want, which sent them south? |
3821 | ( 4) But more, had they never heard of Rome? |
3821 | --the more inclined to ask,''Could it have been done better?'' |
3821 | 1688 after Christ? |
3821 | Am I not wiser, stronger, more virtuous, more beautiful than you? |
3821 | And all the fairy treasure-- what has become of it? |
3821 | And are we to suppose that the dialects did not alter during the long journeyings through many nations? |
3821 | And do we wonder if we are surpassed in power, by an enemy who surpasses us in decency? |
3821 | And how, pray, can we talk of the inevitable, in the face of that one miserable fact of human folly, whether of ignorance or of passion, folly still? |
3821 | And if such be the history of not one nation only, but of the average, how, I ask, are we to make calculations about such a species as man? |
3821 | And now, gentlemen, was this vast campaign fought without a general? |
3821 | And on the third day they came to the place which is called Hersfelt( the hart''s down? |
3821 | And that that was their answer to his three and thirty years of unexampled religious liberty? |
3821 | And what became of the masses all the while? |
3821 | And what had they gained by changing Dietrich for Justinian? |
3821 | And what was his end? |
3821 | And what was left? |
3821 | And what was the original sin of them? |
3821 | And who could that be, if not the Pope of Rome? |
3821 | And who was St. Boniface? |
3821 | And who were these Franks, the ancestors of that magnificent, but profligate aristocracy whose destruction our grandfathers beheld in 1793? |
3821 | And why did he enter into secret negotiations with the Franks to come and invade Italy? |
3821 | And why did not Hadrian''s wall keep them back? |
3821 | And why did the Teutons_ not_ do it? |
3821 | And why did these Goths perish, in spite of all their valour and patriotism, at the hands of mercenaries? |
3821 | And why should he not undertake this great task? |
3821 | And why when he died, did the Goths lose all plan, and wander wildly up Italy, and out into Spain? |
3821 | And why? |
3821 | And why? |
3821 | And why? |
3821 | Are they powerless? |
3821 | Are you aware that those who carelessly do so, blink the whole of the world- old arguments between necessity and free- will? |
3821 | As to Theodoric himself, Kingsley surely knew his real status, for he says:''Why did he not set himself up as Caesar of Rome? |
3821 | Be it so: but in what sense are the laws of matter inevitable? |
3821 | But has he not overstated his case on some points? |
3821 | But if they had not done what they did, where would have been now our gospel, and our Bible? |
3821 | But is the Frank''s perfidy as blameable as ours? |
3821 | But one would hardly blame them for that, surely? |
3821 | But were not these poor monks heroes? |
3821 | But what has this to do with what I said at first, as to the masses having no history? |
3821 | But what of the Christian who does the same? |
3821 | Can we devise any better method of doing it? |
3821 | Christ was coming to put an end to all these horrors: but why did he delay his coming? |
3821 | Could they see the saint, and make it up with him somewhat? |
3821 | Did he felicitate himself like a simple Teuton, on the wonderful learning and eloquence of his Greek- Roman secretary? |
3821 | Did no one marshal them in that impregnable convex front, from the Euxine to the North Sea? |
3821 | Do you not see it? |
3821 | Do you not see the effect of that new thought? |
3821 | Does not Dr. Latham''s theory proceed too much on an assumption that the Sclavonians dispossest the Teutons by force? |
3821 | Each envies the youth before him, each cries-- Why had I not the luck to enter first? |
3821 | Else why did he not set himself up as Caesar of Rome? |
3821 | Even in the seemingly most uniform and universal law, where do we find the inevitable or the irresistible? |
3821 | For no dates are given, and how can they be? |
3821 | For out of those monasteries sprang-- what did not spring? |
3821 | For what is all human invention, but the transcending and conquering one natural law by another? |
3821 | Had the peculiar restlessness of the race nothing to do with it? |
3821 | Had they destroyed Rome sooner, what would not they have lost? |
3821 | Has not Italy proved it likewise, for centuries past? |
3821 | Have they even been always a minority, and not at times a terrible majority, doing each that which was right in the sight of his own eyes? |
3821 | Have they had no influence on History? |
3821 | Have they spoilt it themselves? |
3821 | Have they thrown it away in their quarrel? |
3821 | He says that the letters in which he hoped for the liberty of Rome were forged; how could he hope for the impossible? |
3821 | Hold what natural science teaches? |
3821 | How can a man draw a picture of that which has no shape; or tell the order of absolute disorder? |
3821 | How had these things escaped the Goths forty years before? |
3821 | How is it that these liberties have been lost throughout almost all Europe? |
3821 | If a Hun or a Gepid deceives you, what wonder? |
3821 | If it was, why should not wisdom be justified of all her children? |
3821 | If so, may they not have commenced before the different Teutonic dialects were as distinct as they were in the historic period? |
3821 | If such were the morals of the Empire, what was its political state? |
3821 | If the Church derived her rights from the extinct Roman Caesars, how could the Teuton conquerors interfere with those rights? |
3821 | If the once populous Campagna of Rome be now uninhabitable from malaria, what must it have been in Paul Warnefrid''s time? |
3821 | If there was, as M. Thierry truly says, another nature struggling within him-- is there not such in every man? |
3821 | If these were the old Teutonic laws, this the old Teutonic liberty, the respect for man as man, for woman as woman, whence came the opposite element? |
3821 | In return, Agilwulf had restored the church- property which he had plundered, had reinstated the bishops; and why did not all go well? |
3821 | Is it a myth, a falsehood? |
3821 | Is it not a strange story? |
3821 | Is it not true? |
3821 | Is it possible that the Thervings and Grutungs could have retained the same tongue on the Danube, as their forefathers spoke in their native land? |
3821 | Is it the language of prophecy as well as of personal experience?'' |
3821 | Is the Alman''s drunkenness, or the Alan''s rapacity, as damnable as a Christian''s? |
3821 | Is there not in nature a perpetual competition of law against law, force against force, producing the most endless and unexpected variety of results? |
3821 | It is childish to repeat that, when the question is, was it right then-- or, at least, as right as was possible then? |
3821 | Justified of her children she may be, after we have settled which are to be her children and which not: but of all her children? |
3821 | King over them there in Italy? |
3821 | Many a gem which hangs now on an English lady''s wrist saw Alaric sack Rome-- and saw before and since-- What not? |
3821 | May I be permitted to enlarge somewhat on this topic? |
3821 | Must not that wild fighting Bertrand have gone away from that place a wiser and a better man? |
3821 | Native courage and strength? |
3821 | Need the migrations necessary for this theory have been of''unparalleled magnitude and rapidity''? |
3821 | No one guide them to the two great strategic centres, of the Black Forest and Trieste? |
3821 | One would not blame them as selfish and sordid if they had gone out on a commercial speculation? |
3821 | People began to question the virtues of the bones, and to ask, We can believe that the bones may have worked miracles for good men, but for bad men? |
3821 | Potentially, or actually? |
3821 | Rome taken? |
3821 | Should I have altered this? |
3821 | So it should be( or why was man created a rational being?) |
3821 | Taking one''s stand at Rome, and looking toward the north, what does one see for nearly one hundred years? |
3821 | The Bible was not forbidden to the laity till centuries afterwards-- and forbidden then, why? |
3821 | The Goths inside, tired of the slow Vitigis, send out to the great Belisarius, Will he be their king? |
3821 | The Ostrogoths( East- goths) lay from the Volga to the Borysthenes, the Visigoths( West- goths?) |
3821 | The crown of philosophy? |
3821 | The law of gravity is immutable enough: but do all stones inevitably fall to the ground? |
3821 | The more one studies the facts, the less one is inclined to ask,''Why was it not done better?'' |
3821 | Then, why should he have adopted this High- German name for the great Theodoric, and why should he speak of Attila too as Etzel? |
3821 | They can face flesh and blood: but who can face the quite infinite terrors of an unseen world? |
3821 | Unanimity? |
3821 | Was it needed then-- or, at least, the nearest thing to that which was needed? |
3821 | Was it not true? |
3821 | Was it that the awe of the place, the prestige of the Roman name, cowed him? |
3821 | Was not that wise? |
3821 | Was not the surplus population driven off by famine toward warmer and more hopeful climes? |
3821 | Was that not wise? |
3821 | Was that not wise? |
3821 | Was there a stain on Odoacer from his early connexion with Attila? |
3821 | Were there no causes sufficient to excite so desperate a resolve? |
3821 | Were they not doing the same in pre- historic times, by fits and starts, no doubt with periods of excitement, periods of collapse and rest? |
3821 | What better for them than to seek in convents that peace which this world could not give? |
3821 | What could a man do more meritorious in the eyes of the Pope? |
3821 | What did it all mean? |
3821 | What did they do but hand her over to Frankish tyrants instead? |
3821 | What had become of all the wealth of Rome? |
3821 | What is become, gentlemen, of the treasures of Rome? |
3821 | What matter to Burgunds and Herules who was who, provided they had any thing to be plundered of? |
3821 | What of all the pomp and glory, the spoils of the world, the millions of inhabitants? |
3821 | What put these Germanic peoples on going South? |
3821 | What terms would he take? |
3821 | What then were the causes of the Papal hatred of a race who were good and devout Catholics for the last 200 years of their rule? |
3821 | What then were the causes of the success of the Teutons? |
3821 | What was the essential fault of these Lombard laws-- indeed of all the Teutonic codes? |
3821 | What was there left for him now that he could not do? |
3821 | What will become of the forest children, unless some kind saint or hermit comes among them, to bind them in the holy bonds of brotherhood and law? |
3821 | What woke him from his dream? |
3821 | What would have been the fate of a force landed at the mouth of the Weser on the north, or at the mouth of the Dnieper at the west? |
3821 | What would not the world have lost? |
3821 | What, indeed, was not left to slaves? |
3821 | What, then, was the cause of their success? |
3821 | Where are they all now? |
3821 | Where could they find it, save at Rome? |
3821 | Where is all their wealth gone, they who set out to fight for you? |
3821 | Which was the child of wisdom, I ask again? |
3821 | Who can forget that funeral on the 28th Jan., 1875, and the large sad throng that gathered round his grave? |
3821 | Who can tell? |
3821 | Who can tell? |
3821 | Who could stand against them? |
3821 | Who will tell us why they have arisen when they did, and why they did what they did, and nothing else? |
3821 | Who would deny that man the name of saint? |
3821 | Why are these Lombards still the most wicked of men? |
3821 | Why did he always consider himself as son- in- arms, and quasi- vassal of the Caesar of Constantinople?'' |
3821 | Why did he always consider himself as son- in- arms, and quasi- vassal, of the Caesar of Constantinople? |
3821 | Why did he not set up as king of Italy? |
3821 | Why have you made so many widows? |
3821 | Why not? |
3821 | Why not? |
3821 | Why was Alaric more fortunate? |
3821 | Why, then, if on a religious one? |
3821 | Would not the Moeso- Gothic of Ulfilas have been all but unintelligible to the Goth who, upon the old theory, remained in Gothland of Sweden? |
3821 | Would not the end justify the means? |
3821 | Would not this theory agree at once tolerably with the old traditions and with Dr. Latham''s new facts? |
3821 | Would not those two facts( even the belief that they were facts) have been enough to drive many a wise man mad? |
3821 | You know the Nibelungen Lied? |
3821 | You know what an echellon means? |
3821 | You may ask, however, how these monasteries became so powerful, if they were merely refuges for the weak? |
3821 | You recollect Rosamund his Gepid bride? |
3821 | and that in spite of all their sins, the hosts of our forefathers were the hosts of God? |
3821 | contemporaneous), really''unrepresented in any tradition''? |
3821 | have the Trolls flown away with it, to the fairy land beyond the Eastern mountains? |
3821 | have the cunningest hidden it? |
3821 | of the men, slaves the greater part of them, if not all, who tilled the soil, and ground the corn-- for man must have eaten, then as now? |
3821 | or have the Trolls bewitched it? |
3821 | so utterly unlike anything which we see now;--so utterly unlike anything which we ought to see now? |
3821 | who can tell? |
3821 | { 109} Had he actually taken the name of Theodoric, Theuderic, Dietrich, which signifies much the same thing as''King of nations''? |
7373 | '';_ for''what is the road to?'' |
7373 | ''Anything else?'' |
7373 | ''Can not you see for yourself that it is open?'' |
7373 | ''Can you in an hour,''said I,''give me a meal to my order, then a bed, though it is early day?'' |
7373 | ''How many Jews have you in your town?'' |
7373 | ''Men?'' |
7373 | ''The Earth?'' |
7373 | ''The poor in our great towns, Sir Charles''( for the Learned Man had been made a Baronet),''the condition, I say, of the-- Don''t I feel a draught?'' |
7373 | ''Tourist- e?'' |
7373 | ''What do you mean?'' |
7373 | ''What have you?'' |
7373 | ''Why then?'' |
7373 | ''Yes, of course,''I said,''but what is its name?'' |
7373 | ''_ meaning''Dare you ask fivepence?'' |
7373 | --Where was I? |
7373 | ...?... |
7373 | And I say to them, what about the distribution of the ownership of the concentrated means of production? |
7373 | And did you see nothing of Piacenza? |
7373 | And how far on was that? |
7373 | And if you are so worn- out and bereft of all emotions, how can you tell a story? |
7373 | And it rained all the time, and there was mud? |
7373 | And so I was forced to consider and to be anxious, for how would this money hold out? |
7373 | And was it not his loneliness that enabled him to see it? |
7373 | And what art or songs have you? |
7373 | And what do you think he did at that? |
7373 | And what is there else but pleasure, and to what else does beauty move on? |
7373 | And what of that? |
7373 | And when you have arrested him, can you do more than let him go without proof, on his own word? |
7373 | And where are you?'' |
7373 | And who is a penny the better for it? |
7373 | And why do you suppose I got it? |
7373 | And why( you will say) is all this put by itself in what Anglo- Saxons call a Foreword, but gentlemen a Preface? |
7373 | And, by the way, would you like to know why universities suffer from this curse of nervous disease? |
7373 | And, tell me-- what can it profit you to know these geographical details? |
7373 | As_ La Croix_ said in a famous leading article:_''La Presse? |
7373 | But Mr_( deleted by the Censor)_ does not think so? |
7373 | But all that does not excuse an intolerable prolixity? |
7373 | But all this is by the way; the point is, why was the eight francs and ten centimes of such importance just there and then? |
7373 | But could it be done? |
7373 | But do you intend to tell us nothing of Rome? |
7373 | But perhaps you have been reading little brown books on Evolution, and you do n''t believe in Catastrophes, or Climaxes, or Definitions? |
7373 | But what is it? |
7373 | But what rule governs all this? |
7373 | But why did_ this_ tenth milestone from_ this_ Roman town keep its name? |
7373 | But, frankly, do you suppose I came all this way over so many hills to talk economics? |
7373 | Can the sun be said truly to rise or set, and is there any exact meaning in the phrase,''Done to a turn''as applied to omelettes? |
7373 | Che sono forestiere? |
7373 | Che vole? |
7373 | Che? |
7373 | Come, let me do so... Where are you? |
7373 | Could you give me a little red wine?'' |
7373 | Could you give me a little red wine?'' |
7373 | Did something in my accent suggest wealth? |
7373 | Did you suppose that I thought it was called Decimo because the people had ten toes? |
7373 | Did you think I missed you, hiding and lurking there?) |
7373 | Do I make myself clear? |
7373 | Do you follow? |
7373 | Do you know those books and stories in which parts of the dialogues often have no words at all? |
7373 | Do you want it made plainer than that? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | For who, having noise around him, can strike the table with pleasure at reading the Misanthrope, or in mere thirst or in fatigue praise Chinon wine? |
7373 | Had he opinions? |
7373 | Have you a priest in Calestano, and does he know Latin?'' |
7373 | Have you not read in books how men when they see even divine visions are terrified? |
7373 | Have you seen anything moving on the heights?'' |
7373 | He said,''What do you want?'' |
7373 | How came I at such an hour on foot? |
7373 | How can a man draw pain in the foot and knee? |
7373 | How does their opinion flourish?'' |
7373 | How many more interior brackets are we to have? |
7373 | How much more interesting must Old Lodi be which is the mothertown of Lodi?'' |
7373 | How much more is it the duty of a Christian man to pity the rich who can not ever get into prison? |
7373 | How then would you write such a book if you had the writing of it? |
7373 | How''German''? |
7373 | I approached a priest and said to him:_''Pater, quando vel a quella hora e la prossimma Missa? |
7373 | I caught him up, and, doubting much whether he would understand a word, I said to him repeatedly--_''La granda via? |
7373 | I know that; but what am I to do? |
7373 | I put my head in at the door and said--''Am I in Switzerland?'' |
7373 | I said''_ Molinar_?'''' |
7373 | I said,''Have you any beans?'' |
7373 | I should very much like to know what those who have an answer to everything can say about the food requisite to breakfast? |
7373 | I spoke to the woman, and pointing at the tin cans, said--''Is this what you call open wine?'' |
7373 | I thought you said you were not going to talk economics? |
7373 | I wonder what the people are paid for it? |
7373 | II san Gottardo? |
7373 | If it did, I think there is a little question on''why should habit turn sacred?'' |
7373 | In the name of all decent, common, and homely things, why not begin and have done with it? |
7373 | Indeed? |
7373 | Is it not art? |
7373 | Is it not much wiser to arrest such a man? |
7373 | Is this algebra? |
7373 | It is worth eight''scutcheons the hectolitre, that is, eight sols the litre; what do I say? |
7373 | It is years ago now... Michael, what are those little things swarming up and down all over it?'' |
7373 | Just as I neared them, hobbling, I met a man driving two cows, and said to him the word,''Guest- house?'' |
7373 | La via a Piacenza? |
7373 | May he not cut off it, as his due, twenty- five miserable little miles in the train?'' |
7373 | Non se vede che non parlar vestra lingua? |
7373 | Now, why did he say this and grin happily like a gargoyle appeased? |
7373 | Only dots and dashes and asterisks and interrogations? |
7373 | Pray are we to have any more of that fine writing? |
7373 | Pray, sir, will you not look at other maps for a moment?'' |
7373 | Shall I detail all that afternoon? |
7373 | Shall a man march through Europe dragging an artist on a cord? |
7373 | Shall an artist write a book? |
7373 | She was moreover not exactly of- what shall I say? |
7373 | So I, very narrowly watching him out of half- closed eyes, held up my five fingers interrogatively, and said,_''Cinquante? |
7373 | So you think one can say a plain thing in a plain way? |
7373 | Tell me at least one thing; did you see the Coliseum? |
7373 | Tell me, Lector, had this man any adventures? |
7373 | Tell me, do you believe in the peak of the Matterhorn, and have you doubts on the points of needles? |
7373 | Tell me, why is not every place ten miles out of a Roman town called by such a name? |
7373 | The woman as sulkily said to me, not looking me in the eyes--''How much will you pay?'' |
7373 | Then I added,''Can you make omelettes?'' |
7373 | Then I gave a lira to the molinar, and to his companion on stilts 50 c., who said,''What is this for?'' |
7373 | Then I said to the molinar,_''Quanta? |
7373 | Then I said,_''Soixante Dix? |
7373 | Then I thought,''Shall I take a favour from such a man?'' |
7373 | Then tell me, how would you treat of common things? |
7373 | Then the soldiers began calling out to him singly,''Where are you off to, Father, with that battery?'' |
7373 | Then they say to me, what about the concentration of the means of production? |
7373 | Then they talked a great deal together, while I shouted,_''Quid vis? |
7373 | Then what emotions have you had, unimprisonable rich; or what do you know of active living and of adventure? |
7373 | Then you will say, if I felt all this, why do I draw it, and put it in my book, seeing that my drawings are only for fun? |
7373 | Then, to make conversation, I said,_''Diaconus es? |
7373 | This comfort I ascribe to four causes( just above you will find it written that I could not tell why this should be so, but what of that? |
7373 | Thus he told me the name for a knife was_ cultello;_ for a room,_ camera par domire;_ for''what is it called?'' |
7373 | Thus she would say:''Perhaps the joint would taste better if it were carved on the table; or do the gentlemen prefer it carved aside?'' |
7373 | To the man who had brought me I gave 50 c., and so innocent and good are these people that he said_''Pourquoi? |
7373 | To what emotion shall I compare this astonishment? |
7373 | Tu ris? |
7373 | Vis ne me assassinare? |
7373 | Visne mi dare traductionem in istam linguam Toscanam non nullorum verborum? |
7373 | Was it in so small a space that all the legends of one''s childhood were acted? |
7373 | Was the defence of the bridge against so neighbouring and petty an alliance? |
7373 | Well, it was a short play and modern, was it not? |
7373 | What I want to know is, why a duchess? |
7373 | What about him? |
7373 | What about that great work on The National Debt? |
7373 | What about that little lyric on Winchelsea that you thought of writing six years ago? |
7373 | What about the Brigand of Radicofani of whom you spoke in Lorraine, and of whom I am waiting to hear? |
7373 | What could prevent me? |
7373 | What did I at Lodi Vecchio? |
7373 | What did the old sailor say to the young fool? |
7373 | What do you think, then, was the consequence? |
7373 | What do you turn out, you higglers and sticklers? |
7373 | What else is Venice? |
7373 | What is all this? |
7373 | What is it, do you think, that causes the return? |
7373 | What is ninety miles? |
7373 | What is that in a Book? |
7373 | What is that in the mind which, after( it may be) a slight disappointment or a petty accident, causes it to suffer on the scale of grave things? |
7373 | What is the Grand Climacteric? |
7373 | What is the meaning of that?'' |
7373 | What rhodomontade and pedantry is this talk about the shape of a window? |
7373 | What road could it be? |
7373 | What was it I saw? |
7373 | What will you do for fame? |
7373 | Where are they? |
7373 | Where could such a road lead, and why did it follow right along the highest edge of the mountains? |
7373 | Where had I come from? |
7373 | Where( if I was honest) had I intended to sleep? |
7373 | Who began it? |
7373 | Who but Germans would so feel the mystery of the hills, and so fit their town to the mountains? |
7373 | Who but Germans would so preserve-- would so rebuild the past? |
7373 | Who can not live on four francs a day? |
7373 | Who does not need for either of these perfect things Recollection, a variety of according conditions, and a certain easy Plenitude of the Mind? |
7373 | Who else can give benedictions if people can not when they are on pilgrimage? |
7373 | Who knows? |
7373 | Who would change( says Aristippus of Pslinthon) the moon and all the stars for so much wine as can be held in the cup of a bottle upturned? |
7373 | Why are the few lines still in your head and not on paper? |
7373 | Why could it not be crossed? |
7373 | Why do you use phrases like_''possible exception''?_ AUCTOR. |
7373 | Why not? |
7373 | Why on earth did you write this book? |
7373 | Why should I? |
7373 | Why should the less gracious part of a pilgrimage be specially remembered? |
7373 | Why was I there? |
7373 | Why was the guardian a duchess? |
7373 | Why your benediction? |
7373 | Why, what was the next point in the pilgrimage that was even tolerably noteworthy? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | You follow? |
7373 | You think that, do you? |
7373 | You would simply say what you had to say? |
7373 | _''come si chiama? |
7373 | _''quella e la via a...? |
7373 | _( For who but critics could complain Of''riding''in a railway train?) |
7373 | and''Why carry cold water to Commercy? |
7373 | eh? |
7373 | my jolly Lector? |
7373 | or was he naturally kindly? |
7373 | said the Padre Eterno, a little puzzled...''The Earth? |
7373 | sneered the Devil,''are you an anti- vaccinationist as well? |
7373 | without a ghost of an idea what you are talking about, do you know what is meant by the god? |
20893 | Apparently, have the pupils been shown_ how_ to study, i.e., how to prepare the work most advantageously? |
20893 | Are current political events employed to illustrate the course? |
20893 | Are dates and other mere facts properly subordinated to the real ideas for which they stand? |
20893 | Are definite unifying questions given out for guidance of pupils in preparing for the review lesson? |
20893 | Are details presented in a vivid manner, with many gripping tentacles, or are they set forth in bold, uninteresting forms only? |
20893 | Are formal debates and informal discussions ever permitted in the class? |
20893 | Are generalizations and principles of human thought, feeling, and conduct deduced from the study? |
20893 | Are governmental forms and practices brought into the school work? |
20893 | Are important generalizations formed, and valid principles deduced? |
20893 | Are maps ever drawn, roughly, on the blackboards by either teacher or pupils? |
20893 | Are mock elections and other civic procedures allowed? |
20893 | Are pupils encouraged to beautify the room with significant objects of historical interest? |
20893 | Are pupils encouraged to follow a definite daily schedule in studying their lessons? |
20893 | Are pupils encouraged to outline the lesson? |
20893 | Are pupils expected to present a connected account of the topics studied and to do this in a clear, forceful, logical manner? |
20893 | Are pupils in the classes observed expected to think for themselves? |
20893 | Are questions clear, concrete, and definite? |
20893 | Are review questions of the kind that will confront the pupils in real life? |
20893 | Are sittings arranged in fixed and regular forms, or is it possible for the class to gather about the teacher''s chair in a"social"group? |
20893 | Are students constantly seeking for"causes"of the historical events? |
20893 | Are students encouraged and expected to_ trace causes_ through the various sequences of effects? |
20893 | Are students expected to make use of outline maps? |
20893 | Are students_ required_ to seek for causes back of the events? |
20893 | Are such comments favorable or unfavorable? |
20893 | Are such interpretative means employed with sufficient frequency, completeness, variety, and clearness? |
20893 | Are such modifications somewhat common and important? |
20893 | Are the details intimately fused or correlated? |
20893 | Are the maps made during given recitation periods under the supervision of the teacher, or at the convenience of the students? |
20893 | Are the salient points of the lesson collected and tabulated as the lesson proceeds? |
20893 | Are the textbook facts remembered largely as words, or do the students really enter into the spirit and significance of them? |
20893 | Are the walls adorned with historical pictures or other historical materials? |
20893 | Are the"five formal steps"followed? |
20893 | Are there any criticisms to be made respecting any of the above definitions? |
20893 | Are there any of the units mentioned that ought to be used sparingly, if at all? |
20893 | Are there atlases, globes, and geographical dictionaries at hand? |
20893 | Are there good wall maps in the room? |
20893 | Are there mock elections, court trials, debates? |
20893 | Are there reference books of common use? |
20893 | Are there sufficient good blackboards? |
20893 | Are they advised to use notebooks? |
20893 | Are they encouraged to express their personal reactions to the facts presented? |
20893 | Are they encouraged to make personal notes on the margin of the textbook pages? |
20893 | Are they shown how to annotate? |
20893 | Are visits with the class made to places and institutions of historic interest? |
20893 | Are wall maps used frequently? |
20893 | Are you satisfied that a taste for historical reading is being developed in the pupils? |
20893 | Can she tell a tale simply and pleasingly? |
20893 | Can you give an illustration of its notable operation? |
20893 | Can you give an illustration of the complete modification of history because of"sentimental interests"? |
20893 | Can you name any other"values"that should be included in the study of history? |
20893 | Can you name other factors that would affect the answer? |
20893 | Can you suggest other items under each group of values? |
20893 | Can you suggest ways and means of making the study- lesson more beneficial? |
20893 | Cheyney, E. P._ What is History?_ History Teachers''Magazine, Dec., 1910, p. 75 ff. |
20893 | Could every high school teacher of history make effective use of the material you mention? |
20893 | Did pupils outline the lesson and then talk from their outlines? |
20893 | Did pupils rise and recite by topic? |
20893 | Do pupils comment on the day''s work as they pass out? |
20893 | Do pupils leave the room with faces aglow and minds keyed to earnest thought, or do they seem to go as if freed from a prison? |
20893 | Do pupils make comparisons, judgments, reactions? |
20893 | Do pupils seem merely to try to"learn the text"or really to comprehend the spirit? |
20893 | Do pupils show by their attitude, facial expression, and responsiveness that they are satisfied with the recitation as it progresses? |
20893 | Do the aspects mentioned exhaust the categories? |
20893 | Do the pupils coöperate as a team-- each seeking to contribute his portion freely and all aiming to attain a definite goal? |
20893 | Do the pupils give evidence of having had previous historical training in the high school? |
20893 | Do the students devote much time to map- making? |
20893 | Do the teachers seek to get back of the records of events and to discover the motives, ideas, and ideals that produced those events? |
20893 | Do they merely"color"the map, or do they fill in all important geographical and historical items? |
20893 | Do you advise this? |
20893 | Do you approve of such a period as a regular feature of the course? |
20893 | Do you approve of such study? |
20893 | Do you approve of the custom? |
20893 | Do you approve of this distribution of emphasis? |
20893 | Do you approve of this practice? |
20893 | Do you approve? |
20893 | Do you approve? |
20893 | Does history"inspire a love of truth"to any different degree than does any other subject of study? |
20893 | Does instruction in civics occupy a separate period or separate term in the history work? |
20893 | Does it contemplate that the pupils will devote"home study"to it? |
20893 | Does it include material outside the textbook? |
20893 | Does it raise real problems for the students to solve? |
20893 | Does it seem to you that students really do put themselves back in imagination and live through the period they are studying? |
20893 | Does it suggest too much or too little? |
20893 | Does it take individual differences sufficiently into account? |
20893 | Does rote memory or associative memory receive the emphasis? |
20893 | Does she ask other pupils to criticize? |
20893 | Does she grasp the subject in its unity and entirety? |
20893 | Does she have a fund of explanatory and illustrative material at her command? |
20893 | Does she inspire her pupils? |
20893 | Does she interrupt the pupils while they are reciting, or wait until they are through before commenting or criticizing? |
20893 | Does she know her pupils-- their interests, home life, and ambitions? |
20893 | Does she over- stress them? |
20893 | Does she possess a clear insight into character and life? |
20893 | Does she seem to be familiar with the local library and its equipment? |
20893 | Does she show distinctive qualities of leadership? |
20893 | Does the assignment correlate the textbook material with contemporary life and with the experiences of the pupils? |
20893 | Does the assignment include a"review"of previous work? |
20893 | Does the assignment stress dates too much? |
20893 | Does the assignment take into consideration the character of the work to be studied? |
20893 | Does the assignment vary with the stage of advancement of the students? |
20893 | Does the class come to"attention"as soon as the signal is given? |
20893 | Does the class enter the room in a happy, expectant state of mind, or does it appear as though it were about to undergo a disagreeable operation? |
20893 | Does the class feel that the recitation period is a delight or a bore? |
20893 | Does the class really appear to enjoy the work? |
20893 | Does the grade in which the subject is taught affect the answer? |
20893 | Does the recitation take on the spirit of comradeship, i.e., of courteous and familiar discussion? |
20893 | Does the school provide an adequate number of stereopticon slides? |
20893 | Does the study of history yield equal value in each of the groups mentioned? |
20893 | Does the teacher always seek to connect historical events with geography? |
20893 | Does the teacher correlate the history lesson with other subjects of study? |
20893 | Does the teacher correlate the history lesson with the life interests of the pupils? |
20893 | Does the teacher emphasize this element of history sufficiently? |
20893 | Does the teacher employ any but the large organizing questions while carrying on the review? |
20893 | Does the teacher encourage the weighing of motives and actions with reference to their righteousness? |
20893 | Does the teacher explain the institutions, forms, and procedures of the past by reference to their counterparts of to- day? |
20893 | Does the teacher impress this fact upon his pupils? |
20893 | Does the teacher inspire patriotism? |
20893 | Does the teacher make clear the significance of the_ Zeitgeist_, or spirit of the age, in shaping history? |
20893 | Does the teacher observed lay emphasis on details as ends in themselves or as means to other ends? |
20893 | Does the teacher observed stress dates sufficiently? |
20893 | Does the teacher praise discriminatingly the good efforts of the pupils? |
20893 | Does the teacher really guide and lead, or does she carry most of the burden? |
20893 | Does the teacher seek to bring out the æsthetic values of history? |
20893 | Does the teacher seek to have the students"be like"noble characters in history? |
20893 | Does the teacher seek to impress the importance of"physical elements"in shaping history? |
20893 | Does the teacher seem to be familiar with local history, local geography, and both local and general industrial, political, and social conditions? |
20893 | Does the teacher seem to enjoy clean, harmless jokes and amusing incidents with her pupils? |
20893 | Does the teacher so conduct the class work that the"practical values"of history are realized? |
20893 | Does the teacher sometimes require abstracts to be made in order to teach selection of important points? |
20893 | Does the teacher sufficiently stress the fact that all history is but the operation of cause and effect? |
20893 | Does the teacher''s desk contain copies of textbooks other than the text in chief? |
20893 | Does the work have balance and proportion? |
20893 | Does the work of the day seem to grow out of some previous discussions or conclusions? |
20893 | From your observations do the teachers consciously strive to realize these values in the class? |
20893 | From your observations do the teachers stress the events, or the motives, the ideals, and the ideas that gave rise to the events? |
20893 | Has she a sense of humor and of the fitness of things? |
20893 | Has she clearly prepared herself anew for the lesson in hand? |
20893 | Has she evidently had a good general training in literature, sociology, philosophy, biology, and psychology? |
20893 | Has she evidently had extensive and special training in history and political science? |
20893 | Has she had professional training in educational psychology, history of education, methods, and general administration of school work? |
20893 | Has she self- control, or does she, for example, use sarcasm and ridicule? |
20893 | Has she traveled? |
20893 | Has she winsome manners? |
20893 | Has the influence of religious emotions and aspirations been shown by the teacher in its full significance? |
20893 | Has the recitation period seemed short or has it been a long, tedious hour? |
20893 | Has the teacher the kind of personality you could wish for yourself? |
20893 | Has the work been such as to help pupils to think for themselves, to be accurate, to be resourceful, to develop the historical habit of mind? |
20893 | Has the work been such as to make pupils interested in pursuing the study of history for themselves? |
20893 | Have the pupils acquainted themselves with all unusual words and phrases used in the text? |
20893 | Have the pupils apparently attempted to correlate geography with the history? |
20893 | Have the pupils attacked the lesson because it was made to appear vital to the solution of some really interesting problem? |
20893 | Have the pupils evidently had a good elementary school training? |
20893 | Have the pupils really gotten behind the facts to the spirit of the movement? |
20893 | Have the pupils thoroughly prepared for the day''s recitation? |
20893 | Have the pupils"outlined the lesson"? |
20893 | Have they apparently confined themselves to the text, or have they gone outside this for material? |
20893 | Have they"studied the lesson together"? |
20893 | How can primary source material be employed by teachers of history in the elementary and high school? |
20893 | How can the larger historical works, biographies, and compendiums of history be used in the high school? |
20893 | How can the quasi- primary source material be used in elementary schools and high schools? |
20893 | How does history exert a religious influence on its students? |
20893 | How does she do so? |
20893 | How does the teacher busy herself between the change of classes? |
20893 | How does the teacher secure this effort? |
20893 | How is this administered so far as the study of history is concerned? |
20893 | How is this done? |
20893 | How many dates ought to be required in any course in history in the high school? |
20893 | How many recitation periods per week are allotted to the work in each course? |
20893 | How many such maps does each student make during the semester? |
20893 | How much attention is given to the study of notable characters in history? |
20893 | How much time is devoted to civics? |
20893 | How much time ought the assignment to require of a moderately good student? |
20893 | How much? |
20893 | How, in detail, can such influences be revealed to high school students so that their real significance can be recognized? |
20893 | How? |
20893 | How? |
20893 | If pupils are absent from school, is opportunity given for"making up work"? |
20893 | If pupils show they have not sought to prepare the lesson well, what procedure does the teacher follow? |
20893 | If so, how is it done? |
20893 | If so, how is it secured? |
20893 | If so, how is the period employed? |
20893 | If so, how is the period employed? |
20893 | If so, how is this accomplished? |
20893 | If so, how is this done? |
20893 | If so, how is this done? |
20893 | If so, how long is the time devoted to reviews? |
20893 | If so, how? |
20893 | If so, is the material well chosen and clearly indicated? |
20893 | If so, is the work done in class under the supervision of the teacher, or at the pleasure and convenience of the pupils? |
20893 | If so, is there decided merit in so doing? |
20893 | If so, was advantage gained thereby? |
20893 | If so, what is the character of these? |
20893 | If so, what should be the character of the work in history in the high school? |
20893 | If so, who indicates locations-- teacher or pupils? |
20893 | In how far is it feasible to supplement the textbook by means of definite class- readings? |
20893 | In the high school? |
20893 | In what ways is this true? |
20893 | Is a definite, clear summary of the significant points of the lesson made by the teacher at the close of the period? |
20893 | Is a special textbook used? |
20893 | Is adequate opportunity given pupils to develop literary expression? |
20893 | Is any use made of genealogical tables or historical charts? |
20893 | Is appeal made to more than one sense, i.e., audile, visual, tactile, muscular? |
20893 | Is effort made to get at the spirit of the historical fact, and to discover the motives that operated to produce it? |
20893 | Is effort made to get each pupil to develop a mental picture of the scene represented by the details? |
20893 | Is effort made to test the validity of such principles among social relationships of to- day? |
20893 | Is emphasis placed on information, drill, review, testing, or historical mindedness? |
20893 | Is emphasis placed too much on details or is effort made to get back of practices to discover the origin, development, and purpose of such practices? |
20893 | Is everybody"into the game"all the time? |
20893 | Is her voice melodious and pleasing? |
20893 | Is it advisable to conduct the class in person to near- by historic places? |
20893 | Is it correlated with the common life experiences of the pupils, and with the important contemporary institutions and interests of to- day? |
20893 | Is it made at the beginning of the recitation period or near the close? |
20893 | Is it practicable to have"special reports"from such sources made daily? |
20893 | Is it vitalized by visits to contemporary governmental institutions? |
20893 | Is it well that they should do so? |
20893 | Is it wise to drill on dates frequently? |
20893 | Is it wise to require the learning of some dates for the recitation period only with the expectation that they shall then fade from the mind? |
20893 | Is map drawing required? |
20893 | Is she accurate, positive, and confident? |
20893 | Is she herself thoroughly interested in the work of the day? |
20893 | Is she interested in current events? |
20893 | Is she sympathetic with her students? |
20893 | Is she tied to the textbook? |
20893 | Is such connection real or merely verbal? |
20893 | Is the aim of the day clearly set forth? |
20893 | Is the aim of the recitation kept constantly before the class? |
20893 | Is the assignment given sufficient attention by the teacher? |
20893 | Is the assignment made so clearly and definitely that_ all_ pupils thoroughly understand what it is? |
20893 | Is the assignment made with enthusiasm and interest, and does it thus at once strike a responsive chord in the pupils? |
20893 | Is the assignment too long for adequate preparation? |
20893 | Is the civics instruction closely correlated with history? |
20893 | Is the class encouraged to organize as a civic or political body? |
20893 | Is the fifth formal step( that of application) taken? |
20893 | Is the final review worth while, or can the same results be obtained by constant daily reviewing? |
20893 | Is the history lesson correlated with geography, English, foreign language study, science, manual training, and other school studies? |
20893 | Is the lesson enlivened by means of anecdotes, illustrations, stories, dramatic postures, readings, etc.? |
20893 | Is the pupil''s judgment here of any great weight? |
20893 | Is the review lesson conducted orally or in written form? |
20893 | Is the review lesson really a_ new_ view of the subject matter, or merely a going over the material a second time? |
20893 | Is the significance of national or race spirit in producing history sufficiently emphasized by the teacher? |
20893 | Is the stress laid on artistic effects in map drawing, or on a graphic presentation of the facts in their relations? |
20893 | Is the teacher alert, vivacious, enthusiastic? |
20893 | Is the teacher at all times a friend of the pupils? |
20893 | Is the work in Advanced Civics presented in a separate course, or is it correlated and interwoven with the work in U. S. History? |
20893 | Is there a stated time for"reviews"? |
20893 | Is there a stereopticon? |
20893 | Is there a"museum of history"in the room? |
20893 | Is there a"richness"of details or is there a dearth of them? |
20893 | Is there anything distinctive about the classrooms you have observed that suggests their special uses? |
20893 | Is there ever provided a period for"unassigned work"? |
20893 | Is there good discipline? |
20893 | Is there in the school a weekly period for consultation and advice? |
20893 | Is there interest and attention? |
20893 | Is there interest and enthusiasm in the review lesson? |
20893 | Is there one period per week devoted to"unassigned"or"unprepared"class work? |
20893 | Is there steady progress toward it? |
20893 | Is there supervised study in the school? |
20893 | Is there unexpected variety in the class procedure? |
20893 | Is this adequate? |
20893 | Is this done by the teacher, or by the pupils, or by both? |
20893 | Is this wise? |
20893 | Is this wise? |
20893 | Is this wise? |
20893 | Is use made of the dramatic powers of pupils to interpret and assimilate history? |
20893 | Judging from results, have the pupils made good use of their study periods? |
20893 | Just what is the secret of getting pupils to study their lessons? |
20893 | May several of the above- mentioned modes be employed simultaneously? |
20893 | Of what does thinking consist? |
20893 | On what phase of civics is emphasis laid-- national, state, or local? |
20893 | Ought biography to occupy a more important place in the high school course in history? |
20893 | Ought the teacher to strive consciously to use history to develop ethical ideas in pupils? |
20893 | Precisely how can a high school teacher make use of such a treatise as Montesquieu''s_ The Spirit of the Laws_? |
20893 | Precisely what phases of history would be included under each of the above aspects? |
20893 | Should appeal be made frequently to the emotional side of pupils''natures? |
20893 | Should class- readings be assigned on a page basis, or on a topical basis, or be left to individual selection and spontaneous effort? |
20893 | Should more than one textbook be used in a given course in history? |
20893 | Should the teacher expect all pupils to make frequent"special reports"? |
20893 | Smith, G._ Is History a Science?_ Amer. |
20893 | To what extent do the observations made by you coincide with your views respecting the use of primary source material? |
20893 | To what extent ought it to be employed? |
20893 | Under what circumstances should a date be learned? |
20893 | Were mnemonic devices used? |
20893 | What advantage is gained from the use of such units over what is gained in using other units? |
20893 | What advantages and disadvantages does each practice offer? |
20893 | What argument is there for placing Ancient History in the 12th grade, and making it an elective study? |
20893 | What arguments can you give for and against the practice? |
20893 | What can you say for and against this practice? |
20893 | What common idea runs through all the above definitions? |
20893 | What constitutes a good textbook in history for high school use? |
20893 | What courses are prescribed, and what are elective? |
20893 | What deduction follows from your answer? |
20893 | What evidences have you for your conclusions? |
20893 | What evidences have you of this? |
20893 | What evidences have you of this? |
20893 | What evidences have you of this? |
20893 | What evidences have you that such is the case? |
20893 | What evidences have you that this is so? |
20893 | What fact or event would you attempt to illustrate by each of these selections? |
20893 | What have been your observations respecting the employment of material of this kind? |
20893 | What is the basis for your selection? |
20893 | What is the basis of your conclusion? |
20893 | What is the best method of getting pupils to remember dates? |
20893 | What is the method used to do so? |
20893 | What is the nature of the supervision given in such a period? |
20893 | What is the plan of organization in the school observed? |
20893 | What is the real importance of stressing geography while studying history? |
20893 | What is the scope and aim of each of the courses Of history you have observed? |
20893 | What is the secret of attaining this ideal? |
20893 | What is the secret of it? |
20893 | What is the value of memorized dates? |
20893 | What justification is there in making the first year''s work consist of"Local History, Civics, and Industries"? |
20893 | What methods are used to bring about this permanent association of event and place in the minds of the pupils? |
20893 | What observations make you think as you do? |
20893 | What phases of such material do you plan to use? |
20893 | What place in the high school has such a book as Hill''s_ Liberty Documents_? |
20893 | What principle of selection ought to guide in the choice? |
20893 | What school authorities ought to select the texts to be used in the high school? |
20893 | What seems to be the purpose of the review lesson-- to drill, to test, or to organize the material in new connections? |
20893 | What texts are used in the high schools you have observed? |
20893 | What use should high school teachers and pupils make of material dealing with local history? |
20893 | What value has this? |
20893 | What value is there in so doing? |
20893 | What was the chief weakness of the recitation period? |
20893 | What was the mode of doing this? |
20893 | What would be your aim here? |
20893 | What would be your first and your second choices of texts in each of these six divisions, and why, specifically, would you make those choices? |
20893 | What"unit of location"is chiefly used? |
20893 | When the image is fashioned, is an effort made to discriminate and to abstract the dominant characteristics? |
20893 | Which is the better plan? |
20893 | Which of the above definitions appeals to you most? |
20893 | Which of the above mentioned aspects should receive the chief emphasis in the elementary school? |
20893 | Which of the above plans appeals to you most? |
20893 | Which one of the groups of"values"seems to you most important and hence should receive greatest emphasis? |
20893 | Which time- units are most commonly used in the classes you have observed? |
20893 | Which, to you, seems the best approach to the study of history? |
20893 | Who does it, the teacher or the pupils? |
20893 | Why so? |
20893 | Why would you select the"material"you have? |
20893 | Why? |
20893 | Why? |
20893 | Would such material lend itself to use in every recitation period? |
20893 | Would the constituency of the schools affect the answer? |
20893 | Would the course of history offered, the year in which it is taught, and the character of the school and its pupils, affect the answer? |
20893 | Would the year in which the course is offered in the high school affect the answer? |
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?" |
1397 | And if you die to prove that they make five, will that make them five? |
1397 | And in what respect are you more worthy than we? |
1397 | And what is the natural law? |
1397 | And what is this luminous doctrine that fears the light? 1397 And what right have you, more than we,"said the Imans,"to constitute yourselves the representatives of God? |
1397 | Be it so,replied the legislator;"but if they contradict each other, who shall reconcile them?" |
1397 | Besides, what addition or diminution will it make to our existence, to answer yes or no to all these chimeras? 1397 Besides, why resort forever to incomplete and insufficient miracles? |
1397 | By what right do you constitute yourselves mediators between God and us? |
1397 | Do you love pleasure and hate pain? |
1397 | Farther, what is believing, if believing influences no action? 1397 First, considering the diversity and opposition of the creeds to which you are attached, we ask on what motives you found your persuasion? |
1397 | How dare you speak of morals,answered the Christian priests,"you, whose chief lived in licentiousness and preached impurity? |
1397 | How prove you that? |
1397 | If error has its martyrs, what is the sure criterion of truth? 1397 If his justice,"replied the simple men,"is not like ours, by what rule are we to judge of it? |
1397 | If that law is sufficient, why has he given any other? 1397 If the evil spirit works miracles, what is the distinctive character of God? |
1397 | If the knowledge of these things is so necessary, why have we lived as well without it as those who have taken so much trouble concerning it? 1397 Is it because you pretend to have issued from the head of Brama, and the rest of the human race from the less noble parts of his body? |
1397 | Is it not, then, demonstrated that truth is not the object of your contests? 1397 Is it to you or to God I am to confess?" |
1397 | Is sugar sweet, and gall bitter? |
1397 | Now, tell us, is there a cavern in the centre of the earth, or inhabitants in the moon? |
1397 | We understand them not,said the simple men;"and how came this just God to give you this privilege over us? |
1397 | What, then, is your persuasion to prove, if it changes not the existence of things? 1397 Where is the proof of these orders?" |
1397 | Who is this man,cried all the groups,"who thus insults us without a cause? |
1397 | ''Who knoweth,''said he,''the spirit of a man that it goeth upwards? |
1397 | * And is not the testimony of our fathers and our gods as valid as that of the fathers and the gods of the West? |
1397 | * What is a people? |
1397 | *** Of what real good has been the commerce of India to the mass of the people? |
1397 | After reading this performance it will be asked, how it was possible in 1784 to have had an idea of what did not take place till the year 1790? |
1397 | Alas, if man is blind, shall his misfortune be also his crime? |
1397 | Am I not an unbeliever? |
1397 | And can not a merciful God correct without extermination? |
1397 | And can we ever expect the union of so many circumstances? |
1397 | And do the plants no longer bear fruit and seed? |
1397 | And for what reason are their books to be preferred to ours? |
1397 | And have we not an equal right to use them, in choosing what to believe and what to reject? |
1397 | And how can you hold any converse with a man of such bad connexions? |
1397 | And how did its first authors propagate it, when, being alone possessed of it, their own people were to them profane? |
1397 | And if it treats us with forbearance, what authority have you to be less indulgent? |
1397 | And if the first obstacles are overcome, why should the others be insurmountable? |
1397 | And if we should be deceived, how will that just God save us contrary to law, or condemn us on a law which we have not known?" |
1397 | And if, in the anguish of their miseries, they see not the remedies, is it the ignorance of God which is to blame, or their ignorance? |
1397 | And of what concern the subtleties with which their folly torments itself? |
1397 | And the large body said to the little one: Why are you separated from us? |
1397 | And those nations which call themselves polished, are they not the same that for the last three centuries have filled the earth with their injustice? |
1397 | And what action is influenced by believing, for instance, that the world is or is not eternal?" |
1397 | And what is doubt, replied he, that it should be a crime? |
1397 | And what, said I, are those mad animalculae, which destroy each other? |
1397 | And when, after the destruction of crops, famine has ensued, is it the vengeance of God which has produced it, or the mad fury of mortals? |
1397 | And who shall assure us that you are not in error yourselves, or that you will not lead us into error? |
1397 | And who will attest what no one has seen? |
1397 | And will you grant them privileges of belief to our detriment?" |
1397 | And yet, are not these the children of the prophets? |
1397 | And you call God just? |
1397 | And you, learned doctors, we call you to witness; is not this the unanimous testimony of all ancient monuments? |
1397 | And you, rebel and misguided nation, perceive you not that your new leaders are misleading you? |
1397 | And, moreover, why all these laws, and what is the object proposed by them?" |
1397 | And, what do you expect, oh vanquished, from useless groans? |
1397 | Answer, generation of falsehood and iniquity, hath God deranged the primitive and settled order of things which he himself assigned to nature? |
1397 | Are all the nations still in that age when nothing was seen upon the globe but brutal robbers and brutal slaves? |
1397 | Are courage and strength of body and mind virtues in the law of nature? |
1397 | Are idleness and sloth vices in the law of nature? |
1397 | Are ignorance and silliness common? |
1397 | Are men still in their forests, destitute of everything, ignorant, stupid and ferocious? |
1397 | Are not other laws beneficent likewise? |
1397 | Are not other laws evident? |
1397 | Are not other laws just? |
1397 | Are not other laws pacific? |
1397 | Are the fires of the sun extinct in the regions of space? |
1397 | Are the holy people of God less fortunate than the races of impiety? |
1397 | Are the rains and the dews suspended in the air? |
1397 | Are the social virtues numerous? |
1397 | Are the streams dried up? |
1397 | Are the talents and genius of governors turned to the benefit of the people? |
1397 | Are then the Vedes, the Chastres, and the Pourans inferior to the Bibles, the Zendavestas, and the Zadders? |
1397 | Are they his passions which, under a thousand forms, torment individuals and nations, or are they the passions of man? |
1397 | Are we not men of another race-- the noble and pure descendants of the conquerors of this empire? |
1397 | Are we to understand by filial love a passive and blind submission? |
1397 | Are you not men like us?" |
1397 | Are you not of our number? |
1397 | Art thou disposed to think that the human race degenerates? |
1397 | Before adopting this doctrine, rather than that, did you first compare? |
1397 | Besides, how can you answer for us? |
1397 | But being born ignorant, is not ignorance a law of nature? |
1397 | But can man individually acquire this knowledge necessary to his existence, and to the development of his faculties? |
1397 | But does not even this prove that our sensations can deceive us respecting the end of our preservation? |
1397 | But does not this necessity of preservation engender in individuals egotism, that is to say self- love? |
1397 | But if a man is born strong, has he a natural right to master the weak man? |
1397 | But is not society to man a state against nature? |
1397 | But, then, as our will is not sufficient to procure us those qualities, is it a crime to be destitute of them? |
1397 | Can intention be a merit or a crime? |
1397 | Can liberty be born from the bosom of despots? |
1397 | Can man feel otherwise than as he is affected? |
1397 | Can the teachers and followers of this religion be better classed than under the heads of knavery and credulity? |
1397 | Can we receive them without examining the evidence? |
1397 | Children of nature, how long will you walk in the paths of ignorance? |
1397 | Demands he devastation for homage, and conflagration for sacrifice? |
1397 | Did heaven reveal it to be kept a secret? |
1397 | Disciple of Truth, knowest thou that object? |
1397 | Do such orders exist in nature? |
1397 | Do the mountains withhold their springs? |
1397 | Do the seas no longer emit their vapors? |
1397 | Do thus perish then the works of men-- thus vanish empires and nations? |
1397 | Do you endure the ardor of the sun, and the torment of thirst, to reap the harvest or thrash the grain? |
1397 | Do you give growth to the plants of the earth, that you may waste them? |
1397 | Do you look upon opulence as a virtue? |
1397 | Do you not give them arbitrators? |
1397 | Do you see, said the Genius, those flames which spread over the earth, and do you comprehend their causes and effects? |
1397 | Do you suppose that all men hear equally, see equally, feel equally, have equal wants, and equal passions? |
1397 | Do you toil to furrow the field? |
1397 | Do you traverse deserts, like the merchant? |
1397 | Do you, like the shepherd, watch through the dews of the night? |
1397 | Does he not know, better than men, what befits his dignity?" |
1397 | Does it allow us to repair it by prayers, vows, offerings to God, fasting and mortifications? |
1397 | Does it enjoin forgiveness of injuries? |
1397 | Does it interdict even an inclination to rob? |
1397 | Does it prescribe humility as a virtue? |
1397 | Does it prescribe mildness and modesty? |
1397 | Does it prescribe to us, after having received a blow on one cheek, to hold out the other? |
1397 | Does not instinct alone teach the law of nature? |
1397 | Does not this overturn every idea of justice and of reason?" |
1397 | Does the law of nature consider as virtues faith and hope, which are often joined with charity? |
1397 | Does the law of nature forbid robbery? |
1397 | Does the law of nature forbid the use of certain kinds of meat, or of certain vegetables, on particular days, during certain seasons? |
1397 | Does the law of nature interdict absolutely the use of wine? |
1397 | Does the law of nature look on that absolute chastity so recommended in monastical institutions, as a virtue? |
1397 | Does the law of nature order sincerity? |
1397 | Does the law of nature prescribe continence? |
1397 | Does the law of nature prescribe probity? |
1397 | Does the law of nature prescribe to do good to others beyond the bounds of reason and measure? |
1397 | Dost thou not know that system of worship? |
1397 | Doth sanctity consist in destruction? |
1397 | Everything that tends to preserve, or to produce is therefore a good? |
1397 | From what you say, one would think that poverty was a vice? |
1397 | Give me some examples? |
1397 | Has it not hereby declared you all equal and free? |
1397 | Has not God endowed us, as well as him, with eyes, understanding, and reason? |
1397 | Hath God the heart of a mortal, with passions ever changing? |
1397 | Hath heaven denied to earth, and earth to its inhabitants, the blessings they formerly dispensed? |
1397 | Have not virtue and vice an object purely spiritual and abstracted from the senses? |
1397 | Have the Christians an exclusive right of setting up a blind faith? |
1397 | Have the factitious and conventional laws tended to that object and accomplished that aim? |
1397 | Have these laws, on the contrary, restrained the effort of man toward his own happiness? |
1397 | Have vice and virtue degrees of strength and intensity? |
1397 | Have we any thing equal to that? |
1397 | Have you privileges that we have not? |
1397 | Hence follows this other question: how came they to the knowledge of your fathers, who themselves had no other means than you to conceive them? |
1397 | How can we, by the law of nature, repair the evil we have done? |
1397 | How do our sensations deceive us? |
1397 | How do you divide the virtues? |
1397 | How do you prove this assertion? |
1397 | How does it forbid libertinism? |
1397 | How does it forbid murder? |
1397 | How does it prohibit gluttony? |
1397 | How does nature order man to preserve himself? |
1397 | How does the law of nature forbid ignorance? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe filial love? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe justice? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe science? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe sobriety? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe the practice of good and virtue, and forbid that of evil and vice? |
1397 | How is charity or the love of one''s neighbor a precept and application of it? |
1397 | How is drunkenness considered in the law of nature? |
1397 | How is equality a physical attribute of man? |
1397 | How is justice derived from these three attributes? |
1397 | How is liberty a physical attribute of man? |
1397 | How is property a physical attribute of man? |
1397 | How is this virtue prescribed to us? |
1397 | How long, with vain clamors, will he accuse Fate as the author of his calamities? |
1397 | I have said, with a sigh: is man then born but for sorrow and anguish? |
1397 | If God be good, can your penances please him? |
1397 | If God is good, will he be the author of your misery? |
1397 | If Heaven holds us guilty and in abhorrence, why does it impart to us the same blessings as to you? |
1397 | If all are equal in the civil state, where is our prerogative of birth, of inheritance? |
1397 | If all men are equal, where is our exclusive right to honors and to power? |
1397 | If all men are to be free, what becomes of our slaves, our vassals, our property? |
1397 | If at any time, in any place, individuals have ameliorated, why shall not the whole mass ameliorate? |
1397 | If guides, who teach mankind to see for themselves, mislead and deceive them, what can be expected from those who profess to keep them in darkness? |
1397 | If he attacks us, shall we not defend ourselves? |
1397 | If he is just, will he be the accomplice of your crimes? |
1397 | If he likes to believe without examination, must we therefore not examine before we believe? |
1397 | If he wishes to punish, hath he not earthquakes, volcanoes, and thunder? |
1397 | If his decrees have been formed on foresight of every circumstance, can your prayers change them? |
1397 | If infinite, can your homage add to his glory? |
1397 | If it be uncertain or equivocal, how is he to find in it what it has not? |
1397 | If it is not sufficient, why did he make it imperfect?" |
1397 | If nothing hath changed in the creation, if the same means now exist which before existed, why then are not the present what former generations were? |
1397 | If partial societies have made improvements, what shall hinder the improvement of society in general? |
1397 | If such be infidelity, what then is the true faith? |
1397 | If the ancient shepherds were so studious and sagacious, how does it happen that the modern ones are so stupid, ignorant, and inattentive? |
1397 | If the faith of one man is applicable to many, what need have even you to believe? |
1397 | If the law of nature be not written, must it not become arbitrary and ideal? |
1397 | If the people perish who will nourish the army? |
1397 | If they are all equal in the sight of God, what need of mediators?--where is the priesthood? |
1397 | If this knowledge is superfluous, why should we burden ourselves with it to- day?" |
1397 | If violence and persecution are the arguments of truth, are gentleness and charity the signs of falsehood?" |
1397 | If you die to prove that two and two make four, will your death add any thing to this truth?" |
1397 | If, as you say, it emanates immediately from God, does it teach his existence? |
1397 | If, then, such vast numbers of us are in the wrong, who shall dare to say,"I am in the right?" |
1397 | In general, nothing is more important than a good elementary book; but, also, nothing is more difficult to compose and even to read: and why? |
1397 | In so many centuries, during which you have been following or altering them, what changes have your prescriptions wrought in the laws of nature? |
1397 | In some parts of Europe, indeed, reason has begun to dawn, but even there, do nations partake of the knowledge of individuals? |
1397 | In the mean time how is it possible to conduct one''s self otherwise with the people so long as they are people? |
1397 | In what consist the anathemas of heaven over this land? |
1397 | In what manner ought a society to act when two of its members fight? |
1397 | Instead of changing the course of nature, why not rather change opinions? |
1397 | Is adultery an offence in the law of nature? |
1397 | Is alms- giving a virtuous action? |
1397 | Is he free? |
1397 | Is he happy in that state? |
1397 | Is he, like you, agitated with vengeance or compassion, with wrath or repentance? |
1397 | Is it from a deliberate choice that you follow the standard of one prophet rather than another? |
1397 | Is it his hand which has overthrown these walls, destroyed these temples, mutilated these columns, or is it the hand of man? |
1397 | Is it his pride which excites murderous wars, or the pride of kings and their ministers? |
1397 | Is it his rapacity which robs the husbandman, ravages the fruitful fields, and wastes the earth, or is it the rapacity of those who govern? |
1397 | Is it not in its pursuit that thou seest me in this sequestered spot? |
1397 | Is it not the first law of God that man should live?" |
1397 | Is it not written? |
1397 | Is it the venality of his decisions which overthrows the fortunes of families, or the corruption of the organs of the law? |
1397 | Is it you who gave breath to man, that you dare take it from him? |
1397 | Is luxury a vice in the individual and in society? |
1397 | Is no other law reasonable? |
1397 | Is no other law uniform and invariable? |
1397 | Is no other law universal? |
1397 | Is not happiness also a precept of the law of nature? |
1397 | Is not theirs still more contrary to common sense and justice? |
1397 | Is paternal love a common virtue? |
1397 | Is pleasure the principal object of our existence, as some philosophers have asserted? |
1397 | Is the course of the seasons varied? |
1397 | Is the earth more fruitful, or its inhabitants more happy? |
1397 | Is the sun brighter? |
1397 | Is this also a revelation? |
1397 | It may be asked, why this distinction? |
1397 | Its precepts are then in action? |
1397 | Know you not your rights? |
1397 | May not the oval form of the egg allude to the elipsis of the orbs? |
1397 | May we not also ask, on the other hand, how can an honest woman consent to reveal them? |
1397 | Mortal, who despairest of the human race, on what profound combination of facts hast thou established thy conclusion? |
1397 | My ear, struck with the cries which resounded to the heavens, distinguished these words: What is this new prodigy? |
1397 | Now I ask the public, what kind of a man is Dr. Priestly? |
1397 | Now I ask you, sir, What has all this to do with the main question? |
1397 | Now what is Jupiter? |
1397 | Now, if man, as is evident, can persuade himself of error, what is the persuasion of man to prove? |
1397 | Of what import to thy immensity, their distinctions of parties and sects? |
1397 | On whom shall you wreak vengeance for the faults committed by your own ignorance and cupidity?" |
1397 | Or have you received them only from the chance of birth, from the empire of education and habit? |
1397 | Others exclaimed:"Where are the proofs, the witnesses of these pretended facts? |
1397 | PEOPLE.--And what labor do you perform in our society? |
1397 | PEOPLE.--Do you govern without reason? |
1397 | PEOPLE.--How, then, have you acquired these riches? |
1397 | PRIESTS.--Would you live without gods or kings? |
1397 | Pleasure, then, is not an evil, a sin, as casuists pretend? |
1397 | Q. Charity is then nothing but justice? |
1397 | Q. Dissipation and prodigality, therefore, are vices? |
1397 | Q. Improbity, therefore, is a sign of false judgment and a narrow mind? |
1397 | Q. Instruction, then, is indispensable to man''s existence? |
1397 | Q. Philosophers, then, are fallible? |
1397 | Q. Probity, then, shows an extension and justice in the mind? |
1397 | Q. Uncleanliness or filthiness is, then, a real vice? |
1397 | Requires he groans for hymns, murderers for votaries, a ravaged and desolate earth for his temple? |
1397 | Say then; how should he, whom you style your common father, receive the homage of his children murdering one another? |
1397 | Should abstinence and fasting be considered as virtuous actions? |
1397 | Should modesty be considered as a virtue? |
1397 | Should weakness and cowardice be considered as vices? |
1397 | The Bramins stopping short at these words:"How can we admit your doctrine,"said the legislator,"if you will not make it known? |
1397 | The Mussulman, Christian, Jew, are they not the elect children of God, loaded with favors and miracles? |
1397 | The legislator then asked:"Have you living witnesses of the facts?" |
1397 | The moderate and prudent men added:"Supposing all this to be true, why reveal these mysteries? |
1397 | The murdering of a man is, therefore, a crime in the law of nature? |
1397 | The world has gone thus for two thousand years; why change it now?" |
1397 | Then it is not true that the followers of the law of nature are atheists? |
1397 | Then, taking the sword:"Is this iron,"said the legislator,"softer than lead?" |
1397 | They are, therefore, really unequal? |
1397 | To thee, who art guiding stars in their orbits, what are those wormlings writhing themselves in the dust? |
1397 | True or false, what interest have we in knowing whether the world has existed six thousand, or twenty- five thousand years? |
1397 | Two strong ones then said:"Why fatigue ourselves to produce enjoyments which we may find in the hands of the weak? |
1397 | WILL THE HUMAN RACE IMPROVE? |
1397 | We have an excellent soil, and we are in want of subsistence? |
1397 | We have forgotten our own infancy, and shall we know the infancy of the world? |
1397 | What a war? |
1397 | What are the characters of the law of nature? |
1397 | What are the reciprocal duties of masters and of servants? |
1397 | What are those attributes? |
1397 | What are those virtues? |
1397 | What blind and perverse delirium disorders the spirits of the nations? |
1397 | What can more strongly resemble electricity? |
1397 | What can you expect from this dissension? |
1397 | What causes have so changed the fortunes of these countries? |
1397 | What cruel and mysterious scourge is this? |
1397 | What difference is there between a learned and a wise man? |
1397 | What difference is there between an ignorant and a silly man? |
1397 | What do you conclude from all this? |
1397 | What do you mean be domestic virtues? |
1397 | What do you mean by the word country? |
1397 | What does the word nature signify? |
1397 | What has my book in common with my person? |
1397 | What have you gained by so many battles and tears? |
1397 | What is a sin in the law of nature? |
1397 | What is economy? |
1397 | What is evil? |
1397 | What is filial love? |
1397 | What is good, according to the law of nature? |
1397 | What is man in the savage state? |
1397 | What is meant by physical good and evil, and by moral good and evil? |
1397 | What is meant by the word individual? |
1397 | What is paternal love? |
1397 | What is prudence? |
1397 | What is society? |
1397 | What is temperance? |
1397 | What is that blind fatality, which without order and without law, sports with the destiny of mortals? |
1397 | What is that fundamental principle? |
1397 | What is that precept? |
1397 | What is that unjust necessity, which confounds the effect of actions, whether of wisdom or of folly? |
1397 | What is the law of nature? |
1397 | What is the reason of it? |
1397 | What is the result? |
1397 | What is the true meaning of the word philosopher? |
1397 | What is the vice contrary to this virtue? |
1397 | What is this God of justice, who punishes blindness which he himself has made? |
1397 | What is this apostle of a God of clemency, who preaches nothing but murder and carnage? |
1397 | What is vice according to the law of nature? |
1397 | What is virtue according to the law of nature? |
1397 | What man can answer for the actions of another? |
1397 | What matters it, said the Christian, whether my ruler breaks or adores images, if he renders justice to me? |
1397 | What mortal shall dare refuse to his fellow that which nature gives him? |
1397 | What need have we of knowing what passed five or six thousand years ago, in countries we never heard of, and among men who will ever be unknown to us? |
1397 | What right has he to impose his creed on us as conqueror and tyrant? |
1397 | What tyrant ever rendered children responsible for the faults of their fathers? |
1397 | What worship do they pay to him? |
1397 | What would be the alarm were the public put in possession of the sequel of this work? |
1397 | What would be the judgments of his equal and common justice over the real universality of mankind? |
1397 | Whatever tends to cause death is, therefore, an evil? |
1397 | When among yourselves disputes arise between families and individuals, how do you reconcile them? |
1397 | When do they deceive us by ignorance? |
1397 | When do they deceive us by passion? |
1397 | When prejudice has once seized the mind, how is it to be dissipated? |
1397 | When the Gospel says,"Happy are the poor of spirit,"does it mean the ignorant and imprudent? |
1397 | When the strong has subjected the weak to his opinion, has he thereby aided the cause of truth? |
1397 | When war, famine and pestilence, have swept away the inhabitants, if the earth remains a desert, is it God who has depopulated it? |
1397 | When, sinking under famine, the people have fed on impure aliments, if pestilence ensues, is it the wrath of God which sends it, or the folly of man? |
1397 | Where are those ramparts of Nineveh, those walls of Babylon, those palaces of Persepolis, those temples of Balbec and of Jerusalem? |
1397 | Where is that divine malediction which perpetuates the abandonment of these fields? |
1397 | Where is the inconsistency which thou imputest to the justice of heaven? |
1397 | Where those husbandmen, harvests, flocks, and all the creation of living beings in which the face of the earth rejoiced? |
1397 | Wherefore are so many cities destroyed? |
1397 | Whether it was made of nothing, or of something; by itself, or by a maker, who in his turn would require another maker? |
1397 | Which are the individual virtues? |
1397 | Which are the principal branches of temperance? |
1397 | Which is the eighth character? |
1397 | Which is the fifth character? |
1397 | Which is the first? |
1397 | Which is the fourth character? |
1397 | Which is the last character of the law of nature? |
1397 | Which is the ninth character? |
1397 | Which is the second? |
1397 | Which is the seventh character? |
1397 | Which is the sixth character? |
1397 | Which is the third? |
1397 | Which is the vice contrary to science? |
1397 | Which is the vice contrary to temperance? |
1397 | Whither will this quarrel conduct you? |
1397 | Who can enlighten the ignorance of the weak? |
1397 | Who can teach the multitude to know their rights, and force their chiefs to perform their duties? |
1397 | Who, indeed will ever be able to restrain the lust of wealth in the strong and powerful? |
1397 | Who, then, is the secret enemy that devours us? |
1397 | Why are these fields, sanctified by the blood of martyrs, deprived of their ancient fertility? |
1397 | Why did this common father oblige us to believe on a less degree of evidence than you? |
1397 | Why do you say that activity is a virtue according to the law of nature? |
1397 | Why do you say that conjugal love is a virtue? |
1397 | Why do you say that justice is the fundamental and almost only virtue of society? |
1397 | Why has not this ancient population been reproduced and perpetuated? |
1397 | Why have those blessings been banished hence, and transferred for so many ages to other nations and different climes? |
1397 | Why is chastity considered a greater virtue in women than in men? |
1397 | Why is cleanliness included among the virtues? |
1397 | Why is economy a virtue? |
1397 | Why is fraternal love a virtue? |
1397 | Why is paternal tenderness a virtue in parents? |
1397 | Why murder and terrify men, instead of instructing and correcting them? |
1397 | Why so? |
1397 | Why this unanimity in one case, and this discordance in the other?" |
1397 | Why, then, do these privileged races no longer enjoy the same advantages? |
1397 | Why, then, have philosophers called the savage state the state of perfection? |
1397 | Why, then, have there been moralists who have looked upon it as a virtue and perfection? |
1397 | Will he forever shut his eyes to the light, and his heart to the admonitions of truth and reason? |
1397 | Will not my ashes long ere then be mouldering in the tomb? |
1397 | Will you strike your brothers, your relatives? |
1397 | Would you not think it a chapter from The Thousand and One Nights?" |
1397 | Ye Mussulmans, if God chastiseth you for violating the five precepts, how hath he raised up the Franks who ridicule them? |
1397 | Yes; for that inclination leads naturally to action, and it is for this reason that envy is considered a sin? |
1397 | You have reckoned simplicity of manners among the social virtues; what do you understand by that word? |
1397 | You say, p. 18, that the public will expect it from me: Where are the powers by which you make the public speak and act? |
1397 | You, whose first precept is homicide and war? |
1397 | and is not egotism contrary to the social state? |
1397 | and shall justice be rendered by the hands of piracy and avarice? |
1397 | and what becomes of nobility? |
1397 | can you suppose that truth has been first discovered to- day, and that hitherto you have been walking in error? |
1397 | did you carefully examine them? |
1397 | doth he need your aid? |
1397 | hast thou then abandoned thy faithful people? |
1397 | hath human society, since its origin, made no progress toward knowledge and a better state? |
1397 | have an infidel people then enjoyed the blessings of heaven and earth? |
1397 | have the heavens changed their laws and the earth its motion? |
1397 | how are so many sublime energies allied to so many errors? |
1397 | how has so much glory been eclipsed? |
1397 | how have so many labors been annihilated? |
1397 | how long will you mistake the true principles of morality and religion? |
1397 | if these places are desolate, if these powerful cities are reduced to solitude, is it God who has caused their ruin? |
1397 | is it thus you revere the Divinity? |
1397 | is this passionate emotion? |
1397 | is this what you call governing? |
1397 | is this wisdom? |
1397 | know you not that our ancestors conquered this land, and that your race was spared only on condition of serving us? |
1397 | or, embracing in one glance the history of the species, and judging the future by the past, hast thou shown that all improvement is impossible? |
1397 | said I, is that the earth-- the habitation of man? |
1397 | said he,"instructors of nations, is it thus that you have deceived them?" |
1397 | said they,"because a man and woman ate an apple six thousand years ago, all the human race are damned? |
1397 | say they, what matters who is our master? |
1397 | say what do these human insects, which my sight no longer discerns on the earth, appear in thy eyes? |
1397 | that it is not her cause which you defend, but that of your affections, and your prejudices? |
1397 | that they destroy the principles of your faith, and overturn the religion of your ancestors? |
1397 | that those men, more fortunate than you, have the sole privilege of wisdom? |
1397 | we are not sure of what happens near us, and shall we answer for what happens in the sun, in the moon, or in imaginary regions of space? |
1397 | what this impious altar, this sacrilegious worship? |
1397 | when the dream of life is over, what will then avail all its agitations, if not one trace of utility remains behind? |
1397 | whence proceed such fatal revolutions? |
1397 | where then is the contradiction which offends thee? |
1397 | whither have flown those ages of life and abundance?--whither vanished those brilliant creations of human industry? |
1397 | who can enumerate all the calamities of tyrannical government? |
1397 | who shall dare to fathom the depths of the Omnipotent? |
1397 | who will certify what no man comprehends? |
1397 | why exhaust ourselves in pursuing prey which eludes us in the woods or waters? |
1397 | why not apply our cares in multiplying and preserving them? |
1397 | why not collect under our hands the animals that nourish us? |
1397 | will they not perish soon enough? |
1397 | with what eye should he view your hands reeking in the blood he hath created? |
7960 | When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman? |
7960 | ( map facing page 184)? |
7960 | ------_ What have the Greeks done for Modern Civilization?_( N. Y., 1909, Putnam,$ 1.50). |
7960 | 13. Who was the"Apostle to the Germans"? |
7960 | 14. Who were the"Apostles to the Slavs"? |
7960 | 17. Who is the present Pope? |
7960 | 2. Who were Baber, Kublai Khan, Othman, Mohammed II, Constantine Palaeologus, and Ivan the Great? |
7960 | 3. Who comprised the"third estate"in the Middle Ages? |
7960 | 4. Who were Belisarius, Chosroes II, and Heraclius? |
7960 | 4. Who were St. Thomas Aquinas, Abelard, Gratian, Irnerius, and Roger Bacon? |
7960 | 5. Who were Quintus Fabius Maximus, Mithradates, Catiline, and Cleopatra? |
7960 | 753(?) |
7960 | After what French king was Louisiana named? |
7960 | Are modern coins"debased"to any considerable extent? |
7960 | Are unity of race, a common language, a common religion, and geographical unity of themselves sufficient to make a nation? |
7960 | At what points is it probable that southern Europe and northern Africa were once united? |
7960 | Augustus, 31 B.C.-l4 A.D., topic The Augustan Age)? |
7960 | CHAUCER, 1340(? |
7960 | COLUMBUS, 1446(? |
7960 | Can you find examples of any of the Greek orders in public buildings familiar to you? |
7960 | Can you give any reason for this characterization? |
7960 | Can you justify this statement? |
7960 | Can you mention any of Shakespeare''s plays which are founded on Italian stories or whose scenes are laid in Italy? |
7960 | Can you name any savages still living in the Stone Age? |
7960 | Can you suggest a reason why some historians do not regard Châlons as one of the world''s decisive battles? |
7960 | Can you suggest any objections to the system of state pay introduced by Pericles? |
7960 | Can you suggest any reason why the Arabs did little in painting and sculpture? |
7960 | Can you suggest any reasons why Islam to- day spreads among the African negroes more rapidly than Christianity? |
7960 | Can you suggest any reasons why the sources of the Nile remained unknown until late in the nineteenth century? |
7960 | Can you suggest why Caesar''s conquest of Gaul had even greater importance than Pompey''s conquests in the East? |
7960 | Could monks enter the secular clergy and thus become parish priests and bishops? |
7960 | DESIDERIUS ERASMUS 1466(? |
7960 | Did it have an official character? |
7960 | Did religion have anything to do with the migrations of the Germans? |
7960 | Did the medieval interest in astrology retard or further astronomical research? |
7960 | Did the popular assembly of Athens have any resemblance to a New England town meeting? |
7960 | Do you know of any modern columns of victory? |
7960 | Do you know why Washington was called the"American Fabius"? |
7960 | Do you see any resemblance in structural features between a Gothic cathedral and a modern"sky- scraper"? |
7960 | Does this seem a fair description? |
7960 | Does this statement appear to be justified? |
7960 | Does this statement seem to be justified? |
7960 | EXPANSION OF ROME OVER ITALY, 509(? |
7960 | Establishment of the republic 449 Laws of the Twelve Tables 390(?) |
7960 | Expansion of Rome over Italy, 509(? |
7960 | For what were the following men notable: Pym; Bossuet; duke of Marlborough; Louvois; Hampden; Mazarin; William III; and Colbert? |
7960 | For what were the following persons famous: Hammurabi; Rameses II; Solomon; Cyrus; Nebuchadnezzar; and Darius? |
7960 | For what were the following persons noted: Chrysoloras; Vittorino da Feltre; Gutenberg; Boccaccio; Machiavelli; Harvey; and Galileo? |
7960 | For what were the following places noted: Jerusalem; Thebes; Tyre; Nineveh; and Babylon? |
7960 | From what Oriental peoples do we get the oldest true arch? |
7960 | Had Pompey triumphed over Caesar, is it probable that the republic would have been restored? |
7960 | Had the Italians triumphed in the Social War, is it likely they would have established a better government than that of Rome? |
7960 | Have we anything to learn from the Greeks about the importance of training in music? |
7960 | How are the pyramids proof of an advanced civilization among the Egyptians? |
7960 | How can you explain the persecution of the Christians by an emperor so great and good as Marcus Aurelius? |
7960 | How can you justify this statement by a study of European geography? |
7960 | How did Vasco da Gama complete the work of Prince Henry the Navigator? |
7960 | How did it get that meaning? |
7960 | How did the Franciscans and Dominicans supplement each other''s work? |
7960 | How did the Greeks manage to build solidly without the use of mortar? |
7960 | How did the Macedonian Empire compare in size with that of Persia? |
7960 | How did the belief in Purgatory strengthen the hold of the Church upon men''s minds? |
7960 | How did the condition of Germany after 1648 A.D. facilitate the efforts of Louis XIV to extend the French frontiers to the Rhine? |
7960 | How did the discoveries of Galileo and Kepler confirm the Copernican theory? |
7960 | How did the expression, a"red- cross knight,"arise? |
7960 | How did the founding of the Hellenistic cities continue the earlier colonial expansion of Greece? |
7960 | How did the four English counties, Sussex, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk, receive their names? |
7960 | How did the geographical situation of Arabia preserve it from being conquered by Persians, Macedonians, or Romans? |
7960 | How did the names"damask"linen,"chinaware,""japanned"ware, and"cashmere"shawls originate? |
7960 | How did the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 A.D. affect the commercial importance of Alexandria? |
7960 | How did the position of women at Athens differ from their position in Homeric Greece? |
7960 | How did the revolution of 1688 A.D. affect the fortunes of Louis XIV? |
7960 | How did the tsars come to regard themselves as the successors of the Eastern emperors? |
7960 | How did the words"machiavellism"and"utopian"get their present meanings? |
7960 | How did the worship of the Caesars connect itself with ancestor worship? |
7960 | How did the"year of anarchy"after Nero''s death exhibit a weakness in the imperial system? |
7960 | How do the crusades illustrate the truth of this statement? |
7960 | How do they compare in number with those at Rome in the reign of Marcus Aurelius? |
7960 | How do you account for the failure of the republican institutions of Rome? |
7960 | How do you explain the almost total loss of original Greek sculptures? |
7960 | How does Islam, by sanctioning polygamy and slavery, hinder the rise of women and of the working classes? |
7960 | How does Mohammed''s career in Mecca illustrate the saying that"a prophet is not without honor save in his own country"? |
7960 | How does it happen that the gulf of Finland is often frozen over in winter, while even the northernmost of the Norse fiords remain open? |
7960 | How does it illustrate the medieval attitude toward Jews? |
7960 | How does the history of Ireland illustrate this statement? |
7960 | How does the opera differ from the oratorio? |
7960 | How does the presence of few tameable animals in the New World help to account for its tardier development as compared with the Old World? |
7960 | How does the preservation of the balance of power help to explain the Great European War? |
7960 | How far can the phrase"government of the people, by the people, for the people"be applied to the Athenian democracy? |
7960 | How far can the phrase,"government of the people, by the people, for the people,"be applied to the Roman Republic at this period? |
7960 | How is it easy to evade laws forbidding usury? |
7960 | How is it true that the expedition of the Ten Thousand forms"an epilogue to the invasion of Xerxes and a prologue to the conquests of Alexander"? |
7960 | How many have you read? |
7960 | How many holidays( including Sundays) are there in your state? |
7960 | How many of Shakespeare''s plays can you name? |
7960 | How many provinces existed under Trajan? |
7960 | How many"books"are there in the Old Testament? |
7960 | How much can you see and describe in the Alexander Mosaic( illustration, page 123)? |
7960 | How was it with the Arabs? |
7960 | How was"the victory of the Crescent secured by the children of the Cross"? |
7960 | How, it will be asked, did these rights and privileges arise? |
7960 | If the Athenian Empire could have rested on a representative basis, why would it have been more likely to endure? |
7960 | In such cases how could truth be reached unless one reasoned it out for oneself? |
7960 | In the classification of mankind, where do the Arabs belong? |
7960 | In the face of his encroachments would Athens, Sparta, and Thebes, so long the leading cities, submit tamely to this Macedonian conqueror? |
7960 | In the reign of what Roman emperor was Jesus born? |
7960 | In what European countries do kings still rule by divine right? |
7960 | In what century was the year 1917 B.C.? |
7960 | In what city does he reside? |
7960 | In what different senses is the word"church"often used? |
7960 | In what lies the difference? |
7960 | In what non- Christian religions is monasticism an established institution? |
7960 | In what parts of the British Isles are Celtic languages still spoken? |
7960 | In what parts of the world is English now the prevailing speech? |
7960 | In what parts of the world is Spanish still the common language? |
7960 | In what respects is the American system of education a realization of the ideals of Comenius? |
7960 | In what sense does the date, 476 A.D., mark the"fall"of the Roman Empire? |
7960 | In what sense is it true that the Holy Roman Empire was"neither holy nor Roman, nor an empire"? |
7960 | In what sense is it true that"half Europe owes its Christianity to women"? |
7960 | In what sense was Chaeronea a decisive battle? |
7960 | In whose reign was he crucified? |
7960 | In your opinion which of the two rival imperial lines after 800 A.D. had the better title to represent ancient Rome? |
7960 | Is the English Common law codified? |
7960 | Is this still the case? |
7960 | JOHN HUSS, 1373(? |
7960 | Legendary Roman kings 509(?) |
7960 | May a nation arise where these bonds are lacking? |
7960 | Might Rome have extended her federal policy to her territories outside of Italy? |
7960 | Northmen under Ruric settle in Russia 870 Treaty of Mersen 871- 901(?) |
7960 | ST. FRANCIS, 1181(? |
7960 | They often debated the most subtle questions, for instance,"Can God ever know more than He knows that He knows?" |
7960 | To what cities of Asia Minor did Paul write his epistles, or letters? |
7960 | To what extent do we employ the same system under our government? |
7960 | To what other cities in the Roman Empire? |
7960 | Under what circumstances does the Constitution of the United States provide for the suspension of the writ of_ habeas corpus_? |
7960 | Under what circumstances is it sometimes declared in the United States? |
7960 | WILLIAM''S PERSONALITY What manner of man was William the Conqueror? |
7960 | Was Caesar justified in leading his army against Rome? |
7960 | Was Marius or was Sulla more to blame for the Civil War? |
7960 | Was Rome wise in adopting her new policy of expansion beyond the limits of Italy? |
7960 | Was a provincial system really necessary? |
7960 | Were all the great cities in Alexander''s empire of commercial importance? |
7960 | Were any of the ancient religions missionary faiths? |
7960 | Were the Jews independent of Rome during the lifetime of Jesus? |
7960 | Were the crusades the only means by which western Europe was brought in contact with Moslem civilization? |
7960 | What American states lie in about the same latitude as Greece? |
7960 | What European countries in physical features closely resemble Greece? |
7960 | What European monarch styles himself as an autocrat? |
7960 | What European state comes nearest to being a pure despotism? |
7960 | What French kings did most to form the French nation? |
7960 | What advantages has trial by jury over the older forms of trial, such as oaths, ordeals, and the judicial duel? |
7960 | What are its special advantages? |
7960 | What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of primogeniture as the rule of inheritance? |
7960 | What are some of the best- known stories in the_ Thousand and One Nights_? |
7960 | What are the advantages of local self- government over a centralized government? |
7960 | What arguments might have been made for and against the removal of the capital to Constantinople? |
7960 | What artistic objections to the use of"engaged columns"can you mention? |
7960 | What books of the Bible contain the laws of Israel? |
7960 | What circumstances gave rise to( a) the Petition of Right;( b) the Institute of Government;( c) the Habeas Corpus Act; and( d) the Bill of Rights? |
7960 | What class corresponds to it at the present time? |
7960 | What conditions made it easy for the Romans to conquer Magna Graecia and difficult for them to subdue the Samnites? |
7960 | What conditions of the time help to explain the contempt of the Greeks for money- making? |
7960 | What contrasts can you draw between Caesar and Alexander? |
7960 | What contrasts exist between the ancient and the modern house? |
7960 | What countries of Greece did not touch the sea? |
7960 | What countries of modern Europe are included within the limits of Charlemagne''s empire? |
7960 | What did civic patriotism mean to the Greek and to the Roman? |
7960 | What difference did it make whether Clovis became an Arian or a Catholic? |
7960 | What differences exist between an ancient and a modern theatre? |
7960 | What differences existed between Phoenician and Greek colonization? |
7960 | What do the illustrations on pages 38, 43 tell about the pomp of Oriental kings? |
7960 | What do you understand by a"decisive"battle? |
7960 | What do you understand by representative government? |
7960 | What do you understand by"martial law"? |
7960 | What does this mean? |
7960 | What does this statement mean? |
7960 | What does this statement mean? |
7960 | What elements of weakness in the imperial system had been disclosed during the century 180- 284 A.D.? |
7960 | What events are associated with the following dates: 988 A.D.; 862 A.D.; 1066 A.D.; 1000 A.D.; and 987 A.D.? |
7960 | What events are connected with the following places: Soissons; Mersen; Whitby; Reims; Verdun; Canterbury; and Strassburg? |
7960 | What events are connected with the following places: Zama; Cannae; Actium; Pharsalus, and Philippi? |
7960 | What events in the lives of Clovis and Pepin the Short contributed to the alliance between the Franks and the popes? |
7960 | What examples of pastoral and agricultural life among the North American Indians are familiar to you? |
7960 | What examples of triumphal arches in the United States and France are known to you? |
7960 | What famous examples of domed churches and public buildings are familiar to you? |
7960 | What features of Athenian education are noted in the illustration, page 254? |
7960 | What features of our"circus"recall the proceedings at the Roman games? |
7960 | What happened in 987 A.D.? |
7960 | What is a bas- relief? |
7960 | What is a"Fabian policy"? |
7960 | What is a"Pyrrhic victory"? |
7960 | What is his residence called? |
7960 | What is meant by a"robber baron"? |
7960 | What is meant by calling the Church an episcopal organization? |
7960 | What is meant by saying that"French is a mere_ patois_ of Latin"? |
7960 | What is meant by the statement that Carthage is a"dumb actor on the stage of history"? |
7960 | What is meant by the"Norman graft upon the sturdy Saxon tree"? |
7960 | What is meant by the"berserker''s rage"? |
7960 | What is meant by the"emancipation of the peasantry"? |
7960 | What is meant by"sea- power"? |
7960 | What is the Apocrypha? |
7960 | What is the chief difference in mode of government between Presbyterian and Congregational churches? |
7960 | What is the date of the accession of the emperor Commodus? |
7960 | What is the date of the first recorded Olympiad? |
7960 | What is the essential distinction between a"limited"or"constitutional"monarchy and an"absolute"or"autocratic"monarchy? |
7960 | What is the exact meaning of the words,_ Hebrew_,_ Israelite_, and_ Jew_? |
7960 | What is the historical importance of Augustine, Henry the Fowler, Pepin the Short, Charles Martel, Egbert, and Ethelbert? |
7960 | What is the meaning of the word"martyr"? |
7960 | What is the origin of each term? |
7960 | What is the origin of our names of the two months, January and March? |
7960 | What is the origin of our words_ pedagogue_,_ symposium_,_ circus_, and_ academy_? |
7960 | What is the origin of the geographical names Andalusia, Burgundy, England, and France? |
7960 | What is the origin of the modern city of Constantinople? |
7960 | What is the origin of the name"Protestant"? |
7960 | What is the origin of the name_ Delta_ applied to such a region as Lower Egypt? |
7960 | What is the origin of the word"emperor"? |
7960 | What is the origin of the words"monk,""hermit,""anchorite,"and"abbot"? |
7960 | What is the present meaning of the word"chivalrous"? |
7960 | What is the present population of England? |
7960 | What is the use of alloys? |
7960 | What is the"Socratic method"of teaching? |
7960 | What is the_ Pax Britannica_? |
7960 | What is your favorite Greek statue? |
7960 | What is"the power of the keys"which the popes claim to possess? |
7960 | What justification was found in the New Testament(_ Matthew_, x 8- 10) for the organization of the orders of friars? |
7960 | What light is thrown on the beginnings of money in ancient Egypt by the illustration on page 47? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the Macedonian Empire under Alexander? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of ancient Iran? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of the Balkan peninsula? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of the Persian Empire under Darius? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of the Roman Empire in the age of Trajan? |
7960 | What names of our weekdays are derived from the names of Scandinavian deities? |
7960 | What officers in American cities perform some of the duties of the censors, praetors, and aediles? |
7960 | What particular discoveries were made by Cartier, Drake, Balboa, De Soto, Ponce de León, and Coronado? |
7960 | What parts of Asia were not included in the Mongol Empire at its greatest extent? |
7960 | What parts of the world are most correctly outlined on Ptolemy''s map? |
7960 | What people possessed it during the ninth and tenth centuries? |
7960 | What privileges does it confer? |
7960 | What productions of medieval literature reflect aristocratic and democratic ideals, respectively? |
7960 | What provinces of the Roman Empire in the West were not included within the limits of Charlemagne''s empire? |
7960 | What reasons can be given for the Greek victory in the struggle against Persia? |
7960 | What reasons can you give for Hannibal''s early successes and final failure? |
7960 | What reasons can you suggest for the universal worship of the sun? |
7960 | What reasons for the growth of the Papacy have been set forth in this chapter? |
7960 | What reasons have led the Church to insist upon celibacy of the clergy? |
7960 | What reasons suggest themselves as helping to explain the conversion of the civilized world to Christianity? |
7960 | What resemblances do you discover between the Olympian festival and one of our great international expositions? |
7960 | What resemblances existed between the culture of the Germans and that of the early Greeks? |
7960 | What resemblances may be traced between Islam on the one side and Judaism and Christianity on the other side? |
7960 | What settlements of the Northmen most influenced European history? |
7960 | What state of our union? |
7960 | What states of the Greek mainland were neutral in the Peloponnesian War( map facing page 108)? |
7960 | What stone implements have you ever seen? |
7960 | What was the effect of feudalism on the sentiment of patriotism? |
7960 | What was the importance of the Phoenician fleet in the Persian invasions? |
7960 | What was the importance of the Synod of Whitby? |
7960 | What was the origin of the geographical names Russia, Greenland, Finland, and Normandy? |
7960 | What was the origin of the"divine right"of kings? |
7960 | What was the original meaning of the words"presbyter,""bishop,"and"deacon"? |
7960 | What was the significance of the fact that the Northmen were not Christians at the time when they began their expeditions? |
7960 | What was the_ Pax Romana_? |
7960 | What were the Roman names of England, Scotland, and Ireland? |
7960 | What were the reasons for the failure of the Athenian, Spartan, and Theban attempts at empire? |
7960 | What were the schoolbooks of Greek boys? |
7960 | What were their contributions to knowledge? |
7960 | What would be the effect on trade within an American state if tolls were levied on the border of every county? |
7960 | What would you say of Holbein''s success as a portrait painter( illustrations pages 651, 658)? |
7960 | When and by whom was he elected? |
7960 | When and where was Jesus born? |
7960 | Where are they still found? |
7960 | Where is it obtained? |
7960 | Where was each side weak and where strong? |
7960 | Where were they? |
7960 | Who made them? |
7960 | Who was king of Judea at the time? |
7960 | Whom do you consider the greater man, Julius Caesar or Augustus? |
7960 | Why are modern coins always made perfectly round and with"milled"edges? |
7960 | Why are the earliest laws always unwritten? |
7960 | Why are they not so useful now? |
7960 | Why can wars with barbarous and savage peoples be justified as"the most ultimately righteous of all wars"? |
7960 | Why could not such an institution as the Papacy develop in the East? |
7960 | Why did Balboa call the Pacific the"South Sea"? |
7960 | Why did Italy remain for so many centuries after the Lombard invasion merely"a geographical expression"? |
7960 | Why did Xerxes take the longer route through Thrace, instead of the shorter route followed by Datis and Artaphernes? |
7960 | Why did heresies develop in the East rather than in the West? |
7960 | Why did it prove more difficult to establish a despotic monarchy in England than in France during the seventeenth century? |
7960 | Why did no one suggest that the New World be called after Columbus? |
7960 | Why did the French language in the seventeenth century become the language of fashion and diplomacy? |
7960 | Why did the Germans fail to take part in the work of discovery and colonization? |
7960 | Why did the Germans progress more slowly in civilization than the Greeks and the Romans? |
7960 | Why did the Greek traveler, Herodotus, call Egypt"the gift of the Nile"? |
7960 | Why did the Mongol conquest of Russia tend to strengthen the sentiment of nationality in the Russian people? |
7960 | Why did the Renaissance begin as"an Italian event"? |
7960 | Why did the Romans call the Second Punic War the"War of Hannibal"? |
7960 | Why did the cattle breeder in Italy have no reason to fear foreign competition? |
7960 | Why did the classical scholar come to be regarded as the only educated man? |
7960 | Why did the colonies, as a rule, advance more rapidly than the mother country in wealth and population? |
7960 | Why did the existence of numerous slaves in Egypt and Babylonia tend to keep low the wages of free workmen? |
7960 | Why did the reformers in each country take special pains to translate the Bible into the vernacular? |
7960 | Why do great cities rarely develop without the aid of commerce? |
7960 | Why do you like it? |
7960 | Why does an American city have a charter? |
7960 | Why does classical literature contain almost no"love stories,"or novels? |
7960 | Why does the First Triumvirate mark a distinct step toward the establishment of the empire? |
7960 | Why had the Arabs, until the time of Mohammed, played so inconspicuous a part in the history of the world? |
7960 | Why has Alaric been styled"the Moses of the Visigoths"? |
7960 | Why has Carthage been called the"London"of the ancient world? |
7960 | Why has England been called"the mother of parliaments"? |
7960 | Why has Froissart been styled the"French Herodotus"? |
7960 | Why has Justinian been called the"lawgiver of civilization"? |
7960 | Why has Lothair''s kingdom north of the Alps been called the"strip of trouble"? |
7960 | Why has Marathon been considered such a battle? |
7960 | Why has Marco Polo been called the"Columbus of the East Indies"? |
7960 | Why has Siegfried, the hero of the_ Nibelungenlied_, been called the"Achilles of Teutonic legend"? |
7960 | Why has Wycliffe been called the"morning star of the Reformation"? |
7960 | Why has chivalry been called"the blossom of feudalism"? |
7960 | Why has feudalism been called"confusion roughly organized"? |
7960 | Why has it been called the"suicide of Greece"? |
7960 | Why has scholasticism been called"a sort of Aristotelian Christianity"? |
7960 | Why has the Baltic Sea been called a"secondary Mediterranean"? |
7960 | Why has the Bill of Rights been called the"third great charter of English liberty"? |
7960 | Why has the Delphic oracle been called"the common hearth of Hellas"? |
7960 | Why has the Mediterranean been called a"highway of nations"? |
7960 | Why has the Peloponnesian War been called an"irrepressible conflict"? |
7960 | Why has the Roman Church always refused to sanction divorce? |
7960 | Why has the Third Crusade been called"the most interesting international expedition of the Middle Ages"? |
7960 | Why has the battle of Adrianople been called"the Cannae of the fourth century"? |
7960 | Why has the invention of the bow- and- arrow been of greater importance than the invention of gunpowder? |
7960 | Why has the medieval Papacy been called the"ghost"of the Roman Empire? |
7960 | Why has the medieval city been called the"birthplace of modern democracy"? |
7960 | Why have Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica been called the"suburbs of Italy"? |
7960 | Why have queens never ruled in France? |
7960 | Why have the consuls been called"joint kings for one year"? |
7960 | Why is Greece in its physical aspects"the most European of European lands"? |
7960 | Why is Hastings included among"decisive"battles? |
7960 | Why is Roman law followed in all Spanish- American countries? |
7960 | Why is an acquaintance with Scandinavian mythology, literature, and history especially desirable for English- speaking peoples? |
7960 | Why is it likely that the bust of Nerva( illustration, page 200) is a more faithful likeness than that of Pericles( illustration, page 103)? |
7960 | Why is it so much lower in modern countries? |
7960 | Why is it true that civilization may be said to have begun"with the cracking of the slave whip"? |
7960 | Why is it very desirable for the United States to adopt the budget system? |
7960 | Why is modern civilization, unlike that of antiquity, in little danger from barbarians? |
7960 | Why is the Council of Trent generally considered the most important church council since that of Nicaea? |
7960 | Why is the First Triumvirate described as a"ring"? |
7960 | Why is the Second Crusade often called"St. Bernard''s Crusade"? |
7960 | Why is the defeat of the Moslems before Constantinople regarded as more significant than their defeat at the battle of Tours? |
7960 | Why is there some excuse for describing a Gothic building as"a wall of glass with a roof of stone"? |
7960 | Why not so well fitted as Asia to originate civilization? |
7960 | Why should Mithraism have proved"the most formidable foe which Christianity had to overcome"? |
7960 | Why should Rome have made a greater success of her imperial policy than either Athens or Sparta? |
7960 | Why should the Phoenicians have been called the"colossal peddlers"of the ancient world? |
7960 | Why should the discovery of fire be regarded as of more significance than the discovery of steam? |
7960 | Why should the steppes of central and northern Asia have been a nursery of warlike peoples? |
7960 | Why was Attila called the"scourge of God"? |
7960 | Why was Europe better fitted than Asia to develop the highest civilization? |
7960 | Why was Friday regarded as a specially unlucky day? |
7960 | Why was India better known in ancient times than China? |
7960 | Why was Mary naturally a Catholic and Elizabeth naturally a Protestant? |
7960 | Why was Spain inconspicuous in European politics before the opening of the sixteenth century? |
7960 | Why was Venice called the"bride of the sea"? |
7960 | Why was a canal through the isthmus of Suez less needed in ancient times than to- day? |
7960 | Why was it necessary to codify Roman law? |
7960 | Why was the Parliament of 1295 A.D. named the"Model Parliament"? |
7960 | Why was the extinction of the Ostrogothic kingdom a misfortune for Italy? |
7960 | Why was the feudal system not found in the Roman Empire in the East during the Middle Ages? |
7960 | Why was the island of Cyprus a natural meeting place of Egyptian, Syrian, and Greek peoples? |
7960 | Why was the money- changer so necessary a figure in medieval business? |
7960 | Why was the purchasing power of money much greater in the Middle Ages than it is now? |
7960 | Why was the revival of Greek more important in the history of civilization than the revival of Latin? |
7960 | Why was the rule of the Senate, unsatisfactory though it was, to be preferred to that of the Roman populace? |
7960 | Why was the tyranny of Sparta more oppressive than that of Athens? |
7960 | Why was there no antagonism between labor and capital under the guild system? |
7960 | Why was war the usual condition of feudal society? |
7960 | Why were fairs a necessity in the Middle Ages? |
7960 | Why were the Hellenistic cities the real"backbone"of Hellenism? |
7960 | Why were the invasions of the Mongols and Ottoman Turks more destructive to civilization than those of the Germans, the Arabs, and the Northmen? |
7960 | Why were the reformers within the Church of England called"Puritans"? |
7960 | With that of Assyria? |
7960 | With what paintings by the"old masters"are you familiar? |
7960 | Would import duties on foreign grain have revived Italian agriculture? |
7960 | Would the crusaders in 1204 A.D. have attacked Constantinople, if the schism of 1054 A.D. had not occurred? |
7960 | [ Illustration: CERVANTES] FROISSART, 1397(? |
7960 | [ Illustration: Map, PORTUGUESE AND SPANISH COLONIAL EMPIRES IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY] FERDINAND MAGELLAN, 1480(? |
7960 | [ Illustration: PLAN OF KIRKSTALL ABBEY, YORKSHIRE] RULE OF ST. BENEDICT, 529(?) |
7960 | _ Founding of Rome_ 753(?)-509(?) |
7960 | _ Quo Vadis?_( Boston, 1896, Little, Brown, and Co.,$ 2.00). |
7960 | but were not yet provinces? |
7960 | in 1066 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1215 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1295 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1346 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1453 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1485 A.D.? |
7960 | of Marseilles? |
7960 | of Naples? |
7960 | of Syracuse in Sicily? |
7960 | of the Council of Nicaea? |
7960 | of the Edict of Milan? |
7960 | of the accession of Diocletian? |
7960 | of the death of Theodosius? |
7960 | of the expulsion of the last tyrant of Athens? |
7960 | of"Greater London?" |
7960 | the Germans? |
7960 | the Persians? |
7960 | the earliest legal code? |
7960 | the first coined money? |
7960 | the inhabitants of the United States? |
7960 | the most ancient book? |
7960 | the year 1917 A.D.? |